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CMAKE-MODULES(7)                     CMake                    CMAKE-MODULES(7)

NAME
       cmake-modules - CMake Modules Reference

       The  modules  listed here are part of the CMake distribution.  Projects
       may provide further modules; their location(s) can be specified in  the
       CMAKE_MODULE_PATH variable.

UTILITY MODULES
       These modules are loaded using the include() command.

   AndroidTestUtilities
       New in version 3.7.

       Create  a  test that automatically loads specified data onto an Android
       device.

   Introduction
       Use this module to push data needed for testing an Android  device  be-
       havior  onto  a  connected Android device. The module will accept files
       and libraries as well as separate destinations for each. It will create
       a test that loads the files into a device object store and link to them
       from the specified destination. The files are only uploaded if they are
       not already in the object store.

       For example:

          include(AndroidTestUtilities)
          android_add_test_data(
            example_setup_test
            FILES <files>...
            LIBS <libs>...
            DEVICE_TEST_DIR "/data/local/tests/example"
            DEVICE_OBJECT_STORE "/sdcard/.ExternalData/SHA"
            )

       At  build  time a test named "example_setup_test" will be created.  Run
       this test on the command line with ctest(1) to load the data  onto  the
       Android device.

   Module Functions
       android_add_test_data

                 android_add_test_data(<test-name>
                   [FILES <files>...] [FILES_DEST <device-dir>]
                   [LIBS <libs>...]   [LIBS_DEST <device-dir>]
                   [DEVICE_OBJECT_STORE <device-dir>]
                   [DEVICE_TEST_DIR <device-dir>]
                   [NO_LINK_REGEX <strings>...]
                   )

              The android_add_test_data function is used to copy files and li-
              braries needed to run project-specific tests. On the host  oper-
              ating system, this is done at build time. For on-device testing,
              the files are loaded onto the device by the manufactured test at
              run time.

              This function accepts the following named parameters:

              FILES <files>...
                     zero or more files needed for testing

              LIBS <libs>...
                     zero or more libraries needed for testing

              FILES_DEST <device-dir>
                     absolute path where the data files are expected to be

              LIBS_DEST <device-dir>
                     absolute path where the libraries are expected to be

              DEVICE_OBJECT_STORE <device-dir>
                     absolute  path  to  the location where the data is stored
                     on-device

              DEVICE_TEST_DIR <device-dir>
                     absolute path to the root directory of the on-device test
                     location

              NO_LINK_REGEX <strings>...
                     list  of  regex  strings matching the names of files that
                     should be copied from the object store to the testing di-
                     rectory

   BundleUtilities
       Functions to help assemble a standalone bundle application.

       A  collection  of  CMake utility functions useful for dealing with .app
       bundles on the Mac and bundle-like directories on any OS.

       The following functions are provided by this module:

          fixup_bundle
          copy_and_fixup_bundle
          verify_app
          get_bundle_main_executable
          get_dotapp_dir
          get_bundle_and_executable
          get_bundle_all_executables
          get_item_key
          get_item_rpaths
          clear_bundle_keys
          set_bundle_key_values
          get_bundle_keys
          copy_resolved_item_into_bundle
          copy_resolved_framework_into_bundle
          fixup_bundle_item
          verify_bundle_prerequisites
          verify_bundle_symlinks

       Requires CMake 2.6 or greater because it uses function, break and  PAR-
       ENT_SCOPE.  Also depends on GetPrerequisites.cmake.

       DO  NOT  USE  THESE  FUNCTIONS AT CONFIGURE TIME (from CMakeLists.txt)!
       Instead, invoke them from an install(CODE) or install(SCRIPT) rule.

          fixup_bundle(<app> <libs> <dirs>)

       Fix up <app> bundle in-place and make it standalone, such that  it  can
       be  drag-n-drop  copied  to  another machine and run on that machine as
       long as all of the system libraries are compatible.

