Recursive CMake search for header and source files

Sanchit picture Sanchit · Jul 15, 2013 · Viewed 48.4k times · Source

I am new to CMake and would like to ask if somebody can help in the following problem.

I have C++ source and header files in their respective folders and now, I want to make a CMake text file that recursively searches for them.

Currently, I am doing it in this way:

CMAKE_MINIMUM_REQUIRED(VERSION 2.8)
PROJECT(CarDetectorDAISY)

file(GLOB_RECURSE SRCS *.cpp)
file(GLOB_RECURSE HDRS *.h)

ADD_EXECUTABLE(stereo_framework  ${SRCS} ${HDRS})
TARGET_LINK_LIBRARIES(stereo_framework) 

This creates my CarDetectorDAISY.sln solution file and when I try to build it, it shows an error that header files are not found (No such file or directory).

It would be really grateful if someone can please help me. Thanks.

Answer

Fraser picture Fraser · Jul 15, 2013

You're probably missing one or more include_directories calls. Adding headers to the list of files in the add_executable call doesn't actually add then to the compiler's search path - it's a convenience feature whereby they are only added to the project's folder structure in IDEs.

So, in your root, say you have /my_lib/foo.h, and you want to include that in a source file as

#include "my_lib/foo.h"

Then in your CMakeLists.txt, you need to do:

include_directories(${CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR})

If, instead you just want to do

#include "foo.h"

then in the CMakeLists.txt, do

include_directories(${CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR}/my_lib)


I should mention that file(GLOB...) is not the recommended way to gather your list of sources - you should really just add each file explicitly in the CMakeLists.txt. By doing this, if you add or remove a source file later, the CMakeLists.txt is modified, and CMake automatically reruns the next time you try and build. From the docs for file:

We do not recommend using GLOB to collect a list of source files from your source tree. If no CMakeLists.txt file changes when a source is added or removed then the generated build system cannot know when to ask CMake to regenerate.