Hallo,
I'm using CMake as build system in one of my projects which is quite complex. The project includes several libraries and several applications. My goal is, to make the following possible:
- Libraries may be built on request by user (realised by cached CMake variable)
- Applications are built on request by user (see above), but an application may select which libraries are required and build them without the user selecting them
- This should not change the cached user selection on which libraries to build (to disable building the libraries automatically if the application building is turned off)
My build system layout is the following: I have a parent directory which contains a CMakeLists.txt that adds the libraries and applications as subdirectory. Each library and application has its own CmakeLists.txt which defines the user definable configuration options to be stored in cache, the targets to be built and on which other libraries of the project it depends. Applications are not necessarily located in the next subdirectory of the parent directory, but could also be some levels lower, so that I cannot make use of PARENT_SCOPE, because the parent hasn't to be the topmost parent, but the dependencies have to be known on top.
I tried setting GLOBAL properties like PROJECT_BUILD_SOMELIBRARY set to on and tried to retrieve them in SOMELIBRARY's CMakeLists.txt to decide whether to build or not, but the properties didn't get passed on to the library, so it never built even if it in fact would have had to, because another library or application indicated that it depended on this library. Using a LIST containing the name of each application or library target depending on a library and caching that one internally didn't work either.
To sum these many words up, I'm looking for a way to influence a CMakeLists in some subdirectory responsible for building a library by a CMakeLists in some other subdirectory (which isn't necessarily the same subdirectory level as the other subdir) to build that library, even if the user didn't specify it explicitly via the configuration option on cmake invocation.
Does someone know how this could be achieved or is this impossible with CMake? Are there suggestions for other approaches towards this problem that, however, include using CMake? Do you know of any other build system that could handle this requirements comfortably?
Many thanks, crispinus