       If you pass plugins to fixup_bundle as the libs parameter,  you  should
       install  them or copy them into the bundle before calling fixup_bundle.
       The <libs> parameter is a list of libraries that must be fixed up,  but
       that cannot be determined by otool output analysis  (i.e. plugins).

       Gather  all the keys for all the executables and libraries in a bundle,
       and then, for each key, copy each prerequisite into the  bundle.   Then
       fix each one up according to its own list of prerequisites.

       Then  clear all the keys and call verify_app on the final bundle to en-
       sure that it is truly standalone.

       New in version 3.6: As an optional parameter (IGNORE_ITEM)  a  list  of
       file  names  can  be  passed,  which are then ignored (e.g. IGNORE_ITEM
       "vcredist_x86.exe;vcredist_x64.exe").

          copy_and_fixup_bundle(<src> <dst> <libs> <dirs>)

       Makes a copy of the bundle <src> at location <dst> and  then  fixes  up
       the new copied bundle in-place at <dst>.

          verify_app(<app>)

       Verifies  that  an  application  <app>  appears  valid based on running
       analysis tools on it.  Calls message(FATAL_ERROR) if the application is
       not verified.

       New  in  version  3.6: As an optional parameter (IGNORE_ITEM) a list of
       file names can be passed, which  are  then  ignored  (e.g.  IGNORE_ITEM
       "vcredist_x86.exe;vcredist_x64.exe")

          get_bundle_main_executable(<bundle> <result_var>)

       The  result  will be the full path name of the bundle's main executable
       file or an error: prefixed string if it could not be determined.

          get_dotapp_dir(<exe> <dotapp_dir_var>)

       Returns the nearest parent dir whose name ends with .app given the full
       path to an executable.  If there is no such parent dir, then simply re-
       turn the dir containing the executable.

       The returned directory may or may not exist.

          get_bundle_and_executable(<app> <bundle_var> <executable_var> <valid_var>)

       Takes either a .app directory name or the name of an executable  nested
       inside  a  .app directory and returns the path to the .app directory in
       <bundle_var> and the path to its main executable in <executable_var>.

          get_bundle_all_executables(<bundle> <exes_var>)

       Scans <bundle> bundle recursively for all <exes_var>  executable  files
       and accumulates them into a variable.

          get_item_key(<item> <key_var>)

       Given  <item>  file  name, generate <key_var> key that should be unique
       considering the set of libraries that need copying or fixing up to make
       a  bundle  standalone.  This is essentially the file name including ex-
       tension with . replaced by _

       This key is used as a prefix for CMake variables so that we  can  asso-
       ciate a set of variables with a given item based on its key.

          clear_bundle_keys(<keys_var>)

       Loop over the <keys_var> list of keys, clearing all the variables asso-
       ciated with each key.  After the loop, clear the list of keys itself.

       Caller of get_bundle_keys should call clear_bundle_keys when done  with
       list of keys.

          set_bundle_key_values(<keys_var> <context> <item> <exepath> <dirs>
                                <copyflag> [<rpaths>])

       Add  <keys_var>  key to the list (if necessary) for the given item.  If
       added, also set all the variables associated with that key.

          get_bundle_keys(<app> <libs> <dirs> <keys_var>)

       Loop over all the executable and library files within <app> bundle (and
       given as extra <libs>) and accumulate a list of keys representing them.
       Set values associated with each key such that we can loop over  all  of
       them and copy prerequisite libs into the bundle and then do appropriate
       install_name_tool fixups.

       New in version 3.6: As an optional parameter (IGNORE_ITEM)  a  list  of
       file  names  can  be  passed,  which are then ignored (e.g. IGNORE_ITEM
       "vcredist_x86.exe;vcredist_x64.exe")

          copy_resolved_item_into_bundle(<resolved_item> <resolved_embedded_item>)

       Copy a resolved item into the bundle if necessary.  Copy is not  neces-
       sary,  if  the  <resolved_item>  is  "the same as" the <resolved_embed-
       ded_item>.

          copy_resolved_framework_into_bundle(<resolved_item> <resolved_embedded_item>)

       Copy a resolved framework into the bundle if necessary.   Copy  is  not
       necessary, if the <resolved_item> is "the same as" the <resolved_embed-
       ded_item>.

