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24fdd51f45
Some modules define an intermediate global scope visible variables to access "resource" files from functions. Now these variables could be eliminated.
1059 lines
43 KiB
CMake
1059 lines
43 KiB
CMake
# Distributed under the OSI-approved BSD 3-Clause License. See accompanying
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# file Copyright.txt or https://cmake.org/licensing for details.
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#[=======================================================================[.rst:
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FetchContent
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------------------
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.. only:: html
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.. contents::
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Overview
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^^^^^^^^
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This module enables populating content at configure time via any method
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supported by the :module:`ExternalProject` module. Whereas
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:command:`ExternalProject_Add` downloads at build time, the
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``FetchContent`` module makes content available immediately, allowing the
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configure step to use the content in commands like :command:`add_subdirectory`,
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:command:`include` or :command:`file` operations.
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Content population details would normally be defined separately from the
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command that performs the actual population. This separation ensures that
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all of the dependency details are defined before anything may try to use those
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details to populate content. This is particularly important in more complex
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project hierarchies where dependencies may be shared between multiple projects.
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The following shows a typical example of declaring content details:
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.. code-block:: cmake
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FetchContent_Declare(
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googletest
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GIT_REPOSITORY https://github.com/google/googletest.git
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GIT_TAG release-1.8.0
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)
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For most typical cases, populating the content can then be done with a single
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command like so:
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.. code-block:: cmake
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FetchContent_MakeAvailable(googletest)
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The above command not only populates the content, it also adds it to the main
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build (if possible) so that the main build can use the populated project's
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targets, etc. In some cases, the main project may need to have more precise
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control over the population or may be required to explicitly define the
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population steps (e.g. if CMake versions earlier than 3.14 need to be
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supported). The typical pattern of such custom steps looks like this:
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.. code-block:: cmake
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FetchContent_GetProperties(googletest)
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if(NOT googletest_POPULATED)
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FetchContent_Populate(googletest)
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add_subdirectory(${googletest_SOURCE_DIR} ${googletest_BINARY_DIR})
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endif()
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Regardless of which population method is used, when using the
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declare-populate pattern with a hierarchical project arrangement, projects at
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higher levels in the hierarchy are able to override the population details of
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content specified anywhere lower in the project hierarchy. The ability to
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detect whether content has already been populated ensures that even if
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multiple child projects want certain content to be available, the first one
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to populate it wins. The other child project can simply make use of the
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already available content instead of repeating the population for itself.
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See the :ref:`Examples <fetch-content-examples>` section which demonstrates
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this scenario.
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The ``FetchContent`` module also supports defining and populating
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content in a single call, with no check for whether the content has been
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populated elsewhere in the project already. This is a more low level
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operation and would not normally be the way the module is used, but it is
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sometimes useful as part of implementing some higher level feature or to
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populate some content in CMake's script mode.
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Declaring Content Details
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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.. command:: FetchContent_Declare
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.. code-block:: cmake
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FetchContent_Declare(<name> <contentOptions>...)
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The ``FetchContent_Declare()`` function records the options that describe
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how to populate the specified content, but if such details have already
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been recorded earlier in this project (regardless of where in the project
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hierarchy), this and all later calls for the same content ``<name>`` are
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ignored. This "first to record, wins" approach is what allows hierarchical
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projects to have parent projects override content details of child projects.
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The content ``<name>`` can be any string without spaces, but good practice
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would be to use only letters, numbers and underscores. The name will be
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treated case-insensitively and it should be obvious for the content it
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represents, often being the name of the child project or the value given
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to its top level :command:`project` command (if it is a CMake project).
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For well-known public projects, the name should generally be the official
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name of the project. Choosing an unusual name makes it unlikely that other
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projects needing that same content will use the same name, leading to
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the content being populated multiple times.
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The ``<contentOptions>`` can be any of the download or update/patch options
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that the :command:`ExternalProject_Add` command understands. The configure,
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build, install and test steps are explicitly disabled and therefore options
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related to them will be ignored. In most cases, ``<contentOptions>`` will
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just be a couple of options defining the download method and method-specific
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details like a commit tag or archive hash. For example:
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.. code-block:: cmake
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FetchContent_Declare(
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googletest
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GIT_REPOSITORY https://github.com/google/googletest.git
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GIT_TAG release-1.8.0
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)
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FetchContent_Declare(
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myCompanyIcons
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URL https://intranet.mycompany.com/assets/iconset_1.12.tar.gz
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URL_HASH 5588a7b18261c20068beabfb4f530b87
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)
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FetchContent_Declare(
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myCompanyCertificates
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SVN_REPOSITORY svn+ssh://svn.mycompany.com/srv/svn/trunk/certs
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SVN_REVISION -r12345
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)
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Populating The Content
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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For most common scenarios, population means making content available to the
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main build according to previously declared details for that dependency.
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There are two main patterns for populating content, one based on calling
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:command:`FetchContent_GetProperties` and
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:command:`FetchContent_Populate` for more precise control and the other on
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calling :command:`FetchContent_MakeAvailable` for a simpler, more automated
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approach. The former generally follows this canonical pattern:
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.. _`fetch-content-canonical-pattern`:
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.. code-block:: cmake
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# Check if population has already been performed
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FetchContent_GetProperties(<name>)
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string(TOLOWER "<name>" lcName)
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if(NOT ${lcName}_POPULATED)
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# Fetch the content using previously declared details
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FetchContent_Populate(<name>)
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# Set custom variables, policies, etc.
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# ...
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# Bring the populated content into the build
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add_subdirectory(${${lcName}_SOURCE_DIR} ${${lcName}_BINARY_DIR})
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endif()
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The above is such a common pattern that, where no custom steps are needed
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between the calls to :command:`FetchContent_Populate` and
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:command:`add_subdirectory`, equivalent logic can be obtained by calling
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:command:`FetchContent_MakeAvailable` instead (and should be preferred where
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it meets the needs of the project).
