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My OS is centos which has a default gcc in path /usr/bin/gcc. But it is old, I need a new version of gcc. So I install a new version in a new path /usr/local/bin/gcc.

But when I run cmake, it still uses the old version gcc path(/usr/bin/gcc) . How can I specify the gcc to new path(/usr/local/bin/gcc).

I have tried to overwrite /usr/bin/gcc with /usr/local/bin/gcc, but it not work.

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  • 3
    I think it's a good practice to install alternate gcc version into /opt rather than /usr/local. Preferably /opt/gcc-x.y.z. This way, if you need an even newer version, you won't have any trouble uninstalling the previous one.
    – user666412
    May 25, 2018 at 15:24

8 Answers 8

299

Do not overwrite CMAKE_C_COMPILER, but export CC (and CXX) before calling cmake:

export CC=/usr/local/bin/gcc
export CXX=/usr/local/bin/g++
cmake /path/to/your/project
make

The export only needs to be done once, the first time you configure the project, then those values will be read from the CMake cache.


UPDATE: longer explanation on why not overriding CMAKE_C(XX)_COMPILER after Jake's comment

I recommend against overriding the CMAKE_C(XX)_COMPILER value for two main reasons: because it won't play well with CMake's cache and because it breaks compiler checks and tooling detection.

When using the set command, you have three options:

  • without cache, to create a normal variable
  • with cache, to create a cached variable
  • force cache, to always force the cache value when configuring

Let's see what happens for the three possible calls to set:

Without cache

set(CMAKE_C_COMPILER /usr/bin/clang)
set(CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER /usr/bin/clang++)

When doing this, you create a "normal" variable CMAKE_C(XX)_COMPILER that hides the cache variable of the same name. That means your compiler is now hard-coded in your build script and you cannot give it a custom value. This will be a problem if you have multiple build environments with different compilers. You could just update your script each time you want to use a different compiler, but that removes the value of using CMake in the first place.

Ok, then, let's update the cache...

With cache

set(CMAKE_C_COMPILER /usr/bin/clang CACHE PATH "")
set(CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER /usr/bin/clang++ CACHE PATH "")

This version will just "not work". The CMAKE_C(XX)_COMPILER variable is already in the cache, so it won't get updated unless you force it.

Ah... let's use the force, then...

Force cache

set(CMAKE_C_COMPILER /usr/bin/clang CACHE PATH "" FORCE)
set(CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER /usr/bin/clang++ CACHE PATH "" FORCE)

This is almost the same as the "normal" variable version, the only difference is your value will be set in the cache, so users can see it. But any change will be overwritten by the set command.

Breaking compiler checks and tooling

Early in the configuration process, CMake performs checks on the compiler: Does it work? Is it able to produce executables? etc. It also uses the compiler to detect related tools, like ar and ranlib. When you override the compiler value in a script, it's "too late", all checks and detections are already done.

For instance, on my machine with gcc as default compiler, when using the set command to /usr/bin/clang, ar is set to /usr/bin/gcc-ar-7. When using an export before running CMake it is set to /usr/lib/llvm-3.8/bin/llvm-ar.

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  • Equivalent for the lazy, if the proper compilers are set in your $PATH: > export CC=which gcc > export CXX=which g++
    – gerardw
    Mar 17, 2014 at 15:13
  • 15
    Equivalent for the lazy, if the proper compilers are set in your $PATH: export CC=`which gcc` export CXX=`which g++`
    – gerardw
    Mar 17, 2014 at 15:19
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    How do I do this if I'm on Windows?
    – mr5
    Nov 2, 2016 at 2:31
  • 8
    Actually, setting CMAKE_C_COMPILER works well provided you do it using the command line: $ cmake -GNinja -DCMAKE_C_COMPILER=clang -DCMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=clang++ /path/to/source. Oct 13, 2017 at 12:54
  • 1
    This solution doesn’t always work. You need to clear the CMake cache for it to re-read the CC and CXX environment variables. It also assumes Bash or similar shell. This is an up-to-date answer without these limitations: stackoverflow.com/a/50494125/7328782 Jun 12, 2018 at 2:59
46

This question is quite old but still turns up on Google Search. The accepted question wasn't working for me anymore and seems to be aged. The latest information about cmake is written in the cmake FAQ.