       By default, BU_COPY_FULL_FRAMEWORK_CONTENTS is not set.   If  you  want
       full  frameworks  embedded  in  your  bundles,  set BU_COPY_FULL_FRAME-
       WORK_CONTENTS to ON before calling fixup_bundle.  By default,  COPY_RE-
       SOLVED_FRAMEWORK_INTO_BUNDLE copies the framework dylib itself plus the
       framework Resources directory.

          fixup_bundle_item(<resolved_embedded_item> <exepath> <dirs>)

       Get  the  direct/non-system  prerequisites  of   the   <resolved_embed-
       ded_item>.   For  each prerequisite, change the way it is referenced to
       the value of the _EMBEDDED_ITEM keyed variable for  that  prerequisite.
       (Most likely changing to an @executable_path style reference.)

       This  function requires that the <resolved_embedded_item> be inside the
       bundle already.  In other words, if you pass plugins to fixup_bundle as
       the  libs parameter, you should install them or copy them into the bun-
       dle before calling fixup_bundle.  The libs parameter is a list  of  li-
       braries  that  must be fixed up, but that cannot be determined by otool
       output analysis.  (i.e., plugins)

       Also, change the id of the item being  fixed  up  to  its  own  _EMBED-
       DED_ITEM value.

       Accumulate  changes  in  a  local  variable  and  make  one call to in-
       stall_name_tool at the end of the function  with  all  the  changes  at
       once.

       If  the BU_CHMOD_BUNDLE_ITEMS variable is set then bundle items will be
       marked writable before install_name_tool tries to change them.

          verify_bundle_prerequisites(<bundle> <result_var> <info_var>)

       Verifies that the sum of all prerequisites of all files inside the bun-
       dle  are  contained within the bundle or are system libraries, presumed
       to exist everywhere.

       New in version 3.6: As an optional parameter (IGNORE_ITEM)  a  list  of
       file  names  can  be  passed,  which are then ignored (e.g. IGNORE_ITEM
       "vcredist_x86.exe;vcredist_x64.exe")

          verify_bundle_symlinks(<bundle> <result_var> <info_var>)

       Verifies that any symlinks found in the <bundle> bundle point to  other
       files  that  are already also in the bundle...  Anything that points to
       an external file causes this function to fail the verification.

   CheckCCompilerFlag
       Check whether the C compiler supports a given flag.

       check_c_compiler_flag

                 check_c_compiler_flag(<flag> <var>)

              Check that the <flag> is accepted by the compiler without a  di-
              agnostic.   Stores  the  result in an internal cache entry named
              <var>.

       This command temporarily sets the  CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS  variable
       and     calls    the    check_c_source_compiles    macro    from    the
       CheckCSourceCompiles module.  See documentation of that  module  for  a
       listing of variables that can otherwise modify the build.

       A  positive result from this check indicates only that the compiler did
       not issue a diagnostic message when given the flag.  Whether  the  flag
       has  any effect or even a specific one is beyond the scope of this mod-
       ule.

       NOTE:
          Since the try_compile() command forwards flags from  variables  like
          CMAKE_C_FLAGS,  unknown  flags  in  such variables may cause a false
          negative for this check.

   CheckCompilerFlag
       New in version 3.19.

       Check whether the compiler supports a given flag.

       check_compiler_flag

                 check_compiler_flag(<lang> <flag> <var>)

       Check that the <flag> is accepted by the compiler without a diagnostic.
       Stores the result in an internal cache entry named <var>.

       This  command  temporarily sets the CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS variable
       and  calls  the   check_source_compiles(<LANG>)   function   from   the
       CheckSourceCompiles  module.   See  documentation  of that module for a
       listing of variables that can otherwise modify the build.

