On Thursday 23 April 2009, Martin Apel wrote:
> Alexander Neundorf wrote:
> > On Wednesday 22 April 2009, Martin Apel wrote:
> >> Hi all,
> >>
> >> I am currently fighting with Visual Studio regenerating a
> >> CMake-generated project on every build, although nothing has changed. I
> >> am searching for a method how to debug the generated dependencies inside
> >> VS. The project builds a DLL from Fortran files, which are generated by
> >> a Perl script. The setup looks something like this:
> >>
> >> ADD_CUSTOM_COMMAND(OUTPUT ${FortranSources}
> >>                    COMMAND ${CMAKE_COMMAND} -E chdir
> >> ${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR} ${PERL_EXECUTABLE}
> >> {CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR}/scripts/createFortAccessors.pl
> >>                    DEPENDS
> >> ${CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR}/scripts/createFortAccessors.pl FortranModules.inp
> >> FortranCommons.inp ${ModuleDefs} ${CommonDefs})
> >> ADD_LIBRARY(FortranInterface SHARED ${FortranSources}
> >> FortranInterface.def)
> >
> > What is ModuleDefs and CommonDefs ? Are this files ?
> > How does FortranSources look like ? Does it contain absolute paths ?
> > I think you need to give a bit more information so that we can help.
>
> Hi Alex,
>
> thanks for your reply. ModuleDefs, CommonDefs and FortranSources are all
> lists of files given with their absolute paths. createFortAccessors
> parses the files listed in FortranModules.inp and FortranCommons.inp
> given as input and produces the files listed in FortranSources as
> output. I tried replacing FortranModules.inp and FortranCommons.inp with
> their absolute paths (${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}, but this doesn't
> change anything. Do you have any idea, what might be going wrong here?

No, not really.
I would suggest:
-make sure that the paths are really correct, i.e. use full paths everywhere.
Maybe the files are generated but they end up in a different directory ?

If that doesn't help, try to strip the problem down as much as possible so 
that you get a minimal version which works and can reproduce which step makes 
it fail.
You can start ass simple as using something like
echo "hello" > ${outputfile}
as your command to execute.

Alex
_______________________________________________
Powered by www.kitware.com

Visit other Kitware open-source projects at 
http://www.kitware.com/opensource/opensource.html

Please keep messages on-topic and check the CMake FAQ at: 
http://www.cmake.org/Wiki/CMake_FAQ

Follow this link to subscribe/unsubscribe:
http://www.cmake.org/mailman/listinfo/cmake

Reply via email to