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Boost CMake support infrastructure

This repository hosts the tools/cmake Boost submodule, containing the CMake support infrastructure for Boost.

Note that the officially supported way to build Boost remains with b2.

Building Boost with CMake

The first thing you need to know is that the official Boost releases can't be built with CMake. Even though the Boost Github repository contains a CMakeLists.txt file, it's removed from the release.

That's because the file and directory layout of Boost releases, for historical reasons, has all the Boost header files copied into a single boost/ directory. These headers are then removed from the individual library include/ directories. The CMake support infrastructure expects the headers to remain in their respective libs/<libname>/include directories, and therefore does not work on a release archive.

To build Boost with CMake, you will need either a Git clone of Boost (git clone --recurse-submodules https://github.com/boostorg/boost) or the alternative archives available on Github.

Once you have cloned, or downloaded and extracted, Boost, use the usual procedure of

mkdir __build
cd __build
cmake ..
cmake --build .

to build it with CMake. To install it, add

cmake --build . --target install

Under Windows (when using the Visual Studio generator), you can control whether Debug or Release variants are built by adding --config Debug or --config Release to the cmake --build lines:

cmake --build . --config Debug
cmake --build . --target install --config Debug

The default is Debug. You can build and install both Debug and Release at the same time, by running the respective cmake --build line twice, once per --config:

cmake --build . --target install --config Debug
cmake --build . --target install --config Release

Configuration variables

The following variables are supported and can be set either from the command line as cmake -DVARIABLE=VALUE .., or via ccmake or cmake-gui:

  • BOOST_INCLUDE_LIBRARIES

    A semicolon-separated list of libraries to include into the build (and installation.) Defaults to empty, which means "all libraries". Example: filesystem;regex.

  • BOOST_EXCLUDE_LIBRARIES

    A semicolon-separated list of libraries to exclude from the build (and installation.) This is useful if a library causes an error in the CMake configure phase.

  • BOOST_ENABLE_MPI

    Set to ON if Boost libraries depending on MPI should be built.

  • BOOST_ENABLE_PYTHON

    Set to ON if Boost libraries depending on Python should be built.

  • CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE

    For single-configuration generators such as Makefile and Ninja (the typical case under POSIX operating systems), controls the build variant (Debug or Release.) The default when building Boost is set to Release.

    For multi-configuration generators such as the Visual Studio generators, CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE is ignored; the desired configuration is set at build (or install) time, with the --config option to cmake --build and cmake --install.

    For more information, see the CMake documentation on build configurations.

  • CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX

    A standard CMake variable that determines where the headers and libraries should be installed. The default when building Boost is set to C:/Boost under Windows, /usr/local otherwise.

  • CMAKE_INSTALL_INCLUDEDIR

    Directory in which to install the header files. Can be relative to CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX. Default include.

  • CMAKE_INSTALL_BINDIR

    Directory in which to install the binary artifacts (executables and Windows DLLs.) Can be relative to CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX. Default bin.

  • CMAKE_INSTALL_LIBDIR

    Directory in which to install the compiled libraries. Can be relative to CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX. Default lib.

  • BOOST_INSTALL_CMAKEDIR

    Directory in which to install the CMake configuration files. Default lib/cmake.

  • BOOST_INSTALL_LAYOUT

    Boost installation layout. Can be one of system, tagged, or versioned. The default is versioned under Windows, and system otherwise.

    versioned produces library names of the form libboost_timer-vc143-mt-gd-x64-1_82.lib, containing the toolset (compiler) name and version, encoded build settings, and the Boost version. (The extension is .lib under Windows, .a or .so under Linux, and .a or .dylib under macOS.)

    tagged produces library names of the form libboost_timer-mt-gd-x64.lib; only the build settings are encoded in the name, the toolset and the Boost version are not.

    system produces library names of the form libboost_timer.lib (or libboost_timer.a, libboost_timer.so, libboost_timer.dylib.)

  • BOOST_INSTALL_INCLUDE_SUBDIR

    When BOOST_INSTALL_LAYOUT is versioned, headers are installed in a subdirectory of CMAKE_INSTALL_INCLUDEDIR (to enable several Boost releases being installed at the same time.) The default for release e.g. 1.81 is /boost-1_81.)

  • BOOST_RUNTIME_LINK

    Whether to use the static or the shared C++ runtime libraries under Microsoft Visual C++ and compatible compilers. (The available values are shared and static and the default is shared.)

  • BUILD_TESTING

    A standard CMake variable; when ON, tests are configured and built. Defaults to OFF.

  • BUILD_SHARED_LIBS

    A standard CMake variable that determines whether to build shared or static libraries. Defaults to OFF.

  • BOOST_STAGEDIR

    The directory in which to place the build outputs. Defaults to the stage subdirectory of the current CMake binary directory.

    The standard CMake variables CMAKE_RUNTIME_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY, CMAKE_LIBRARY_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY, and CMAKE_ARCHIVE_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY are set by default to ${BOOST_STAGEDIR}/bin, ${BOOST_STAGEDIR}/lib, and ${BOOST_STAGEDIR}/lib, respectively.

