Here's the sample code:
https://github.com/NickNick/cmake-interface-includes/commits/master . The
second commit breaks the build. I sort of understand why it does, but that
means I can't use the INTERFACE-trick, so to say, even with static
libraries.
Thanks for linking the other bug.
On Mon,
On 07/30/2014 05:31 AM, Nick Overdijk wrote:
https://github.com/NickNick/cmake-interface-includes/commits/master
Thanks. For reference, the summary is:
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 2.8.12)
project(FOO CXX)
add_library(foo foo/foo.cpp)
target_include_directories(foo INTERFACE foo)
True, I was just bothered by it when we got distcc running with a good
amount of cores. Thanks for your effort. :) I'll try and make something
with the things I've learned (I'm thinking of making some functions that
propagate usage requirements yet link with INTERFACE or something along
those
On 07/24/2014 05:47 PM, Nick Overdijk wrote:
I'm using target_include_directories of A to get some include
directories into B well, so I can't use
target_link_libraries(A INTERFACE B),
Can you clarify this with sample code please?
and I can't seem to use the OBJECT-way neither since B's
I'm using target_include_directories of A to get some include directories
into B well, so I can't use target_link_libraries(A INTERFACE B), and I
can't seem to use the OBJECT-way neither since B's sources won't compile
without A's INTERFACE_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES... Any suggestions?
On Wed, Jul 23,
On 07/23/2014 08:00 AM, Nick Overdijk wrote:
With this https://github.com/NickNick/cmake-dependency-waiting code here, why
do b wait for a and c wait for b to be build? The object files could all be
build in parallel right? Not doing it is making my distcc-cluster less and
less useful the
Thanks for the quick reply, but what if c needs b and b needs a? Adding
INTERFACE will then break the build of course, right, since b isn't
really linked to a... Or am I mistaken?
On Wed, Jul 23, 2014 at 2:36 PM, Brad King brad.k...@kitware.com wrote:
On 07/23/2014 08:00 AM, Nick Overdijk
Oh wait, since a is in the interface of b, b will always be accompanied by
a, even though it's not a dependency. Is that how it works?
On Wed, Jul 23, 2014 at 2:58 PM, Nick Overdijk n...@astrant.net wrote:
Thanks for the quick reply, but what if c needs b and b needs a? Adding
INTERFACE will
On 07/23/2014 09:07 AM, Nick Overdijk wrote:
Oh wait, since a is in the interface of b, b will always be
accompanied by a, even though it's not a dependency.
Is that how it works?
Yes. If B is a static library then it does not really link so
its dependencies are only ever used transitively
Crystal clear. Another layer of indirection eh? I'll see if I can work with
that... Thanks for the explanation.
On Wed, Jul 23, 2014 at 3:14 PM, Brad King brad.k...@kitware.com wrote:
On 07/23/2014 09:07 AM, Nick Overdijk wrote:
Oh wait, since a is in the interface of b, b will always be
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