osquery-1/CMakeLists.txt

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CMake
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# Copyright (c) 2014-present, The osquery authors
#
# This source code is licensed as defined by the LICENSE file found in the
# root directory of this source tree.
#
# SPDX-License-Identifier: (Apache-2.0 OR GPL-2.0-only)
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.14.6)
Refactor third-party libraries to build from source on Linux (#5706) Add a way to compile third-party libraries from source instead of downloading prebuilt ones. Each library source code is downloaded with git into a submodule at configure time, in response to the find_package(library_name) CMake call, except for OpenSSL where the official source archive is used. Each submodule is attached to a release tag on its own upstream repository. All the libraries are built using CMake directly, except for OpenSSL which uses a formula system, which permits to build libraries with a separate build system when there's no easy way to integrate it directly with CMake. This new dependency system determines which library is fetched from where using the concept of "layers". Currently we have three of them: source, formula, facebook, where the last layer represents the pre-built libraries. The provided order will be used when looking for libraries. A system to patch submodule source code has been added and it's currently used with googletest, libudev and util-linux. Patches should be put under libraries/cmake/source/<library name>/patches/<submodule>, where <submodule> is often one and is "src", but in other cases, like AWS, there are multiple with a more specific name. If for whatever reason the submodule cloning or the patching fails, the submodule has to be unregistered and its folder should be cleared. This should be achievable with "git submodule deinit -f <submodule path>" Following some other changes on existing functionality: - Changed the CMake variable BUILD_TESTING to OSQUERY_BUILD_TESTS to avoid enabling tests on third party libraries. Due to an issue with glog the BUILD_TESTING variable will be always forced to OFF. - Moved compiler and linker flags to their own file cmake/flags.cmake - Moved all the third-party CMakeLists.txt used for pre-built libraries under libraries/cmake/facebook - Added the --exclude-folders option to tools/format-check.py and tools/git-clang-format.py, so that it's possible to ignore any third party library source code. - The format and format_check target use the new --exclude-folders option to exclude libraries/cmake/source from formatting. - The test and osquery binaries are properly compiled with PIE (osquery/osquery#5611) Co-authored-by: Stefano Bonicatti <stefano.bonicatti@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Teddy Reed <teddy@casualhacking.io>
2019-08-30 14:25:19 +00:00
cmake_policy(SET CMP0083 NEW)
# toolchain.cmake needs to be included before project() because the former sets the compiler path for the custom toolchain,
# if the user specify it and the latter does compiler detection.
# utilities.cmake is a dependency of toolchain.cmake.
include(cmake/utilities.cmake)
include(cmake/toolchain.cmake)
project(osquery)
Refactor third-party libraries to build from source on Linux (#5706) Add a way to compile third-party libraries from source instead of downloading prebuilt ones. Each library source code is downloaded with git into a submodule at configure time, in response to the find_package(library_name) CMake call, except for OpenSSL where the official source archive is used. Each submodule is attached to a release tag on its own upstream repository. All the libraries are built using CMake directly, except for OpenSSL which uses a formula system, which permits to build libraries with a separate build system when there's no easy way to integrate it directly with CMake. This new dependency system determines which library is fetched from where using the concept of "layers". Currently we have three of them: source, formula, facebook, where the last layer represents the pre-built libraries. The provided order will be used when looking for libraries. A system to patch submodule source code has been added and it's currently used with googletest, libudev and util-linux. Patches should be put under libraries/cmake/source/<library name>/patches/<submodule>, where <submodule> is often one and is "src", but in other cases, like AWS, there are multiple with a more specific name. If for whatever reason the submodule cloning or the patching fails, the submodule has to be unregistered and its folder should be cleared. This should be achievable with "git submodule deinit -f <submodule path>" Following some other changes on existing functionality: - Changed the CMake variable BUILD_TESTING to OSQUERY_BUILD_TESTS to avoid enabling tests on third party libraries. Due to an issue with glog the BUILD_TESTING variable will be always forced to OFF. - Moved compiler and linker flags to their own file cmake/flags.cmake - Moved all the third-party CMakeLists.txt used for pre-built libraries under libraries/cmake/facebook - Added the --exclude-folders option to tools/format-check.py and tools/git-clang-format.py, so that it's possible to ignore any third party library source code. - The format and format_check target use the new --exclude-folders option to exclude libraries/cmake/source from formatting. - The test and osquery binaries are properly compiled with PIE (osquery/osquery#5611) Co-authored-by: Stefano Bonicatti <stefano.bonicatti@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Teddy Reed <teddy@casualhacking.io>
