blob: 454c8605c7c17614c2f9d3a138a467e907bc7d96 [file] [log] [blame]
cmake_path
----------
.. versionadded:: 3.20
This command is for the manipulation of paths. Only syntactic aspects of
paths are handled, there is no interaction of any kind with any underlying
file system. The path may represent a non-existing path or even one that
is not allowed to exist on the current file system or platform.
For operations that do interact with the filesystem, see the :command:`file`
command.
.. note::
The ``cmake_path`` command handles paths in the format of the build system
(i.e. the host platform), not the target system. When cross-compiling,
if the path contains elements that are not representable on the host
platform (e.g. a drive letter when the host is not Windows), the results
will be unpredictable.
Synopsis
^^^^^^^^
.. parsed-literal::
`Conventions`_
`Path Structure And Terminology`_
`Normalization`_
`Decomposition`_
cmake_path(`GET`_ <path-var> :ref:`ROOT_NAME <GET_ROOT_NAME>` <out-var>)
cmake_path(`GET`_ <path-var> :ref:`ROOT_DIRECTORY <GET_ROOT_DIRECTORY>` <out-var>)
cmake_path(`GET`_ <path-var> :ref:`ROOT_PATH <GET_ROOT_PATH>` <out-var>)
cmake_path(`GET`_ <path-var> :ref:`FILENAME <GET_FILENAME>` <out-var>)
cmake_path(`GET`_ <path-var> :ref:`EXTENSION <GET_EXTENSION>` [LAST_ONLY] <out-var>)
cmake_path(`GET`_ <path-var> :ref:`STEM <GET_STEM>` [LAST_ONLY] <out-var>)
cmake_path(`GET`_ <path-var> :ref:`RELATIVE_PART <GET_RELATIVE_PART>` <out-var>)
cmake_path(`GET`_ <path-var> :ref:`PARENT_PATH <GET_PARENT_PATH>` <out-var>)
`Query`_
cmake_path(`HAS_ROOT_NAME`_ <path-var> <out-var>)
cmake_path(`HAS_ROOT_DIRECTORY`_ <path-var> <out-var>)
cmake_path(`HAS_ROOT_PATH`_ <path-var> <out-var>)
cmake_path(`HAS_FILENAME`_ <path-var> <out-var>)
cmake_path(`HAS_EXTENSION`_ <path-var> <out-var>)
cmake_path(`HAS_STEM`_ <path-var> <out-var>)
cmake_path(`HAS_RELATIVE_PART`_ <path-var> <out-var>)
cmake_path(`HAS_PARENT_PATH`_ <path-var> <out-var>)
cmake_path(`IS_ABSOLUTE`_ <path-var> <out-var>)
cmake_path(`IS_RELATIVE`_ <path-var> <out-var>)
cmake_path(`IS_PREFIX`_ <path-var> <input> [NORMALIZE] <out-var>)
cmake_path(`COMPARE`_ <input1> <OP> <input2> <out-var>)
`Modification`_
cmake_path(:ref:`SET <cmake_path-SET>` <path-var> [NORMALIZE] <input>)
cmake_path(`APPEND`_ <path-var> [<input>...] [OUTPUT_VARIABLE <out-var>])
cmake_path(`APPEND_STRING`_ <path-var> [<input>...] [OUTPUT_VARIABLE <out-var>])
cmake_path(`REMOVE_FILENAME`_ <path-var> [OUTPUT_VARIABLE <out-var>])
cmake_path(`REPLACE_FILENAME`_ <path-var> <input> [OUTPUT_VARIABLE <out-var>])
cmake_path(`REMOVE_EXTENSION`_ <path-var> [LAST_ONLY] [OUTPUT_VARIABLE <out-var>])
cmake_path(`REPLACE_EXTENSION`_ <path-var> [LAST_ONLY] <input> [OUTPUT_VARIABLE <out-var>])
`Generation`_
cmake_path(`NORMAL_PATH`_ <path-var> [OUTPUT_VARIABLE <out-var>])
cmake_path(`RELATIVE_PATH`_ <path-var> [BASE_DIRECTORY <input>] [OUTPUT_VARIABLE <out-var>])
cmake_path(`ABSOLUTE_PATH`_ <path-var> [BASE_DIRECTORY <input>] [NORMALIZE] [OUTPUT_VARIABLE <out-var>])
`Native Conversion`_
cmake_path(`NATIVE_PATH`_ <path-var> [NORMALIZE] <out-var>)
cmake_path(`CONVERT`_ <input> `TO_CMAKE_PATH_LIST`_ <out-var> [NORMALIZE])
cmake_path(`CONVERT`_ <input> `TO_NATIVE_PATH_LIST`_ <out-var> [NORMALIZE])
`Hashing`_
cmake_path(`HASH`_ <path-var> <out-var>)
Conventions
^^^^^^^^^^^
The following conventions are used in this command's documentation:
``<path-var>``
Always the name of a variable. For commands that expect a ``<path-var>``
as input, the variable must exist and it is expected to hold a single path.
