For a brief user-level introduction to CMake, watch C++ Weekly, Episode 78, Intro to CMake by Jason Turner. LLVM’s CMake Primer provides a good high-level introduction to the CMake syntax. Go read it now.
After that, watch Mathieu Ropert’s CppCon 2017 talk Using Modern CMake Patterns to Enforce a Good Modular Design (slides). It provides a thorough explanation of what modern CMake is and why it is so much better than “old school” CMake. The modular design ideas in this talk are based on the book Large-Scale C++ Software Design by John Lakos. The next video that goes more into the details of modern CMake is Daniel Pfeifer’s C++Now 2017 talk Effective CMake (slides).
This text is heavily influenced by Mathieu Ropert’s and Daniel Pfeifer’s talks.
If you are interested in the history and internal architecture of CMake, have a look at the article CMake in the book The Architecture of Open Source Applications.
Modern CMake is only available starting with version 3.0.0.
CMake is code. Therefore, it should be clean. Use the same principles for CMakeLists.txt
and modules as for the rest of codebase.
For example, a project might use a common set of compiler warnings. Defining such properties globally in the top-level CMakeLists.txt
file prevents scenarios where public headers of a dependent target causing a depending target not to compile because the depending target uses stricter compiler options. Defining such project properties globally makes it easier to manage the project with all its targets.
Those commands operate on the directory level. All targets defined on that level inherit those properties. This increases the chance of hidden dependencies. Better operate on the targets directly.
Different compilers use different command-line parameter formats. Setting the C++ standard via -std=c++14
in CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS
will brake in the future, because those requirements are also fulfilled in other standards like C++17 and the compiler option is not the same on old compilers. So it’s much better to tell CMake the compile features so that it can figure out the appropriate compiler option to use.
As an example, don’t add -Wall
to the PUBLIC
or INTERFACE
section of target_compile_options
, since it is not required to build depending targets.
@rockerbacon, I have written a script that checks for new files and touches the corresponding CMakeLists file. Quoting Linus Thorwald freely I would say: "people who do not use GLOB are smart but ugly"