For Find modules where `<Modulename>` is not fully uppercase.
`<Modulename>` is case-exact name used in the Find modules filename:
`CMake/Find<Moduleame>.cmake`.
`find_package_handle_standard_args()` sets both `<MODULENAME>_FOUND` and
`<Modulename>_FOUND` when detecting the dependency. Some CMake code
relies on this and 3rd-party code may rely on it too. Make sure to set
the latter variant when detecting the dependency via `pkg-config`, where
we don't call `find_package_handle_standard_args()`.
CMake sets these variable to `TRUE` (not `ON` or `1`). Replicate this
for compatibility.
Closes#16153
Make the Find modules set and return their respective `pkg-config`
module name(s) to the CMake build process, which then adds those
to the `Requires:` list.
Before this patch, `pkg-config` module names were maintainted in two
separate places. After this patch, they are maintained in the Find
modules for dependencies that have one (most do).
Re-align existing modules with this change: msh3, mbedtls, rustls.
These modules return their `pkg-config` module name only when
detected via `pkg-config`.
Follow-up to d511ec8b0a#15573Closes#15800
Extend `INSTALL-CMAKE` document with the list of available options,
a short description and default values.
The list may not be 100% complete.
There are no component boundaries in CMake, so the line is blurry
between curl options, CMake options, CMake Find modules options.
I included certain CMake options that seemed useful, and/or have
dedicated use withing curl's CMake source. But, all CMake built-in
options are usable, as documented upstream in CMake.
The naming of the options has a heritage and the inconsistencies with
it, including a lack of clear namespace. This may be subject to future
updates, also after figuring out which name has special meaning within
CMake and/or CMake projects out of unwritten convention or something
more tangible.
CMake allows to initialize any internal variable via `-D`. This may be
useful to pre-initialize/override feature check results. The list
doesn't contain these, and they remain officially undocumented.
Also:
- make adjustments to keep the spellchecker happy.
- retrofit description changes to the cmake sources.
- stop documenting deprecated `Find*` variables.
Reported-by: Daniel Stenberg
Fixes https://github.com/curl/curl/discussions/14885Closes#15388
In Find modules with native pkg-config detection (libgsasl, libidn2,
libssh, libuv, nettle) use the C compiler flags returned by pkg-config.
Also use the library paths, and return the pathless library names.
Also:
- add these library paths to `libcurl.pc`/`curl-config`.
- fix libgsasl detection to use the detected header directory.
FindGSS already did this before this patch.
Fixes#14641Closes#14652
For: libgsasl, libidn2, libssh, libuv.
The new Find modules retain using `pkg-config` natively, not as a "hint"
for the CMake-native detection. Of the pre-existing Find modules, only
FindNettle, and FindGSS (with customized code) work this way. Align
detection code for the new modules and add version detection for the
CMake-native paths.
Also, add CMake-native detection for `libgsasl`.
The remaining outlier in `CMakeLists.txt` is GnuTLS, which has
a CMake built-in Find module, but which lacks `pkg-config` support,
required for vcpkg. It remains unchanged.
Another part-outlier is `libssh`, which keeps requiring the trick
`find_package(libssh CONFIG QUIET)` for reasons I could not yet figure
out.
Closes#14555