I believe that the most common solution is have independent build directories for each compile mode (options).
I mean that you need create two directories for this purpose (if your source code stored in ProjectSrc
):
ProjectSrc
└── CMakeList.txt
ProjectBuild_Debug
ProjectBuild_Release
Inside ProjectBuild_Debug
you need call:
cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug ../ProjectSrc
And Inside ProjectBuild_Release
you need call:
cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release ../ProjectSrc
Now you can rebuild any type of your program and only files which was changed will be recompiled.
everything is recompiling
- everything is recompiling because each file must be compiled with specified compiler options and it's necessary.
Let's look together. For example our project, which build executable file program.exe
consist from two source files: one.cpp
and two.cpp
, both of them have debug output.
- You build with
release
options:
one.o
and two.o
.
- You change file
one.cpp
and rebuild with debug
. Now if CMake
rebuild only changed files you will get situation when you expect debug version of your program.exe
with correct debug output, but it is not, because debug output in file two.o
was disabled according last time compilation options.