       A positive result from this check indicates only that the compiler  did
       not  issue  a diagnostic message when given the flag.  Whether the flag
       has any effect or even a specific one is beyond the scope of this  mod-
       ule.

       NOTE:
          Since  the  try_compile() command forwards flags from variables like
          CMAKE_<LANG>_FLAGS, unknown flags in  such  variables  may  cause  a
          false negative for this check.

   CheckCSourceCompiles
       Check if given C source compiles and links into an executable.

       check_c_source_compiles

                 check_c_source_compiles(<code> <resultVar>
                                         [FAIL_REGEX <regex1> [<regex2>...]])

              Check  that the source supplied in <code> can be compiled as a C
              source file and linked as an executable (so it must  contain  at
              least  a  main() function). The result will be stored in the in-
              ternal cache variable specified by <resultVar>, with  a  boolean
              true  value  for  success  and  boolean  false  for  failure. If
              FAIL_REGEX is provided, then failure is determined  by  checking
              if  anything  in the output matches any of the specified regular
              expressions.

              The underlying check is performed by the try_compile()  command.
              The  compile  and link commands can be influenced by setting any
              of the following variables prior to calling  check_c_source_com-
              piles():

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS
                     Additional  flags  to pass to the compiler. Note that the
                     contents of CMAKE_C_FLAGS and its  associated  configura-
                     tion-specific  variable  are  automatically  added to the
                     compiler  command  before  the  contents   of   CMAKE_RE-
                     QUIRED_FLAGS.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS
                     A  ;-list  of  compiler  definitions of the form -DFOO or
                     -DFOO=bar. A definition for the name  specified  by  <re-
                     sultVar> will also be added automatically.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_INCLUDES
                     A  ;-list of header search paths to pass to the compiler.
                     These will be  the  only  header  search  paths  used  by
                     try_compile(),     i.e.     the     contents    of    the
                     INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES directory property will be ignored.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_LINK_OPTIONS
                     New in version 3.14.

                     A ;-list of options to  add  to  the  link  command  (see
                     try_compile() for further details).

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES
                     A  ;-list  of libraries to add to the link command. These
                     can be the name  of  system  libraries  or  they  can  be
                     Imported Targets (see try_compile() for further details).

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_QUIET
                     New in version 3.1.

                     If  this  variable evaluates to a boolean true value, all
                     status messages associated with the check  will  be  sup-
                     pressed.

              The  check is only performed once, with the result cached in the
              variable named by <resultVar>. Every subsequent CMake  run  will
              re-use this cached value rather than performing the check again,
              even if the <code> changes.  In order to force the check  to  be
              re-evaluated, the variable named by <resultVar> must be manually
              removed from the cache.

   CheckCSourceRuns
       Check if given C source compiles and links into an executable  and  can
       subsequently be run.

       check_c_source_runs

                 check_c_source_runs(<code> <resultVar>)

              Check  that the source supplied in <code> can be compiled as a C
              source file, linked as an executable and then  run.  The  <code>
              must  contain at least a main() function. If the <code> could be
              built and run successfully, the internal cache  variable  speci-
              fied  by  <resultVar> will be set to 1, otherwise it will be set
              to an value that evaluates  to  boolean  false  (e.g.  an  empty
              string or an error message).

              The  underlying check is performed by the try_run() command. The
              compile and link commands can be influenced by  setting  any  of
              the following variables prior to calling check_c_source_runs():

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS
                     Additional  flags  to pass to the compiler. Note that the
                     contents of CMAKE_C_FLAGS and its  associated  configura-
                     tion-specific  variable  are  automatically  added to the
                     compiler  command  before  the  contents   of   CMAKE_RE-
                     QUIRED_FLAGS.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS
                     A  ;-list  of  compiler  definitions of the form -DFOO or
                     -DFOO=bar. A definition for the name  specified  by  <re-
                     sultVar> will also be added automatically.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_INCLUDES
                     A  ;-list of header search paths to pass to the compiler.
                     These will be  the  only  header  search  paths  used  by
                     try_run(),  i.e.  the contents of the INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES
                     directory property will be ignored.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_LINK_OPTIONS
                     New in version 3.14.

