199

CMake offers several ways to specify the source files for a target. One is to use globbing (documentation), for example:

FILE(GLOB MY_SRCS dir/*)

Another method is to specify each file individually.

Which way is preferred? Globbing seems easy, but I heard it has some downsides.

1
  • One aspect I don't see discussed in any current answers is the relation to deterministic/reproducible builds. See this section of a Conan article on the subject. file(GLOB) doesn't have a specified order until v3.6, where it is specified to be lexicographical. I wish I could say today that everyone is past v3.6, but I can't. On the bright (?) side, some people have never even heard of deterministic/reproducible builds.
    – starball
    Oct 21, 2022 at 4:19

7 Answers 7

226

Full disclosure: I originally preferred the globbing approach for its simplicity, but over the years I have come to recognise that explicitly listing the files is less error-prone for large, multi-developer projects.

Original answer:


The advantages to globbing are:

  • It's easy to add new files as they are only listed in one place: on disk. Not globbing creates duplication.

  • Your CMakeLists.txt file will be shorter. This is a big plus if you have lots of files. Not globbing causes you to lose the CMake logic amongst huge lists of files.

The advantages of using hardcoded file lists are:

  • CMake will track the dependencies of a new file on disk correctly - if we use glob then files not globbed first time round when you ran CMake will not get picked up

  • You ensure that only files you want are added. Globbing may pick up stray files that you do not want.

In order to work around the first issue, you can simply "touch" the CMakeLists.txt that does the glob, either by using the touch command or by writing the file with no changes. This will force CMake to re-run and pick up the new file.

To fix the second problem you can organize your code carefully into directories, which is what you probably do anyway. In the worst case, you can use the list(REMOVE_ITEM) command to clean up the globbed list of files:

file(GLOB to_remove file_to_remove.cpp)
list(REMOVE_ITEM list ${to_remove})

The only real situation where this can bite you is if you are using something like git-bisect to try older versions of your code in the same build directory. In that case, you may have to clean and compile more than necessary to ensure you get the right files in the list. This is such a corner case, and one where you already are on your toes, that it isn't really an issue.

15
  • 12
    I think this answer glosses over the drawbacks of cmake missing new files, Simply "touch" the CMakeLists.txt is OK if you are the developer, but for others building your software it can really be a pain-point that your build fails after updating and the burden is on them to investigate why.
    – ideasman42
    Aug 30, 2013 at 17:38
  • 52
    You know what? Since writing this answer 6 year ago, I've changed my mind a bit and now prefer to explicitly list files. It's only real disadvantage is "it's a bit more work to add a file", but it saves you all sorts of headaches. And in a lot of ways explicit is better than implicit.
    – richq
    May 7, 2015 at 12:02
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    Well as Antonio says, the votes were given for advocating the "globbing" approach. Changing the nature of the answer is a bait-and-switch thing to do for those voters. As a compromise I've added an edit to reflect my changed opinion. I apologise to the internet for causing such a storm in a teacup :-P
    – richq
    Apr 26, 2016 at 11:38
  • 3
    I find that the best compromise is to have a tiny external script (e.g. python) that updates the CMakeLists.txt file with the sources. It combines the benefits of having files added for you automatically (so prevents potential typos in file paths), but produces an explicit manifest that can be checked into source control (so deltas are obvious/tracked and git-bisect will work), allows inspection to debug issues when spurious or unintended files were included, and properly triggers cmake to know when it should rerun. Jul 16, 2017 at 5:19
  • 3
    There is one more disadvantage to globbing. The files end up as absolute paths, so if you want to use the file names (with leading relative path) to reproduce a folder structure somewhere else as part of your build, suddenly those leading paths are absolute. Jul 30, 2019 at 8:51
143

The best way to specify sourcefiles in CMake is by listing them explicitly.

The creators of CMake themselves advise not to use globbing.

See: Filesystem

(We do not recommend using GLOB to collect a list of source files from your source tree. If no CMakeLists.txt file changes when a source is added or removed then the generated build system cannot know when to ask CMake to regenerate.)

Of course, you might want to know what the downsides are - read on!


When Globbing Fails:

The big disadvantage to globbing is that creating/deleting files won't automatically update the build system.

If you are the person adding the files, this may seem an acceptable trade-off. However, this causes problems for other people building your code; they update the project from version control, run build, and then contact you, complaining that
"the build's broken".

To make matters worse, the failure typically gives some linking error which doesn't give any hints to the cause of the problem and time is lost troubleshooting it.

In a project I worked on, we started off globbing, but we got so many complaints when new files were added that it was enough reason to explicitly list files instead of globbing.

This also breaks common Git workflows
(git bisect and switching between feature branches).

So I couldn't recommend this. The problems it causes far outweigh the convenience. When someone can't build your software because of this, they may lose a lot of time to track down the issue or just give up.

And another note. Just remembering to touch CMakeLists.txt isn't always enough. With automated builds that use globbing, I had to run cmake before every build since files might have been added/removed since last building *.

