Hi
We have not yet moved to 3.5 but seeing this discussion, I am wondering
what we will have to do. In our project, we have several C and C++ cross
compilers and we want to compare them on selected benchmarks. We also
want to compare different compile options and different linking options.
We know for sure these cross compilers are working properly
and our technique today is roughly
CMakeForceCompiler(A)
compile benchmarks with A (and various options)
CMakeForceCCompiler(B)
compile benchmarks with B
CMakeForceCompiler(C)
compile benchmarks with C
Next, we run all the benchmarks and compare the results.
How am I supposed to do that if CMakeForceCompiler() is deprecated ?
Vania
On 02/09/2016 06:02 PM, Brad King wrote:
Hi Thibault,
Thanks for trying the release candidate!
On 02/09/2016 09:10 AM, Thibault Genessay wrote:
I installed 3.5 and the build broke
While CMakeForceCompiler is deprecated we think it should still work
in most cases where it worked before, just with a warning. What
actually breaks?
CMake complaining that this macro was deprecated and should
not be used because of the many improvements on the compiler
detection side.
For reference, the discussion that led to this decision was here:
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.programming.tools.cmake.devel/14410/focus=14500
Basically CMake now needs to detect a lot more from the compiler than
we can expect a caller to provide in a CMAKE_FORCE_C_COMPILER call.
We need to make the compiler detection work for everyone.
why I did use this FORCE hack in the first place: CMake tells me
my compiler is broken because it cannot compile a test program
(undefined symbol: _exit). This is somehow correct, as I compile
for bare metal and I am providing the _exit function in my code.
Does CMake at least detect the compiler id and version correctly?
Is it then only the test for working compiler that fails? Is there
something from the toolchain we can query to decide whether it can
link an executable without an extra spec file?
Thanks,
-Brad
--
Powered by www.kitware.com
Please keep messages on-topic and check the CMake FAQ at:
http://www.cmake.org/Wiki/CMake_FAQ
Kitware offers various services to support the CMake community. For more
information on each offering, please visit:
CMake Support: http://cmake.org/cmake/help/support.html
CMake Consulting: http://cmake.org/cmake/help/consulting.html
CMake Training Courses: http://cmake.org/cmake/help/training.html
Visit other Kitware open-source projects at
http://www.kitware.com/opensource/opensource.html
Follow this link to subscribe/unsubscribe:
http://public.kitware.com/mailman/listinfo/cmake