``<input>``
A string literal which may contain a path, path fragment, or multiple paths
with a special separator depending on the command. See the description of
each command to see how this is interpreted.
``<input>...``
Zero or more string literal arguments.
``<out-var>``
The name of a variable into which the result of a command will be written.
Path Structure And Terminology
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
A path has the following structure (all components are optional, with some
constraints):
::
root-name root-directory-separator (item-name directory-separator)* filename
``root-name``
Identifies the root on a filesystem with multiple roots (such as ``"C:"``
or ``"//myserver"``). It is optional.
``root-directory-separator``
A directory separator that, if present, indicates that this path is
absolute. If it is missing and the first element other than the
``root-name`` is an ``item-name``, then the path is relative.
``item-name``
A sequence of characters that aren't directory separators. This name may
identify a file, a hard link, a symbolic link, or a directory. Two special
cases are recognized:
* The item name consisting of a single dot character ``.`` is a
directory name that refers to the current directory.
* The item name consisting of two dot characters ``..`` is a
directory name that refers to the parent directory.
The ``(...)*`` pattern shown above is to indicate that there can be zero
or more item names, with multiple items separated by a
``directory-separator``. The ``()*`` characters are not part of the path.
``directory-separator``
The only recognized directory separator is a forward slash character ``/``.
If this character is repeated, it is treated as a single directory
separator. In other words, ``/usr///////lib`` is the same as ``/usr/lib``.
.. _FILENAME_DEF:
.. _EXTENSION_DEF:
.. _STEM_DEF:
``filename``
A path has a ``filename`` if it does not end with a ``directory-separator``.
The ``filename`` is effectively the last ``item-name`` of the path, so it
can also be a hard link, symbolic link or a directory.
A ``filename`` can have an *extension*. By default, the extension is
defined as the sub-string beginning at the left-most period (including
the period) and until the end of the ``filename``. In commands that
accept a ``LAST_ONLY`` keyword, ``LAST_ONLY`` changes the interpretation
to the sub-string beginning at the right-most period.
The following exceptions apply to the above interpretation:
* If the first character in the ``filename`` is a period, that period is
ignored (i.e. a ``filename`` like ``".profile"`` is treated as having
no extension).
* If the ``filename`` is either ``.`` or ``..``, it has no extension.
The *stem* is the part of the ``filename`` before the extension.
Some commands refer to a ``root-path``. This is the concatenation of
``root-name`` and ``root-directory-separator``, either or both of which can
be empty. A ``relative-part`` refers to the full path with any ``root-path``
removed.
