This module provides a command to check whether the C compiler supports a given flag.
Load this module in a CMake project with:
include(CheckCCompilerFlag)
This module provides the following command:
Checks once whether the C compiler supports a given flag:
check_c_compiler_flag(<flag> <variable>)
This command checks once that the <flag> is accepted by the C compiler
without producing a diagnostic message. Multiple flags can be specified
in one argument as a string using a semicolon-separated list.
The result of the check is stored in the internal cache variable specified
by <variable>, with boolean true for success and boolean false for
failure.
A successful result only indicates that the compiler did not report an error when given the flag. Whether the flag has any effect, or the intended one, is outside the scope of this module.
Note
Since the underlying try_compile() command also uses flags from
variables like CMAKE_<LANG>_FLAGS, unknown or unsupported
flags in those variables may result in a false negative for this check.
Variables Affecting the Check
The following variables may be set before calling this command to modify the way the check is run:
CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGSA space-separated string of additional flags to pass to the compiler.
A semicolon-separated list will not work.
The contents of CMAKE_<LANG>_FLAGS and its associated
configuration-specific CMAKE_<LANG>_FLAGS_<CONFIG> variables
are automatically prepended to the compiler command before the contents of
this variable.
CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONSA semicolon-separated list of compiler
definitions, each of the form -DFOO or -DFOO=bar. A definition for
the name specified by the result variable argument of the check
command is also added automatically.
CMAKE_REQUIRED_INCLUDESA semicolon-separated list of header
search paths to pass to the compiler. These will be the only header
search paths used; the contents of the INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES
directory property will be ignored.
CMAKE_REQUIRED_LINK_OPTIONSAdded in version 3.14.
A semicolon-separated list of options to
add to the link command (see try_compile() for further details).
CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIESA semicolon-separated list of libraries to
add to the link command. These can be the names of system libraries, or
they can be Imported Targets (see try_compile() for further
details).
CMAKE_REQUIRED_LINK_DIRECTORIESAdded in version 3.31.
A semicolon-separated list of library search
paths to pass to the linker (see try_compile() for further
details).
CMAKE_REQUIRED_QUIETAdded in version 3.1.
If this variable evaluates to a boolean true value, all status messages associated with the check will be suppressed.
CMAKE_TRY_COMPILE_TARGET_TYPEInternally, the try_compile() command is used to perform the
check, and this variable controls the type of target it creates. If this
variable is set to EXECUTABLE (the default), the check compiles and
links the test source code as an executable program. If set to
STATIC_LIBRARY, the test source code is compiled but not linked.
The following example demonstrates how to use this module to check support
for the C compiler flag -fno-optimize-strlen, which disables
optimizations related to the strlen() C function in GCC and Clang
compilers. The result of the check is stored in the internal cache
variable HAVE_FNO_OPTIMIZE_STRLEN, and the flag is conditionally enabled
using the target_compile_options() command. The
$<COMPILE_LANGUAGE:...> generator
expression ensures that the flag is added only to C source files.
include(CheckCCompilerFlag)
check_c_compiler_flag(-fno-optimize-strlen HAVE_FNO_OPTIMIZE_STRLEN)
if(HAVE_FNO_OPTIMIZE_STRLEN)
target_compile_options(
example
PRIVATE $<$<COMPILE_LANGUAGE:C>:-fno-optimize-strlen>
)
endif()
The CheckCompilerFlag module for a more general command to check
whether a compiler flag is supported.