2019-08-30 14:25:19 +00:00
if(OSQUERY_BUILD_TESTS)
enable_testing()
endif()
include(cmake/globals.cmake)
include(cmake/options.cmake)
Refactor third-party libraries to build from source on Linux (#5706) Add a way to compile third-party libraries from source instead of downloading prebuilt ones. Each library source code is downloaded with git into a submodule at configure time, in response to the find_package(library_name) CMake call, except for OpenSSL where the official source archive is used. Each submodule is attached to a release tag on its own upstream repository. All the libraries are built using CMake directly, except for OpenSSL which uses a formula system, which permits to build libraries with a separate build system when there's no easy way to integrate it directly with CMake. This new dependency system determines which library is fetched from where using the concept of "layers". Currently we have three of them: source, formula, facebook, where the last layer represents the pre-built libraries. The provided order will be used when looking for libraries. A system to patch submodule source code has been added and it's currently used with googletest, libudev and util-linux. Patches should be put under libraries/cmake/source/<library name>/patches/<submodule>, where <submodule> is often one and is "src", but in other cases, like AWS, there are multiple with a more specific name. If for whatever reason the submodule cloning or the patching fails, the submodule has to be unregistered and its folder should be cleared. This should be achievable with "git submodule deinit -f <submodule path>" Following some other changes on existing functionality: - Changed the CMake variable BUILD_TESTING to OSQUERY_BUILD_TESTS to avoid enabling tests on third party libraries. Due to an issue with glog the BUILD_TESTING variable will be always forced to OFF. - Moved compiler and linker flags to their own file cmake/flags.cmake - Moved all the third-party CMakeLists.txt used for pre-built libraries under libraries/cmake/facebook - Added the --exclude-folders option to tools/format-check.py and tools/git-clang-format.py, so that it's possible to ignore any third party library source code. - The format and format_check target use the new --exclude-folders option to exclude libraries/cmake/source from formatting. - The test and osquery binaries are properly compiled with PIE (osquery/osquery#5611) Co-authored-by: Stefano Bonicatti <stefano.bonicatti@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Teddy Reed <teddy@casualhacking.io>
2019-08-30 14:25:19 +00:00
include(cmake/flags.cmake)
include(cmake/packaging.cmake)
if(OSQUERY_TOOLCHAIN_SYSROOT AND NOT DEFINED PLATFORM_LINUX)
message(FATAL_ERROR "The custom toolchain can only be used with Linux, undefine OSQUERY_TOOLCHAIN_SYSROOT and specify a compiler to use")
endif()
# clang-tidy needs to be initialized in global scope, before any
# target is created
if(OSQUERY_ENABLE_CLANG_TIDY)
find_package(clang-tidy)
if(TARGET clang-tidy::clang-tidy)
foreach(language C CXX)
set("CMAKE_${language}_CLANG_TIDY"
"${CLANG-TIDY_EXECUTABLE};${OSQUERY_CLANG_TIDY_CHECKS}"
)
endforeach()
else()
message(WARNING "clang-tidy: Disabled because it was not found")
endif()
endif()
function(main)
message(STATUS "Build type: ${CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE}")
message(STATUS "Shared libraries: ${BUILD_SHARED_LIBS}")
if(DEFINED PLATFORM_MACOS)
if((NOT "${CMAKE_C_COMPILER_ID}" STREQUAL "Clang" AND NOT "${CMAKE_C_COMPILER_ID}" STREQUAL "AppleClang") OR
(NOT "${CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER_ID}" STREQUAL "Clang" AND NOT "${CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER_ID}" STREQUAL "AppleClang"))
message(STATUS "Warning: the selected C or C++ compiler is not clang/clang++. Compilation may fail")
endif()
elseif(NOT DEFINED PLATFORM_WINDOWS)
if(NOT "${CMAKE_C_COMPILER_ID}" STREQUAL "Clang" OR
NOT "${CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER_ID}" STREQUAL "Clang")
message(STATUS "Warning: the selected C or C++ compiler is not clang/clang++. Compilation may fail")
endif()
endif()
findPythonExecutablePath()
generateSpecialTargets()
