FeatureSummary: Format documentation

Revise the documentation using reStructuredText inline markup and
explicit blocks so that it formats well.
This commit is contained in:
Brad King 2016-09-15 11:33:24 -04:00
parent 5d17e99580
commit 46ded385c0

View File

@ -2,19 +2,10 @@
FeatureSummary
--------------
Macros for generating a summary of enabled/disabled features
Functions for generating a summary of enabled/disabled features.
This module provides the macros feature_summary(),
set_package_properties() and add_feature_info(). For compatibility it
also still provides set_package_info(), set_feature_info(),
print_enabled_features() and print_disabled_features().
These macros can be used to generate a summary of enabled and disabled
packages and/or feature for a build tree:
::
These functions can be used to generate a summary of enabled and disabled
packages and/or feature for a build tree such as::
-- The following OPTIONAL packages have been found:
LibXml2 (required version >= 2.4), XML processing lib, <http://xmlsoft.org>
@ -27,242 +18,9 @@ packages and/or feature for a build tree:
* Enables macros in MyWordProcessor
Foo , Foo provides cool stuff.
Functions
^^^^^^^^^
::
FEATURE_SUMMARY( [FILENAME <file>]
[APPEND]
[VAR <variable_name>]
[INCLUDE_QUIET_PACKAGES]
[FATAL_ON_MISSING_REQUIRED_PACKAGES]
[DESCRIPTION "Found packages:"]
WHAT (ALL | PACKAGES_FOUND | PACKAGES_NOT_FOUND
| ENABLED_FEATURES | DISABLED_FEATURES)
)
The FEATURE_SUMMARY() macro can be used to print information about
enabled or disabled packages or features of a project. By default,
only the names of the features/packages will be printed and their
required version when one was specified. Use SET_PACKAGE_PROPERTIES()
to add more useful information, like e.g. a download URL for the
respective package or their purpose in the project.
The WHAT option is the only mandatory option. Here you specify what
information will be printed:
``ALL``
print everything
``ENABLED_FEATURES``
the list of all features which are enabled
``DISABLED_FEATURES``
the list of all features which are disabled
``PACKAGES_FOUND``
the list of all packages which have been found
``PACKAGES_NOT_FOUND``
the list of all packages which have not been found
``OPTIONAL_PACKAGES_FOUND``
only those packages which have been found which have the type OPTIONAL
``OPTIONAL_PACKAGES_NOT_FOUND``
only those packages which have not been found which have the type OPTIONAL
``RECOMMENDED_PACKAGES_FOUND``
only those packages which have been found which have the type RECOMMENDED
``RECOMMENDED_PACKAGES_NOT_FOUND``
only those packages which have not been found which have the type RECOMMENDED
``REQUIRED_PACKAGES_FOUND``
only those packages which have been found which have the type REQUIRED
``REQUIRED_PACKAGES_NOT_FOUND``
only those packages which have not been found which have the type REQUIRED
``RUNTIME_PACKAGES_FOUND``
only those packages which have been found which have the type RUNTIME
``RUNTIME_PACKAGES_NOT_FOUND``
only those packages which have not been found which have the type RUNTIME
With the exception of the ``ALL`` value, these values can be combined
in order to customize the output. For example:
::
feature_summary(WHAT ENABLED_FEATURES DISABLED_FEATURES)
If a FILENAME is given, the information is printed into this file. If
APPEND is used, it is appended to this file, otherwise the file is
overwritten if it already existed. If the VAR option is used, the
information is "printed" into the specified variable. If FILENAME is
not used, the information is printed to the terminal. Using the
DESCRIPTION option a description or headline can be set which will be
printed above the actual content. If INCLUDE_QUIET_PACKAGES is given,
packages which have been searched with find_package(... QUIET) will
also be listed. By default they are skipped. If
FATAL_ON_MISSING_REQUIRED_PACKAGES is given, CMake will abort if a
package which is marked as REQUIRED has not been found.
Example 1, append everything to a file:
::
feature_summary(WHAT ALL
FILENAME ${CMAKE_BINARY_DIR}/all.log APPEND)
Example 2, print the enabled features into the variable
enabledFeaturesText, including QUIET packages:
::
feature_summary(WHAT ENABLED_FEATURES
INCLUDE_QUIET_PACKAGES
DESCRIPTION "Enabled Features:"
VAR enabledFeaturesText)
message(STATUS "${enabledFeaturesText}")
::
SET_PACKAGE_PROPERTIES(<name> PROPERTIES
[ URL <url> ]
[ DESCRIPTION <description> ]
[ TYPE (RUNTIME|OPTIONAL|RECOMMENDED|REQUIRED) ]
[ PURPOSE <purpose> ]
)
Use this macro to set up information about the named package, which
can then be displayed via FEATURE_SUMMARY(). This can be done either
directly in the Find-module or in the project which uses the module
after the find_package() call. The features for which information can
be set are added automatically by the find_package() command.