Exceptions to the rule:

There are times where globbing is preferable:

  • For setting up a CMakeLists.txt files for existing projects that don't use CMake.
    it’s a fast way to get all the source referenced (once the build system's running - replace globbing with explicit file-lists).
  • When CMake isn't used as the primary build system, if for example you're using a project who aren't using CMake, and you would like to maintain your own build-system for it.
  • For any situation where the file list changes so often that it becomes impractical to maintain. In this case, it could be useful, but then you have to accept running cmake to generate build-files every time to get a reliable/correct build (which goes against the intention of CMake - the ability to split configuration from building).

*Yes, I could have written a code to compare the tree of files on disk before and after an update, but this is not such a nice workaround and something better left up to the build system.

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    "The big disadvantage to globbing is that creating new files won't automatically update the build-system." But isn't it true that if you don't glob, you still have to manually update CMakeLists.txt, meaning cmake is still not automatically updating the build system? It seems like either way you must remember to manually do something in order for the new files to build. Touching CMakeLists.txt seems easier than opening it up and editing it to add the new file.
    – dafalcon
    Jan 9, 2014 at 14:35
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    @Dan, for your system - sure, if you only develop alone this is fine, but what about everyone else who builds your project? are you going to email them to go and manually touch the CMake file? every time a file is added or removed? - Storing the file list in CMake ensures the build is always using the same files vcs knows about. Believe me - this is not just some subtle detail - When your build fails for many devs - they mail lists and ask on IRC that the code is broken. Note: (Even on your own system you may go back in git history for eg, and not think to go in and touch CMake files)
    – ideasman42
    Jan 9, 2014 at 14:52
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    Ah I had not thought of that case. That is the best reason I've heard against globbing. I wish the cmake docs expanded on why they recommend people avoid globbing.
    – dafalcon
    Jan 9, 2014 at 22:20
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    I've been thinking about solution of writing timestamp of last cmake execution into file. The only problems are: 1) it probably has to be done by cmake to be crossplatform and so we need to avoid cmake running itself second time somehow. 2) Possibly more merge conflicts (which still happen with file list btw) They could actually be resolved trivially in this case by taking later timestamp.
    – Predelnik
    Feb 16, 2017 at 11:32
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    @tim-mb, "But it would be nice if CMake created a filetree_updated file that you could check in, which it would automatically change each time the glob of files updated." - you have just exactly described what my answer does. Oct 15, 2017 at 8:19
67
+50

In CMake 3.12, the file(GLOB ...) and file(GLOB_RECURSE ...) commands gained a CONFIGURE_DEPENDS option which reruns cmake if the glob's value changes. As that was the primary disadvantage of globbing for source files, it is now okay to do so:

# Whenever this glob's value changes, cmake will rerun and update the build with the
# new/removed files.
file(GLOB_RECURSE sources CONFIGURE_DEPENDS "*.cpp")

add_executable(my_target ${sources})

However, some people still recommend avoiding globbing for sources. Indeed, the documentation states:

We do not recommend using GLOB to collect a list of source files from your source tree. ... The CONFIGURE_DEPENDS flag may not work reliably on all generators, or if a new generator is added in the future that cannot support it, projects using it will be stuck. Even if CONFIGURE_DEPENDS works reliably, there is still a cost to perform the check on every rebuild.

Personally, I consider the benefits of not having to manually manage the source file list to outweigh the possible drawbacks. If you do have to switch back to manually listed files, this can be easily achieved by just printing the globbed source list and pasting it back in.

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  • 1
    If your build system performs a complete cmake and build cycle (delete the build directory, run cmake from there and then invoke the makefile), provided they don't pull in unwanted files, surely there are no drawbacks to using GLOBbed sources? In my experience the cmake part runs much more quickly than the build, so it's not that much of an overhead anyway
    – Den-Jason
    Mar 3, 2020 at 14:33
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    The real, well-thought-out answer, always nearing the bottom of the page. Those who would rather keep updating the file fail to notice that the actual loss of efficiency isn't in the order of seconds as the file gets manually updated, or literally nanoseconds in performing the check, but possibly days or weeks accumulated as the programmer loses their flow while messing with the file, or postpones their work altogether, just because they don't want to update it. Thank You for this answer, truly a service to humanity... And thanks to the CMake folks for finally patching it up! :) Aug 2, 2020 at 17:33
  • 1
    "possibly days or weeks accumulated as the programmer loses their flow while messing with the file" -- Citation needed Jan 31, 2021 at 11:26
  • 1
    @S.ExchangeConsideredHarmful I have seen much so much time lost on broken build because of globbing that you would need to do millions of updates to the file list to make up for it. It does not happen frequently, but 1) every occurence immediately incurs bug reports and headaches, and 2) the issue is frequent enough that people working on those projects, whenever something does not build, now always start by clearing cmake cache and rebuilding. This habit wastes hours per week, and it is a direct consequence of the use of file(GLOB).
    – spectras
    Feb 10, 2021 at 16:39
  • 1
    IDEs like Clion already manage updates to CMakeLists.txt. Given this, and the fact that cmake's own maintainers recommend against abusing GLOB to handle source files, I don't understand why some people continue pushing antipatterns.
    – RAM
    Dec 20, 2021 at 9:43
10

You can safely glob (and probably should) at the cost of an additional file to hold the dependencies.