Refactor third-party libraries to build from source on Linux (#5706) Add a way to compile third-party libraries from source instead of downloading prebuilt ones. Each library source code is downloaded with git into a submodule at configure time, in response to the find_package(library_name) CMake call, except for OpenSSL where the official source archive is used. Each submodule is attached to a release tag on its own upstream repository. All the libraries are built using CMake directly, except for OpenSSL which uses a formula system, which permits to build libraries with a separate build system when there's no easy way to integrate it directly with CMake. This new dependency system determines which library is fetched from where using the concept of "layers". Currently we have three of them: source, formula, facebook, where the last layer represents the pre-built libraries. The provided order will be used when looking for libraries. A system to patch submodule source code has been added and it's currently used with googletest, libudev and util-linux. Patches should be put under libraries/cmake/source/<library name>/patches/<submodule>, where <submodule> is often one and is "src", but in other cases, like AWS, there are multiple with a more specific name. If for whatever reason the submodule cloning or the patching fails, the submodule has to be unregistered and its folder should be cleared. This should be achievable with "git submodule deinit -f <submodule path>" Following some other changes on existing functionality: - Changed the CMake variable BUILD_TESTING to OSQUERY_BUILD_TESTS to avoid enabling tests on third party libraries. Due to an issue with glog the BUILD_TESTING variable will be always forced to OFF. - Moved compiler and linker flags to their own file cmake/flags.cmake - Moved all the third-party CMakeLists.txt used for pre-built libraries under libraries/cmake/facebook - Added the --exclude-folders option to tools/format-check.py and tools/git-clang-format.py, so that it's possible to ignore any third party library source code. - The format and format_check target use the new --exclude-folders option to exclude libraries/cmake/source from formatting. - The test and osquery binaries are properly compiled with PIE (osquery/osquery#5611) Co-authored-by: Stefano Bonicatti <stefano.bonicatti@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Teddy Reed <teddy@casualhacking.io>
2019-08-30 14:25:19 +00:00
add_subdirectory("libraries")
importLibraries()
add_subdirectory("osquery")
add_subdirectory("plugins")
add_subdirectory("tools")
add_subdirectory("specs")
add_subdirectory("external")
add_subdirectory("tests")
if(DEFINED PLATFORM_WINDOWS)
enableOsqueryWEL()
endif()
identifyPackagingSystem()
generateInstallTargets()
generatePackageTarget()
Refactor third-party libraries to build from source on Linux (#5706) Add a way to compile third-party libraries from source instead of downloading prebuilt ones. Each library source code is downloaded with git into a submodule at configure time, in response to the find_package(library_name) CMake call, except for OpenSSL where the official source archive is used. Each submodule is attached to a release tag on its own upstream repository. All the libraries are built using CMake directly, except for OpenSSL which uses a formula system, which permits to build libraries with a separate build system when there's no easy way to integrate it directly with CMake. This new dependency system determines which library is fetched from where using the concept of "layers". Currently we have three of them: source, formula, facebook, where the last layer represents the pre-built libraries. The provided order will be used when looking for libraries. A system to patch submodule source code has been added and it's currently used with googletest, libudev and util-linux. Patches should be put under libraries/cmake/source/<library name>/patches/<submodule>, where <submodule> is often one and is "src", but in other cases, like AWS, there are multiple with a more specific name. If for whatever reason the submodule cloning or the patching fails, the submodule has to be unregistered and its folder should be cleared. This should be achievable with "git submodule deinit -f <submodule path>" Following some other changes on existing functionality: - Changed the CMake variable BUILD_TESTING to OSQUERY_BUILD_TESTS to avoid enabling tests on third party libraries. Due to an issue with glog the BUILD_TESTING variable will be always forced to OFF. - Moved compiler and linker flags to their own file cmake/flags.cmake - Moved all the third-party CMakeLists.txt used for pre-built libraries under libraries/cmake/facebook - Added the --exclude-folders option to tools/format-check.py and tools/git-clang-format.py, so that it's possible to ignore any third party library source code. - The format and format_check target use the new --exclude-folders option to exclude libraries/cmake/source from formatting. - The test and osquery binaries are properly compiled with PIE (osquery/osquery#5611) Co-authored-by: Stefano Bonicatti <stefano.bonicatti@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Teddy Reed <teddy@casualhacking.io>