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.. command:: FetchContent_Populate
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.. code-block:: cmake
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FetchContent_Populate( <name> )
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In most cases, the only argument given to ``FetchContent_Populate()`` is the
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``<name>``. When used this way, the command assumes the content details have
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been recorded by an earlier call to :command:`FetchContent_Declare`. The
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details are stored in a global property, so they are unaffected by things
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like variable or directory scope. Therefore, it doesn't matter where in the
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project the details were previously declared, as long as they have been
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declared before the call to ``FetchContent_Populate()``. Those saved details
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are then used to construct a call to :command:`ExternalProject_Add` in a
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private sub-build to perform the content population immediately. The
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implementation of ``ExternalProject_Add()`` ensures that if the content has
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already been populated in a previous CMake run, that content will be reused
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rather than repopulating them again. For the common case where population
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involves downloading content, the cost of the download is only paid once.
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An internal global property records when a particular content population
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request has been processed. If ``FetchContent_Populate()`` is called more
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than once for the same content name within a configure run, the second call
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will halt with an error. Projects can and should check whether content
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population has already been processed with the
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:command:`FetchContent_GetProperties` command before calling
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``FetchContent_Populate()``.
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``FetchContent_Populate()`` will set three variables in the scope of the
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caller; ``<lcName>_POPULATED``, ``<lcName>_SOURCE_DIR`` and
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``<lcName>_BINARY_DIR``, where ``<lcName>`` is the lowercased ``<name>``.
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``<lcName>_POPULATED`` will always be set to ``True`` by the call.
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``<lcName>_SOURCE_DIR`` is the location where the
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content can be found upon return (it will have already been populated), while
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``<lcName>_BINARY_DIR`` is a directory intended for use as a corresponding
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build directory. The main use case for the two directory variables is to
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call :command:`add_subdirectory` immediately after population, i.e.:
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.. code-block:: cmake
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FetchContent_Populate(FooBar ...)
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add_subdirectory(${foobar_SOURCE_DIR} ${foobar_BINARY_DIR})
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The values of the three variables can also be retrieved from anywhere in the
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project hierarchy using the :command:`FetchContent_GetProperties` command.
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A number of cache variables influence the behavior of all content population
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performed using details saved from a :command:`FetchContent_Declare` call:
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``FETCHCONTENT_BASE_DIR``
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In most cases, the saved details do not specify any options relating to the
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directories to use for the internal sub-build, final source and build areas.
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It is generally best to leave these decisions up to the ``FetchContent``
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module to handle on the project's behalf. The ``FETCHCONTENT_BASE_DIR``
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cache variable controls the point under which all content population
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directories are collected, but in most cases developers would not need to
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change this. The default location is ``${CMAKE_BINARY_DIR}/_deps``, but if
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developers change this value, they should aim to keep the path short and
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just below the top level of the build tree to avoid running into path
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length problems on Windows.
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``FETCHCONTENT_QUIET``
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The logging output during population can be quite verbose, making the
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configure stage quite noisy. This cache option (``ON`` by default) hides
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all population output unless an error is encountered. If experiencing
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problems with hung downloads, temporarily switching this option off may
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help diagnose which content population is causing the issue.
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``FETCHCONTENT_FULLY_DISCONNECTED``
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When this option is enabled, no attempt is made to download or update
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any content. It is assumed that all content has already been populated in
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a previous run or the source directories have been pointed at existing
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contents the developer has provided manually (using options described
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further below). When the developer knows that no changes have been made to
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any content details, turning this option ``ON`` can significantly speed up
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the configure stage. It is ``OFF`` by default.
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``FETCHCONTENT_UPDATES_DISCONNECTED``
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This is a less severe download/update control compared to
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``FETCHCONTENT_FULLY_DISCONNECTED``. Instead of bypassing all download and
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update logic, the ``FETCHCONTENT_UPDATES_DISCONNECTED`` only disables the
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update stage. Therefore, if content has not been downloaded previously,
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it will still be downloaded when this option is enabled. This can speed up
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the configure stage, but not as much as
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``FETCHCONTENT_FULLY_DISCONNECTED``. It is ``OFF`` by default.
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In addition to the above cache variables, the following cache variables are
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also defined for each content name (``<ucName>`` is the uppercased value of
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``<name>``):
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``FETCHCONTENT_SOURCE_DIR_<ucName>``
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If this is set, no download or update steps are performed for the specified
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content and the ``<lcName>_SOURCE_DIR`` variable returned to the caller is
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pointed at this location. This gives developers a way to have a separate
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checkout of the content that they can modify freely without interference
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from the build. The build simply uses that existing source, but it still
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defines ``<lcName>_BINARY_DIR`` to point inside its own build area.
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Developers are strongly encouraged to use this mechanism rather than
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editing the sources populated in the default location, as changes to
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sources in the default location can be lost when content population details
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are changed by the project.
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``FETCHCONTENT_UPDATES_DISCONNECTED_<ucName>``
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This is the per-content equivalent of
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``FETCHCONTENT_UPDATES_DISCONNECTED``. If the global option or this option
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is ``ON``, then updates will be disabled for the named content.
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Disabling updates for individual content can be useful for content whose
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details rarely change, while still leaving other frequently changing
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content with updates enabled.
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The ``FetchContent_Populate()`` command also supports a syntax allowing the
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content details to be specified directly rather than using any saved
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details. This is more low-level and use of this form is generally to be
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avoided in favour of using saved content details as outlined above.
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Nevertheless, in certain situations it can be useful to invoke the content
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population as an isolated operation (typically as part of implementing some
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other higher level feature or when using CMake in script mode):
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.. code-block:: cmake
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FetchContent_Populate( <name>
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[QUIET]
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[SUBBUILD_DIR <subBuildDir>]
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[SOURCE_DIR <srcDir>]
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[BINARY_DIR <binDir>]
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...
