I'm having trouble setting my default build configuration to Release. In my CMakeLists.txt file, I set CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE at the top of the file with:
#enable Release ALWAYS, configure vars
set(CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE Release)
set(EXECUTABLE_NAME "ParticleSimulator")
set(VERSION_MAJOR 0)
set(VERSION_MINOR 2)
But upon building my project and opening the solution, I'm always presented with Debug mode, contrary to what I specified in my CMakeLists file. What am I doing wrong?
I've looked at some of the other question on there, but I didn't see anything that was specific to this question.
A gist of the CMakeLists.txt.
CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE
from working...
set(CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE "Release" CACHE STRING "Configuration type" FORCE)
which didn't work
set(CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE Release)
This is not how it's working. Accidentally this will work for Makefile
generator, for IDE's like Xcode and Visual Studio this line will be ignored because Release/Debug switched internally. Documentation is pretty clear about that. If you want to limit your build variants you need to set CMAKE_CONFIGURATION_TYPES
CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE
is give in this post. Once set giving make VERBOSE=1
shows the complete command sent to the compiler which can be used to verify if it did work.
There are two types of generators: single-configurations and multi-configurations.
Single configurations
Make-like generators: Unix Makefiles, NMake Makefiles, MinGW Makefiles, ...
You set the configuration type in the generate step:
cmake -H. -B_builds/Debug -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug "-GUnix Makefiles"
In this case, the build step is always Debug:
> cmake --build _builds/Debug
/usr/bin/c++ -g ...
> cmake --build _builds/Debug --config Debug # `--config` ignored
/usr/bin/c++ -g ...
> cmake --build _builds/Debug --config Release # yep, ignored
/usr/bin/c++ -g ...
Multi-configuration
IDE generators: Visual Studio, Xcode
CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE
on generate step is ignored, both:
> cmake -H. -B_builds -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug "-GVisual Studio 12 2013 Win64"
and
> cmake -H. -B_builds -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release "-GVisual Studio 12 2013 Win64"
will have the same effect:
https://i.stack.imgur.com/C0vNC.png
This is because all the configurations is internal (i.e., _builds/msvc-opaque/Release
and _builds/msvc-opaque/Debug
or something, doesn't matter). You can use --config
options to switch:
> cmake --build _builds --config Release
cl /O2 ...
> cmake --build _builds --config Debug
cl /Od ...
Control (?)
Yes, you can. Just define CMAKE_CONFIGURATION_TYPES:
# Somewhere in CMakeLists.txt
message("Generated with config types: ${CMAKE_CONFIGURATION_TYPES}")
Default output:
-- Detecting CXX compiler ABI info - done
Generated with config types: Debug;Release;MinSizeRel;RelWithDebInfo
-- Configuring done
Rewrite it:
> cmake -H. -B_builds -DCMAKE_CONFIGURATION_TYPES="Debug;Release" "-GVisual Studio 12 2013 Win64"
-- Detecting CXX compiler ABI info - done
Generated with config types: Debug;Release
-- Configuring done
https://i.stack.imgur.com/a3yIB.png
You can even define your own configuration type:
> cmake -H. -B_builds -DCMAKE_CONFIGURATION_TYPES="Debug;MyRelease" -DCMAKE_CXX_FLAGS_MYRELEASE="/My-Rel-flag" -DCMAKE_EXE_LINKER_FLAGS_MYRELEASE="/My-Linker-flags" "-GVisual Studio 12 2013 Win64"
https://i.stack.imgur.com/y3V0k.png
And build:
cmake --build _builds --config MyRelease
Messy (?)
Not at all if you know the trick :) This is how to build/test configuration in a script/CI server/documentation's build instructions, etc.:
> CONFIG=Debug
> cmake -H. -B_builds "-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=${CONFIG}" # Set Debug to Makefile, ignored by IDE
> cmake --build _builds --config "${CONFIG}" # Build Debug in IDE, ignored by Makefile
> (cd _builds && ctest -VV -C "${CONFIG}") # Test Debug in IDE, ignored by Makefile
Bad pattern
if(CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE STREQUAL Debug) # Burn it with fire!!!
set(CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE MySuperRelease) # Be ready to catch a bug from IDE user...
Good one
set(CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS_DEBUG "${CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS_DEBUG} --my-debug-flags")
Works nice.
target_compile_definitions(MyTarget PUBLIC "$<$<CONFIG:Debug>:MYDEBUG_MACRO>")
Thank you! :) You save a day for one programmer.
Works for me with Makefile, I'm happy ...
Some quote from a nice book of a nice guy you probably know (emphasis mine):
Why should you bother? People who program on a variety of systems or use a variety of compilers care a lot because if they don’t, they are forced to waste time finding and fixing obscure bugs. People who claim they don’t care about portability usually do so because they use only a single system and feel they can afford the attitude that ‘‘the language is what my compiler implements.’’ This is a narrow and shortsighted view. If your program is a success, it is likely to be ported, so someone will have to find and fix problems related to implementation dependent features. In addition, programs often need to be compiled with other compilers for the same system, and even a future release of your favorite compiler may do some things differently from the current one. It is far easier to know and limit the impact of implementation dependencies when a program is written than to try to untangle the mess afterwards.
You can also use following snippet:
if(NOT CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE)
set(CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE "RelWithDebInfo" CACHE STRING
"Default build type: RelWithDebInfo" FORCE)
endif()
One possibility that occurs is that one of the sub-modules had set the CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE
value in the cache, that is:
SET(CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE Debug CACHE)
Meaning that that value will be updated permanently from that point to the end of the configuration run.
One great way to track the offending place where this value has changed is by using CMake's variable_watch. In your main CMakelists.txt
file, add the following line
variable_watch(CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE)
This will print to the standard error every access to this variable. And to get it to log file, do something like:
cmake <your options> 2>variable_watch.log
You may see something like:
CMake Debug Log at <...>/CMakeLists.txt:184 (add_library): Variable "CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE" was accessed using READ_ACCESS with value "Debug".
Then you will likely see the point(s) where CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE was first changed. And from here you'll be much closer to trace the offending CMake line.
Success story sharing
CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE
to ReleaseCmakeList.txt
? I think its somewhere in the section Control (?), but I am having trouble parsing it because I'm too inexperienced. Also note we only want to set the default valu; its fine of the user overrides it from the command line.-H.
is an undocumented feature.