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CMAKE(1) CMake CMAKE(1)
NAME
cmake - CMake Command-Line Reference
SYNOPSIS
Generate a Project Buildsystem
cmake [<options>] <path-to-source | path-to-existing-build>
cmake [<options>] -S <path-to-source> -B <path-to-build>
Build a Project
cmake --build <dir> [<options>] [-- <build-tool-options>]
Install a Project
cmake --install <dir> [<options>]
Open a Project
cmake --open <dir>
Run a Script
cmake [-D <var>=<value>]... -P <cmake-script-file>
Run a Command-Line Tool
cmake -E <command> [<options>]
Run the Find-Package Tool
cmake --find-package [<options>]
Run a Workflow Preset
cmake --workflow [<options>]
View Help
cmake --help[-<topic>]
DESCRIPTION
The cmake executable is the command-line interface of the
cross-platform buildsystem generator CMake. The above Synopsis lists
various actions the tool can perform as described in sections below.
To build a software project with CMake, Generate a Project Buildsystem.
Optionally use cmake to Build a Project, Install a Project or just run
the corresponding build tool (e.g. make) directly. cmake can also be
used to View Help.
The other actions are meant for use by software developers writing
scripts in the CMake language to support their builds.
For graphical user interfaces that may be used in place of cmake, see
ccmake and cmake-gui. For command-line interfaces to the CMake testing
and packaging facilities, see ctest and cpack.
For more information on CMake at large, see also the links at the end
of this manual.
INTRODUCTION TO CMAKE BUILDSYSTEMS
A buildsystem describes how to build a project's executables and
libraries from its source code using a build tool to automate the
process. For example, a buildsystem may be a Makefile for use with a
command-line make tool or a project file for an Integrated Development
Environment (IDE). In order to avoid maintaining multiple such
buildsystems, a project may specify its buildsystem abstractly using
files written in the CMake language. From these files CMake generates
a preferred buildsystem locally for each user through a backend called
a generator.
To generate a buildsystem with CMake, the following must be selected:
Source Tree
The top-level directory containing source files provided by the
project. The project specifies its buildsystem using files as
described in the cmake-language(7) manual, starting with a
top-level file named CMakeLists.txt. These files specify build
targets and their dependencies as described in the
cmake-buildsystem(7) manual.
Build Tree
The top-level directory in which buildsystem files and build
output artifacts (e.g. executables and libraries) are to be
stored. CMake will write a CMakeCache.txt file to identify the
directory as a build tree and store persistent information such
as buildsystem configuration options.
To maintain a pristine source tree, perform an out-of-source
build by using a separate dedicated build tree. An in-source
build in which the build tree is placed in the same directory as
the source tree is also supported, but discouraged.
Generator
This chooses the kind of buildsystem to generate. See the
cmake-generators(7) manual for documentation of all generators.
Run cmake --help to see a list of generators available locally.
Optionally use the -G option below to specify a generator, or
simply accept the default CMake chooses for the current
platform.
When using one of the Command-Line Build Tool Generators CMake
expects that the environment needed by the compiler toolchain is
already configured in the shell. When using one of the IDE
Build Tool Generators, no particular environment is needed.
GENERATE A PROJECT BUILDSYSTEM
Run CMake with one of the following command signatures to specify the
source and build trees and generate a buildsystem:
cmake [<options>] <path-to-source>
Uses the current working directory as the build tree, and
<path-to-source> as the source tree. The specified path may be
absolute or relative to the current working directory. The
source tree must contain a CMakeLists.txt file and must not
contain a CMakeCache.txt file because the latter identifies an
existing build tree. For example:
$ mkdir build ; cd build
$ cmake ../src
cmake [<options>] <path-to-existing-build>
Uses <path-to-existing-build> as the build tree, and loads the
path to the source tree from its CMakeCache.txt file, which must
have already been generated by a previous run of CMake. The
specified path may be absolute or relative to the current
working directory. For example:
$ cd build
$ cmake .
cmake [<options>] -S <path-to-source> -B <path-to-build>
New in version 3.13.
Uses <path-to-build> as the build tree and <path-to-source> as the
source tree. The specified paths may be absolute or relative to the
current working directory. The source tree must contain a
CMakeLists.txt file. The build tree will be created automatically
if it does not already exist. For example:
$ cmake -S src -B build
In all cases the <options> may be zero or more of the Options below.
The above styles for specifying the source and build trees may be
mixed. Paths specified with -S or -B are always classified as source
or build trees, respectively. Paths specified with plain arguments are
classified based on their content and the types of paths given earlier.
