CMP0058¶
New in version 3.3.
Ninja requires custom command byproducts to be explicit.
When an intermediate file generated during the build is consumed by an expensive operation or a large tree of dependents, one may reduce the work needed for an incremental rebuild by updating the file timestamp only when its content changes. With this approach the generation rule must have a separate output file that is always updated with a new timestamp that is newer than any dependencies of the rule so that the build tool re-runs the rule only when the input changes. We refer to the separate output file as a rule's witness and the generated file as a rule's byproduct.
Byproducts may not be listed as outputs because their timestamps are
allowed to be older than the inputs. No build tools (like make
)
that existed when CMake was designed have a way to express byproducts.
Therefore CMake versions prior to 3.2 had no way to specify them.
Projects typically left byproducts undeclared in the rules that
generate them. For example:
add_custom_command(
OUTPUT witness.txt
COMMAND ${CMAKE_COMMAND} -E copy_if_different
${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}/input.txt
byproduct.txt # timestamp may not change
COMMAND ${CMAKE_COMMAND} -E touch witness.txt
DEPENDS ${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}/input.txt
)
add_custom_target(Provider DEPENDS witness.txt)
add_custom_command(
OUTPUT generated.c
COMMAND expensive-task -i byproduct.txt -o generated.c
DEPENDS ${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/byproduct.txt
)
add_library(Consumer generated.c)
add_dependencies(Consumer Provider)
This works well for all generators except Ninja
.
The Ninja build tool sees a rule listing byproduct.txt
as a dependency and no rule listing it as an output. Ninja then
complains that there is no way to satisfy the dependency and
stops building even though there are order-only dependencies
that ensure byproduct.txt
will exist before its consumers
need it. See discussion of this problem in Ninja Issue 760
for further details on why Ninja works this way.
Instead of leaving byproducts undeclared in the rules that generate
them, Ninja expects byproducts to be listed along with other outputs.
Such rules may be marked with a restat
option that tells Ninja
to check the timestamps of outputs after the rules run. This
prevents byproducts whose timestamps do not change from causing
their dependents to re-build unnecessarily.
Since the above approach does not tell CMake what custom command
generates byproduct.txt
, the Ninja generator does not have
enough information to add the byproduct as an output of any rule.
CMake 2.8.12 and above work around this problem and allow projects
using the above approach to build by generating phony
build
rules to tell Ninja to tolerate such missing files. However, this
workaround prevents Ninja from diagnosing a dependency that is
really missing. It also works poorly in in-source builds where
every custom command dependency, even on source files, needs to
be treated this way because CMake does not have enough information
to know which files are generated as byproducts of custom commands.
Introducing Byproducts¶
CMake 3.2 introduced the BYPRODUCTS
option to the
add_custom_command()
and add_custom_target()
commands. This option allows byproducts to be specified explicitly:
add_custom_command(
OUTPUT witness.txt
BYPRODUCTS byproduct.txt # explicit byproduct specification
COMMAND ${CMAKE_COMMAND} -E copy_if_different
${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}/input.txt
byproduct.txt # timestamp may not change
...
The BYPRODUCTS
option is used by the Ninja
generator
to list byproducts among the outputs of the custom commands that
generate them, and is ignored by other generators.
CMake 3.3 and above prefer to require projects to specify custom
command byproducts explicitly so that it can avoid using the
phony
rule workaround altogether. Policy CMP0058
was
introduced to provide compatibility with existing projects that
still need the workaround.
This policy has no effect on generators other than Ninja
.
The OLD
behavior for this policy is to generate Ninja phony
rules for unknown dependencies in the build tree. The NEW
behavior for this policy is to not generate these and instead
require projects to specify custom command BYPRODUCTS
explicitly.
This policy was introduced in CMake version 3.3.
It may be set by cmake_policy()
or cmake_minimum_required()
.
If it is not set, CMake warns when it sees unknown dependencies in out-of-source build trees, and uses OLD
behavior.
The policy setting must be in scope at the end of the top-level
CMakeLists.txt
file of the project and has global effect.
Note
The OLD
behavior of a policy is
deprecated by definition
and may be removed in a future version of CMake.