| add_library | |
| ----------- | |
| .. only:: html | |
| .. contents:: | |
| Add a library to the project using the specified source files. | |
| Normal Libraries | |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | |
| .. signature:: | |
| add_library(<name> [<type>] [EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL] <sources>...) | |
| :target: normal | |
| Add a library target called ``<name>`` to be built from the source files | |
| listed in the command invocation. | |
| The optional ``<type>`` specifies the type of library to be created: | |
| ``STATIC`` | |
| An archive of object files for use when linking other targets. | |
| ``SHARED`` | |
| A dynamic library that may be linked by other targets and loaded | |
| at runtime. | |
| ``MODULE`` | |
| A plugin that may not be linked by other targets, but may be | |
| dynamically loaded at runtime using dlopen-like functionality. | |
| If no ``<type>`` is given the default is ``STATIC`` or ``SHARED`` | |
| based on the value of the :variable:`BUILD_SHARED_LIBS` variable. | |
| The options are: | |
| ``EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL`` | |
| Set the :prop_tgt:`EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL` target property automatically. | |
| See documentation of that target property for details. | |
| The ``<name>`` corresponds to the logical target name and must be globally | |
| unique within a project. The actual file name of the library built is | |
| constructed based on conventions of the native platform (such as | |
| ``lib<name>.a`` or ``<name>.lib``). | |
| .. versionadded:: 3.1 | |
| Source arguments to ``add_library`` may use "generator expressions" with | |
| the syntax ``$<...>``. See the :manual:`cmake-generator-expressions(7)` | |
| manual for available expressions. | |
| .. versionadded:: 3.11 | |
| The source files can be omitted if they are added later using | |
| :command:`target_sources`. | |
| For ``SHARED`` and ``MODULE`` libraries the | |
| :prop_tgt:`POSITION_INDEPENDENT_CODE` target | |
| property is set to ``ON`` automatically. | |
| A ``SHARED`` library may be marked with the :prop_tgt:`FRAMEWORK` | |
| target property to create an macOS Framework. | |
| .. versionadded:: 3.8 | |
| A ``STATIC`` library may be marked with the :prop_tgt:`FRAMEWORK` | |
| target property to create a static Framework. | |
| If a library does not export any symbols, it must not be declared as a | |
| ``SHARED`` library. For example, a Windows resource DLL or a managed C++/CLI | |
| DLL that exports no unmanaged symbols would need to be a ``MODULE`` library. | |
| This is because CMake expects a ``SHARED`` library to always have an | |
| associated import library on Windows. | |
| By default the library file will be created in the build tree directory | |
| corresponding to the source tree directory in which the command was | |
| invoked. See documentation of the :prop_tgt:`ARCHIVE_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY`, | |
| :prop_tgt:`LIBRARY_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY`, and | |
| :prop_tgt:`RUNTIME_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY` target properties to change this | |
| location. See documentation of the :prop_tgt:`OUTPUT_NAME` target | |
| property to change the ``<name>`` part of the final file name. | |
| See the :manual:`cmake-buildsystem(7)` manual for more on defining | |
| buildsystem properties. | |
| See also :prop_sf:`HEADER_FILE_ONLY` on what to do if some sources are | |
| pre-processed, and you want to have the original sources reachable from | |
| within IDE. | |
| .. versionchanged:: 3.30 | |
| On platforms that do not support shared libraries, ``add_library`` | |
| now fails on calls creating ``SHARED`` libraries instead of | |
| automatically converting them to ``STATIC`` libraries as before. | |
| See policy :policy:`CMP0164`. | |
| Object Libraries | |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | |
| .. signature:: | |
| add_library(<name> OBJECT <sources>...) | |
| :target: OBJECT | |
| Add an :ref:`Object Library <Object Libraries>` to compile source files | |
| without archiving or linking their object files into a library. | |
| Other targets created by ``add_library`` or :command:`add_executable` | |
| may reference the objects using an expression of the | |
| form :genex:`$\<TARGET_OBJECTS:objlib\> <TARGET_OBJECTS>` as a source, where | |
| ``objlib`` is the object library name. For example: | |