Creating A Path Variable
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
While a path can be created with care using an ordinary :command:`set`
command, it is recommended to use :ref:`cmake_path(SET) <cmake_path-SET>`
instead, as it automatically converts the path to the required form where
required. The :ref:`cmake_path(APPEND) <APPEND>` subcommand may
be another suitable alternative where a path needs to be constructed by
joining fragments. The following example compares the three methods for
constructing the same path:
.. code-block:: cmake
set(path1 "${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}/data")
cmake_path(SET path2 "${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}/data")
cmake_path(APPEND path3 "${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}" "data")
`Modification`_ and `Generation`_ sub-commands can either store the result
in-place, or in a separate variable named after an ``OUTPUT_VARIABLE``
keyword. All other sub-commands store the result in a mandatory ``<out-var>``
variable.
.. _Normalization:
Normalization
^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Some sub-commands support *normalizing* a path. The algorithm used to
normalize a path is as follows:
1. If the path is empty, stop (the normalized form of an empty path is
also an empty path).
2. Replace each ``directory-separator``, which may consist of multiple
separators, with a single ``/`` (``/a///b --> /a/b``).
3. Remove each solitary period (``.``) and any immediately following
``directory-separator`` (``/a/./b/. --> /a/b``).
4. Remove each ``item-name`` (other than ``..``) that is immediately
followed by a ``directory-separator`` and a ``..``, along with any
immediately following ``directory-separator`` (``/a/b/../c --> a/c``).
5. If there is a ``root-directory``, remove any ``..`` and any
``directory-separators`` immediately following them. The parent of the
root directory is treated as still the root directory (``/../a --> /a``).
6. If the last ``item-name`` is ``..``, remove any trailing
``directory-separator`` (``../ --> ..``).
7. If the path is empty by this stage, add a ``dot`` (normal form of ``./``
is ``.``).
Decomposition
^^^^^^^^^^^^^
.. _GET:
.. _GET_ROOT_NAME:
.. _GET_ROOT_DIRECTORY:
.. _GET_ROOT_PATH:
.. _GET_FILENAME:
.. _GET_EXTENSION:
.. _GET_STEM:
.. _GET_RELATIVE_PART:
.. _GET_PARENT_PATH:
The following forms of the ``GET`` subcommand each retrieve a different
component or group of components from a path. See
`Path Structure And Terminology`_ for the meaning of each path component.
::
cmake_path(GET <path-var> ROOT_NAME <out-var>)
cmake_path(GET <path-var> ROOT_DIRECTORY <out-var>)
cmake_path(GET <path-var> ROOT_PATH <out-var>)
cmake_path(GET <path-var> FILENAME <out-var>)
cmake_path(GET <path-var> EXTENSION [LAST_ONLY] <out-var>)
cmake_path(GET <path-var> STEM [LAST_ONLY] <out-var>)
cmake_path(GET <path-var> RELATIVE_PART <out-var>)
cmake_path(GET <path-var> PARENT_PATH <out-var>)
If a requested component is not present in the path, an empty string will be
stored in ``<out-var>``. For example, only Windows systems have the concept
of a ``root-name``, so when the host machine is non-Windows, the ``ROOT_NAME``
subcommand will always return an empty string.
For ``PARENT_PATH``, if the `HAS_RELATIVE_PART`_ subcommand returns false,
the result is a copy of ``<path-var>``. Note that this implies that a root
directory is considered to have a parent, with that parent being itself.
Where `HAS_RELATIVE_PART`_ returns true, the result will essentially be
``<path-var>`` with one less element.
Root examples
"""""""""""""
.. code-block:: cmake
set(path "c:/a")
cmake_path(GET path ROOT_NAME rootName)
cmake_path(GET path ROOT_DIRECTORY rootDir)
cmake_path(GET path ROOT_PATH rootPath)
message("Root name is \"${rootName}\"")
message("Root directory is \"${rootDir}\"")
message("Root path is \"${rootPath}\"")
::
Root name is "c:"
Root directory is "/"
Root path is "c:/"
Filename examples
"""""""""""""""""
.. code-block:: cmake
set(path "/a/b")
cmake_path(GET path FILENAME filename)
message("First filename is \"${filename}\"")
# Trailing slash means filename is empty
set(path "/a/b/")
cmake_path(GET path FILENAME filename)
message("Second filename is \"${filename}\"")
::
First filename is "b"
Second filename is ""
Extension and stem examples
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""
.. code-block:: cmake
set(path "name.ext1.ext2")
cmake_path(GET path EXTENSION fullExt)
cmake_path(GET path STEM fullStem)
message("Full extension is \"${fullExt}\"")
message("Full stem is \"${fullStem}\"")
# Effect of LAST_ONLY
cmake_path(GET path EXTENSION LAST_ONLY lastExt)
cmake_path(GET path STEM LAST_ONLY lastStem)
message("Last extension is \"${lastExt}\"")
message("Last stem is \"${lastStem}\"")
# Special cases
set(dotPath "/a/.")
