CheckFunctionExists¶
This module provides a command to check whether a C function exists.
Load this module in a CMake project with:
include(CheckFunctionExists)
Commands¶
This module provides the following command:
- check_function_exists¶
Checks once whether a C function can be linked from system libraries:
check_function_exists(<function> <variable>)
This command checks whether the
<function>
is provided by libraries on the system, and stores the result in an internal cache variable<variable>
.备注
Prefer using
CheckSymbolExists
orCheckSourceCompiles
instead of this command, for the following reasons:check_function_exists()
can't detect functions that are inlined in headers or defined as preprocessor macros.check_function_exists()
can't detect anything in the 32-bit versions of the Win32 API, because of a mismatch in calling conventions.check_function_exists()
only verifies linking, it does not verify that the function is declared in system headers.
Variables Affecting the Check
The following variables may be set before calling this command to modify the way the check is run:
CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS
A 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-specificCMAKE_<LANG>_FLAGS_<CONFIG>
variables are automatically prepended to the compiler command before the contents of this variable.
CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS
A 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_INCLUDES
A 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_OPTIONS
Added in version 3.14.
A semicolon-separated list of options to add to the link command (see
try_compile()
for further details).
CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES
A 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_DIRECTORIES
Added 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_QUIET
Added in version 3.1.
If this variable evaluates to a boolean true value, all status messages associated with the check will be suppressed.
Examples¶
Example: Basic Usage¶
In the following example, a check is performed to determine whether the
linker sees the C function fopen()
, and the result is stored in the
HAVE_FOPEN
internal cache variable:
include(CheckFunctionExists)
check_function_exists(fopen HAVE_FOPEN)
Example: Missing Declaration¶
As noted above, the CheckSymbolExists
module is preferred for
checking C functions, since it also verifies whether the function is
declared or defined as a macro. In the following example, this module is
used to check an edge case where a function may not be declared in system
headers. For instance, on macOS, the fdatasync()
function may be
available in the C library, but its declaration is not provided in the
unistd.h
system header.
CMakeLists.txt
¶include(CheckFunctionExists)
include(CheckSymbolExists)
check_symbol_exists(fdatasync "unistd.h" HAVE_FDATASYNC)
# Check if fdatasync() is available in the C library.
if(NOT HAVE_FDATASYNC)
check_function_exists(fdatasync HAVE_FDATASYNC_WITHOUT_DECL)
endif()
In such a case, the project can provide its own declaration if missing:
example.c
¶#ifdef HAVE_FDATASYNC_WITHOUT_DECL
extern int fdatasync(int);
#endif
See Also¶
The
CheckSymbolExists
module to check whether a C symbol exists.The
CheckSourceCompiles
module to check whether a source code can be compiled.The
CheckFortranFunctionExists
module to check whether a Fortran function exists.