URL: this should be the homepage of the package, or something similar.
Ideally this is set already directly in the Find-module.
DESCRIPTION: A short description what that package is, at most one
sentence. Ideally this is set already directly in the Find-module.
TYPE: What type of dependency has the using project on that package.
Default is OPTIONAL. In this case it is a package which can be used
by the project when available at buildtime, but it also work without.
RECOMMENDED is similar to OPTIONAL, i.e. the project will build if
the package is not present, but the functionality of the resulting
binaries will be severly limited. If a REQUIRED package is not
available at buildtime, the project may not even build. This can be
combined with the FATAL_ON_MISSING_REQUIRED_PACKAGES argument for
feature_summary(). Last, a RUNTIME package is a package which is
actually not used at all during the build, but which is required for
actually running the resulting binaries. So if such a package is
missing, the project can still be built, but it may not work later on.
If set_package_properties() is called multiple times for the same
package with different TYPEs, the TYPE is only changed to higher TYPEs
( RUNTIME < OPTIONAL < RECOMMENDED < REQUIRED ), lower TYPEs are
ignored. The TYPE property is project-specific, so it cannot be set
by the Find-module, but must be set in the project.
PURPOSE: This describes which features this package enables in the
project, i.e. it tells the user what functionality he gets in the
resulting binaries. If set_package_properties() is called multiple
times for a package, all PURPOSE properties are appended to a list of
purposes of the package in the project. As the TYPE property, also
the PURPOSE property is project-specific, so it cannot be set by the
Find-module, but must be set in the project.
Example for setting the info for a package:
::
find_package(LibXml2)
set_package_properties(LibXml2 PROPERTIES
DESCRIPTION "A XML processing library."
URL "http://xmlsoft.org/")
::
set_package_properties(LibXml2 PROPERTIES
TYPE RECOMMENDED
PURPOSE "Enables HTML-import in MyWordProcessor")
...
set_package_properties(LibXml2 PROPERTIES
TYPE OPTIONAL
PURPOSE "Enables odt-export in MyWordProcessor")
::
find_package(DBUS)
set_package_properties(DBUS PROPERTIES
TYPE RUNTIME
PURPOSE "Necessary to disable the screensaver during a presentation" )
::
ADD_FEATURE_INFO(<name> <enabled> <description>)
Use this macro to add information about a feature with the given
<name>. <enabled> contains whether this feature is enabled or not,
<description> is a text describing the feature. The information can
be displayed using feature_summary() for ENABLED_FEATURES and
DISABLED_FEATURES respectively.
Example for setting the info for a feature:
::
option(WITH_FOO "Help for foo" ON)
add_feature_info(Foo WITH_FOO "The Foo feature provides very cool stuff.")
The following macros are provided for compatibility with previous
CMake versions:
::
SET_PACKAGE_INFO(<name> <description> [<url> [<purpose>] ] )
Use this macro to set up information about the named package, which
can then be displayed via FEATURE_SUMMARY(). This can be done either
directly in the Find-module or in the project which uses the module
after the find_package() call. The features for which information can
be set are added automatically by the find_package() command.
::
PRINT_ENABLED_FEATURES()
Does the same as FEATURE_SUMMARY(WHAT ENABLED_FEATURES DESCRIPTION
"Enabled features:")
::
PRINT_DISABLED_FEATURES()
Does the same as FEATURE_SUMMARY(WHAT DISABLED_FEATURES DESCRIPTION
"Disabled features:")
::
SET_FEATURE_INFO(<name> <description> [<url>] )
Does the same as SET_PACKAGE_INFO(<name> <description> <url> )
#]=======================================================================]
#=============================================================================
@ -363,6 +121,95 @@ function(_FS_GET_FEATURE_SUMMARY _property _var _includeQuiet)
endfunction()
#[=======================================================================[.rst:
.. command:: feature_summary
::
feature_summary( [FILENAME <file>]
[APPEND]
[VAR <variable_name>]
[INCLUDE_QUIET_PACKAGES]
[FATAL_ON_MISSING_REQUIRED_PACKAGES]
[DESCRIPTION "Found packages:"]
WHAT (ALL | PACKAGES_FOUND | PACKAGES_NOT_FOUND
| ENABLED_FEATURES | DISABLED_FEATURES)
)
The ``feature_summary()`` macro can be used to print information about
enabled or disabled packages or features of a project. By default,
only the names of the features/packages will be printed and their
required version when one was specified. Use ``set_package_properties()``
to add more useful information, like e.g. a download URL for the
respective package or their purpose in the project.