Add functions like these somewhere:

# Compare the new contents with the existing file, if it exists and is the
# same we don't want to trigger a make by changing its timestamp.
function(update_file path content)
    set(old_content "")
    if(EXISTS "${path}")
        file(READ "${path}" old_content)
    endif()
    if(NOT old_content STREQUAL content)
        file(WRITE "${path}" "${content}")
    endif()
endfunction(update_file)

# Creates a file called CMakeDeps.cmake next to your CMakeLists.txt with
# the list of dependencies in it - this file should be treated as part of
# CMakeLists.txt (source controlled, etc.).
function(update_deps_file deps)
    set(deps_file "CMakeDeps.cmake")
    # Normalize the list so it's the same on every machine
    list(REMOVE_DUPLICATES deps)
    foreach(dep IN LISTS deps)
        file(RELATIVE_PATH rel_dep ${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR} ${dep})
        list(APPEND rel_deps ${rel_dep})
    endforeach(dep)
    list(SORT rel_deps)
    # Update the deps file
    set(content "# generated by make process\nset(sources ${rel_deps})\n")
    update_file(${deps_file} "${content}")
    # Include the file so it's tracked as a generation dependency we don't
    # need the content.
    include(${deps_file})
endfunction(update_deps_file)

And then go globbing:

file(GLOB_RECURSE sources LIST_DIRECTORIES false *.h *.cpp)
update_deps_file("${sources}")
add_executable(test ${sources})

You're still carting around the explicit dependencies (and triggering all the automated builds!) like before, only it's in two files instead of one.

The only change in procedure is after you've created a new file. If you don't glob, the workflow is to modify CMakeLists.txt from inside Visual Studio and rebuild. If you do glob, you run cmake explicitly - or just touch CMakeLists.txt.

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  • 1
    At first I thought this was a tool that would automatically update the Makefiles when a source file is added, but I see now what its value is. Nice! This solves concern of someone updating from the repository and having make give strange linker errors. Jul 14, 2017 at 22:12
  • 1
    I believe this could be a good method. One of course has still to remember to trigger cmake after adding or removing a file, and it is also require committing this dependency file, so some education on the user side is necessary. The major drawback could be that this dependency file could originate nasty merge conflicts which might be difficult to solve without again requiring the developer to have some understanding of the mechanism.
    – Antonio
    Oct 30, 2017 at 16:09
  • 1
    This won't work if your project has conditionally included files (eg, some files which are only used when a feature is enabled, or only used for a particular operating-system). It's common enough for portable software that some files are only used for spesific platforms.
    – ideasman42
    Jan 7, 2018 at 4:24
2

Specify each file individually!

I use a conventional CMakeLists.txt and a Python script to update it. I run the python script manually after adding files.

See my answer at How to collect source files with CMake without globbing?.

0

I'm not a fan of globbing and never used it for my libraries. But recently I've looked a presentation by Robert Schumacher (vcpkg developer) where he recommends to treat all your library sources as separate components (for example, private sources (.cpp), public headers (.h), tests, examples - are all separate components) and use separate folders for all of them (similarly to how we use C++ namespaces for classes). In that case I think globbing makes sense, because it allows you to clearly express this components approach and stimulate other developers to follow it. For example, your library directory structure can be the following:

  • /include - for public headers
  • /src - for private headers and sources
  • /tests - for tests

You obviously want other developers to follow your convention (i.e., place public headers under /include and tests under /tests). file(glob) gives a hint for developers that all files from a directory have the same conceptual meaning and any files placed to this directory matching the regexp will also be treated in the same way (for example, installed during 'make install' if we speak about public headers).

-1

This might be a useful cog:

It's in powershell, but any other scripting language will do... It's just one possible addition to the stuff mentioned above.

Get a recursive list of the code files: $res=$( Get-ChildItem -Path $root -Recurse -Attributes !Directory -Name -Include *.h,*.c,CMakeLists.txt )

Concatenate each line / element from the returning Object[] into a single string and compute a hash for it. Store the hash in a file on the root (any) what you will query. Typically it's the components,main,etc folder(s). Each compile script will check a freshly computed hash against the stored one and in case of mismatch (there was a change in the file layout) a cmake reconfigure is required and naturally store the fresh hash (still melts a bit) then goto 10.

Hash from a string:

function stringhash {
    PARAM (
        [Parameter(Mandatory, Position = 0)]
        [string]
        $source)

    $stringAsStream = [System.IO.MemoryStream]::new()
    $writer = [System.IO.StreamWriter]::new($stringAsStream)
    $writer.write("$($source)")
    $writer.Flush()
    $stringAsStream.Position = 0
    $res = (Get-FileHash -InputStream $stringAsStream | Select-Object Hash)
    $writer.Close()
    $stringAsStream.Close()
    return $res.Hash.ToUpper()
}

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