set(dotDotPath "/a/..")
set(someMorePath "/a/.some.more")
cmake_path(GET dotPath EXTENSION dotExt)
cmake_path(GET dotPath STEM dotStem)
cmake_path(GET dotDotPath EXTENSION dotDotExt)
cmake_path(GET dotDotPath STEM dotDotStem)
cmake_path(GET dotMorePath EXTENSION someMoreExt)
cmake_path(GET dotMorePath STEM someMoreStem)
message("Dot extension is \"${dotExt}\"")
message("Dot stem is \"${dotStem}\"")
message("Dot-dot extension is \"${dotDotExt}\"")
message("Dot-dot stem is \"${dotDotStem}\"")
message(".some.more extension is \"${someMoreExt}\"")
message(".some.more stem is \"${someMoreStem}\"")
::
Full extension is ".ext1.ext2"
Full stem is "name"
Last extension is ".ext2"
Last stem is "name.ext1"
Dot extension is ""
Dot stem is "."
Dot-dot extension is ""
Dot-dot stem is ".."
.some.more extension is ".more"
.some.more stem is ".some"
Relative part examples
""""""""""""""""""""""
.. code-block:: cmake
set(path "c:/a/b")
cmake_path(GET path RELATIVE_PART result)
message("Relative part is \"${result}\"")
set(path "c/d")
cmake_path(GET path RELATIVE_PART result)
message("Relative part is \"${result}\"")
set(path "/")
cmake_path(GET path RELATIVE_PART result)
message("Relative part is \"${result}\"")
::
Relative part is "a/b"
Relative part is "c/d"
Relative part is ""
Path traversal examples
"""""""""""""""""""""""
.. code-block:: cmake
set(path "c:/a/b")
cmake_path(GET path PARENT_PATH result)
message("Parent path is \"${result}\"")
set(path "c:/")
cmake_path(GET path PARENT_PATH result)
message("Parent path is \"${result}\"")
::
Parent path is "c:/a"
Parent path is "c:/"
Query
^^^^^
Each of the ``GET`` subcommands has a corresponding ``HAS_...``
subcommand which can be used to discover whether a particular path
component is present. See `Path Structure And Terminology`_ for the
meaning of each path component.
.. _HAS_ROOT_NAME:
.. _HAS_ROOT_DIRECTORY:
.. _HAS_ROOT_PATH:
.. _HAS_FILENAME:
.. _HAS_EXTENSION:
.. _HAS_STEM:
.. _HAS_RELATIVE_PART:
.. _HAS_PARENT_PATH:
::
cmake_path(HAS_ROOT_NAME <path-var> <out-var>)
cmake_path(HAS_ROOT_DIRECTORY <path-var> <out-var>)
cmake_path(HAS_ROOT_PATH <path-var> <out-var>)
cmake_path(HAS_FILENAME <path-var> <out-var>)
cmake_path(HAS_EXTENSION <path-var> <out-var>)
cmake_path(HAS_STEM <path-var> <out-var>)
cmake_path(HAS_RELATIVE_PART <path-var> <out-var>)
cmake_path(HAS_PARENT_PATH <path-var> <out-var>)
Each of the above follows the predictable pattern of setting ``<out-var>``
to true if the path has the associated component, or false otherwise.