If only one type of path is given, the current working directory (cwd)
is used for the other. For example:
+-------------------+------------+-----------+
|Command Line | Source Dir | Build Dir |
+-------------------+------------+-----------+
|cmake src | src | cwd |
+-------------------+------------+-----------+
|cmake build | loaded | build |
|(existing) | | |
+-------------------+------------+-----------+
|cmake -S src | src | cwd |
+-------------------+------------+-----------+
|cmake -S src build | src | build |
+-------------------+------------+-----------+
|cmake -S src -B | src | build |
|build | | |
+-------------------+------------+-----------+
|cmake -B build | cwd | build |
+-------------------+------------+-----------+
|cmake -B build src | src | build |
+-------------------+------------+-----------+
|cmake -B build -S | src | build |
|src | | |
+-------------------+------------+-----------+
Changed in version 3.23: CMake warns when multiple source paths are
specified. This has never been officially documented or supported, but
older versions accidentally accepted multiple source paths and used the
last path specified. Avoid passing multiple source path arguments.
After generating a buildsystem one may use the corresponding native
build tool to build the project. For example, after using the Unix
Makefiles generator one may run make directly:
$ make
$ make install
Alternatively, one may use cmake to Build a Project by automatically
choosing and invoking the appropriate native build tool.
Options
-S <path-to-source>
Path to root directory of the CMake project to build.
-B <path-to-build>
Path to directory which CMake will use as the root of build
directory.
If the directory doesn't already exist CMake will make it.
-C <initial-cache>
Pre-load a script to populate the cache.
When CMake is first run in an empty build tree, it creates a
CMakeCache.txt file and populates it with customizable settings
for the project. This option may be used to specify a file from
which to load cache entries before the first pass through the
project's CMake listfiles. The loaded entries take priority
over the project's default values. The given file should be a
CMake script containing set() commands that use the CACHE
option, not a cache-format file.
References to CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR and CMAKE_BINARY_DIR within the
script evaluate to the top-level source and build tree.
-D <var>:<type>=<value>, -D <var>=<value>
Create or update a CMake CACHE entry.
When CMake is first run in an empty build tree, it creates a
CMakeCache.txt file and populates it with customizable settings
for the project. This option may be used to specify a setting
that takes priority over the project's default value. The
option may be repeated for as many CACHE entries as desired.
If the :<type> portion is given it must be one of the types
specified by the set() command documentation for its CACHE
signature. If the :<type> portion is omitted the entry will be
created with no type if it does not exist with a type already.
If a command in the project sets the type to PATH or FILEPATH
then the <value> will be converted to an absolute path.
This option may also be given as a single argument:
-D<var>:<type>=<value> or -D<var>=<value>.
It's important to note that the order of -C and -D arguments is
significant. They will be carried out in the order they are
listed, with the last argument taking precedence over the
previous ones. For example, if you specify
-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug, followed by a -C argument with a file
that calls:
set(CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE "Release" CACHE STRING "" FORCE)
then the -C argument will take precedence, and CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE
will be set to Release. However, if the -D argument comes after
the -C argument, it will be set to Debug.
If a set(... CACHE ...) call in the -C file does not use FORCE,
and a -D argument sets the same variable, the -D argument will
take precedence regardless of order because of the nature of
non-FORCE set(... CACHE ...) calls.
-U <globbing_expr>
Remove matching entries from CMake CACHE.
This option may be used to remove one or more variables from the
CMakeCache.txt file, globbing expressions using * and ? are
supported. The option may be repeated for as many CACHE entries
as desired.
Use with care, you can make your CMakeCache.txt non-working.
-G <generator-name>
Specify a build system generator.
CMake may support multiple native build systems on certain
platforms. A generator is responsible for generating a
particular build system. Possible generator names are specified
in the cmake-generators(7) manual.
If not specified, CMake checks the CMAKE_GENERATOR environment
variable and otherwise falls back to a builtin default
selection.
-T <toolset-spec>
Toolset specification for the generator, if supported.
Some CMake generators support a toolset specification to tell
the native build system how to choose a compiler. See the
CMAKE_GENERATOR_TOOLSET variable for details.
-A <platform-name>
Specify platform name if supported by generator.
Some CMake generators support a platform name to be given to the
native build system to choose a compiler or SDK. See the
CMAKE_GENERATOR_PLATFORM variable for details.
--toolchain <path-to-file>
Specify the cross compiling toolchain file, equivalent to
setting CMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE variable.
--install-prefix <directory>
Specify the installation directory, used by the
CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX variable. Must be an absolute path.
-Wno-dev
Suppress developer warnings.
Suppress warnings that are meant for the author of the
CMakeLists.txt files. By default this will also turn off
deprecation warnings.
-Wdev Enable developer warnings.
Enable warnings that are meant for the author of the
CMakeLists.txt files. By default this will also turn on
deprecation warnings.
-Wdeprecated
Enable deprecated functionality warnings.
Enable warnings for usage of deprecated functionality, that are
meant for the author of the CMakeLists.txt files.
-Wno-deprecated
Suppress deprecated functionality warnings.
Suppress warnings for usage of deprecated functionality, that
are meant for the author of the CMakeLists.txt files.