  • CMAKE_CXX_VISIBILITY_PRESET

    C++ symbol visibility (one of default, hidden, protected, internal). The default is set to hidden to match b2.

  • CMAKE_C_VISIBILITY_PRESET

    C symbol visibility (one of default, hidden, protected, internal). The default is set to hidden to match b2.

  • CMAKE_VISIBILITY_INLINES_HIDDEN

    Whether inline functions should have hidden visibility. The default is set to ON to match b2.

Library-specific configuration variables

Some Boost libraries provide their own configuration variables, some of which are given below.

Context

  • BOOST_CONTEXT_BINARY_FORMAT

    Allowed values are elf, mach-o, pe, xcoff. The default is autodetected from the platform.

  • BOOST_CONTEXT_ABI

    Allowed values are aapcs, eabi, ms, n32, n64, o32, o64, sysv, x32. The default is autodetected from the platform.

  • BOOST_CONTEXT_ARCHITECTURE

    Allowed values are arm, arm64, loongarch64, mips32, mips64, ppc32, ppc64, riscv64, s390x, i386, x86_64, combined. The default is autodetected from the platform.

  • BOOST_CONTEXT_ASSEMBLER

    Allowed values are masm, gas, armasm. The default is autodetected from the platform.

  • BOOST_CONTEXT_ASM_SUFFIX

    Allowed values are .asm and .S. The default is autodetected from the platform.

  • BOOST_CONTEXT_IMPLEMENTATION

    Allowed values are fcontext, ucontext, winfib. Defaults to fcontext.

Fiber

  • BOOST_FIBER_NUMA_TARGET_OS

    Target OS for the Fiber NUMA support. Can be aix, freebsd, hpux, linux, solaris, windows, none. Defaults to windows under Windows, linux under Linux, otherwise none.

IOStreams

  • BOOST_IOSTREAMS_ENABLE_ZLIB

    When ON, enables ZLib support. Defaults to ON when zlib is found, OFF otherwise.

  • BOOST_IOSTREAMS_ENABLE_BZIP2

    When ON, enables BZip2 support. Defaults to ON when libbzip2 is found, OFF otherwise.

  • BOOST_IOSTREAMS_ENABLE_LZMA

    When ON, enables LZMA support. Defaults to ON when liblzma is found, OFF otherwise.

  • BOOST_IOSTREAMS_ENABLE_ZSTD

    When ON, enables Zstd support. Defaults to ON when libzstd is found, OFF otherwise.

Locale

  • BOOST_LOCALE_ENABLE_ICU

    When ON, enables the ICU backend. Defaults to ON when ICU is found, OFF otherwise.

  • BOOST_LOCALE_ENABLE_ICONV

    When ON, enables the Iconv backend. Defaults to ON when iconv is found, OFF otherwise.

  • BOOST_LOCALE_ENABLE_POSIX

    When ON, enables the POSIX backend. Defaults to ON on POSIX systems, OFF otherwise.

  • BOOST_LOCALE_ENABLE_STD

    When ON, enables the std::locale backend. Defaults to ON.

  • BOOST_LOCALE_ENABLE_WINAPI

    When ON, enables the Windows API backend. Defaults to ON under Windows, OFF otherwise.

Stacktrace

  • BOOST_STACKTRACE_ENABLE_NOOP

    When ON, builds the boost_stacktrace_noop library variant. Defaults to ON.

  • BOOST_STACKTRACE_ENABLE_BACKTRACE

    When ON, builds the boost_stacktrace_backtrace library variant. Defaults to ON when libbacktrace is found, OFF otherwise.

  • BOOST_STACKTRACE_ENABLE_ADDR2LINE

    When ON, builds the boost_stacktrace_addr2line library variant. Defaults to ON, except on Windows.

  • BOOST_STACKTRACE_ENABLE_BASIC

    When ON, builds the boost_stacktrace_basic library variant. Defaults to ON.

  • BOOST_STACKTRACE_ENABLE_WINDBG

    When ON, builds the boost_stacktrace_windbg library variant. Defaults to ON under Windows when WinDbg support is autodetected, otherwise OFF.

  • BOOST_STACKTRACE_ENABLE_WINDBG_CACHED

    When ON, builds the boost_stacktrace_windbg_cached library variant. Defaults to ON under Windows when WinDbg support is autodetected and when thread_local is supported, otherwise OFF.

Thread

  • BOOST_THREAD_THREADAPI

    Threading API, pthread or win32. Defaults to win32 under Windows, pthread otherwise.