Note the following special cases:
* For ``HAS_ROOT_PATH``, a true result will only be returned if at least one
of ``root-name`` or ``root-directory`` is non-empty.
* For ``HAS_PARENT_PATH``, the root directory is also considered to have a
parent, which will be itself. The result is true except if the path
consists of just a :ref:`filename <FILENAME_DEF>`.
.. _IS_ABSOLUTE:
::
cmake_path(IS_ABSOLUTE <path-var> <out-var>)
Sets ``<out-var>`` to true if ``<path-var>`` is absolute. An absolute path
is a path that unambiguously identifies the location of a file without
reference to an additional starting location. On Windows, this means the
path must have both a ``root-name`` and a ``root-directory-separator`` to be
considered absolute. On other platforms, just a ``root-directory-separator``
is sufficient. Note that this means on Windows, ``IS_ABSOLUTE`` can be
false while ``HAS_ROOT_DIRECTORY`` can be true.
.. _IS_RELATIVE:
::
cmake_path(IS_RELATIVE <path-var> <out-var>)
This will store the opposite of ``IS_ABSOLUTE`` in ``<out-var>``.
.. _IS_PREFIX:
::
cmake_path(IS_PREFIX <path-var> <input> [NORMALIZE] <out-var>)
Checks if ``<path-var>`` is the prefix of ``<input>``.
When the ``NORMALIZE`` option is specified, ``<path-var>`` and ``<input>``
are :ref:`normalized <Normalization>` before the check.
.. code-block:: cmake
set(path "/a/b/c")
cmake_path(IS_PREFIX path "/a/b/c/d" result) # result = true
cmake_path(IS_PREFIX path "/a/b" result) # result = false
cmake_path(IS_PREFIX path "/x/y/z" result) # result = false
set(path "/a/b")
cmake_path(IS_PREFIX path "/a/c/../b" NORMALIZE result) # result = true
.. _COMPARE:
::
cmake_path(COMPARE <input1> EQUAL <input2> <out-var>)
cmake_path(COMPARE <input1> NOT_EQUAL <input2> <out-var>)
Compares the lexical representations of two paths provided as string literals.
No normalization is performed on either path. Equality is determined
according to the following pseudo-code logic:
::
if(NOT <input1>.root_name() STREQUAL <input2>.root_name())
return FALSE
if(<input1>.has_root_directory() XOR <input2>.has_root_directory())
return FALSE
Return FALSE if a relative portion of <input1> is not lexicographically
equal to the relative portion of <input2>. This comparison is performed path
component-wise. If all of the components compare equal, then return TRUE.
.. note::
Unlike most other ``cmake_path()`` subcommands, the ``COMPARE`` subcommand
takes literal strings as input, not the names of variables.
Modification
^^^^^^^^^^^^
.. _cmake_path-SET:
::
cmake_path(SET <path-var> [NORMALIZE] <input>)
Assign the ``<input>`` path to ``<path-var>``. If ``<input>`` is a native
path, it is converted into a cmake-style path with forward-slashes
(``/``). On Windows, the long filename marker is taken into account.
When the ``NORMALIZE`` option is specified, the path is :ref:`normalized
<Normalization>` before the conversion.
For example:
.. code-block:: cmake
set(native_path "c:\\a\\b/..\\c")
cmake_path(SET path "${native_path}")
message("CMake path is \"${path}\"")
cmake_path(SET path NORMALIZE "${native_path}")
message("Normalized CMake path is \"${path}\"")
Output::
CMake path is "c:/a/b/../c"
Normalized CMake path is "c:/a/c"
.. _APPEND:
::
cmake_path(APPEND <path-var> [<input>...] [OUTPUT_VARIABLE <out-var>])
Append all the ``<input>`` arguments to the ``<path-var>`` using ``/`` as
the ``directory-separator``. Depending on the ``<input>``, the previous
contents of ``<path-var>`` may be discarded. For each ``<input>`` argument,
the following algorithm (pseudo-code) applies:
::
# <path> is the contents of <path-var>
if(<input>.is_absolute() OR
(<input>.has_root_name() AND
NOT <input>.root_name() STREQUAL <path>.root_name()))
replace <path> with <input>
return()
endif()
if(<input>.has_root_directory())
remove any root-directory and the entire relative path from <path>
elseif(<path>.has_filename() OR
(NOT <path-var>.has_root_directory() OR <path>.is_absolute()))
append directory-separator to <path>
endif()
append <input> omitting any root-name to <path>
.. _APPEND_STRING:
::
cmake_path(APPEND_STRING <path-var> [<input>...] [OUTPUT_VARIABLE <out-var>])
Append all the ``<input>`` arguments to the ``<path-var>`` without adding any
``directory-separator``.