The ``WHAT`` option is the only mandatory option. Here you specify what
information will be printed:
``ALL``
print everything
``ENABLED_FEATURES``
the list of all features which are enabled
``DISABLED_FEATURES``
the list of all features which are disabled
``PACKAGES_FOUND``
the list of all packages which have been found
``PACKAGES_NOT_FOUND``
the list of all packages which have not been found
``OPTIONAL_PACKAGES_FOUND``
only those packages which have been found which have the type OPTIONAL
``OPTIONAL_PACKAGES_NOT_FOUND``
only those packages which have not been found which have the type OPTIONAL
``RECOMMENDED_PACKAGES_FOUND``
only those packages which have been found which have the type RECOMMENDED
``RECOMMENDED_PACKAGES_NOT_FOUND``
only those packages which have not been found which have the type RECOMMENDED
``REQUIRED_PACKAGES_FOUND``
only those packages which have been found which have the type REQUIRED
``REQUIRED_PACKAGES_NOT_FOUND``
only those packages which have not been found which have the type REQUIRED
``RUNTIME_PACKAGES_FOUND``
only those packages which have been found which have the type RUNTIME
``RUNTIME_PACKAGES_NOT_FOUND``
only those packages which have not been found which have the type RUNTIME
With the exception of the ``ALL`` value, these values can be combined
in order to customize the output. For example:
.. code-block:: cmake
feature_summary(WHAT ENABLED_FEATURES DISABLED_FEATURES)
If a ``FILENAME`` is given, the information is printed into this file. If
``APPEND`` is used, it is appended to this file, otherwise the file is
overwritten if it already existed. If the VAR option is used, the
information is "printed" into the specified variable. If ``FILENAME`` is
not used, the information is printed to the terminal. Using the
``DESCRIPTION`` option a description or headline can be set which will be
printed above the actual content. If ``INCLUDE_QUIET_PACKAGES`` is given,
packages which have been searched with ``find_package(... QUIET)`` will
also be listed. By default they are skipped. If
``FATAL_ON_MISSING_REQUIRED_PACKAGES`` is given, CMake will abort if a
package which is marked as ``REQUIRED`` has not been found.
Example 1, append everything to a file:
.. code-block:: cmake
feature_summary(WHAT ALL
FILENAME ${CMAKE_BINARY_DIR}/all.log APPEND)
Example 2, print the enabled features into the variable
enabledFeaturesText, including QUIET packages:
.. code-block:: cmake
feature_summary(WHAT ENABLED_FEATURES
INCLUDE_QUIET_PACKAGES
DESCRIPTION "Enabled Features:"
VAR enabledFeaturesText)
message(STATUS "${enabledFeaturesText}")
#]=======================================================================]
function(FEATURE_SUMMARY)
# CMAKE_PARSE_ARGUMENTS(<prefix> <options> <one_value_keywords> <multi_value_keywords> args...)
@ -482,6 +329,83 @@ function(FEATURE_SUMMARY)
endfunction()
#[=======================================================================[.rst:
.. command:: set_package_properties
::
set_package_properties(<name> PROPERTIES
[ URL <url> ]
[ DESCRIPTION <description> ]
[ TYPE (RUNTIME|OPTIONAL|RECOMMENDED|REQUIRED) ]
[ PURPOSE <purpose> ]
)
Use this macro to set up information about the named package, which
can then be displayed via FEATURE_SUMMARY(). This can be done either
directly in the Find-module or in the project which uses the module
after the find_package() call. The features for which information can
be set are added automatically by the find_package() command.
``URL <url>``
This should be the homepage of the package, or something similar.
Ideally this is set already directly in the Find-module.
``DESCRIPTION <description>``
A short description what that package is, at most one sentence.
Ideally this is set already directly in the Find-module.
``TYPE <type>``
What type of dependency has the using project on that package.
Default is ``OPTIONAL``. In this case it is a package which can be used
by the project when available at buildtime, but it also work without.
``RECOMMENDED`` is similar to ``OPTIONAL``, i.e. the project will build if
the package is not present, but the functionality of the resulting
binaries will be severly limited. If a ``REQUIRED`` package is not
available at buildtime, the project may not even build. This can be
combined with the ``FATAL_ON_MISSING_REQUIRED_PACKAGES`` argument for
``feature_summary()``. Last, a ``RUNTIME`` package is a package which is
actually not used at all during the build, but which is required for
actually running the resulting binaries. So if such a package is
missing, the project can still be built, but it may not work later on.
