https://git.yoctoproject.org/cgit/cgit.cgi/poky/tree/meta/recipes-devtools/cmake
I see CMake 3.16 in there. That’s about as new as it gets. 😊
I’m not sure if that answers the question, but I hope so.
- Garrett
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
From: Cody Piersall
Sent: Thursday, January 2, 2020 3:03 PM
To: nanomsg@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [nanomsg] Re: NNG & modern CMake
The only place where the requirement *might* be onerous for me
personally would be when I'm building distributions for SoC boards
with the Yocto project. I'm not sure what version of CMake is used
for each different Yocto release, and a quick Google search didn't
reveal anything.
For those unfamiliar with the Yocto project, it is a toolchain for
building entire custom Linux distributions, including the bootloader,
Linux kernel, and all of userspace. Each Yocto release pins versions
of all the build software it uses to get (closer to) deterministic
builds, including the host gcc, host libc, etc. So each Yocto release
will have a specific version of CMake that it uses to cross-compile
everything.
Does anyone else know which version of CMake the various Yocto
releases use, or how to find out? And how easy it is to use a
different host version? Changing the CMake version would potentially
have unexpected side effects elsewhere.
Cody
On Wed, Jan 1, 2020 at 7:22 PM Garrett D'Amore <garrett@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Sent to you because via the nanomsg@xxxxxxxxxxxxx mailing list.
All,
This is a heads up (and a request for objections if any) that at some point
soon a future release of NNG (possibly starting with v1.3) will require
significantly newer CMake versions. I’m contemplating requiring at least
3.13, and probably more like 3.14 or even 3.15.
There are a number of features that more recent CMake brings to the table,
which potentially reduce the effort required to have easily supportable,
flexible configuration. At present we are working around limitations in
older releases, but it’s becoming somewhat annoying to have to keep doing so.
Note that CMake binaries are packaged and freely and readily available for
Ubuntu 16.x and newer, RedHat 7.x and newer, Windows, and macOS. Recent
Visual Studio 2019 even *includes* cmake 3.15.
This might make things slightly more annoying for folks using CMake on
non-mainstream platforms, but even on those platforms bootstrapping CMake is
generally a very simple task. (Note also that modern CMake can cross compile
easily, so even if your target environment is not mainstream, you won’t be
impacted as long as your *development* system isn’t too far off the beaten
path.)
If this is going to cause anyone undue stress, please let me know.
Garrett