.. _REMOVE_FILENAME:
::
cmake_path(REMOVE_FILENAME <path-var> [OUTPUT_VARIABLE <out-var>])
Removes the :ref:`filename <FILENAME_DEF>` component (as returned by
:ref:`GET ... FILENAME <GET_FILENAME>`) from ``<path-var>``. After removal,
any trailing ``directory-separator`` is left alone, if present.
If ``OUTPUT_VARIABLE`` is not given, then after this function returns,
`HAS_FILENAME`_ returns false for ``<path-var>``.
For example:
.. code-block:: cmake
set(path "/a/b")
cmake_path(REMOVE_FILENAME path)
message("First path is \"${path}\"")
# filename is now already empty, the following removes nothing
cmake_path(REMOVE_FILENAME path)
message("Second path is \"${result}\"")
Output::
First path is "/a/"
Second path is "/a/"
.. _REPLACE_FILENAME:
::
cmake_path(REPLACE_FILENAME <path-var> <input> [OUTPUT_VARIABLE <out-var>])
Replaces the :ref:`filename <FILENAME_DEF>` component from ``<path-var>``
with ``<input>``. If ``<path-var>`` has no filename component (i.e.
`HAS_FILENAME`_ returns false), the path is unchanged. The operation is
equivalent to the following:
.. code-block:: cmake
cmake_path(HAS_FILENAME path has_filename)
if(has_filename)
cmake_path(REMOVE_FILENAME path)
cmake_path(APPEND path input);
endif()
.. _REMOVE_EXTENSION:
::
cmake_path(REMOVE_EXTENSION <path-var> [LAST_ONLY]
[OUTPUT_VARIABLE <out-var>])
Removes the :ref:`extension <EXTENSION_DEF>`, if any, from ``<path-var>``.
.. _REPLACE_EXTENSION:
::
cmake_path(REPLACE_EXTENSION <path-var> [LAST_ONLY] <input>
[OUTPUT_VARIABLE <out-var>])
Replaces the :ref:`extension <EXTENSION_DEF>` with ``<input>``. Its effect
is equivalent to the following:
.. code-block:: cmake
cmake_path(REMOVE_EXTENSION path)
if(NOT "input" MATCHES "^\\.")
cmake_path(APPEND_STRING path ".")
endif()
cmake_path(APPEND_STRING path "input")
Generation
^^^^^^^^^^
.. _NORMAL_PATH:
::
cmake_path(NORMAL_PATH <path-var> [OUTPUT_VARIABLE <out-var>])
Normalize ``<path-var>`` according the steps described in :ref:`Normalization`.
.. _cmake_path-RELATIVE_PATH:
.. _RELATIVE_PATH:
::
cmake_path(RELATIVE_PATH <path-var> [BASE_DIRECTORY <input>]
[OUTPUT_VARIABLE <out-var>])
Modifies ``<path-var>`` to make it relative to the ``BASE_DIRECTORY`` argument.
If ``BASE_DIRECTORY`` is not specified, the default base directory will be
:variable:`CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR`.
For reference, the algorithm used to compute the relative path is the same
as that used by C++
`std::filesystem::path::lexically_relative
<https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/filesystem/path/lexically_normal>`_.