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)
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This form has a number of key differences to that where only ``<name>`` is
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provided:
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- All required population details are assumed to have been provided directly
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in the call to ``FetchContent_Populate()``. Any saved details for
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``<name>`` are ignored.
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- No check is made for whether content for ``<name>`` has already been
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populated.
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- No global property is set to record that the population has occurred.
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- No global properties record the source or binary directories used for the
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populated content.
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- The ``FETCHCONTENT_FULLY_DISCONNECTED`` and
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``FETCHCONTENT_UPDATES_DISCONNECTED`` cache variables are ignored.
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The ``<lcName>_SOURCE_DIR`` and ``<lcName>_BINARY_DIR`` variables are still
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returned to the caller, but since these locations are not stored as global
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properties when this form is used, they are only available to the calling
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scope and below rather than the entire project hierarchy. No
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``<lcName>_POPULATED`` variable is set in the caller's scope with this form.
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The supported options for ``FetchContent_Populate()`` are the same as those
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for :command:`FetchContent_Declare()`. Those few options shown just
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above are either specific to ``FetchContent_Populate()`` or their behavior is
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slightly modified from how :command:`ExternalProject_Add` treats them.
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``QUIET``
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The ``QUIET`` option can be given to hide the output associated with
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populating the specified content. If the population fails, the output will
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be shown regardless of whether this option was given or not so that the
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cause of the failure can be diagnosed. The global ``FETCHCONTENT_QUIET``
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cache variable has no effect on ``FetchContent_Populate()`` calls where the
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content details are provided directly.
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``SUBBUILD_DIR``
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The ``SUBBUILD_DIR`` argument can be provided to change the location of the
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sub-build created to perform the population. The default value is
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``${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/<lcName>-subbuild`` and it would be unusual
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to need to override this default. If a relative path is specified, it will
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be interpreted as relative to :variable:`CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR`.
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``SOURCE_DIR``, ``BINARY_DIR``
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The ``SOURCE_DIR`` and ``BINARY_DIR`` arguments are supported by
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:command:`ExternalProject_Add`, but different default values are used by
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``FetchContent_Populate()``. ``SOURCE_DIR`` defaults to
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``${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/<lcName>-src`` and ``BINARY_DIR`` defaults to
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``${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/<lcName>-build``. If a relative path is
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specified, it will be interpreted as relative to
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:variable:`CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR`.
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In addition to the above explicit options, any other unrecognized options are
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passed through unmodified to :command:`ExternalProject_Add` to perform the
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download, patch and update steps. The following options are explicitly
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prohibited (they are disabled by the ``FetchContent_Populate()`` command):
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- ``CONFIGURE_COMMAND``
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- ``BUILD_COMMAND``
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- ``INSTALL_COMMAND``
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- ``TEST_COMMAND``
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If using ``FetchContent_Populate()`` within CMake's script mode, be aware
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that the implementation sets up a sub-build which therefore requires a CMake
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generator and build tool to be available. If these cannot be found by
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default, then the :variable:`CMAKE_GENERATOR` and/or
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:variable:`CMAKE_MAKE_PROGRAM` variables will need to be set appropriately
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on the command line invoking the script.
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.. command:: FetchContent_GetProperties
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When using saved content details, a call to :command:`FetchContent_Populate`
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records information in global properties which can be queried at any time.
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This information includes the source and binary directories associated with
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the content and also whether or not the content population has been processed
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during the current configure run.
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.. code-block:: cmake
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FetchContent_GetProperties( <name>
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[SOURCE_DIR <srcDirVar>]
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[BINARY_DIR <binDirVar>]
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[POPULATED <doneVar>]
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)
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The ``SOURCE_DIR``, ``BINARY_DIR`` and ``POPULATED`` options can be used to
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specify which properties should be retrieved. Each option accepts a value
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which is the name of the variable in which to store that property. Most of
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the time though, only ``<name>`` is given, in which case the call will then
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set the same variables as a call to
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:command:`FetchContent_Populate(name) <FetchContent_Populate>`. This allows
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the following canonical pattern to be used, which ensures that the relevant
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variables will always be defined regardless of whether or not the population
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has been performed elsewhere in the project already:
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.. code-block:: cmake
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FetchContent_GetProperties(foobar)
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if(NOT foobar_POPULATED)
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FetchContent_Populate(foobar)
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...
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endif()
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The above pattern allows other parts of the overall project hierarchy to
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re-use the same content and ensure that it is only populated once.
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.. command:: FetchContent_MakeAvailable
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.. code-block:: cmake
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FetchContent_MakeAvailable( <name1> [<name2>...] )
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This command implements the common pattern typically needed for most
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dependencies. It iterates over each of the named dependencies in turn
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and for each one it loosely follows the same
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:ref:`canonical pattern <fetch-content-canonical-pattern>` as
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presented at the beginning of this section. One small difference to
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that pattern is that it will only call :command:`add_subdirectory` on the
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populated content if there is a ``CMakeLists.txt`` file in its top level
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source directory. This allows the command to be used for dependencies
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that make downloaded content available at a known location but which do
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not need or support being added directly to the build.