Testing Boost with CMake

To run the Boost tests with CMake/CTest, first configure as before, but with BUILD_TESTING=ON:

mkdir __build
cd __build
cmake -DBUILD_TESTING=ON ..

then build the tests:

cmake --build . --target tests

and then run them:

ctest --output-on-failure --no-tests=error

Under Windows, you need to select a configuration (Debug or Release):

cmake --build . --target tests --config Debug
ctest --output-on-failure --no-tests=error -C Debug

To only build the tests for a specific library, and not the entire Boost, use BOOST_INCLUDE_LIBRARIES:

cmake -DBUILD_TESTING=ON -DBOOST_INCLUDE_LIBRARIES=timer ..

To build and run in parallel using more than one core, use the -j option:

cmake --build . --target tests -j 16
ctest --output-on-failure --no-tests=error -j 16

A convenience target check is provided that first builds the tests and then invokes ctest:

cmake --build . --target check

but it doesn't support running the tests in parallel.

Using Boost after building and installing it with CMake

Normally, a Boost installation is used from CMake by means of find_package(Boost). However, up to and including release 1.81.0, installing Boost with CMake did not deploy the necessary CMake configuration file for the Boost package, so find_package(Boost) did not work. (It also did not provide the Boost::boost and Boost::headers targets, on which many existing CMakeLists.txt files rely.)

Instead, the individual Boost libraries needed to be referenced as in

find_package(boost_filesystem 1.81 REQUIRED)

This has been rectified in Boost 1.82, which installs an umbrella CMake configuration file for the Boost package (BoostConfig.cmake) and provides the Boost::boost and Boost::headers compatibility targets.

Using Boost with add_subdirectory

Assuming that your project already has a copy of Boost in a subdirectory, either deployed as a Git submodule or extracted manually by the user as a prerequisite, using it is relatively straightforward:

add_subdirectory(deps/boost)

However, as-is, this will configure all Boost libraries and build them by default regardless of whether they are used. It's better to use

add_subdirectory(deps/boost EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL)

so that only the libraries that are referenced by the project are built, and it's even better to set BOOST_INCLUDE_LIBRARIES before the add_subdirectory call to a list of the Boost libraries that need to be configured:

set(BOOST_INCLUDE_LIBRARIES filesystem regex)
add_subdirectory(deps/boost EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL)

Using an individual Boost library with add_subdirectory

Boost is a large dependency, and sometimes a project only needs a single library. It's possible to use add_subdirectory with individual Boost libraries (https://github.com/boostorg/<libname>) instead of the entire superproject or release archive. However, since Boost libraries depend on each other quite extensively, all library dependencies also need to be added (again via add_subdirectory.)

As an example, this is how one would use Boost.Timer in this manner:

set(libs

  timer

  # Primary dependencies

  chrono
  config
  core
  io
  predef
  system
  throw_exception

  # Secondary dependencies

  assert
  integer
  move
  mpl
  ratio
  static_assert
  type_traits
  typeof
  utility
  winapi
  variant2
  preprocessor
  rational
  mp11
)

foreach(lib IN LISTS libs)

  add_subdirectory(deps/boost/${lib} EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL)

endforeach()

assuming that the individual libraries have been placed in subdirectories of deps/boost.

(The list of required dependencies above has been produced by running boostdep --brief timer. See the documentation of Boostdep.)

Using Boost with FetchContent

FetchContent downloads the required dependencies as part of CMake's project configuration phase. While this is convenient because it doesn't require the user to acquire the dependencies beforehand, in the case of Boost it involves an 87 MB download, so you should carefully weigh the pros and cons of this approach.

That said, here's how one would use Boost with FetchContent:

include(FetchContent)

FetchContent_Declare(
  Boost
  URL https://github.com/boostorg/boost/releases/download/boost-1.84.0/boost-1.84.0.tar.xz
  URL_MD5 893b5203b862eb9bbd08553e24ff146a
  DOWNLOAD_EXTRACT_TIMESTAMP ON
)

FetchContent_MakeAvailable(Boost)

This has the same drawback as the simple add_subdirectory call -- all Boost libraries are configured and built, even if not used by the project.

To configure only some Boost libraries, set BOOST_INCLUDE_LIBRARIES before the FetchContent_MakeAvailable call:

set(BOOST_INCLUDE_LIBRARIES timer filesystem regex)
FetchContent_MakeAvailable(Boost)

To perform the add_subdirectory call with the EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL option, if you are using CMake 3.28 or newer, you can simply pass EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL to FetchContent_Declare:

FetchContent_Declare(
  Boost
  URL https://github.com/boostorg/boost/releases/download/boost-1.84.0/boost-1.84.0.tar.xz
  URL_MD5 893b5203b862eb9bbd08553e24ff146a
  DOWNLOAD_EXTRACT_TIMESTAMP ON
  EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL
)

For earlier versions of CMake, you can replace FetchContent_MakeAvailable(Boost) with this:

FetchContent_GetProperties(Boost)

if(NOT Boost_POPULATED)

  message(STATUS "Fetching Boost")
  FetchContent_Populate(Boost)

  message(STATUS "Configuring Boost")
  add_subdirectory(${Boost_SOURCE_DIR} ${Boost_BINARY_DIR} EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL)

endif()