| .. code-block:: cmake | |
| add_library(... $<TARGET_OBJECTS:objlib> ...) | |
| add_executable(... $<TARGET_OBJECTS:objlib> ...) | |
| will include objlib's object files in a library and an executable | |
| along with those compiled from their own sources. Object libraries | |
| may contain only sources that compile, header files, and other files | |
| that would not affect linking of a normal library (e.g. ``.txt``). | |
| They may contain custom commands generating such sources, but not | |
| ``PRE_BUILD``, ``PRE_LINK``, or ``POST_BUILD`` commands. Some native build | |
| systems (such as Xcode) may not like targets that have only object files, so | |
| consider adding at least one real source file to any target that references | |
| :genex:`$\<TARGET_OBJECTS:objlib\> <TARGET_OBJECTS>`. | |
| .. versionadded:: 3.12 | |
| Object libraries can be linked to with :command:`target_link_libraries`. | |
| Interface Libraries | |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | |
| .. signature:: | |
| add_library(<name> INTERFACE) | |
| :target: INTERFACE | |
| Add an :ref:`Interface Library <Interface Libraries>` target that may | |
| specify usage requirements for dependents but does not compile sources | |
| and does not produce a library artifact on disk. | |
| An interface library with no source files is not included as a target | |
| in the generated buildsystem. However, it may have | |
| properties set on it and it may be installed and exported. | |
| Typically, ``INTERFACE_*`` properties are populated on an interface | |
| target using the commands: | |
| * :command:`set_property`, | |
| * :command:`target_link_libraries(INTERFACE)`, | |
| * :command:`target_link_options(INTERFACE)`, | |
| * :command:`target_include_directories(INTERFACE)`, | |
| * :command:`target_compile_options(INTERFACE)`, | |
| * :command:`target_compile_definitions(INTERFACE)`, and | |
| * :command:`target_sources(INTERFACE)`, | |
| and then it is used as an argument to :command:`target_link_libraries` | |
| like any other target. | |
| .. versionadded:: 3.15 | |
| An interface library can have :prop_tgt:`PUBLIC_HEADER` and | |
| :prop_tgt:`PRIVATE_HEADER` properties. The headers specified by those | |
| properties can be installed using the :command:`install(TARGETS)` command. | |
| .. signature:: | |
| add_library(<name> INTERFACE [EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL] <sources>...) | |
| :target: INTERFACE-with-sources | |
| .. versionadded:: 3.19 | |
| Add an :ref:`Interface Library <Interface Libraries>` target with | |
| source files (in addition to usage requirements and properties as | |
| documented by the :command:`above signature <add_library(INTERFACE)>`). | |
| Source files may be listed directly in the ``add_library`` call | |
| or added later by calls to :command:`target_sources` with the | |
| ``PRIVATE`` or ``PUBLIC`` keywords. | |
| If an interface library has source files (i.e. the :prop_tgt:`SOURCES` | |
| target property is set), or header sets (i.e. the :prop_tgt:`HEADER_SETS` | |
| target property is set), it will appear in the generated buildsystem | |
| as a build target much like a target defined by the | |
| :command:`add_custom_target` command. It does not compile any sources, | |
| but does contain build rules for custom commands created by the | |
| :command:`add_custom_command` command. | |
| The options are: | |
| ``EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL`` | |
| Set the :prop_tgt:`EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL` target property automatically. | |
| See documentation of that target property for details. | |
| .. note:: | |
| In most command signatures where the ``INTERFACE`` keyword appears, | |
| the items listed after it only become part of that target's usage | |
| requirements and are not part of the target's own settings. However, | |
| in this signature of ``add_library``, the ``INTERFACE`` keyword refers | |
| to the library type only. Sources listed after it in the ``add_library`` | |
| call are ``PRIVATE`` to the interface library and do not appear in its | |
| :prop_tgt:`INTERFACE_SOURCES` target property. | |
| .. _`add_library imported libraries`: | |
| Imported Libraries | |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | |
| .. signature:: | |
| add_library(<name> <type> IMPORTED [GLOBAL]) | |
| :target: IMPORTED | |
| Add an :ref:`IMPORTED library target <Imported Targets>` called ``<name>``. | |