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.. _`fetch-content-examples`:
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Examples
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^^^^^^^^
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This first fairly straightforward example ensures that some popular testing
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frameworks are available to the main build:
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.. code-block:: cmake
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include(FetchContent)
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FetchContent_Declare(
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googletest
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GIT_REPOSITORY https://github.com/google/googletest.git
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GIT_TAG release-1.8.0
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)
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FetchContent_Declare(
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Catch2
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GIT_REPOSITORY https://github.com/catchorg/Catch2.git
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GIT_TAG v2.5.0
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)
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# After the following call, the CMake targets defined by googletest and
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# Catch2 will be defined and available to the rest of the build
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FetchContent_MakeAvailable(googletest Catch2)
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In more complex project hierarchies, the dependency relationships can be more
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complicated. Consider a hierarchy where ``projA`` is the top level project and
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it depends directly on projects ``projB`` and ``projC``. Both ``projB`` and
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``projC`` can be built standalone and they also both depend on another project
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``projD``. ``projB`` additionally depends on ``projE``. This example assumes
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that all five projects are available on a company git server. The
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``CMakeLists.txt`` of each project might have sections like the following:
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*projA*:
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.. code-block:: cmake
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include(FetchContent)
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FetchContent_Declare(
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projB
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GIT_REPOSITORY git@mycompany.com:git/projB.git
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GIT_TAG 4a89dc7e24ff212a7b5167bef7ab079d
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)
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|
FetchContent_Declare(
|
|
projC
|
|
GIT_REPOSITORY git@mycompany.com:git/projC.git
|
|
GIT_TAG 4ad4016bd1d8d5412d135cf8ceea1bb9
|
|
)
|
|
FetchContent_Declare(
|
|
projD
|
|
GIT_REPOSITORY git@mycompany.com:git/projD.git
|
|
GIT_TAG origin/integrationBranch
|
|
)
|
|
FetchContent_Declare(
|
|
projE
|
|
GIT_REPOSITORY git@mycompany.com:git/projE.git
|
|
GIT_TAG origin/release/2.3-rc1
|
|
)
|
|
|
|
# Order is important, see notes in the discussion further below
|
|
FetchContent_MakeAvailable(projD projB projC)
|
|
|
|
*projB*:
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: cmake
|
|
|
|
include(FetchContent)
|
|
FetchContent_Declare(
|
|
projD
|
|
GIT_REPOSITORY git@mycompany.com:git/projD.git
|
|
GIT_TAG 20b415f9034bbd2a2e8216e9a5c9e632
|
|
)
|
|
FetchContent_Declare(
|
|
projE
|
|
GIT_REPOSITORY git@mycompany.com:git/projE.git
|
|
GIT_TAG 68e20f674a48be38d60e129f600faf7d
|
|
)
|
|
|
|
FetchContent_MakeAvailable(projD projE)
|
|
|
|
*projC*:
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: cmake
|
|
|
|
include(FetchContent)
|
|
FetchContent_Declare(
|
|
projD
|
|
GIT_REPOSITORY git@mycompany.com:git/projD.git
|
|
GIT_TAG 7d9a17ad2c962aa13e2fbb8043fb6b8a
|
|
)
|
|
|
|
# This particular version of projD requires workarounds
|
|
FetchContent_GetProperties(projD)
|
|
if(NOT projd_POPULATED)
|
|
FetchContent_Populate(projD)
|
|
|
|
# Copy an additional/replacement file into the populated source
|
|
file(COPY someFile.c DESTINATION ${projd_SOURCE_DIR}/src)
|
|
|
|
add_subdirectory(${projd_SOURCE_DIR} ${projd_BINARY_DIR})
|
|
endif()
|
|
|
|
A few key points should be noted in the above:
|
|
|
|
- ``projB`` and ``projC`` define different content details for ``projD``,
|
|
but ``projA`` also defines a set of content details for ``projD``.
|
|
Because ``projA`` will define them first, the details from ``projB`` and
|
|
``projC`` will not be used. The override details defined by ``projA``
|
|
are not required to match either of those from ``projB`` or ``projC``, but
|
|
it is up to the higher level project to ensure that the details it does
|
|
define still make sense for the child projects.
|
|
- In the ``projA`` call to :command:`FetchContent_MakeAvailable`, ``projD``
|
|
is listed ahead of ``projB`` and ``projC`` to ensure that ``projA`` is in
|
|
control of how ``projD`` is populated.
|
|
- While ``projA`` defines content details for ``projE``, it does not need
|
|
to explicitly call ``FetchContent_MakeAvailable(projE)`` or
|
|
``FetchContent_Populate(projD)`` itself. Instead, it leaves that to the
|
|
child ``projB``. For higher level projects, it is often enough to just
|
|
define the override content details and leave the actual population to the
|
|
child projects. This saves repeating the same thing at each level of the
|
|
project hierarchy unnecessarily.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Projects don't always need to add the populated content to the build.
|
|
Sometimes the project just wants to make the downloaded content available at
|
|
a predictable location. The next example ensures that a set of standard
|
|
company toolchain files (and potentially even the toolchain binaries
|
|
themselves) is available early enough to be used for that same build.
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: cmake
|
|
|
|
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.14)
|
|
|
|
include(FetchContent)
|
|
FetchContent_Declare(
|
|
mycom_toolchains
|
|
URL https://intranet.mycompany.com//toolchains_1.3.2.tar.gz
|
|
)
|
|
FetchContent_MakeAvailable(mycom_toolchains)
|
|
|
|
project(CrossCompileExample)
|
|
|
|
The project could be configured to use one of the downloaded toolchains like
|
|
so:
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: shell
|
|
|
|
cmake -DCMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE=_deps/mycom_toolchains-src/toolchain_arm.cmake /path/to/src
|
|
|
|
When CMake processes the ``CMakeLists.txt`` file, it will download and unpack
|
|
the tarball into ``_deps/mycompany_toolchains-src`` relative to the build
|
|
directory. The :variable:`CMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE` variable is not used until
|
|
the :command:`project` command is reached, at which point CMake looks for the
|
|
named toolchain file relative to the build directory. Because the tarball has
|
|
already been downloaded and unpacked by then, the toolchain file will be in
|
|
place, even the very first time that ``cmake`` is run in the build directory.
|
|
|
|
Lastly, the following example demonstrates how one might download and unpack a
|
|
firmware tarball using CMake's :manual:`script mode <cmake(1)>`. The call to
|
|
:command:`FetchContent_Populate` specifies all the content details and the
|
|
unpacked firmware will be placed in a ``firmware`` directory below the
|
|
current working directory.
