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I am kind of desperate: For my studies I need to work with Eigen and CMake. I'm able to use Eigen if I copy the whole library in the directories where my compiler looks by default but as soon as I try to find it via
find_package(Eigen3 REQUIRED)
I get the following error:


CMake Error at /usr/share/cmake/Modules/FindPackageHandleStandardArgs.cmake:148 (message):
  Could NOT find Eigen3 (missing: EIGEN3_INCLUDE_DIR EIGEN3_VERSION_OK)
  (Required is at least version "2.91.0")
Call Stack (most recent call first):
  /usr/share/cmake/Modules/FindPackageHandleStandardArgs.cmake:388 (_FPHSA_FAILURE_MESSAGE)
  FindEigen3.cmake:76 (find_package_handle_standard_args)
  CMakeLists.txt:8 (find_package)

-- Configuring incomplete, errors occurred!


Now I searched for solutions but all I those I tried (also those available on stackoverflow:
Find package Eigen3 for CMake or CMake Can't find Eigen3 ) did not work. My Eigen Version (according to the Macros in Core/util/Macros.h) is 3.2.5. I keep the Eigen directory in /usr/local/include, I use the FindEigen3.cmake which comes with the Eigen library and my CMakeLists.txt looks as follows:


cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 2.8)
project(Test)

set(CMAKE_MODULE_PATH ${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR})
find_package(Eigen3 REQUIRED)
include_directories(${EIGEN3_INCLUDE_DIR})
message("Found Eigen3 in: ${EIGEN3_INCLUDE_DIR}")

add_executable(main test.cpp)

Has anyone an idea what's going wrong?

Kind regards, Julien

4
  • 1
    Welcome to StackOverflow. The find package scripts normally use the find_path() command to detect the package's include directory. If it's not found automatically you can extend CMAKE_INCLUDE_PATH by the path where CMake should search (for example see here). So you could add something like list(APPEND CMAKE_INCLUDE_PATH "/usr/local/include") before your find_package() command.
    – Florian
    Commented Dec 7, 2015 at 20:46
  • Thanks! If I add the exact path to the CMAKE_INCLUDE_PATH it finds the package - but isn't searching manually exactly what I want to avoid? Shouldn't the find_package() do that for me?
    – Cryoris
    Commented Dec 7, 2015 at 21:15
  • You are right. The CMAKE_INCLUDE_PATH was meant for a non-standard Eigen installation path. I have given your code sample a try and - if I install Eigen into the default path - it seems to work without the need to give the path (see my answer). If you have already used the Eigen installation process, could you please add more details on your environment (CMake version, CMake command line call, host OS, compiler version, ...)?
    – Florian
    Commented Dec 8, 2015 at 9:48
  • Curious, is this about caffe and AI?
    – A P
    Commented Jan 23, 2017 at 10:19

2 Answers 2

15

Turning my comment into an answer

The find package scripts - like FindEigen3.cmake - normally use the find_path() command to detect the package's include directory (see it's documentation for the full details).

FindEigen3.cmake uses the following code snippet:

find_path(EIGEN3_INCLUDE_DIR NAMES signature_of_eigen3_matrix_library
    PATHS
    ${CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX}/include
    ${KDE4_INCLUDE_DIR}
    PATH_SUFFIXES eigen3 eigen
)

So it looks in CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX which on Unix/Linux hosts is /usr/local by default.

The following has worked for me:

  • Go to the Eigen source directory and run the CMake and installation steps

    > mkdir build
    > cd build
    > cmake ..
    > make install
    
  • Then copy - as you have done - FindEigen3.cmake to your projects source directory.

  • Now your code does find Eigen (just changed to list(APPEND ...))

    list(APPEND CMAKE_MODULE_PATH "${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}")
    find_package(Eigen3 REQUIRED)
    

References

1
  • Perfect it's working now! I think what also caused problems is, that I didnt use $ make install to install the Library but just copied it in my /usr/local/include. The directory FindEigen3.cmake was looking for was probably too deep (it was somewhere in /usr/include/Eigen_all/eigen-tar-folder-name/). Anyways - thank you very much for your detailed answer!
    – Cryoris
    Commented Dec 8, 2015 at 16:09
1

Add the path of FindEigen3.cmake before find_package(Eigen3 REQUIRED), like this:

LIST(APPEND CMAKE_MODULE_PATH "/usr/share/cmake-2.8/Modules/")
find_package(Eigen3)
1
  • 2
    There is no needs to add Modules/ directory, shipped with CMake, into CMAKE_MODULE_PATH: CMake searches in this directory in any case.
    – Tsyvarev
    Commented Sep 10, 2019 at 7:48

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