| The target name may be referenced like any target built within the project, | |
| except that by default it is visible only in the directory in which it is | |
| created, and below. | |
| The ``<type>`` must be one of: | |
| ``STATIC``, ``SHARED``, ``MODULE``, ``UNKNOWN`` | |
| References a library file located outside the project. The | |
| :prop_tgt:`IMPORTED_LOCATION` target property (or its per-configuration | |
| variant :prop_tgt:`IMPORTED_LOCATION_<CONFIG>`) specifies the | |
| location of the main library file on disk: | |
| * For a ``SHARED`` library on most non-Windows platforms, the main library | |
| file is the ``.so`` or ``.dylib`` file used by both linkers and dynamic | |
| loaders. If the referenced library file has a ``SONAME`` (or on macOS, | |
| has a ``LC_ID_DYLIB`` starting in ``@rpath/``), the value of that field | |
| should be set in the :prop_tgt:`IMPORTED_SONAME` target property. | |
| If the referenced library file does not have a ``SONAME``, but the | |
| platform supports it, then the :prop_tgt:`IMPORTED_NO_SONAME` target | |
| property should be set. | |
| * For a ``SHARED`` library on Windows, the :prop_tgt:`IMPORTED_IMPLIB` | |
| target property (or its per-configuration variant | |
| :prop_tgt:`IMPORTED_IMPLIB_<CONFIG>`) specifies the location of the | |
| DLL import library file (``.lib`` or ``.dll.a``) on disk, and the | |
| ``IMPORTED_LOCATION`` is the location of the ``.dll`` runtime | |
| library (and is optional, but needed by the :genex:`TARGET_RUNTIME_DLLS` | |
| generator expression). | |
| Additional usage requirements may be specified in ``INTERFACE_*`` | |
| properties. | |
| An ``UNKNOWN`` library type is typically only used in the implementation | |
| of :ref:`Find Modules`. It allows the path to an imported library | |
| (often found using the :command:`find_library` command) to be used | |
| without having to know what type of library it is. This is especially | |
| useful on Windows where a static library and a DLL's import library | |
| both have the same file extension. | |
| ``OBJECT`` | |
| References a set of object files located outside the project. | |
| The :prop_tgt:`IMPORTED_OBJECTS` target property (or its per-configuration | |
| variant :prop_tgt:`IMPORTED_OBJECTS_<CONFIG>`) specifies the locations of | |
| object files on disk. | |
| Additional usage requirements may be specified in ``INTERFACE_*`` | |
| properties. | |
| ``INTERFACE`` | |
| Does not reference any library or object files on disk, but may | |
| specify usage requirements in ``INTERFACE_*`` properties. | |
| The options are: | |
| ``GLOBAL`` | |
| Make the target name globally visible. | |
| No rules are generated to build imported targets, and the :prop_tgt:`IMPORTED` | |
| target property is ``True``. Imported libraries are useful for convenient | |
| reference from commands like :command:`target_link_libraries`. | |
| Details about the imported library are specified by setting properties whose | |
| names begin in ``IMPORTED_`` and ``INTERFACE_``. See documentation of | |
| such properties for more information. | |
| Alias Libraries | |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | |
| .. signature:: | |
| add_library(<name> ALIAS <target>) | |
| :target: ALIAS | |
| Creates an :ref:`Alias Target <Alias Targets>`, such that ``<name>`` can be | |
| used to refer to ``<target>`` in subsequent commands. The ``<name>`` does | |
| not appear in the generated buildsystem as a make target. The ``<target>`` | |
| may not be an ``ALIAS``. | |
| .. versionadded:: 3.11 | |
| An ``ALIAS`` can target a ``GLOBAL`` :ref:`Imported Target <Imported Targets>` | |
| .. versionadded:: 3.18 | |
| An ``ALIAS`` can target a non-``GLOBAL`` Imported Target. Such alias is | |
| scoped to the directory in which it is created and below. | |
| The :prop_tgt:`ALIAS_GLOBAL` target property can be used to check if the | |
| alias is global or not. | |
| ``ALIAS`` targets can be used as linkable targets and as targets to | |
| read properties from. They can also be tested for existence with the | |
| regular :command:`if(TARGET)` subcommand. The ``<name>`` may not be used | |
| to modify properties of ``<target>``, that is, it may not be used as the | |
| operand of :command:`set_property`, :command:`set_target_properties`, | |
| :command:`target_link_libraries` etc. An ``ALIAS`` target may not be | |
| installed or exported. | |
| See Also | |
| ^^^^^^^^ | |
| * :command:`add_executable` | |