-Werror=<what>
Treat CMake warnings as errors. <what> must be one of the
following:
dev Make developer warnings errors.
Make warnings that are meant for the author of the
CMakeLists.txt files errors. By default this will also
turn on deprecated warnings as errors.
deprecated
Make deprecated macro and function warnings errors.
Make warnings for usage of deprecated macros and
functions, that are meant for the author of the
CMakeLists.txt files, errors.
-Wno-error=<what>
Do not treat CMake warnings as errors. <what> must be one of the
following:
dev Make warnings that are meant for the author of the
CMakeLists.txt files not errors. By default this will
also turn off deprecated warnings as errors.
deprecated
Make warnings for usage of deprecated macros and
functions, that are meant for the author of the
CMakeLists.txt files, not errors.
--fresh
New in version 3.24.
Perform a fresh configuration of the build tree. This removes
any existing CMakeCache.txt file and associated CMakeFiles/
directory, and recreates them from scratch.
-L[A][H]
List non-advanced cached variables.
List CACHE variables will run CMake and list all the variables
from the CMake CACHE that are not marked as INTERNAL or
ADVANCED. This will effectively display current CMake settings,
which can then be changed with -D option. Changing some of the
variables may result in more variables being created. If A is
specified, then it will display also advanced variables. If H
is specified, it will also display help for each variable.
-N View mode only.
Only load the cache. Do not actually run configure and generate
steps.
--graphviz=<file>
Generate graphviz of dependencies, see CMakeGraphVizOptions for
more.
Generate a graphviz input file that will contain all the library
and executable dependencies in the project. See the
documentation for CMakeGraphVizOptions for more details.
--system-information [file]
Dump information about this system.
Dump a wide range of information about the current system. If
run from the top of a binary tree for a CMake project it will
dump additional information such as the cache, log files etc.
--log-level=<level>
Set the log <level>.
The message() command will only output messages of the specified
log level or higher. The valid log levels are ERROR, WARNING,
NOTICE, STATUS (default), VERBOSE, DEBUG, or TRACE.
To make a log level persist between CMake runs, set
CMAKE_MESSAGE_LOG_LEVEL as a cache variable instead. If both
the command line option and the variable are given, the command
line option takes precedence.
For backward compatibility reasons, --loglevel is also accepted
as a synonym for this option.
New in version 3.25: See the cmake_language() command for a way
to query the current message logging level.
--log-context
Enable the message() command outputting context attached to each
message.
This option turns on showing context for the current CMake run
only. To make showing the context persistent for all subsequent
CMake runs, set CMAKE_MESSAGE_CONTEXT_SHOW as a cache variable
instead. When this command line option is given,
CMAKE_MESSAGE_CONTEXT_SHOW is ignored.
--debug-trycompile
Do not delete the files and directories created for
try_compile() / try_run() calls. This is useful in debugging
failed checks.
Note that some uses of try_compile() may use the same build
tree, which will limit the usefulness of this option if a
project executes more than one try_compile(). For example, such
uses may change results as artifacts from a previous try-compile
may cause a different test to either pass or fail incorrectly.
This option is best used only when debugging.
(With respect to the preceding, the try_run() command is
effectively a try_compile(). Any combination of the two is
subject to the potential issues described.)
New in version 3.25: When this option is enabled, every
try-compile check prints a log message reporting the directory
in which the check is performed.
--debug-output
Put cmake in a debug mode.
Print extra information during the cmake run like stack traces
with message(SEND_ERROR) calls.
--debug-find
Put cmake find commands in a debug mode.
Print extra find call information during the cmake run to
standard error. Output is designed for human consumption and not
for parsing. See also the CMAKE_FIND_DEBUG_MODE variable for
debugging a more local part of the project.
--debug-find-pkg=<pkg>[,...]
Put cmake find commands in a debug mode when running under calls
to find_package(<pkg>), where <pkg> is an entry in the given
comma-separated list of case-sensitive package names.
Like --debug-find, but limiting scope to the specified packages.
--debug-find-var=<var>[,...]
Put cmake find commands in a debug mode when called with <var>
as the result variable, where <var> is an entry in the given
comma-separated list.
Like --debug-find, but limiting scope to the specified variable
names.
--trace
Put cmake in trace mode.
Print a trace of all calls made and from where.
--trace-expand
Put cmake in trace mode.
Like --trace, but with variables expanded.
--trace-format=<format>
Put cmake in trace mode and sets the trace output format.
<format> can be one of the following values.
human Prints each trace line in a human-readable format.
This is the default format.
json-v1
Prints each line as a separate JSON document. Each
document is separated by a newline ( \n ). It is
guaranteed that no newline characters will be present
inside a JSON document.
