How to store CMake build settings
There is an option to pre-load a script for populating the cache file with cmake using
cmake -C <initial-cache>
The initial-cache is a file containing variables set in the following way, e.g. for the install prefix:
set(CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX "/my/install/prefix" CACHE PATH "")
Then just pass this file while populating the cache with cmake. Easy, but I didn't know that and found no good sample. As a plus, this is an platform independent way instead of writing a script or batch file.
I create a separate script folder next to the sources out of the generated out-of-source build folder. My files containing the settings are stored there for each lib/executable to build.
You can put all the settings into a separate file and at the end of the day there are just a few calls left:
cmake -E make_directory build/somelib
cmake -E chdir build/somelib cmake -C ../../script/cmake/somelib.cmake ../../source/somelib/src
cmake --build build/somelib --target install
Simple, isn't it?
Automatically generate initial-cache
file:
If you are on a *nix system you can run the following inside your build dir:
cmake -N -LA | tail -n+2 | sed -r 's/([A-Za-z_0-9]+):([A-Z]+)=(.*)/set(\1 "\3" CACHE \2 "")/' >cmake-init.txt
On Windows, something like the following cmake
script should work:
# list all cache variables
# this should be run in your build dir
set(filename ${CMAKE_ARGV3})
message(STATUS "Writing to ${filename}")
if(NOT filename)
message(FATAL_ERROR "Must provide an output filename")
return()
endif()
execute_process(COMMAND "${CMAKE_COMMAND}" "-N" "-LA" OUTPUT_VARIABLE cacheVars)
string(REPLACE "\n" ";" cacheVars ${cacheVars})
file(WRITE ${filename} "")
foreach (variable ${cacheVars})
string(REGEX REPLACE "([A-Za-z_0-9]+):([A-Z]+)=(.*)$" "set(\\1 \"\\3\" CACHE \\2 \"\")\n" output ${variable})
if(CMAKE_MATCH_0)
file(APPEND ${filename} ${output})
endif()
endforeach()
Save it to, e.g., get_cache_vars.cmake
and run it like:
cd <your build-dir>
cmake -P path\to\get_cache_vars.cmake <outputfile.txt>
The best way to replicate this on another machine is to use -DSETTING=TRUE/FALSE args.
If you have a LOT of these options differing from the default you can build your cmake call using a script.
Ex:
#!/bin/bash
cmake -G "Unix Makefiles \
-DOPTION1=TRUE
-DOPTION2=FALSE
Distribute the helper bash script to the other machine.