If ``set_package_properties()`` is called multiple times for the same
package with different TYPEs, the ``TYPE`` is only changed to higher
TYPEs (``RUNTIME < OPTIONAL < RECOMMENDED < REQUIRED``), lower TYPEs are
ignored. The ``TYPE`` property is project-specific, so it cannot be set
by the Find-module, but must be set in the project.
``PURPOSE <purpose>``
This describes which features this package enables in the
project, i.e. it tells the user what functionality he gets in the
resulting binaries. If set_package_properties() is called multiple
times for a package, all PURPOSE properties are appended to a list of
purposes of the package in the project. As the TYPE property, also
the PURPOSE property is project-specific, so it cannot be set by the
Find-module, but must be set in the project.
Example for setting the info for a package:
.. code-block:: cmake
find_package(LibXml2)
set_package_properties(LibXml2 PROPERTIES
DESCRIPTION "A XML processing library."
URL "http://xmlsoft.org/")
# or
set_package_properties(LibXml2 PROPERTIES
TYPE RECOMMENDED
PURPOSE "Enables HTML-import in MyWordProcessor")
# or
set_package_properties(LibXml2 PROPERTIES
TYPE OPTIONAL
PURPOSE "Enables odt-export in MyWordProcessor")
find_package(DBUS)
set_package_properties(DBUS PROPERTIES
TYPE RUNTIME
PURPOSE "Necessary to disable the screensaver during a presentation")
#]=======================================================================]
function(SET_PACKAGE_PROPERTIES _name _props)
if(NOT "${_props}" STREQUAL "PROPERTIES")
message(FATAL_ERROR "PROPERTIES keyword is missing in SET_PACKAGE_PROPERTIES() call.")
@ -545,6 +469,26 @@ function(SET_PACKAGE_PROPERTIES _name _props)
endfunction()
#[=======================================================================[.rst:
.. command:: add_feature_info
::
add_feature_info(<name> <enabled> <description>)
Use this macro to add information about a feature with the given ``<name>``.
``<enabled>`` contains whether this feature is enabled or not.
``<description>`` is a text describing the feature. The information can
be displayed using ``feature_summary()`` for ``ENABLED_FEATURES`` and
``DISABLED_FEATURES`` respectively.
Example for setting the info for a feature:
.. code-block:: cmake
option(WITH_FOO "Help for foo" ON)
add_feature_info(Foo WITH_FOO "The Foo feature provides very cool stuff.")
#]=======================================================================]
function(ADD_FEATURE_INFO _name _enabled _desc)
if (${_enabled})
set_property(GLOBAL APPEND PROPERTY ENABLED_FEATURES "${_name}")
@ -558,6 +502,25 @@ endfunction()
# The stuff below is only kept for compatibility
#[=======================================================================[.rst:
Legacy Macros
^^^^^^^^^^^^^
The following macros are provided for compatibility with previous
CMake versions:
.. command:: set_package_info
::
set_package_info(<name> <description> [ <url> [<purpose>] ])
Use this macro to set up information about the named package, which
can then be displayed via ``feature_summary()``. This can be done either
directly in the Find-module or in the project which uses the module
after the :command:`find_package` call. The features for which information
can be set are added automatically by the ``find_package()`` command.
#]=======================================================================]
function(SET_PACKAGE_INFO _name _desc)
unset(_url)
unset(_purpose)
@ -576,20 +539,51 @@ function(SET_PACKAGE_INFO _name _desc)
endif()
endfunction()
#[=======================================================================[.rst:
.. command:: set_feature_info
::
set_feature_info(<name> <description> [<url>])
Does the same as::
set_package_info(<name> <description> <url>)
#]=======================================================================]
function(SET_FEATURE_INFO)
SET_PACKAGE_INFO(${ARGN})
endfunction()
#[=======================================================================[.rst:
.. command:: print_enabled_features
::
print_enabled_features()
Does the same as
.. code-block:: cmake
feature_summary(WHAT ENABLED_FEATURES DESCRIPTION "Enabled features:")
#]=======================================================================]
function(PRINT_ENABLED_FEATURES)
FEATURE_SUMMARY(WHAT ENABLED_FEATURES DESCRIPTION "Enabled features:")
endfunction()
#[=======================================================================[.rst:
.. command:: print_disabled_features
::
print_disabled_features()
Does the same as
.. code-block:: cmake
feature_summary(WHAT DISABLED_FEATURES DESCRIPTION "Disabled features:")
#]=======================================================================]
function(PRINT_DISABLED_FEATURES)
FEATURE_SUMMARY(WHAT DISABLED_FEATURES DESCRIPTION "Disabled features:")
endfunction()