JSON trace format
{
"file": "/full/path/to/the/CMake/file.txt",
"line": 0,
"cmd": "add_executable",
"args": ["foo", "bar"],
"time": 1579512535.9687231,
"frame": 2,
"global_frame": 4
}
The members are:
file The full path to the CMake source file where
the function was called.
line The line in file where the function call
begins.
line_end
If the function call spans multiple lines, this
field will be set to the line where the
function call ends. If the function calls spans
a single line, this field will be unset. This
field was added in minor version 2 of the
json-v1 format.
defer Optional member that is present when the
function call was deferred by
cmake_language(DEFER). If present, its value
is a string containing the deferred call <id>.
cmd The name of the function that was called.
args A string list of all function parameters.
time Timestamp (seconds since epoch) of the function
call.
frame Stack frame depth of the function that was
called, within the context of the
CMakeLists.txt being processed currently.
global_frame
Stack frame depth of the function that was
called, tracked globally across all
CMakeLists.txt files involved in the trace.
This field was added in minor version 2 of the
json-v1 format.
Additionally, the first JSON document outputted
contains the version key for the current major and
minor version of the
JSON version format
{
"version": {
"major": 1,
"minor": 2
}
}
The members are:
version
Indicates the version of the JSON format. The
version has a major and minor components
following semantic version conventions.
--trace-source=<file>
Put cmake in trace mode, but output only lines of a specified
file.
Multiple options are allowed.
--trace-redirect=<file>
Put cmake in trace mode and redirect trace output to a file
instead of stderr.
--warn-uninitialized
Warn about uninitialized values.
Print a warning when an uninitialized variable is used.
--warn-unused-vars
Does nothing. In CMake versions 3.2 and below this enabled
warnings about unused variables. In CMake versions 3.3 through
3.18 the option was broken. In CMake 3.19 and above the option
has been removed.
--no-warn-unused-cli
Don't warn about command line options.
Don't find variables that are declared on the command line, but
not used.
--check-system-vars
Find problems with variable usage in system files.
Normally, unused and uninitialized variables are searched for
only in CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR and CMAKE_BINARY_DIR. This flag tells
CMake to warn about other files as well.
--compile-no-warning-as-error
Ignore target property COMPILE_WARNING_AS_ERROR and variable
CMAKE_COMPILE_WARNING_AS_ERROR, preventing warnings from being
treated as errors on compile.
--profiling-output=<path>
Used in conjunction with --profiling-format to output to a given
path.
--profiling-format=<file>
Enable the output of profiling data of CMake script in the given
format.
This can aid performance analysis of CMake scripts executed.
Third party applications should be used to process the output
into human readable format.
Currently supported values are: google-trace Outputs in Google
Trace Format, which can be parsed by the about:tracing tab of
Google Chrome or using a plugin for a tool like Trace Compass.
--preset <preset>, --preset=<preset>
Reads a preset from <path-to-source>/CMakePresets.json and
<path-to-source>/CMakeUserPresets.json. The preset may specify
the generator and the build directory, and a list of variables
and other arguments to pass to CMake. The current working
directory must contain CMake preset files. The CMake GUI can
also recognize CMakePresets.json and CMakeUserPresets.json
files. For full details on these files, see cmake-presets(7).
The presets are read before all other command line options. The
options specified by the preset (variables, generator, etc.) can
all be overridden by manually specifying them on the command
line. For example, if the preset sets a variable called MYVAR to
1, but the user sets it to 2 with a -D argument, the value 2 is
preferred.
--list-presets[=<type>]
Lists the available presets of the specified <type>. Valid
values for <type> are configure, build, test, package, or all.
If <type> is omitted, configure is assumed. The current working
directory must contain CMake preset files.
BUILD A PROJECT
CMake provides a command-line signature to build an already-generated
project binary tree:
cmake --build <dir> [<options>] [-- <build-tool-options>]
cmake --build --preset <preset> [<options>] [-- <build-tool-options>]
This abstracts a native build tool's command-line interface with the
following options:
--build <dir>
Project binary directory to be built. This is required (unless
a preset is specified) and must be first.
--preset <preset>, --preset=<preset>
Use a build preset to specify build options. The project binary
directory is inferred from the configurePreset key. The current
working directory must contain CMake preset files. See preset
for more details.
--list-presets
Lists the available build presets. The current working directory
must contain CMake preset files.
-j [<jobs>], --parallel [<jobs>]
New in version 3.12.
The maximum number of concurrent processes to use when building.
If <jobs> is omitted the native build tool's default number is
used.
The CMAKE_BUILD_PARALLEL_LEVEL environment variable, if set,
specifies a default parallel level when this option is not
given.
Some native build tools always build in parallel. The use of
<jobs> value of 1 can be used to limit to a single job.
-t <tgt>..., --target <tgt>...
Build <tgt> instead of the default target. Multiple targets may
be given, separated by spaces.
--config <cfg>
For multi-configuration tools, choose configuration <cfg>.
--clean-first
Build target clean first, then build. (To clean only, use
--target clean.)
