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CMake output/build directory

I'm pretty new to CMake, and read a few tutorials on how to use it, and wrote some complicated 50 lines of CMake script in order to make a program for 3 different compilers. This probably concludes all my knowledge in CMake.

Now my problem is that I have some source code, whose folder I don't want to touch/mess with when I make the program. I want that all CMake and make output files and folders to go into ../Compile/, so I changed a few variables in my CMake script for that, and it worked for sometime when I did something like this on my laptop:

Compile$ cmake ../src
Compile$ make

Where with that I had a clean output in the folder I'm in right now, which is exactly what I'm looking for.

Now I moved to another computer, and recompiled CMake 2.8.11.2, and I'm almost back to square one! It always compiles the thing into the src folder where my CMakeLists.txt is located.

The part where I choose the directory in my CMake script is this:

set(dir ${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}/../Compile/)
set(EXECUTABLE_OUTPUT_PATH ${dir} CACHE PATH "Build directory" FORCE)
set(LIBRARY_OUTPUT_PATH ${dir} CACHE PATH "Build directory" FORCE)
set(CMAKE_RUNTIME_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY ${dir})
set(CMAKE_BUILD_FILES_DIRECTORY ${dir})
set(CMAKE_BUILD_DIRECTORY ${dir})
set(CMAKE_BINARY_DIR  ${dir})
SET(EXECUTABLE_OUTPUT_PATH ${dir})
SET(LIBRARY_OUTPUT_PATH ${dir}lib)
SET(CMAKE_CACHEFILE_DIR ${dir})

And now it always ends with:

-- Build files have been written to: /.../src

Am I missing something?

There's little need to set all the variables you're setting. CMake sets them to reasonable defaults. You should definitely not modify CMAKE_BINARY_DIR or CMAKE_CACHEFILE_DIR. What happens if you remove all these set() calls and just do cd Compile; rm -rf *; cmake ../src?
Basically, as long as you're outside of the source directory when running CMake, it will not modify the source directory unless your CMakeList explicitly tells it to.
@Angew Thank you for the tip, which is surprising! I removed all those lines and just used cmake ../src and it worked like a charm! This is so surprising because I tried it before when I was first learning CMake and it didn't work. Please put your answer in an official reply to give you the big fat check mark :)
What saved me was @Adam Bowen's remark that "you cannot create an out-of-source build for a source directory with an in-source build"

A
Adam Bowen

It sounds like you want an out of source build. There are a couple of ways you can create an out of source build.

Do what you were doing, run cd /path/to/my/build/folder cmake /path/to/my/source/folder which will cause cmake to generate a build tree in /path/to/my/build/folder for the source tree in /path/to/my/source/folder. Once you've created it, cmake remembers where the source folder is - so you can rerun cmake on the build tree with cmake /path/to/my/build/folder or even cmake . if your current directory is already the build folder. For CMake 3.13 or later, use these options to set the source and build folders cmake -B/path/to/my/build/folder -S/path/to/my/source/folder For older CMake, use some undocumented options to set the source and build folders: cmake -B/path/to/my/build/folder -H/path/to/my/source/folder which will do exactly the same thing as (1), but without the reliance on the current working directory.

CMake puts all of its outputs in the build tree by default, so unless you are liberally using ${CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR} or ${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR} in your cmake files, it shouldn't touch your source tree.

The biggest thing that can go wrong is if you have previously generated a build tree in your source tree (i.e. you have an in source build). Once you've done this the second part of (1) above kicks in, and cmake doesn't make any changes to the source or build locations. Thus, you cannot create an out-of-source build for a source directory with an in-source build. You can fix this fairly easily by removing (at a minimum) CMakeCache.txt from the source directory. There are a few other files (mostly in the CMakeFiles directory) that CMake generates that you should remove as well, but these won't cause cmake to treat the source tree as a build tree.

Since out-of-source builds are often more desirable than in-source builds, you might want to modify your cmake to require out of source builds:

# Ensures that we do an out of source build

MACRO(MACRO_ENSURE_OUT_OF_SOURCE_BUILD MSG)
     STRING(COMPARE EQUAL "${CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR}"
     "${CMAKE_BINARY_DIR}" insource)
     GET_FILENAME_COMPONENT(PARENTDIR ${CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR} PATH)
     STRING(COMPARE EQUAL "${CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR}"
     "${PARENTDIR}" insourcesubdir)
    IF(insource OR insourcesubdir)
        MESSAGE(FATAL_ERROR "${MSG}")
    ENDIF(insource OR insourcesubdir)
ENDMACRO(MACRO_ENSURE_OUT_OF_SOURCE_BUILD)

MACRO_ENSURE_OUT_OF_SOURCE_BUILD(
    "${CMAKE_PROJECT_NAME} requires an out of source build."
)

The above macro comes from a commonly used module called MacroOutOfSourceBuild. There are numerous sources for MacroOutOfSourceBuild.cmake on google but I can't seem to find the original and it's short enough to include here in full.