                     A ;-list of options to  add  to  the  link  command  (see
                     try_run() for further details).

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES
                     A  ;-list  of libraries to add to the link command. These
                     can be the name  of  system  libraries  or  they  can  be
                     Imported Targets (see try_run() for further details).

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_QUIET
                     New in version 3.1.

                     If  this  variable evaluates to a boolean true value, all
                     status messages associated with the check  will  be  sup-
                     pressed.

              The  check is only performed once, with the result cached in the
              variable named by <resultVar>. Every subsequent CMake  run  will
              re-use this cached value rather than performing the check again,
              even if the <code> changes.  In order to force the check  to  be
              re-evaluated, the variable named by <resultVar> must be manually
              removed from the cache.

   CheckCXXCompilerFlag
       Check whether the CXX compiler supports a given flag.

       check_cxx_compiler_flag

                 check_cxx_compiler_flag(<flag> <var>)

              Check that the <flag> is accepted by the compiler without a  di-
              agnostic.   Stores  the  result in an internal cache entry named
              <var>.

       This command temporarily sets the  CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS  variable
       and    calls    the    check_cxx_source_compiles    macro    from   the
       CheckCXXSourceCompiles module.  See documentation of that module for  a
       listing of variables that can otherwise modify the build.

       A  positive result from this check indicates only that the compiler did
       not issue a diagnostic message when given the flag.  Whether  the  flag
       has  any effect or even a specific one is beyond the scope of this mod-
       ule.

       NOTE:
          Since the try_compile() command forwards flags from  variables  like
          CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS,  unknown  flags in such variables may cause a false
          negative for this check.

   CheckCXXSourceCompiles
       Check if given C++ source compiles and links into an executable.

       check_cxx_source_compiles

                 check_cxx_source_compiles(<code> <resultVar>
                                           [FAIL_REGEX <regex1> [<regex2>...]])

              Check that the source supplied in <code> can be  compiled  as  a
              C++  source file and linked as an executable (so it must contain
              at least a main() function). The result will be  stored  in  the
              internal cache variable specified by <resultVar>, with a boolean
              true value  for  success  and  boolean  false  for  failure.  If
              FAIL_REGEX  is  provided, then failure is determined by checking
              if anything in the output matches any of the  specified  regular
              expressions.

              The  underlying check is performed by the try_compile() command.
              The compile and link commands can be influenced by  setting  any
              of     the     following     variables    prior    to    calling
              check_cxx_source_compiles():

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS
                     Additional flags to pass to the compiler. Note  that  the
                     contents of CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS and its associated configura-
                     tion-specific variable are  automatically  added  to  the
                     compiler   command   before  the  contents  of  CMAKE_RE-
                     QUIRED_FLAGS.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS
                     A ;-list of compiler definitions of  the  form  -DFOO  or
                     -DFOO=bar.  A  definition  for the name specified by <re-
                     sultVar> will also be added automatically.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_INCLUDES
                     A ;-list of header search paths to pass to the  compiler.
                     These  will  be  the  only  header  search  paths used by
                     try_compile(),    i.e.    the     contents     of     the
                     INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES directory property will be ignored.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_LINK_OPTIONS
                     New in version 3.14.

                     A  ;-list  of  options  to  add  to the link command (see
                     try_compile() for further details).

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES
                     A ;-list of libraries to add to the link  command.  These
                     can  be  the  name  of  system  libraries  or they can be
                     Imported Targets (see try_compile() for further details).

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_QUIET
                     New in version 3.1.

                     If this variable evaluates to a boolean true  value,  all
                     status  messages  associated  with the check will be sup-
                     pressed.

              The check is only performed once, with the result cached in  the
              variable  named  by <resultVar>. Every subsequent CMake run will
              re-use this cached value rather than performing the check again,
              even  if  the <code> changes.  In order to force the check to be
              re-evaluated, the variable named by <resultVar> must be manually
              removed from the cache.