|
|
|
|
*getFirmware.cmake*:
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: cmake
|
|
|
|
# NOTE: Intended to be run in script mode with cmake -P
|
|
include(FetchContent)
|
|
FetchContent_Populate(
|
|
firmware
|
|
URL https://mycompany.com/assets/firmware-1.23-arm.tar.gz
|
|
URL_HASH MD5=68247684da89b608d466253762b0ff11
|
|
SOURCE_DIR firmware
|
|
)
|
|
|
|
#]=======================================================================]
|
|
|
|
#=======================================================================
|
|
# Recording and retrieving content details for later population
|
|
#=======================================================================
|
|
|
|
# Internal use, projects must not call this directly. It is
|
|
# intended for use by FetchContent_Declare() only.
|
|
#
|
|
# Sets a content-specific global property (not meant for use
|
|
# outside of functions defined here in this file) which can later
|
|
# be retrieved using __FetchContent_getSavedDetails() with just the
|
|
# same content name. If there is already a value stored in the
|
|
# property, it is left unchanged and this call has no effect.
|
|
# This allows parent projects to define the content details,
|
|
# overriding anything a child project may try to set (properties
|
|
# are not cached between runs, so the first thing to set it in a
|
|
# build will be in control).
|
|
function(__FetchContent_declareDetails contentName)
|
|
|
|
string(TOLOWER ${contentName} contentNameLower)
|
|
set(propertyName "_FetchContent_${contentNameLower}_savedDetails")
|
|
get_property(alreadyDefined GLOBAL PROPERTY ${propertyName} DEFINED)
|
|
if(NOT alreadyDefined)
|
|
define_property(GLOBAL PROPERTY ${propertyName}
|
|
BRIEF_DOCS "Internal implementation detail of FetchContent_Populate()"
|
|
FULL_DOCS "Details used by FetchContent_Populate() for ${contentName}"
|
|
)
|
|
set_property(GLOBAL PROPERTY ${propertyName} ${ARGN})
|
|
endif()
|
|
|
|
endfunction()
|
|
|
|
|
|
# Internal use, projects must not call this directly. It is
|
|
# intended for use by the FetchContent_Declare() function.
|
|
#
|
|
# Retrieves details saved for the specified content in an
|
|
# earlier call to __FetchContent_declareDetails().
|
|
function(__FetchContent_getSavedDetails contentName outVar)
|
|
|
|
string(TOLOWER ${contentName} contentNameLower)
|
|
set(propertyName "_FetchContent_${contentNameLower}_savedDetails")
|
|
get_property(alreadyDefined GLOBAL PROPERTY ${propertyName} DEFINED)
|
|
if(NOT alreadyDefined)
|
|
message(FATAL_ERROR "No content details recorded for ${contentName}")
|
|
endif()
|
|
get_property(propertyValue GLOBAL PROPERTY ${propertyName})
|
|
set(${outVar} "${propertyValue}" PARENT_SCOPE)
|
|
|
|
endfunction()
|
|
|
|
|
|
# Saves population details of the content, sets defaults for the
|
|
# SOURCE_DIR and BUILD_DIR.
|
|
function(FetchContent_Declare contentName)
|
|
|
|
set(options "")
|
|
set(oneValueArgs SVN_REPOSITORY)
|
|
set(multiValueArgs "")
|
|
|
|
cmake_parse_arguments(ARG "${options}" "${oneValueArgs}" "${multiValueArgs}" ${ARGN})
|
|
|
|
unset(srcDirSuffix)
|
|
unset(svnRepoArgs)
|
|
if(ARG_SVN_REPOSITORY)
|
|
# Add a hash of the svn repository URL to the source dir. This works
|
|
# around the problem where if the URL changes, the download would
|
|
# fail because it tries to checkout/update rather than switch the
|
|
# old URL to the new one. We limit the hash to the first 7 characters
|
|
# so that the source path doesn't get overly long (which can be a
|
|
# problem on windows due to path length limits).
|
|
string(SHA1 urlSHA ${ARG_SVN_REPOSITORY})
|
|
string(SUBSTRING ${urlSHA} 0 7 urlSHA)
|
|
set(srcDirSuffix "-${urlSHA}")
|
|
set(svnRepoArgs SVN_REPOSITORY ${ARG_SVN_REPOSITORY})
|
|
endif()
|
|
|
|
string(TOLOWER ${contentName} contentNameLower)
|
|
__FetchContent_declareDetails(
|
|
${contentNameLower}
|
|
SOURCE_DIR "${FETCHCONTENT_BASE_DIR}/${contentNameLower}-src${srcDirSuffix}"
|
|
BINARY_DIR "${FETCHCONTENT_BASE_DIR}/${contentNameLower}-build"
|
|
${svnRepoArgs}
|
|
# List these last so they can override things we set above
|
|
${ARG_UNPARSED_ARGUMENTS}
|
|
)
|
|
|
|
endfunction()
|
|
|
|
|
|
#=======================================================================
|
|
# Set/get whether the specified content has been populated yet.
|
|
# The setter also records the source and binary dirs used.
|
|
#=======================================================================
|
|
|
|
# Internal use, projects must not call this directly. It is
|
|
# intended for use by the FetchContent_Populate() function to
|
|
# record when FetchContent_Populate() is called for a particular
|
|
# content name.
|
|
function(__FetchContent_setPopulated contentName sourceDir binaryDir)
|
|
|
|
string(TOLOWER ${contentName} contentNameLower)
|
|
set(prefix "_FetchContent_${contentNameLower}")
|
|
|
|
set(propertyName "${prefix}_sourceDir")
|
|
define_property(GLOBAL PROPERTY ${propertyName}
|
|
BRIEF_DOCS "Internal implementation detail of FetchContent_Populate()"
|
|
FULL_DOCS "Details used by FetchContent_Populate() for ${contentName}"
|
|
)
|
|
set_property(GLOBAL PROPERTY ${propertyName} ${sourceDir})
|
|
|
|
set(propertyName "${prefix}_binaryDir")
|
|
define_property(GLOBAL PROPERTY ${propertyName}
|
|
BRIEF_DOCS "Internal implementation detail of FetchContent_Populate()"
|
|
FULL_DOCS "Details used by FetchContent_Populate() for ${contentName}"
|
|
)
|
|
set_property(GLOBAL PROPERTY ${propertyName} ${binaryDir})
|
|
|
|
set(propertyName "${prefix}_populated")
|
|
define_property(GLOBAL PROPERTY ${propertyName}
|
|
BRIEF_DOCS "Internal implementation detail of FetchContent_Populate()"
|
|
FULL_DOCS "Details used by FetchContent_Populate() for ${contentName}"
|
|
)
|
|
set_property(GLOBAL PROPERTY ${propertyName} True)
|
|
|
|
endfunction()