2019-08-30 14:25:19 +00:00
endfunction()
function(importLibraries)
set(library_descriptor_list
"Linux,Darwin:augeas"
"Linux:berkeley-db"
"Linux,Darwin,Windows:boost"
"Linux,Darwin,Windows:bzip2"
"Linux,Darwin,Windows:gflags"
"Linux,Darwin,Windows:glog"
"Linux,Darwin,Windows:googletest"
"Linux,Darwin,Windows:libarchive"
"Linux:libaudit"
"Linux:libcryptsetup"
"Linux:libdevmapper"
"Linux:libdpkg"
"Linux:libelfin"
"Linux:libgcrypt"
"Linux:libgpg-error"
"Linux:libiptables"
"Linux,Darwin:libmagic"
2020-03-06 20:06:55 +00:00
"Linux,Darwin,Windows:librdkafka"
Refactor third-party libraries to build from source on Linux (#5706) Add a way to compile third-party libraries from source instead of downloading prebuilt ones. Each library source code is downloaded with git into a submodule at configure time, in response to the find_package(library_name) CMake call, except for OpenSSL where the official source archive is used. Each submodule is attached to a release tag on its own upstream repository. All the libraries are built using CMake directly, except for OpenSSL which uses a formula system, which permits to build libraries with a separate build system when there's no easy way to integrate it directly with CMake. This new dependency system determines which library is fetched from where using the concept of "layers". Currently we have three of them: source, formula, facebook, where the last layer represents the pre-built libraries. The provided order will be used when looking for libraries. A system to patch submodule source code has been added and it's currently used with googletest, libudev and util-linux. Patches should be put under libraries/cmake/source/<library name>/patches/<submodule>, where <submodule> is often one and is "src", but in other cases, like AWS, there are multiple with a more specific name. If for whatever reason the submodule cloning or the patching fails, the submodule has to be unregistered and its folder should be cleared. This should be achievable with "git submodule deinit -f <submodule path>" Following some other changes on existing functionality: - Changed the CMake variable BUILD_TESTING to OSQUERY_BUILD_TESTS to avoid enabling tests on third party libraries. Due to an issue with glog the BUILD_TESTING variable will be always forced to OFF. - Moved compiler and linker flags to their own file cmake/flags.cmake - Moved all the third-party CMakeLists.txt used for pre-built libraries under libraries/cmake/facebook - Added the --exclude-folders option to tools/format-check.py and tools/git-clang-format.py, so that it's possible to ignore any third party library source code. - The format and format_check target use the new --exclude-folders option to exclude libraries/cmake/source from formatting. - The test and osquery binaries are properly compiled with PIE (osquery/osquery#5611) Co-authored-by: Stefano Bonicatti <stefano.bonicatti@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Teddy Reed <teddy@casualhacking.io>
2019-08-30 14:25:19 +00:00
"Linux:librpm"
"Linux:libudev"
"Linux,Darwin,Windows:libxml2"
Refactor third-party libraries to build from source on Linux (#5706) Add a way to compile third-party libraries from source instead of downloading prebuilt ones. Each library source code is downloaded with git into a submodule at configure time, in response to the find_package(library_name) CMake call, except for OpenSSL where the official source archive is used. Each submodule is attached to a release tag on its own upstream repository. All the libraries are built using CMake directly, except for OpenSSL which uses a formula system, which permits to build libraries with a separate build system when there's no easy way to integrate it directly with CMake. This new dependency system determines which library is fetched from where using the concept of "layers". Currently we have three of them: source, formula, facebook, where the last layer represents the pre-built libraries. The provided order will be used when looking for libraries. A system to patch submodule source code has been added and it's currently used with googletest, libudev and util-linux. Patches should be put under libraries/cmake/source/<library name>/patches/<submodule>, where <submodule> is often one and is "src", but in other cases, like AWS, there are multiple with a more specific name. If for whatever reason the submodule cloning or the patching fails, the submodule has to be unregistered and its folder should be cleared. This should be achievable with "git submodule deinit -f <submodule path>" Following some other changes on existing functionality: - Changed the CMake variable BUILD_TESTING to OSQUERY_BUILD_TESTS to avoid enabling tests on third party libraries. Due to an issue with glog the BUILD_TESTING variable will be always forced to OFF. - Moved compiler and linker flags to their own file cmake/flags.cmake - Moved all the third-party CMakeLists.txt used for pre-built libraries under libraries/cmake/facebook - Added the --exclude-folders option to tools/format-check.py and tools/git-clang-format.py, so that it's possible to ignore any third party library source code. - The format and format_check target use the new --exclude-folders option to exclude libraries/cmake/source from formatting. - The test and osquery binaries are properly compiled with PIE (osquery/osquery#5611) Co-authored-by: Stefano Bonicatti <stefano.bonicatti@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Teddy Reed <teddy@casualhacking.io>