   CheckCXXSourceRuns
       Check if given C++ source compiles and links into an executable and can
       subsequently be run.

       check_cxx_source_runs

                 check_cxx_source_runs(<code> <resultVar>)

              Check that the source supplied in <code> can be  compiled  as  a
              C++  source  file,  linked  as  an  executable and then run. The
              <code> must contain at least a main() function.  If  the  <code>
              could be built and run successfully, the internal cache variable
              specified by <resultVar> will be set to 1, otherwise it will  be
              set  to  an value that evaluates to boolean false (e.g. an empty
              string or an error message).

              The underlying check is performed by the try_run() command.  The
              compile  and  link  commands can be influenced by setting any of
              the     following      variables      prior      to      calling
              check_cxx_source_runs():

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS
                     Additional  flags  to pass to the compiler. Note that the
                     contents of CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS and its associated configura-
                     tion-specific  variable  are  automatically  added to the
                     compiler  command  before  the  contents   of   CMAKE_RE-
                     QUIRED_FLAGS.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS
                     A  ;-list  of  compiler  definitions of the form -DFOO or
                     -DFOO=bar. A definition for the name  specified  by  <re-
                     sultVar> will also be added automatically.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_INCLUDES
                     A  ;-list of header search paths to pass to the compiler.
                     These will be  the  only  header  search  paths  used  by
                     try_run(),  i.e.  the contents of the INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES
                     directory property will be ignored.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_LINK_OPTIONS
                     New in version 3.14.

                     A ;-list of options to  add  to  the  link  command  (see
                     try_run() for further details).

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES
                     A  ;-list  of libraries to add to the link command. These
                     can be the name  of  system  libraries  or  they  can  be
                     Imported Targets (see try_run() for further details).

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_QUIET
                     New in version 3.1.

                     If  this  variable evaluates to a boolean true value, all
                     status messages associated with the check  will  be  sup-
                     pressed.

              The  check is only performed once, with the result cached in the
              variable named by <resultVar>. Every subsequent CMake  run  will
              re-use this cached value rather than performing the check again,
              even if the <code> changes.  In order to force the check  to  be
              re-evaluated, the variable named by <resultVar> must be manually
              removed from the cache.

   CheckCXXSymbolExists
       Check if a symbol exists as a function, variable, or macro in C++.

       check_cxx_symbol_exists

                 check_cxx_symbol_exists(<symbol> <files> <variable>)

              Check that the  <symbol>  is  available  after  including  given
              header  <files>  and  store the result in a <variable>.  Specify
              the list of files in one argument as a semicolon-separated list.
              check_cxx_symbol_exists()  can  be  used to check for symbols as
              seen by the C++ compiler, as opposed  to  check_symbol_exists(),
              which always uses the C compiler.

              If  the  header files define the symbol as a macro it is consid-
              ered available and assumed to work.  If the header files declare
              the  symbol  as a function or variable then the symbol must also
              be available for linking.  If the symbol is a type, enum  value,
              or  C++  template  it will not be recognized: consider using the
              CheckTypeSize or CheckSourceCompiles module instead.

       NOTE:
          This command is unreliable when <symbol> is (potentially)  an  over-
          loaded function. Since there is no reliable way to predict whether a
          given function in the system environment may be defined as an  over-
          loaded function or may be an overloaded function on other systems or
          will become so in the future, it is generally  advised  to  use  the
          CheckCXXSourceCompiles  module for checking any function symbol (un-
          less somehow you surely know the checked function is not  overloaded
          on other systems or will not be so in the future).

       The  following variables may be set before calling this macro to modify
       the way the check is run:

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS
              string of compile command line flags.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS
              a ;-list of macros to define (-DFOO=bar).