|
|
|
|
|
|
# Set variables in the calling scope for any of the retrievable
|
|
# properties. If no specific properties are requested, variables
|
|
# will be set for all retrievable properties.
|
|
#
|
|
# This function is intended to also be used by projects as the canonical
|
|
# way to detect whether they should call FetchContent_Populate()
|
|
# and pull the populated source into the build with add_subdirectory(),
|
|
# if they are using the populated content in that way.
|
|
function(FetchContent_GetProperties contentName)
|
|
|
|
string(TOLOWER ${contentName} contentNameLower)
|
|
|
|
set(options "")
|
|
set(oneValueArgs SOURCE_DIR BINARY_DIR POPULATED)
|
|
set(multiValueArgs "")
|
|
|
|
cmake_parse_arguments(ARG "${options}" "${oneValueArgs}" "${multiValueArgs}" ${ARGN})
|
|
|
|
if(NOT ARG_SOURCE_DIR AND
|
|
NOT ARG_BINARY_DIR AND
|
|
NOT ARG_POPULATED)
|
|
# No specific properties requested, provide them all
|
|
set(ARG_SOURCE_DIR ${contentNameLower}_SOURCE_DIR)
|
|
set(ARG_BINARY_DIR ${contentNameLower}_BINARY_DIR)
|
|
set(ARG_POPULATED ${contentNameLower}_POPULATED)
|
|
endif()
|
|
|
|
set(prefix "_FetchContent_${contentNameLower}")
|
|
|
|
if(ARG_SOURCE_DIR)
|
|
set(propertyName "${prefix}_sourceDir")
|
|
get_property(value GLOBAL PROPERTY ${propertyName})
|
|
if(value)
|
|
set(${ARG_SOURCE_DIR} ${value} PARENT_SCOPE)
|
|
endif()
|
|
endif()
|
|
|
|
if(ARG_BINARY_DIR)
|
|
set(propertyName "${prefix}_binaryDir")
|
|
get_property(value GLOBAL PROPERTY ${propertyName})
|
|
if(value)
|
|
set(${ARG_BINARY_DIR} ${value} PARENT_SCOPE)
|
|
endif()
|
|
endif()
|
|
|
|
if(ARG_POPULATED)
|
|
set(propertyName "${prefix}_populated")
|
|
get_property(value GLOBAL PROPERTY ${propertyName} DEFINED)
|
|
set(${ARG_POPULATED} ${value} PARENT_SCOPE)
|
|
endif()
|
|
|
|
endfunction()
|
|
|
|
|
|
#=======================================================================
|
|
# Performing the population
|
|
#=======================================================================
|
|
|
|
# The value of contentName will always have been lowercased by the caller.
|
|
# All other arguments are assumed to be options that are understood by
|
|
# ExternalProject_Add(), except for QUIET and SUBBUILD_DIR.
|
|
function(__FetchContent_directPopulate contentName)
|
|
|
|
set(options
|
|
QUIET
|
|
)
|
|
set(oneValueArgs
|
|
SUBBUILD_DIR
|
|
SOURCE_DIR
|
|
BINARY_DIR
|
|
# Prevent the following from being passed through
|
|
CONFIGURE_COMMAND
|
|
BUILD_COMMAND
|
|
INSTALL_COMMAND
|
|
TEST_COMMAND
|
|
# We force both of these to be ON since we are always executing serially
|
|
# and we want all steps to have access to the terminal in case they
|
|
# need input from the command line (e.g. ask for a private key password)
|
|
# or they want to provide timely progress. We silently absorb and
|
|
# discard these if they are set by the caller.
|
|
USES_TERMINAL_DOWNLOAD
|
|
USES_TERMINAL_UPDATE
|
|
)
|
|
set(multiValueArgs "")
|
|
|
|
cmake_parse_arguments(ARG "${options}" "${oneValueArgs}" "${multiValueArgs}" ${ARGN})
|
|
|
|
if(NOT ARG_SUBBUILD_DIR)
|
|
message(FATAL_ERROR "Internal error: SUBBUILD_DIR not set")
|
|
elseif(NOT IS_ABSOLUTE "${ARG_SUBBUILD_DIR}")
|
|
set(ARG_SUBBUILD_DIR "${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/${ARG_SUBBUILD_DIR}")
|
|
endif()
|
|
|
|
if(NOT ARG_SOURCE_DIR)
|
|
message(FATAL_ERROR "Internal error: SOURCE_DIR not set")
|
|
elseif(NOT IS_ABSOLUTE "${ARG_SOURCE_DIR}")
|
|
set(ARG_SOURCE_DIR "${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/${ARG_SOURCE_DIR}")
|
|
endif()
|
|
|
|
if(NOT ARG_BINARY_DIR)
|
|
message(FATAL_ERROR "Internal error: BINARY_DIR not set")
|
|
elseif(NOT IS_ABSOLUTE "${ARG_BINARY_DIR}")
|
|
set(ARG_BINARY_DIR "${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/${ARG_BINARY_DIR}")
|
|
endif()