--resolve-package-references=<value>
New in version 3.23.
Resolve remote package references from external package managers
(e.g. NuGet) before build. When <value> is set to on (default),
packages will be restored before building a target. When
<value> is set to only, the packages will be restored, but no
build will be performed. When <value> is set to off, no
packages will be restored.
If the target does not define any package references, this
option does nothing.
This setting can be specified in a build preset (using
resolvePackageReferences). The preset setting will be ignored,
if this command line option is specified.
If no command line parameter or preset option are provided, an
environment- specific cache variable will be evaluated to
decide, if package restoration should be performed.
When using the Visual Studio generator, package references are
defined using the VS_PACKAGE_REFERENCES property. Package
references are restored using NuGet. It can be disabled by
setting the CMAKE_VS_NUGET_PACKAGE_RESTORE variable to OFF.
--use-stderr
Ignored. Behavior is default in CMake >= 3.0.
-v, --verbose
Enable verbose output - if supported - including the build
commands to be executed.
This option can be omitted if VERBOSE environment variable or
CMAKE_VERBOSE_MAKEFILE cached variable is set.
-- Pass remaining options to the native tool.
Run cmake --build with no options for quick help.
INSTALL A PROJECT
CMake provides a command-line signature to install an already-generated
project binary tree:
cmake --install <dir> [<options>]
This may be used after building a project to run installation without
using the generated build system or the native build tool. The options
are:
--install <dir>
Project binary directory to install. This is required and must
be first.
--config <cfg>
For multi-configuration generators, choose configuration <cfg>.
--component <comp>
Component-based install. Only install component <comp>.
--default-directory-permissions <permissions>
Default directory install permissions. Permissions in format
<u=rwx,g=rx,o=rx>.
--prefix <prefix>
Override the installation prefix, CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX.
--strip
Strip before installing.
-v, --verbose
Enable verbose output.
This option can be omitted if VERBOSE environment variable is
set.
Run cmake --install with no options for quick help.
OPEN A PROJECT
cmake --open <dir>
Open the generated project in the associated application. This is only
supported by some generators.
RUN A SCRIPT
cmake [-D <var>=<value>]... -P <cmake-script-file> [-- <unparsed-options>...]
-D <var>=<value>
Define a variable for script mode.
-P <cmake-script-file>
Process the given cmake file as a script written in the CMake
language. No configure or generate step is performed and the
cache is not modified. If variables are defined using -D, this
must be done before the -P argument.
Any options after -- are not parsed by CMake, but they are still
included in the set of CMAKE_ARGV<n> variables passed to the script
(including the -- itself).
RUN A COMMAND-LINE TOOL
CMake provides builtin command-line tools through the signature
cmake -E <command> [<options>]
-E [help]
Run cmake -E or cmake -E help for a summary of commands.
Available commands are:
capabilities
New in version 3.7.
Report cmake capabilities in JSON format. The output is a JSON
object with the following keys:
version
A JSON object with version information. Keys are:
string The full version string as displayed by cmake
--version.
major The major version number in integer form.
minor The minor version number in integer form.
patch The patch level in integer form.
suffix The cmake version suffix string.
isDirty
A bool that is set if the cmake build is from a
dirty tree.
generators
A list available generators. Each generator is a JSON
object with the following keys:
name A string containing the name of the generator.
toolsetSupport
true if the generator supports toolsets and false
otherwise.
platformSupport
true if the generator supports platforms and false
otherwise.
supportedPlatforms
New in version 3.21.
Optional member that may be present when the
generator supports platform specification via
CMAKE_GENERATOR_PLATFORM (-A ...). The value is a
list of platforms known to be supported.
extraGenerators
A list of strings with all the extra generators
compatible with the generator.
fileApi
Optional member that is present when the
cmake-file-api(7) is available. The value is a JSON
object with one member:
requests
A JSON array containing zero or more supported
file-api requests. Each request is a JSON object
with members:
kind Specifies one of the supported Object
Kinds.
version
A JSON array whose elements are each a JSON
object containing major and minor members
specifying non-negative integer version
components.
serverMode
true if cmake supports server-mode and false otherwise.
Always false since CMake 3.20.
tls New in version 3.25.
true if TLS support is enabled and false otherwise.
cat [--] <files>...
New in version 3.18.
Concatenate files and print on the standard output.
-- New in version 3.24.
Added support for the double dash argument --. This basic
implementation of cat does not support any options, so
using a option starting with - will result in an error.
Use -- to indicate the end of options, in case a file
starts with -.
chdir <dir> <cmd> [<arg>...]
Change the current working directory and run a command.
compare_files [--ignore-eol] <file1> <file2>
Check if <file1> is same as <file2>. If files are the same, then
returns 0, if not it returns 1. In case of invalid arguments,
it returns 2.
--ignore-eol
New in version 3.14.