Unfortunately cmake has usually written a few files by the time the macro is invoked, so although it will stop you from actually performing the build you will still need to delete CMakeCache.txt and CMakeFiles.

You may find it useful to set the paths that binaries, shared and static libraries are written to - in which case see how do I make cmake output into a 'bin' dir? (disclaimer, I have the top voted answer on that question...but that's how I know about it).


Actually the option to set the source folder is -S, not -H
@smac89 Thanks! It looks like they documented them in 3.13 - I've updated the answer to reflect modern CMake.
A
Angew is no longer proud of SO

There's little need to set all the variables you're setting. CMake sets them to reasonable defaults. You should definitely not modify CMAKE_BINARY_DIR or CMAKE_CACHEFILE_DIR. Treat these as read-only.

First remove the existing problematic cache file from the src directory:

cd src
rm CMakeCache.txt
cd ..

Then remove all the set() commands and do:

cd Compile && rm -rf *
cmake ../src

As long as you're outside of the source directory when running CMake, it will not modify the source directory unless your CMakeList explicitly tells it to do so.

Once you have this working, you can look at where CMake puts things by default, and only if you're not satisfied with the default locations (such as the default value of EXECUTABLE_OUTPUT_PATH), modify only those you need. And try to express them relative to CMAKE_BINARY_DIR, CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR, PROJECT_BINARY_DIR etc.

If you look at CMake documentation, you'll see variables partitioned into semantic sections. Except for very special circumstances, you should treat all those listed under "Variables that Provide Information" as read-only inside CMakeLists.


I started using cmake with builds in the src directory... this technique failed initially. Once I deleted all the cmake build files/caches in the src directory this technique worked. Thanks!
Maybe it's better to not advise using rm -rf *. It's not pretty if cd Compile fails...
@Roman I consider such command-line examples pretty much pseudo-code. It's less verbose and more exact than typing "enter the directory Compile, delete everything there, and then run CMake with a path to the source dir." I assume basic common sense & judgement on part of the reader.
@AviTevet: I think this is the correct answer. If there are cmake cache files from a previous cmake invocation inside the source directory, you wont get cmake to pick another directory for the generated files, unless you delete all the old ones from the source directory. Pretty broken behaviour by CMake in my opinion. Why don't you write another answer?
A
Avi Tevet

Turning my comment into an answer:

In case anyone did what I did, which was start by putting all the build files in the source directory:

cd src
cmake .

cmake will put a bunch of build files and cache files (CMakeCache.txt, CMakeFiles, cmake_install.cmake, etc) in the src dir.

To change to an out of source build, I had to remove all of those files. Then I could do what @Angew recommended in his answer:

mkdir -p src/build
cd src/build
cmake ..

l
ldav1s

As of CMake Wiki:

CMAKE_BINARY_DIR if you are building in-source, this is the same as CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR, otherwise this is the top level directory of your build tree

Compare these two variables to determine if out-of-source build was started


D
Daniel Griscom

You should not rely on a hard coded build dir name in your script, so the line with ../Compile must be changed.

It's because it should be up to user where to compile.

Instead of that use one of predefined variables: http://www.cmake.org/Wiki/CMake_Useful_Variables (look for CMAKE_BINARY_DIR and CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR)


this is eaxctly what i was looking for - CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR, would typically tell about the current binary build path. Possibly can be used for setting the dependent libs/bin builds.
M
Martin Flaska

Starting from cmake 3.19 you can use also preset files, where you can specify among other useful things also the output binary dir:

{
  "version": 2,
  "cmakeMinimumRequired": {
    "major": 3,
    "minor": 19,
    "patch": 0
  },
  "configurePresets": [
    {
      "name": "default",
      "displayName": "Default",
      "description": "Default build cfg",
      "generator": "Unix Makefiles",
      "binaryDir": "${sourceDir}/Compile",
      "cacheVariables": {
      },
      "environment": {
      }
    }
  ]
}

Then just run cmake with --preset arg:

cmake --preset=default

Then just cd to your build dir and run make, in your case:

cd ./Compile
make