|
|
|
|
# Ensure the caller can know where to find the source and build directories
|
|
# with some convenient variables. Doing this here ensures the caller sees
|
|
# the correct result in the case where the default values are overridden by
|
|
# the content details set by the project.
|
|
set(${contentName}_SOURCE_DIR "${ARG_SOURCE_DIR}" PARENT_SCOPE)
|
|
set(${contentName}_BINARY_DIR "${ARG_BINARY_DIR}" PARENT_SCOPE)
|
|
|
|
# The unparsed arguments may contain spaces, so build up ARG_EXTRA
|
|
# in such a way that it correctly substitutes into the generated
|
|
# CMakeLists.txt file with each argument quoted.
|
|
unset(ARG_EXTRA)
|
|
foreach(arg IN LISTS ARG_UNPARSED_ARGUMENTS)
|
|
set(ARG_EXTRA "${ARG_EXTRA} \"${arg}\"")
|
|
endforeach()
|
|
|
|
# Hide output if requested, but save it to a variable in case there's an
|
|
# error so we can show the output upon failure. When not quiet, don't
|
|
# capture the output to a variable because the user may want to see the
|
|
# output as it happens (e.g. progress during long downloads). Combine both
|
|
# stdout and stderr in the one capture variable so the output stays in order.
|
|
if (ARG_QUIET)
|
|
set(outputOptions
|
|
OUTPUT_VARIABLE capturedOutput
|
|
ERROR_VARIABLE capturedOutput
|
|
)
|
|
else()
|
|
set(capturedOutput)
|
|
set(outputOptions)
|
|
message(STATUS "Populating ${contentName}")
|
|
endif()
|
|
|
|
if(CMAKE_GENERATOR)
|
|
set(generatorOpts "-G${CMAKE_GENERATOR}")
|
|
if(CMAKE_GENERATOR_PLATFORM)
|
|
list(APPEND generatorOpts "-A${CMAKE_GENERATOR_PLATFORM}")
|
|
endif()
|
|
if(CMAKE_GENERATOR_TOOLSET)
|
|
list(APPEND generatorOpts "-T${CMAKE_GENERATOR_TOOLSET}")
|
|
endif()
|
|
|
|
if(CMAKE_MAKE_PROGRAM)
|
|
list(APPEND generatorOpts "-DCMAKE_MAKE_PROGRAM:FILEPATH=${CMAKE_MAKE_PROGRAM}")
|
|
endif()
|
|
|
|
else()
|
|
# Likely we've been invoked via CMake's script mode where no
|
|
# generator is set (and hence CMAKE_MAKE_PROGRAM could not be
|
|
# trusted even if provided). We will have to rely on being
|
|
# able to find the default generator and build tool.
|
|
unset(generatorOpts)
|
|
endif()
|
|
|
|
# Create and build a separate CMake project to carry out the population.
|
|
# If we've already previously done these steps, they will not cause
|
|
# anything to be updated, so extra rebuilds of the project won't occur.
|
|
# Make sure to pass through CMAKE_MAKE_PROGRAM in case the main project
|
|
# has this set to something not findable on the PATH.
|
|
configure_file("${CMAKE_CURRENT_FUNCTION_LIST_DIR}/FetchContent/CMakeLists.cmake.in"
|
|
"${ARG_SUBBUILD_DIR}/CMakeLists.txt")
|
|
execute_process(
|
|
COMMAND ${CMAKE_COMMAND} ${generatorOpts} .
|
|
RESULT_VARIABLE result
|
|
${outputOptions}
|
|
WORKING_DIRECTORY "${ARG_SUBBUILD_DIR}"
|
|
)
|
|
if(result)
|
|
if(capturedOutput)
|
|
message("${capturedOutput}")
|
|
endif()
|
|
message(FATAL_ERROR "CMake step for ${contentName} failed: ${result}")
|
|
endif()
|
|
execute_process(
|
|
COMMAND ${CMAKE_COMMAND} --build .
|
|
RESULT_VARIABLE result
|
|
${outputOptions}
|
|
WORKING_DIRECTORY "${ARG_SUBBUILD_DIR}"
|
|
)
|
|
if(result)
|
|
if(capturedOutput)
|
|
message("${capturedOutput}")
|
|
endif()
|
|
message(FATAL_ERROR "Build step for ${contentName} failed: ${result}")
|
|
endif()
|
|
|
|
endfunction()
|
|
|
|
|
|
option(FETCHCONTENT_FULLY_DISCONNECTED "Disables all attempts to download or update content and assumes source dirs already exist")
|
|
option(FETCHCONTENT_UPDATES_DISCONNECTED "Enables UPDATE_DISCONNECTED behavior for all content population")
|
|
option(FETCHCONTENT_QUIET "Enables QUIET option for all content population" ON)
|
|
set(FETCHCONTENT_BASE_DIR "${CMAKE_BINARY_DIR}/_deps" CACHE PATH "Directory under which to collect all populated content")
|
|
|
|
# Populate the specified content using details stored from
|
|
# an earlier call to FetchContent_Declare().
|
|
function(FetchContent_Populate contentName)
|
|
|
|
if(NOT contentName)
|
|
message(FATAL_ERROR "Empty contentName not allowed for FetchContent_Populate()")
|
|
endif()
|
|
|
|
string(TOLOWER ${contentName} contentNameLower)
|
|
|
|
if(ARGN)
|
|
# This is the direct population form with details fully specified
|
|
# as part of the call, so we already have everything we need
|
|
__FetchContent_directPopulate(
|
|
${contentNameLower}
|
|
SUBBUILD_DIR "${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/${contentNameLower}-subbuild"
|
|
SOURCE_DIR "${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/${contentNameLower}-src"
|
|
BINARY_DIR "${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/${contentNameLower}-build"
|
|
${ARGN} # Could override any of the above ..._DIR variables
|
|
)
|
|
|
|
# Pass source and binary dir variables back to the caller
|
|
set(${contentNameLower}_SOURCE_DIR "${${contentNameLower}_SOURCE_DIR}" PARENT_SCOPE)
|
|
set(${contentNameLower}_BINARY_DIR "${${contentNameLower}_BINARY_DIR}" PARENT_SCOPE)