.. _ABSOLUTE_PATH:
::
cmake_path(ABSOLUTE_PATH <path-var> [BASE_DIRECTORY <input>] [NORMALIZE]
[OUTPUT_VARIABLE <out-var>])
If ``<path-var>`` is a relative path (`IS_RELATIVE`_ is true), it is evaluated
relative to the given base directory specified by ``BASE_DIRECTORY`` option.
If ``BASE_DIRECTORY`` is not specified, the default base directory will be
:variable:`CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR`.
When the ``NORMALIZE`` option is specified, the path is :ref:`normalized
<Normalization>` after the path computation.
Because ``cmake_path()`` does not access the filesystem, symbolic links are
not resolved and any leading tilde is not expanded. To compute a real path
with symbolic links resolved and leading tildes expanded, use the
:command:`file(REAL_PATH)` command instead.
Native Conversion
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
For commands in this section, *native* refers to the host platform, not the
target platform when cross-compiling.
.. _cmake_path-NATIVE_PATH:
.. _NATIVE_PATH:
::
cmake_path(NATIVE_PATH <path-var> [NORMALIZE] <out-var>)
Converts a cmake-style ``<path-var>`` into a native path with
platform-specific slashes (``\`` on Windows hosts and ``/`` elsewhere).
When the ``NORMALIZE`` option is specified, the path is :ref:`normalized
<Normalization>` before the conversion.
.. _CONVERT:
.. _cmake_path-TO_CMAKE_PATH_LIST:
.. _TO_CMAKE_PATH_LIST:
::
cmake_path(CONVERT <input> TO_CMAKE_PATH_LIST <out-var> [NORMALIZE])
Converts a native ``<input>`` path into a cmake-style path with forward
slashes (``/``). On Windows hosts, the long filename marker is taken into
account. The input can be a single path or a system search path like
``$ENV{PATH}``. A search path will be converted to a cmake-style list
separated by ``;`` characters (on non-Windows platforms, this essentially
means ``:`` separators are replaced with ``;``). The result of the
conversion is stored in the ``<out-var>`` variable.
When the ``NORMALIZE`` option is specified, the path is :ref:`normalized
<Normalization>` before the conversion.
.. note::
Unlike most other ``cmake_path()`` subcommands, the ``CONVERT`` subcommand
takes a literal string as input, not the name of a variable.
.. _cmake_path-TO_NATIVE_PATH_LIST:
.. _TO_NATIVE_PATH_LIST:
::
cmake_path(CONVERT <input> TO_NATIVE_PATH_LIST <out-var> [NORMALIZE])
Converts a cmake-style ``<input>`` path into a native path with
platform-specific slashes (``\`` on Windows hosts and ``/`` elsewhere).
The input can be a single path or a cmake-style list. A list will be
converted into a native search path (``;``-separated on Windows,
``:``-separated on other platforms). The result of the conversion is
stored in the ``<out-var>`` variable.
When the ``NORMALIZE`` option is specified, the path is :ref:`normalized
<Normalization>` before the conversion.
.. note::
Unlike most other ``cmake_path()`` subcommands, the ``CONVERT`` subcommand
takes a literal string as input, not the name of a variable.
For example:
.. code-block:: cmake
set(paths "/a/b/c" "/x/y/z")
cmake_path(CONVERT "${paths}" TO_NATIVE_PATH_LIST native_paths)
message("Native path list is \"${native_paths}\"")
Output on Windows::
Native path list is "\a\b\c;\x\y\z"
Output on all other platforms::
Native path list is "/a/b/c:/x/y/z"
Hashing
^^^^^^^
.. _HASH:
::
cmake_path(HASH <path-var> <out-var>)
Compute a hash value of ``<path-var>`` such that for two paths ``p1`` and
``p2`` that compare equal (:ref:`COMPARE ... EQUAL <COMPARE>`), the hash
value of ``p1`` is equal to the hash value of ``p2``. The path is always
:ref:`normalized <Normalization>` before the hash is computed.