2019-08-30 14:25:19 +00:00
"Linux,Darwin,Windows:linenoise-ng"
"Linux,Darwin:lldpd"
"Linux,Darwin,Windows:lzma"
Refactor third-party libraries to build from source on Linux (#5706) Add a way to compile third-party libraries from source instead of downloading prebuilt ones. Each library source code is downloaded with git into a submodule at configure time, in response to the find_package(library_name) CMake call, except for OpenSSL where the official source archive is used. Each submodule is attached to a release tag on its own upstream repository. All the libraries are built using CMake directly, except for OpenSSL which uses a formula system, which permits to build libraries with a separate build system when there's no easy way to integrate it directly with CMake. This new dependency system determines which library is fetched from where using the concept of "layers". Currently we have three of them: source, formula, facebook, where the last layer represents the pre-built libraries. The provided order will be used when looking for libraries. A system to patch submodule source code has been added and it's currently used with googletest, libudev and util-linux. Patches should be put under libraries/cmake/source/<library name>/patches/<submodule>, where <submodule> is often one and is "src", but in other cases, like AWS, there are multiple with a more specific name. If for whatever reason the submodule cloning or the patching fails, the submodule has to be unregistered and its folder should be cleared. This should be achievable with "git submodule deinit -f <submodule path>" Following some other changes on existing functionality: - Changed the CMake variable BUILD_TESTING to OSQUERY_BUILD_TESTS to avoid enabling tests on third party libraries. Due to an issue with glog the BUILD_TESTING variable will be always forced to OFF. - Moved compiler and linker flags to their own file cmake/flags.cmake - Moved all the third-party CMakeLists.txt used for pre-built libraries under libraries/cmake/facebook - Added the --exclude-folders option to tools/format-check.py and tools/git-clang-format.py, so that it's possible to ignore any third party library source code. - The format and format_check target use the new --exclude-folders option to exclude libraries/cmake/source from formatting. - The test and osquery binaries are properly compiled with PIE (osquery/osquery#5611) Co-authored-by: Stefano Bonicatti <stefano.bonicatti@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Teddy Reed <teddy@casualhacking.io>
2019-08-30 14:25:19 +00:00
"Linux,Darwin:popt"
"Linux,Darwin,Windows:rapidjson"
"Linux,Darwin,Windows:rocksdb"
2020-05-25 16:17:11 +00:00
"Linux,Darwin,Windows:sleuthkit"
Refactor third-party libraries to build from source on Linux (#5706) Add a way to compile third-party libraries from source instead of downloading prebuilt ones. Each library source code is downloaded with git into a submodule at configure time, in response to the find_package(library_name) CMake call, except for OpenSSL where the official source archive is used. Each submodule is attached to a release tag on its own upstream repository. All the libraries are built using CMake directly, except for OpenSSL which uses a formula system, which permits to build libraries with a separate build system when there's no easy way to integrate it directly with CMake. This new dependency system determines which library is fetched from where using the concept of "layers". Currently we have three of them: source, formula, facebook, where the last layer represents the pre-built libraries. The provided order will be used when looking for libraries. A system to patch submodule source code has been added and it's currently used with googletest, libudev and util-linux. Patches should be put under libraries/cmake/source/<library name>/patches/<submodule>, where <submodule> is often one and is "src", but in other cases, like AWS, there are multiple with a more specific name. If for whatever reason the submodule cloning or the patching fails, the submodule has to be unregistered and its folder should be cleared. This should be achievable with "git submodule deinit -f <submodule path>" Following some other changes on existing functionality: - Changed the CMake variable BUILD_TESTING to OSQUERY_BUILD_TESTS to avoid