|
|
|
|
# Don't set global properties, or record that we did this population, since
|
|
# this was a direct call outside of the normal declared details form.
|
|
# We only want to save values in the global properties for content that
|
|
# honours the hierarchical details mechanism so that projects are not
|
|
# robbed of the ability to override details set in nested projects.
|
|
return()
|
|
endif()
|
|
|
|
# No details provided, so assume they were saved from an earlier call
|
|
# to FetchContent_Declare(). Do a check that we haven't already
|
|
# populated this content before in case the caller forgot to check.
|
|
FetchContent_GetProperties(${contentName})
|
|
if(${contentNameLower}_POPULATED)
|
|
message(FATAL_ERROR "Content ${contentName} already populated in ${${contentNameLower}_SOURCE_DIR}")
|
|
endif()
|
|
|
|
string(TOUPPER ${contentName} contentNameUpper)
|
|
set(FETCHCONTENT_SOURCE_DIR_${contentNameUpper}
|
|
"${FETCHCONTENT_SOURCE_DIR_${contentNameUpper}}"
|
|
CACHE PATH "When not empty, overrides where to find pre-populated content for ${contentName}")
|
|
|
|
if(FETCHCONTENT_SOURCE_DIR_${contentNameUpper})
|
|
# The source directory has been explicitly provided in the cache,
|
|
# so no population is required
|
|
set(${contentNameLower}_SOURCE_DIR "${FETCHCONTENT_SOURCE_DIR_${contentNameUpper}}")
|
|
set(${contentNameLower}_BINARY_DIR "${FETCHCONTENT_BASE_DIR}/${contentNameLower}-build")
|
|
|
|
elseif(FETCHCONTENT_FULLY_DISCONNECTED)
|
|
# Bypass population and assume source is already there from a previous run
|
|
set(${contentNameLower}_SOURCE_DIR "${FETCHCONTENT_BASE_DIR}/${contentNameLower}-src")
|
|
set(${contentNameLower}_BINARY_DIR "${FETCHCONTENT_BASE_DIR}/${contentNameLower}-build")
|
|
|
|
else()
|
|
# Support both a global "disconnect all updates" and a per-content
|
|
# update test (either one being set disables updates for this content).
|
|
option(FETCHCONTENT_UPDATES_DISCONNECTED_${contentNameUpper}
|
|
"Enables UPDATE_DISCONNECTED behavior just for population of ${contentName}")
|
|
if(FETCHCONTENT_UPDATES_DISCONNECTED OR
|
|
FETCHCONTENT_UPDATES_DISCONNECTED_${contentNameUpper})
|
|
set(disconnectUpdates True)
|
|
else()
|
|
set(disconnectUpdates False)
|
|
endif()
|
|
|
|
if(FETCHCONTENT_QUIET)
|
|
set(quietFlag QUIET)
|
|
else()
|
|
unset(quietFlag)
|
|
endif()
|
|
|
|
__FetchContent_getSavedDetails(${contentName} contentDetails)
|
|
if("${contentDetails}" STREQUAL "")
|
|
message(FATAL_ERROR "No details have been set for content: ${contentName}")
|
|
endif()
|
|
|
|
__FetchContent_directPopulate(
|
|
${contentNameLower}
|
|
${quietFlag}
|
|
UPDATE_DISCONNECTED ${disconnectUpdates}
|
|
SUBBUILD_DIR "${FETCHCONTENT_BASE_DIR}/${contentNameLower}-subbuild"
|
|
SOURCE_DIR "${FETCHCONTENT_BASE_DIR}/${contentNameLower}-src"
|
|
BINARY_DIR "${FETCHCONTENT_BASE_DIR}/${contentNameLower}-build"
|
|
# Put the saved details last so they can override any of the
|
|
# the options we set above (this can include SOURCE_DIR or
|
|
# BUILD_DIR)
|
|
${contentDetails}
|
|
)
|
|
endif()
|
|
|
|
__FetchContent_setPopulated(
|
|
${contentName}
|
|
${${contentNameLower}_SOURCE_DIR}
|
|
${${contentNameLower}_BINARY_DIR}
|
|
)
|
|
|
|
# Pass variables back to the caller. The variables passed back here
|
|
# must match what FetchContent_GetProperties() sets when it is called
|
|
# with just the content name.
|
|
set(${contentNameLower}_SOURCE_DIR "${${contentNameLower}_SOURCE_DIR}" PARENT_SCOPE)
|
|
set(${contentNameLower}_BINARY_DIR "${${contentNameLower}_BINARY_DIR}" PARENT_SCOPE)
|
|
set(${contentNameLower}_POPULATED True PARENT_SCOPE)
|
|
|
|
endfunction()
|
|
|
|
# Arguments are assumed to be the names of dependencies that have been
|
|
# declared previously and should be populated. It is not an error if
|
|
# any of them have already been populated (they will just be skipped in
|
|
# that case). The command is implemented as a macro so that the variables
|
|
# defined by the FetchContent_GetProperties() and FetchContent_Populate()
|
|
# calls will be available to the caller.
|
|
macro(FetchContent_MakeAvailable)
|
|
|
|
foreach(contentName IN ITEMS ${ARGV})
|
|
string(TOLOWER ${contentName} contentNameLower)
|
|
FetchContent_GetProperties(${contentName})
|
|
if(NOT ${contentNameLower}_POPULATED)
|
|
FetchContent_Populate(${contentName})
|
|
|
|
# Only try to call add_subdirectory() if the populated content
|
|
# can be treated that way. Protecting the call with the check
|
|
# allows this function to be used for projects that just want
|
|
# to ensure the content exists, such as to provide content at
|
|
# a known location.
|
|
if(EXISTS ${${contentNameLower}_SOURCE_DIR}/CMakeLists.txt)
|
|
add_subdirectory(${${contentNameLower}_SOURCE_DIR}
|
|
${${contentNameLower}_BINARY_DIR})
|
|
endif()
|
|
endif()
|
|
endforeach()
|
|
|
|
endmacro()
|