mirror of
https://github.com/Kitware/CMake.git
synced 2026-05-09 07:39:47 -05:00
b665966933c8656d1dafde06b8f29fe7e4901738
In commit b6a5382217 (Ninja: depend on language module information files
directly, 2023-02-10), introduced via !8197, language-specific module
information files (`CMakeFiles/<target>.dir/<lang>Modules.json`) files
were added as real dependencies to the dyndep collation steps.
Previously, the behavior was to inform the collator of all possible
targets and search for the files manually ignoring those which did not
exist with ordering enforced by depending on the linker output of all
dependent targets. This behavior could lead to stale information being
used (e.g., if a target stops providing any targets) and also did not
reliably build everything needed on rebuilds. Afterwards, the internal
computation changed the dependency from all possible targets to an exact
set of "these targets might have modules" query, however one that did
not include `OBJECT` libraries since do not have `LinkEntry` items
internally (their objects are instead treated as source files).
As a stopgap measure, track `OBJECT` libraries in a separate list and
query them explicitly when gathering targets which may have interesting
information. Future work can add `LinkEntry` items to represent these
targets once all `LinkEntry` consumers have been audited to make sure
they are not surprised by any `OBJECT` library entries.
Fixes: #25112
…
…
CMake
*****
Introduction
============
CMake is a cross-platform, open-source build system generator.
For full documentation visit the `CMake Home Page`_ and the
`CMake Documentation Page`_. The `CMake Community Wiki`_ also
references useful guides and recipes.
.. _`CMake Home Page`: https://cmake.org
.. _`CMake Documentation Page`: https://cmake.org/documentation
.. _`CMake Community Wiki`: https://gitlab.kitware.com/cmake/community/-/wikis/home
CMake is maintained and supported by `Kitware`_ and developed in
collaboration with a productive community of contributors.
.. _`Kitware`: http://www.kitware.com/cmake
License
=======
CMake is distributed under the OSI-approved BSD 3-clause License.
See `Copyright.txt`_ for details.
.. _`Copyright.txt`: Copyright.txt
Building CMake
==============
Supported Platforms
-------------------
* Microsoft Windows
* Apple macOS
* Linux
* FreeBSD
* OpenBSD
* Solaris
* AIX
Other UNIX-like operating systems may work too out of the box, if not
it should not be a major problem to port CMake to this platform.
Please post to the `CMake Discourse Forum`_ to ask if others have
had experience with the platform.
.. _`CMake Discourse Forum`: https://discourse.cmake.org
Building CMake from Scratch
---------------------------
UNIX/Mac OSX/MinGW/MSYS/Cygwin
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
You need to have a C++ compiler (supporting C++11) and a ``make`` installed.
Run the ``bootstrap`` script you find in the source directory of CMake.
You can use the ``--help`` option to see the supported options.
You may use the ``--prefix=<install_prefix>`` option to specify a custom
installation directory for CMake. Once this has finished successfully,
run ``make`` and ``make install``.
For example, if you simply want to build and install CMake from source,
you can build directly in the source tree::
$ ./bootstrap && make && sudo make install
Or, if you plan to develop CMake or otherwise run the test suite, create
a separate build tree::
$ mkdir cmake-build && cd cmake-build
$ ../cmake-source/bootstrap && make
Windows
^^^^^^^
There are two ways for building CMake under Windows:
1. Compile with MSVC from VS 2015 or later.
You need to download and install a binary release of CMake. You can get
these releases from the `CMake Download Page`_. Then proceed with the
instructions below for `Building CMake with CMake`_.
2. Bootstrap with MinGW under MSYS2.
Download and install `MSYS2`_. Then install the required build tools::
$ pacman -S --needed git base-devel mingw-w64-x86_64-gcc
and bootstrap as above.
.. _`CMake Download Page`: https://cmake.org/download
.. _`MSYS2`: https://www.msys2.org/
Building CMake with CMake
-------------------------
You can build CMake as any other project with a CMake-based build system:
run the installed CMake on the sources of this CMake with your preferred
options and generators. Then build it and install it.
For instructions how to do this, see documentation on `Running CMake`_.
.. _`Running CMake`: https://cmake.org/runningcmake
To build the documentation, install `Sphinx`_ and configure CMake with
``-DSPHINX_HTML=ON`` and/or ``-DSPHINX_MAN=ON`` to enable the "html" or
"man" builder. Add ``-DSPHINX_EXECUTABLE=/path/to/sphinx-build`` if the
tool is not found automatically.
.. _`Sphinx`: http://sphinx-doc.org
Reporting Bugs
==============
If you have found a bug:
1. If you have a patch, please read the `CONTRIBUTING.rst`_ document.
2. Otherwise, please post to the `CMake Discourse Forum`_ and ask about
the expected and observed behaviors to determine if it is really
a bug.
3. Finally, if the issue is not resolved by the above steps, open
an entry in the `CMake Issue Tracker`_.
.. _`CMake Issue Tracker`: https://gitlab.kitware.com/cmake/cmake/-/issues
Contributing
============
See `CONTRIBUTING.rst`_ for instructions to contribute.
.. _`CONTRIBUTING.rst`: CONTRIBUTING.rst
Description
Languages
C
40.4%
C++
29.8%
CMake
26.9%
Roff
0.7%
Python
0.5%
Other
1.1%