The option implies line-wise comparison and ignores
LF/CRLF differences.
copy <file>... <destination>, copy -t <destination> <file>...
Copy files to <destination> (either file or directory). If
multiple files are specified, or if -t is specified, the
<destination> must be directory and it must exist. If -t is not
specified, the last argument is assumed to be the <destination>.
Wildcards are not supported. copy does follow symlinks. That
means it does not copy symlinks, but the files or directories it
point to.
New in version 3.5: Support for multiple input files.
New in version 3.26: Support for -t argument.
copy_directory <dir>... <destination>
Copy content of <dir>... directories to <destination> directory.
If <destination> directory does not exist it will be created.
copy_directory does follow symlinks.
New in version 3.5: Support for multiple input directories.
New in version 3.15: The command now fails when the source
directory does not exist. Previously it succeeded by creating
an empty destination directory.
copy_directory_if_different <dir>... <destination>
New in version 3.26.
Copy changed content of <dir>... directories to <destination>
directory. If <destination> directory does not exist it will be
created.
copy_directory_if_different does follow symlinks. The command
fails when the source directory does not exist.
copy_if_different <file>... <destination>
Copy files to <destination> (either file or directory) if they
have changed. If multiple files are specified, the
<destination> must be directory and it must exist.
copy_if_different does follow symlinks.
New in version 3.5: Support for multiple input files.
create_symlink <old> <new>
Create a symbolic link <new> naming <old>.
New in version 3.13: Support for creating symlinks on Windows.
NOTE:
Path to where <new> symbolic link will be created has to
exist beforehand.
create_hardlink <old> <new>
New in version 3.19.
Create a hard link <new> naming <old>.
NOTE:
Path to where <new> hard link will be created has to exist
beforehand. <old> has to exist beforehand.
echo [<string>...]
Displays arguments as text.
echo_append [<string>...]
Displays arguments as text but no new line.
env [<options>] [--] <command> [<arg>...]
New in version 3.1.
Run command in a modified environment. Options are:
NAME=VALUE
Replaces the current value of NAME with VALUE.
--unset=NAME
Unsets the current value of NAME.
--modify ENVIRONMENT_MODIFICATION
New in version 3.25.
Apply a single ENVIRONMENT_MODIFICATION operation to the
modified environment.
The NAME=VALUE and --unset=NAME options are equivalent to
--modify NAME=set:VALUE and --modify NAME=unset:,
respectively. Note that --modify NAME=reset: resets NAME
to the value it had when cmake launched (or unsets it),
not to the most recent NAME=VALUE option.
-- New in version 3.24.
Added support for the double dash argument --. Use -- to
stop interpreting options/environment variables and treat
the next argument as the command, even if it start with -
or contains a =.
environment
Display the current environment variables.
false New in version 3.16.
Do nothing, with an exit code of 1.
make_directory <dir>...
Create <dir> directories. If necessary, create parent
directories too. If a directory already exists it will be
silently ignored.
New in version 3.5: Support for multiple input directories.
md5sum <file>...
Create MD5 checksum of files in md5sum compatible format:
351abe79cd3800b38cdfb25d45015a15 file1.txt
052f86c15bbde68af55c7f7b340ab639 file2.txt
sha1sum <file>...
New in version 3.10.
Create SHA1 checksum of files in sha1sum compatible format:
4bb7932a29e6f73c97bb9272f2bdc393122f86e0 file1.txt
1df4c8f318665f9a5f2ed38f55adadb7ef9f559c file2.txt
sha224sum <file>...
New in version 3.10.
Create SHA224 checksum of files in sha224sum compatible format:
b9b9346bc8437bbda630b0b7ddfc5ea9ca157546dbbf4c613192f930 file1.txt
6dfbe55f4d2edc5fe5c9197bca51ceaaf824e48eba0cc453088aee24 file2.txt
sha256sum <file>...
New in version 3.10.
Create SHA256 checksum of files in sha256sum compatible format:
76713b23615d31680afeb0e9efe94d47d3d4229191198bb46d7485f9cb191acc file1.txt
15b682ead6c12dedb1baf91231e1e89cfc7974b3787c1e2e01b986bffadae0ea file2.txt
sha384sum <file>...
New in version 3.10.
Create SHA384 checksum of files in sha384sum compatible format:
acc049fedc091a22f5f2ce39a43b9057fd93c910e9afd76a6411a28a8f2b8a12c73d7129e292f94fc0329c309df49434 file1.txt
668ddeb108710d271ee21c0f3acbd6a7517e2b78f9181c6a2ff3b8943af92b0195dcb7cce48aa3e17893173c0a39e23d file2.txt
sha512sum <file>...
New in version 3.10.