enabling tests on third party libraries. Due to an issue with glog the BUILD_TESTING variable will be always forced to OFF. - Moved compiler and linker flags to their own file cmake/flags.cmake - Moved all the third-party CMakeLists.txt used for pre-built libraries under libraries/cmake/facebook - Added the --exclude-folders option to tools/format-check.py and tools/git-clang-format.py, so that it's possible to ignore any third party library source code. - The format and format_check target use the new --exclude-folders option to exclude libraries/cmake/source from formatting. - The test and osquery binaries are properly compiled with PIE (osquery/osquery#5611) Co-authored-by: Stefano Bonicatti <stefano.bonicatti@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Teddy Reed <teddy@casualhacking.io>
2019-08-30 14:25:19 +00:00
"Linux,Darwin:smartmontools"
"Linux,Darwin,Windows:sqlite"
"Linux,Darwin:ssdeep-cpp"
"Linux,Darwin,Windows:thrift"
"Linux:util-linux"
2020-07-24 01:16:10 +00:00
"Linux,Darwin,Windows:yara"
Refactor third-party libraries to build from source on Linux (#5706) Add a way to compile third-party libraries from source instead of downloading prebuilt ones. Each library source code is downloaded with git into a submodule at configure time, in response to the find_package(library_name) CMake call, except for OpenSSL where the official source archive is used. Each submodule is attached to a release tag on its own upstream repository. All the libraries are built using CMake directly, except for OpenSSL which uses a formula system, which permits to build libraries with a separate build system when there's no easy way to integrate it directly with CMake. This new dependency system determines which library is fetched from where using the concept of "layers". Currently we have three of them: source, formula, facebook, where the last layer represents the pre-built libraries. The provided order will be used when looking for libraries. A system to patch submodule source code has been added and it's currently used with googletest, libudev and util-linux. Patches should be put under libraries/cmake/source/<library name>/patches/<submodule>, where <submodule> is often one and is "src", but in other cases, like AWS, there are multiple with a more specific name. If for whatever reason the submodule cloning or the patching fails, the submodule has to be unregistered and its folder should be cleared. This should be achievable with "git submodule deinit -f <submodule path>" Following some other changes on existing functionality: - Changed the CMake variable BUILD_TESTING to OSQUERY_BUILD_TESTS to avoid enabling tests on third party libraries. Due to an issue with glog the BUILD_TESTING variable will be always forced to OFF. - Moved compiler and linker flags to their own file cmake/flags.cmake - Moved all the third-party CMakeLists.txt used for pre-built libraries under libraries/cmake/facebook - Added the --exclude-folders option to tools/format-check.py and tools/git-clang-format.py, so that it's possible to ignore any third party library source code. - The format and format_check target use the new --exclude-folders option to exclude libraries/cmake/source from formatting. - The test and osquery binaries are properly compiled with PIE (osquery/osquery#5611) Co-authored-by: Stefano Bonicatti <stefano.bonicatti@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Teddy Reed <teddy@casualhacking.io>
2019-08-30 14:25:19 +00:00
"Linux,Darwin,Windows:zlib"
"Linux,Darwin,Windows:zstd"
"Linux,Darwin,Windows:openssl"
"Linux,Darwin,Windows:aws-sdk-cpp"
"Linux,Darwin,Windows:icu"
Refactor third-party libraries to build from source on Linux (#5706) Add a way to compile third-party libraries from source instead of downloading prebuilt ones. Each library source code is downloaded with git into a submodule at configure time, in response to the find_package(library_name) CMake call, except for OpenSSL where the official source archive is used. Each submodule is attached to a release tag on its own upstream repository. All the libraries are built using CMake directly, except for OpenSSL which uses a formula system, which permits to build libraries with a separate build system when there's no easy way to integrate it directly with CMake. This new dependency system determines which library is fetched from where using the concept of "layers". Currently we have three of them: source, formula, facebook, where the last layer represents the pre-built libraries. The provided order will be used when looking for libraries. A system to patch submodule source code has been added and it's currently used with googletest, libudev and util-linux. Patches should be put under libraries/cmake/source/<library name>/patches/<submodule>, where <submodule> is often one and is "src", but in other cases, like AWS, there are multiple with a more specific name. If for whatever reason the submodule cloning or the patching fails, the