There are various ways to change the path of your compiler. One way would be

Set the appropriate CMAKE_FOO_COMPILER variable(s) to a valid compiler name or full path on the command-line using cmake -D. For example:

cmake -G "Your Generator" -D CMAKE_C_COMPILER=gcc-4.2 -D CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=g++-4.2 path/to/your/source

instead of gcc-4.2 you can write the path/to/your/compiler like this

 cmake -D CMAKE_C_COMPILER=/path/to/gcc/bin/gcc -D CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=/path/to/gcc/bin/g++ .
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    I was doing so while building an old project on an old compiler (GCC 5.3) while a newer compiler (GCC 7.3) was sourced in the environment. It built fine and worked on my machine, but once I moved the executable to a different machine I realized the program is linked to libstdc++.so from the sourced 7.3 instead of the requested 5.3... Sep 2, 2019 at 7:39
  • 1
    This works for me while the accepted one did not.
    – floodking
    Aug 25, 2021 at 0:23
8

Set CMAKE_C_COMPILER to your new path.

See here: http://www.cmake.org/Wiki/CMake_Useful_Variables

5

Change CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER path without triggering a reconfigure

I wanted to compile with an alternate compiler, but also pass -D options on the command-line which would get wiped out by setting a different compiler. This happens because it triggers a re-configure. The trick is to disable the compiler detection with NONE, set the paths with FORCE, then enable_language.

project( sample_project NONE )

set( COMPILER_BIN /opt/compiler/bin )
set( CMAKE_C_COMPILER ${COMPILER_BIN}/clang CACHE PATH "clang" FORCE )
set( CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER ${COMPILER_BIN}/clang++ CACHE PATH "clang++" FORCE )

enable_language( C CXX )

Use a Toolchain file

The more sensible choice is to create a toolchain file.

set( CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME Darwin )

set( COMPILER_BIN /opt/compiler/bin )
set( CMAKE_C_COMPILER ${COMPILER_BIN}/clang CACHE PATH "clang" )
set( CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER ${COMPILER_BIN}/clang++ CACHE PATH "clang++" )

Then you invoke Cmake with an additional flag

cmake -D CMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE=/path/to/toolchain_file.cmake ...
4

Export should be specific about which version of GCC/G++ to use, because if user had multiple compiler version, it would not compile successfully.

 export CC=path_of_gcc/gcc-version
 export CXX=path_of_g++/g++-version
 cmake  path_of_project_contain_CMakeList.txt
 make 

In case project use C++11 this can be handled by using -std=C++-11 flag in CMakeList.txt

3

An alternative solution is to configure your project through cmake-gui, starting from a clean build directory. Among the options you have available at the beginning, there's the possibility to choose the exact path to the compilers

2

This not only works with cmake, but also with ./configure and make:

./configure CC=/usr/local/bin/gcc CXX=/usr/local/bin/g++

Which is resulting in:

checking for gcc... /usr/local/bin/gcc
checking whether the C compiler works... yes
0

RE Guillaume's answer:

Why yes, you can just swap swap CMAKE_C_COMPILER and CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER, but you need to do that before "initializing" the project:

    set(CMAKE_C_COMPILER <path/to/c/compiler>)
    set(CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER <path/to/c++/compiler>)
    project(PROJECT_NAME)

CMake actually performs those checks (in this case it actually doesn't since the existence of those variables indicates to it that it had already detected a working compiler, so no need to check it) when you do the project "initialization", so if you do the swapping before that, it checks your newly swapped variables.

Though, better to set CC and CXX environment variables:

    set(ENV{CC} <path/to/compiler>)
    set(ENV{CXX} <path/to/compiler>)
    project(PROJECT_NAME)

That way CMake also performs compiler checks.

Not sure this is the "correct" way to do it, but works for me ("computing" the compiler location I need when running CMake script, and swapping the default one for it).

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