Version 14 (modified by nicolasc, 17 years ago) (diff) |
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CMake Build System
Using CMake
CMake is a build tool which created Makefile for you.
$ cmake .
With those Makefiles, the project the can be built.
$ make -j2 all
Rebuilding the CMakeCache
Sometime it happens, that CMake won't accept the new setting you added some where in a CMakeLists.txt. As a workaround — I have not found a better solution yet — delete the the toplevel CMakeCache, and rebuild every Makefile.
$ cd <some/branch/or/trunk> && rm -f CMakeCache && cmake .
Writing CMakeLists.txt
Just as an simple example for how to write a CMakeLists.txt.
PROJECT(Orxonox) SET( SRC_FILES some_soource.cc another_source.cc ) INCLUDE_DIRECOTRIES(.) ADD_LIBRARY(network ${SRC_FILES})
Using CMake with KDevelop
CMake is capable of creating .kdevelop files, which are used as project files in (guess where) KDevelop. To create them simply use the following command
$ cmake . -GKDevelop3
Optimize KDevelop
Do some configursation to make the usage of KDevelop smoother
Go to Project->Project Option->Build Option->Make, and do the following changes
- Select Run Multiple Jobs, and set Number of Simultaneous Jobs to 3
- set Make Prority to 5
- Optional: Add Environment Variables
- i.e Name: CXXFLAGS; Value: -O2 -pipe
- CXXFLAGS or LDFLAGS are also possible. In fact any compiler flags can be set here
If you don't know what CFLAGS are, don't set them, otherwise use at you own discretion. Only reasonable flags will be supported
- i.e Name: CXXFLAGS; Value: -O2 -pipe
Go to Project->Project Option->Run Option
- Working Directory: just add /bin you still need to run ./run-script the first time