submodule has to be unregistered and its folder should be cleared. This should be achievable with "git submodule deinit -f <submodule path>" Following some other changes on existing functionality: - Changed the CMake variable BUILD_TESTING to OSQUERY_BUILD_TESTS to avoid enabling tests on third party libraries. Due to an issue with glog the BUILD_TESTING variable will be always forced to OFF. - Moved compiler and linker flags to their own file cmake/flags.cmake - Moved all the third-party CMakeLists.txt used for pre-built libraries under libraries/cmake/facebook - Added the --exclude-folders option to tools/format-check.py and tools/git-clang-format.py, so that it's possible to ignore any third party library source code. - The format and format_check target use the new --exclude-folders option to exclude libraries/cmake/source from formatting. - The test and osquery binaries are properly compiled with PIE (osquery/osquery#5611) Co-authored-by: Stefano Bonicatti <stefano.bonicatti@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Teddy Reed <teddy@casualhacking.io>
2019-08-30 14:25:19 +00:00
)
foreach(library_descriptor ${library_descriptor_list})
# Expand the library descriptor
string(REPLACE ":" ";" library_descriptor "${library_descriptor}")
list(GET library_descriptor 0 platform_list)
list(GET library_descriptor 1 library)
string(REPLACE "," ";" platform_list "${platform_list}")
Refactor third-party libraries to build from source on Linux (#5706) Add a way to compile third-party libraries from source instead of downloading prebuilt ones. Each library source code is downloaded with git into a submodule at configure time, in response to the find_package(library_name) CMake call, except for OpenSSL where the official source archive is used. Each submodule is attached to a release tag on its own upstream repository. All the libraries are built using CMake directly, except for OpenSSL which uses a formula system, which permits to build libraries with a separate build system when there's no easy way to integrate it directly with CMake. This new dependency system determines which library is fetched from where using the concept of "layers". Currently we have three of them: source, formula, facebook, where the last layer represents the pre-built libraries. The provided order will be used when looking for libraries. A system to patch submodule source code has been added and it's currently used with googletest, libudev and util-linux. Patches should be put under libraries/cmake/source/<library name>/patches/<submodule>, where <submodule> is often one and is "src", but in other cases, like AWS, there are multiple with a more specific name. If for whatever reason the submodule cloning or the patching fails, the submodule has to be unregistered and its folder should be cleared. This should be achievable with "git submodule deinit -f <submodule path>" Following some other changes on existing functionality: - Changed the CMake variable BUILD_TESTING to OSQUERY_BUILD_TESTS to avoid enabling tests on third party libraries. Due to an issue with glog the BUILD_TESTING variable will be always forced to OFF. - Moved compiler and linker flags to their own file cmake/flags.cmake - Moved all the third-party CMakeLists.txt used for pre-built libraries under libraries/cmake/facebook - Added the --exclude-folders option to tools/format-check.py and tools/git-clang-format.py, so that it's possible to ignore any third party library source code. - The format and format_check target use the new --exclude-folders option to exclude libraries/cmake/source from formatting. - The test and osquery binaries are properly compiled with PIE (osquery/osquery#5611) Co-authored-by: Stefano Bonicatti <stefano.bonicatti@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Teddy Reed <teddy@casualhacking.io>
2019-08-30 14:25:19 +00:00
list(FIND platform_list "${CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME}" platform_index)
if(platform_index EQUAL -1)
continue()
endif()
find_package("${library}" REQUIRED)
# Skip libraries which already use our internal target name
Refactor third-party libraries to build from source on Linux (#5706) Add a way to compile third-party libraries from source instead of downloading prebuilt ones. Each library source code is downloaded with git into a submodule at configure time, in response to the find_package(library_name) CMake call, except for OpenSSL where the official source archive is used. Each submodule is attached to a release tag on its own upstream repository. All the libraries are built using CMake directly, except for OpenSSL which uses a formula system, which permits to build libraries with a separate build system when there's no easy way to integrate it directly with CMake. This new dependency system determines which library is fetched from where using the concept of "layers". Currently we have three of them: source, formula, facebook, where the last layer represents the pre-built