Can you share a bit more context? I suspect there may be no single
correct answer, as it depends on your situation what the best way is. If
you are using a toolchain file you will have to put the decision of
using that file outside of your cmake file. You can also opt to put a
check inside your
I have found this to work for RPM
files:
You have to define components using:
cpack_add_component(runtime DISPLAY_NAME runtime REQUIRED
INSTALL_TYPES all)
For rpm I had to set this:
SET(CPACK_RPM_COMPONENT_INSTALL "ON"
(Grepping
On 07/30/2012 11:28 PM, Xavier Besseron wrote:
On Mon, Jul 30, 2012 at 9:44 PM, Alexander Neundorf
a.neundorf-w...@gmx.net wrote:
On Monday 30 July 2012, Xavier Besseron wrote:
To build i386 binaries on my 64-bit system with multilib, I just do
something like this:
mkdir build-i386
cd
I'm not exactly sure what you are asking, but I think that rpm takes
care of moving old files by renaming them to .rpmorig. As an alternative
it is possible to pass your own rpm spec file to cmakerpm and there you
can use pre- and postinstallation hooks to do what you want.
Micha
On
Will a string replace combo help in your case? We use it to replace line
endings with ; to make a cmake list variable from a filelist:
STRING(REPLACE \n \\ svn_lastlog_with_slashes ${svn_lastlog})
regards,
Micha
On 06/29/2012 01:56 AM, Totte Karlsson wrote:
Hi,
I'm trying to get some svn
The unspecified may come from an Install statement that does not have a
component specified.
Micha
On 06/27/2012 01:44 PM, hce wrote:
Hi,
I've read some discussions posted ten months ago on
http://cmake.3232098.n2.nabble.com/Component-Package-Name-td6976896.html
where Eric Noulard pointed
Since a few days my cdash dashboard has stopped showing certain uploaded
builds. In the logfiles of the sites I can see they have been uploaded
successfully, and I do see the files on the cdash server in the backup
directory. The database does not show them however. The weird part is
that it
I think you could put the enable_testing() and add_test() statements in
a file called CMakeTests.txt in your subdirectory and include that in
your toplevel cmakelists.txt. That works for me anyway. I'm not sure if
this is the official way it is supposed to be done though.
Regards,
Micha
On
On 02/26/2012 09:18 AM, Andreas Guther wrote:
Hello,
I'm justing starting to learn/use CMake and I have a question regarding the
usage of it in regards of source tree structure and library usage.
I have the following folder structure:
Root
Bin
Win32X86Debug
I would like to exclude third party header files from the coverage
output. We're using ctest, cmake (version 2.8.5) and cdash, all on
Linux. The archive layout is as follows:
/
/Code/
/Code/Application/
/Code/Application/src/
/Code/Third-Party/
/Code/Third-Party/boost/
On 02/08/2012 12:00 PM, Rolf Eike Beer wrote:
I would like to exclude third party header files from the coverage
output. We're using ctest, cmake (version 2.8.5) and cdash, all on
Linux. The archive layout is as follows:
/
/Code/
/Code/Application/
/Code/Application/src/
/Code/Third-Party/
On 12/09/2011 04:47 PM, m.hergarden wrote:
On 12/09/2011 04:30 PM, David Cole wrote:
On Fri, Dec 9, 2011 at 9:30 AM, m.hergardenm.hergar...@euphoria-it.nl wrote:
I have two buildservers: a Linux box and a Windows box. I now have a
buildscript that does a svn checkout in the homedir
I have two buildservers: a Linux box and a Windows box. I now have a
buildscript that does a svn checkout in the homedir of the Linux build
user. This directory is shared read/write using Samba. The Windows
builduser (same credentials, same uid) is able to reach the files
through a mingw
On 12/09/2011 04:30 PM, David Cole wrote:
On Fri, Dec 9, 2011 at 9:30 AM, m.hergardenm.hergar...@euphoria-it.nl wrote:
I have two buildservers: a Linux box and a Windows box. I now have a
buildscript that does a svn checkout in the homedir of the Linux build user.
This directory is shared
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