This module provides helper tools for generating cmake package files. It also supports the usage of CMake based subprojects, similar to the normal meson subprojects.
To use this module, just do: cmake = import('cmake')
. The following functions will then be available as methods on the object with the name cmake
. You can, of course, replace the name cmake
with anything else.
Using CMake subprojects is similar to using the “normal” meson subprojects. They also have to be located in the subprojects
directory.
Example:
add_library(cm_lib SHARED ${SOURCES})
cmake = import('cmake') # Configure the CMake project sub_proj = cmake.subproject('libsimple_cmake') # Fetch the dependency object cm_lib = sub_proj.dependency('cm_lib') executable(exe1, ['sources'], dependencies: [cm_lib])
The subproject
method is almost identical to the normal meson subproject
function. The only difference is that a CMake project instead of a meson project is configured.
Also, project specific CMake options can be added with the cmake_options
key.
The returned sub_proj
supports the same options as a “normal” subproject. Meson automatically detects CMake build targets, which can be accessed with the methods listed below.
It is usually enough to just use the dependency object returned by the dependency()
method in the build targets. This is almost identical to using declare_dependency()
object from a normal meson subproject.
It is also possible to use executables defined in the CMake project as code generators with the target()
method:
add_executable(cm_exe ${EXE_SRC})
cmake = import('cmake') # Subproject with the "code generator" sub_pro = cmake.subproject('cmCodeGen') # Fetch the code generator exe sub_exe = sub_pro.target('cm_exe') # Use the code generator generated = custom_target( 'cmake-generated', input: [], output: ['test.cpp'], command: [sub_exe, '@OUTPUT@'] )
It should be noted that not all projects are guaranteed to work. The safest approach would still be to create a meson.build
for the subprojects in question.
subproject
objectThis object is returned by the subproject
function described above and supports the following methods:
dependency(target)
returns a dependency object for any CMake target.include_directories(target)
returns a meson include_directories()
object for the specified target. Using this function is not neccessary if the dependency object is used.target(target)
returns the raw build target.target_type(target)
returns the type of the target as a stringtarget_list()
returns a list of all target names.get_variable(name)
fetches the specified variable from inside the subproject. Usually dependency()
or target()
should be prefered to extract build targets.This function is the equivalent of the corresponding CMake function, it generates a name
package version file.
name
: the name of the package.version
: the version of the generated package file.compatibility
: a string indicating the kind of compatibility, the accepted values are AnyNewerVersion
, SameMajorVersion
, SameMinorVersion
or ExactVersion
. It defaults to AnyNewerVersion
. Depending on your cmake installation some kind of compatibility may not be available.install_dir
: optional installation directory, it defaults to $(libdir)/cmake/$(name)
Example:
cmake = import('cmake') cmake.write_basic_package_version_file(name: 'myProject', version: '1.0.0')
This function is the equivalent of the corresponding CMake function, it generates a name
package configuration file from the input
template file. Just like the cmake function in this file the @PACKAGE_INIT@
statement will be replaced by the appropriate piece of cmake code. The equivalent PATH_VARS
argument is given through the configuration
parameter.
name
: the name of the package.input
: the template file where that will be treated for variable substitutions contained in configuration
.install_dir
: optional installation directory, it defaults to $(libdir)/cmake/$(name)
.configuration
: a configuration_data
object that will be used for variable substitution in the template file.Example:
meson.build:
cmake = import('cmake') conf = configuration_data() conf.set_quoted('VAR', 'variable value') cmake.configure_package_config_file( name: 'myProject', input: 'myProject.cmake.in', configuration: conf )
myProject.cmake.in:
@PACKAGE_INIT@ set(MYVAR VAR)