libraries. The provided order will be used when looking for libraries. A system to patch submodule source code has been added and it's currently used with googletest, libudev and util-linux. Patches should be put under libraries/cmake/source/<library name>/patches/<submodule>, where <submodule> is often one and is "src", but in other cases, like AWS, there are multiple with a more specific name. If for whatever reason the submodule cloning or the patching fails, the submodule has to be unregistered and its folder should be cleared. This should be achievable with "git submodule deinit -f <submodule path>" Following some other changes on existing functionality: - Changed the CMake variable BUILD_TESTING to OSQUERY_BUILD_TESTS to avoid enabling tests on third party libraries. Due to an issue with glog the BUILD_TESTING variable will be always forced to OFF. - Moved compiler and linker flags to their own file cmake/flags.cmake - Moved all the third-party CMakeLists.txt used for pre-built libraries under libraries/cmake/facebook - Added the --exclude-folders option to tools/format-check.py and tools/git-clang-format.py, so that it's possible to ignore any third party library source code. - The format and format_check target use the new --exclude-folders option to exclude libraries/cmake/source from formatting. - The test and osquery binaries are properly compiled with PIE (osquery/osquery#5611) Co-authored-by: Stefano Bonicatti <stefano.bonicatti@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Teddy Reed <teddy@casualhacking.io>
2019-08-30 14:25:19 +00:00
if(TARGET "thirdparty_${library}")
continue()
# For generic libraries that import the library name, let's create
# an alias
elseif(TARGET "${library}")
add_library("thirdparty_${library}" ALIAS "${library}")
# Legacy libraries will just export variables; build a new INTERFACE
# target with them
elseif(DEFINED "${library}_LIBRARIES")
if(NOT DEFINED "${library}_INCLUDE_DIRS")
message(FATAL_ERROR "Variable ${library}_INCLUDE_DIRS was not found!")
endif()
add_library("thirdparty_${library}" INTERFACE)
target_link_libraries("thirdparty_${library}" INTERFACE
${library}_LIBRARIES
)
target_include_directories("thirdparty_${library}" INTERFACE
${library}_INCLUDE_DIRS
)
if(DEFINED "${library}_DEFINITIONS")
target_compile_definitions("thirdparty_${library}" INTERFACE
${library}_DEFINITIONS
)
endif()
else()
message(FATAL_ERROR "The '${library}' library was found but it couldn't be imported correctly")
Refactor third-party libraries to build from source on Linux (#5706) Add a way to compile third-party libraries from source instead of downloading prebuilt ones. Each library source code is downloaded with git into a submodule at configure time, in response to the find_package(library_name) CMake call, except for OpenSSL where the official source archive is used. Each submodule is attached to a release tag on its own upstream repository. All the libraries are built using CMake directly, except for OpenSSL which uses a formula system, which permits to build libraries with a separate build system when there's no easy way to integrate it directly with CMake. This new dependency system determines which library is fetched from where using the concept of "layers". Currently we have three of them: source, formula, facebook, where the last layer represents the pre-built libraries. The provided order will be used when looking for libraries. A system to patch submodule source code has been added and it's currently used with googletest, libudev and util-linux. Patches should be put under libraries/cmake/source/<library name>/patches/<submodule>, where <submodule> is often one and is "src", but in other cases, like AWS, there are multiple with a more specific name. If for whatever reason the submodule cloning or the patching fails, the submodule has to be unregistered and its folder should be cleared. This should be achievable with "git submodule deinit -f <submodule path>" Following some other changes on existing functionality: - Changed the CMake variable BUILD_TESTING to OSQUERY_BUILD_TESTS to avoid enabling tests on third party libraries. Due to an issue with glog the BUILD_TESTING variable will be always forced to OFF. - Moved compiler and linker flags to their own file cmake/flags.cmake - Moved all the third-party CMakeLists.txt used for pre-built libraries under libraries/cmake/facebook - Added the --exclude-folders option to tools/format-check.py and tools/git-clang-format.py, so that it's possible to ignore any third party library source code. - The format and format_check target use the new --exclude-folders option to exclude libraries/cmake/source from formatting. - The test and osquery binaries are properly compiled with PIE (osquery/osquery#5611) Co-authored-by: Stefano Bonicatti <stefano.bonicatti@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Teddy Reed <teddy@casualhacking.io>
2019-08-30 14:25:19 +00:00
endif()
endforeach()
endfunction()
main()