Create SHA512 checksum of files in sha512sum compatible format:
2a78d7a6c5328cfb1467c63beac8ff21794213901eaadafd48e7800289afbc08e5fb3e86aa31116c945ee3d7bf2a6194489ec6101051083d1108defc8e1dba89 file1.txt
7a0b54896fe5e70cca6dd643ad6f672614b189bf26f8153061c4d219474b05dad08c4e729af9f4b009f1a1a280cb625454bf587c690f4617c27e3aebdf3b7a2d file2.txt
remove [-f] <file>...
Deprecated since version 3.17.
Remove the file(s). The planned behavior was that if any of the
listed files already do not exist, the command returns a
non-zero exit code, but no message is logged. The -f option
changes the behavior to return a zero exit code (i.e. success)
in such situations instead. remove does not follow symlinks.
That means it remove only symlinks and not files it point to.
The implementation was buggy and always returned 0. It cannot be
fixed without breaking backwards compatibility. Use rm instead.
remove_directory <dir>...
Deprecated since version 3.17.
Remove <dir> directories and their contents. If a directory does
not exist it will be silently ignored. Use rm instead.
New in version 3.15: Support for multiple directories.
New in version 3.16: If <dir> is a symlink to a directory, just
the symlink will be removed.
rename <oldname> <newname>
Rename a file or directory (on one volume). If file with the
<newname> name already exists, then it will be silently
replaced.
rm [-rRf] [--] <file|dir>...
New in version 3.17.
Remove the files <file> or directories <dir>. Use -r or -R to
remove directories and their contents recursively. If any of
the listed files/directories do not exist, the command returns a
non-zero exit code, but no message is logged. The -f option
changes the behavior to return a zero exit code (i.e. success)
in such situations instead. Use -- to stop interpreting options
and treat all remaining arguments as paths, even if they start
with -.
sleep <number>...
New in version 3.0.
Sleep for given number of seconds.
tar [cxt][vf][zjJ] file.tar [<options>] [--] [<pathname>...]
Create or extract a tar or zip archive. Options are:
c Create a new archive containing the specified files. If
used, the <pathname>... argument is mandatory.
x Extract to disk from the archive.
New in version 3.15: The <pathname>... argument could be
used to extract only selected files or directories. When
extracting selected files or directories, you must
provide their exact names including the path, as printed
by list (-t).
t List archive contents.
New in version 3.15: The <pathname>... argument could be
used to list only selected files or directories.
v Produce verbose output.
z Compress the resulting archive with gzip.
j Compress the resulting archive with bzip2.
J New in version 3.1.
Compress the resulting archive with XZ.
--zstd New in version 3.15.
Compress the resulting archive with Zstandard.
--files-from=<file>
New in version 3.1.
Read file names from the given file, one per line. Blank
lines are ignored. Lines may not start in - except for
--add-file=<name> to add files whose names start in -.
--format=<format>
New in version 3.3.
Specify the format of the archive to be created.
Supported formats are: 7zip, gnutar, pax, paxr
(restricted pax, default), and zip.
--mtime=<date>
New in version 3.1.
Specify modification time recorded in tarball entries.
--touch
New in version 3.24.
Use current local timestamp instead of extracting file
timestamps from the archive.
-- New in version 3.1.
Stop interpreting options and treat all remaining
arguments as file names, even if they start with -.
New in version 3.1: LZMA (7zip) support.
New in version 3.15: The command now continues adding files to
an archive even if some of the files are not readable. This
behavior is more consistent with the classic tar tool. The
command now also parses all flags, and if an invalid flag was
provided, a warning is issued.
time <command> [<args>...]
Run command and display elapsed time.
New in version 3.5: The command now properly passes arguments
with spaces or special characters through to the child process.
This may break scripts that worked around the bug with their own
extra quoting or escaping.
touch <file>...
Creates <file> if file do not exist. If <file> exists, it is
changing <file> access and modification times.
touch_nocreate <file>...
Touch a file if it exists but do not create it. If a file does
not exist it will be silently ignored.
true New in version 3.16.
Do nothing, with an exit code of 0.
Windows-specific Command-Line Tools
The following cmake -E commands are available only on Windows:
delete_regv <key>
Delete Windows registry value.
env_vs8_wince <sdkname>
New in version 3.2.
Displays a batch file which sets the environment for the
provided Windows CE SDK installed in VS2005.
env_vs9_wince <sdkname>
New in version 3.2.
Displays a batch file which sets the environment for the
provided Windows CE SDK installed in VS2008.
write_regv <key> <value>
Write Windows registry value.
RUN THE FIND-PACKAGE TOOL
CMake provides a pkg-config like helper for Makefile-based projects:
cmake --find-package [<options>]
It searches a package using find_package() and prints the resulting
flags to stdout. This can be used instead of pkg-config to find
installed libraries in plain Makefile-based projects or in
autoconf-based projects (via share/aclocal/cmake.m4).
NOTE:
This mode is not well-supported due to some technical limitations.
It is kept for compatibility but should not be used in new projects.
RUN A WORKFLOW PRESET
CMake Presets provides a way to execute multiple build steps in order:
cmake --workflow [<options>]
The options are:
--workflow
Select a Workflow Preset using one of the following options.
--preset <preset>, --preset=<preset>
Use a workflow preset to specify a workflow. The project binary
directory is inferred from the initial configure preset. The
current working directory must contain CMake preset files. See
preset for more details.
--list-presets
Lists the available workflow presets. The current working
directory must contain CMake preset files.
--fresh
Perform a fresh configuration of the build tree. This removes
any existing CMakeCache.txt file and associated CMakeFiles/
directory, and recreates them from scratch.
VIEW HELP
To print selected pages from the CMake documentation, use
cmake --help[-<topic>]
with one of the following options:
-version [<file>], --version [<file>], /V [<file>]
Show program name/version banner and exit. The output is
printed to a named <file> if given.
-h, -H, --help, -help, -usage, /?
Print usage information and exit.
Usage describes the basic command line interface and its
options.
--help-full [<file>]
Print all help manuals and exit.
All manuals are printed in a human-readable text format. The
output is printed to a named <file> if given.
--help-manual <man> [<file>]
Print one help manual and exit.
The specified manual is printed in a human-readable text format.
The output is printed to a named <file> if given.
--help-manual-list [<file>]
List help manuals available and exit.
The list contains all manuals for which help may be obtained by
using the --help-manual option followed by a manual name. The
output is printed to a named <file> if given.
--help-command <cmd> [<file>]
Print help for one command and exit.
The cmake-commands(7) manual entry for <cmd> is printed in a
human-readable text format. The output is printed to a named
<file> if given.
--help-command-list [<file>]
List commands with help available and exit.
The list contains all commands for which help may be obtained by
using the --help-command option followed by a command name. The
output is printed to a named <file> if given.
--help-commands [<file>]
Print cmake-commands manual and exit.
The cmake-commands(7) manual is printed in a human-readable text
format. The output is printed to a named <file> if given.
--help-module <mod> [<file>]
Print help for one module and exit.
The cmake-modules(7) manual entry for <mod> is printed in a
human-readable text format. The output is printed to a named
<file> if given.
--help-module-list [<file>]
List modules with help available and exit.
The list contains all modules for which help may be obtained by
using the --help-module option followed by a module name. The
output is printed to a named <file> if given.
--help-modules [<file>]
Print cmake-modules manual and exit.
The cmake-modules(7) manual is printed in a human-readable text
format. The output is printed to a named <file> if given.
--help-policy <cmp> [<file>]
Print help for one policy and exit.
The cmake-policies(7) manual entry for <cmp> is printed in a
human-readable text format. The output is printed to a named
<file> if given.
--help-policy-list [<file>]
List policies with help available and exit.
The list contains all policies for which help may be obtained by
using the --help-policy option followed by a policy name. The
output is printed to a named <file> if given.
--help-policies [<file>]
Print cmake-policies manual and exit.
The cmake-policies(7) manual is printed in a human-readable text
format. The output is printed to a named <file> if given.
--help-property <prop> [<file>]
Print help for one property and exit.
The cmake-properties(7) manual entries for <prop> are printed in
a human-readable text format. The output is printed to a named
<file> if given.
--help-property-list [<file>]
List properties with help available and exit.
The list contains all properties for which help may be obtained
by using the --help-property option followed by a property name.
The output is printed to a named <file> if given.
--help-properties [<file>]
Print cmake-properties manual and exit.
The cmake-properties(7) manual is printed in a human-readable
text format. The output is printed to a named <file> if given.
--help-variable <var> [<file>]
Print help for one variable and exit.
The cmake-variables(7) manual entry for <var> is printed in a
human-readable text format. The output is printed to a named
<file> if given.
--help-variable-list [<file>]
List variables with help available and exit.
The list contains all variables for which help may be obtained
by using the --help-variable option followed by a variable name.
The output is printed to a named <file> if given.
--help-variables [<file>]
Print cmake-variables manual and exit.
The cmake-variables(7) manual is printed in a human-readable
text format. The output is printed to a named <file> if given.
To view the presets available for a project, use
cmake <source-dir> --list-presets
RETURN VALUE (EXIT CODE)
Upon regular termination, the cmake executable returns the exit code 0.
If termination is caused by the command message(FATAL_ERROR), or
another error condition, then a non-zero exit code is returned.
SEE ALSO
The following resources are available to get help using CMake:
Home Page
https://cmake.org
The primary starting point for learning about CMake.
Online Documentation and Community Resources
https://cmake.org/documentation
Links to available documentation and community resources may be
found on this web page.
Discourse Forum
https://discourse.cmake.org
The Discourse Forum hosts discussion and questions about CMake.
COPYRIGHT
2000-2023 Kitware, Inc. and Contributors
3.26.1 September 28, 2023 CMAKE(1)