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_INCLUDES
              a ;-list of header search paths to pass to the compiler.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_LINK_OPTIONS
              New in version 3.14: a ;-list of options to add to the link com-
              mand.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES
              a  ;-list  of  libraries  to add to the link command. See policy
              CMP0075.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_QUIET
              New in version 3.1: execute quietly without messages.

       For example:

          include(CheckCXXSymbolExists)

          # Check for macro SEEK_SET
          check_cxx_symbol_exists(SEEK_SET "cstdio" HAVE_SEEK_SET)
          # Check for function std::fopen
          check_cxx_symbol_exists(std::fopen "cstdio" HAVE_STD_FOPEN)

   CheckFortranCompilerFlag
       New in version 3.3.

       Check whether the Fortran compiler supports a given flag.

       check_fortran_compiler_flag

                 check_fortran_compiler_flag(<flag> <var>)

              Check that the <flag> is accepted by the compiler without a  di-
              agnostic.   Stores  the  result in an internal cache entry named
              <var>.

       This command temporarily sets the  CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS  variable
       and    calls   the   check_fortran_source_compiles   macro   from   the
       CheckFortranSourceCompiles module.  See documentation  of  that  module
       for a listing of variables that can otherwise modify the build.

       A  positive result from this check indicates only that the compiler did
       not issue a diagnostic message when given the flag.  Whether  the  flag
       has  any effect or even a specific one is beyond the scope of this mod-
       ule.

       NOTE:
          Since the try_compile() command forwards flags from  variables  like
          CMAKE_Fortran_FLAGS,  unknown  flags  in  such variables may cause a
          false negative for this check.

   CheckFortranFunctionExists
       Check if a Fortran function exists.

       CHECK_FORTRAN_FUNCTION_EXISTS

                 CHECK_FORTRAN_FUNCTION_EXISTS(<function> <result>)

              where

              <function>
                     the name of the Fortran function

              <result>
                     variable to store the result; will be created as  an  in-
                     ternal cache variable.

       NOTE:
          This  command  does not detect functions in Fortran modules. In gen-
          eral it is recommended to use CheckSourceCompiles instead to  deter-
          mine if a Fortran function or subroutine is available.

       The  following variables may be set before calling this macro to modify
       the way the check is run:

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_LINK_OPTIONS
              New in version 3.14: A ;-list of options to add to the link com-
              mand (see try_compile() for further details).

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES
              A  ;-list  of libraries to add to the link command. These can be
              the name of system libraries or they  can  be  Imported  Targets
              (see try_compile() for further details).

   CheckFortranSourceCompiles
       New in version 3.1.

       Check if given Fortran source compiles and links into an executable.

       check_fortran_source_compiles

                 check_fortran_source_compiles(<code> <resultVar>
                     [FAIL_REGEX <regex>...]
                     [SRC_EXT <extension>]
                 )

              Checks  that  the source supplied in <code> can be compiled as a
              Fortran source file and linked as an executable. The <code> must
              be  a  Fortran program containing at least an end statement--for
              example:

                 check_fortran_source_compiles("character :: b; error stop b; end" F2018ESTOPOK SRC_EXT F90)

              This command can help avoid costly build processes when  a  com-
              piler  lacks  support  for  a necessary feature, or a particular
              vendor library is not compatible with the Fortran compiler  ver-
              sion being used. This generate-time check may advise the user of
              such   before   the   main   build   process.   See   also   the
              check_fortran_source_runs() command to actually run the compiled
              code.

              The result will be stored in the internal  cache  variable  <re-
              sultVar>,  with  a  boolean  true  value for success and boolean
              false for failure.

              If FAIL_REGEX is provided, then failure is determined by  check-
              ing if anything in the output matches any of the specified regu-
              lar expressions.

              By default, the test source file will be given a .F file  exten-
              sion. The SRC_EXT option can be used to override this with .<ex-
              tension> instead-- .F90 is a typical choice.

              The underlying check is performed by the try_compile()  command.
              The  compile  and link commands can be influenced by setting any
              of  the  following  variables  prior   to   calling   check_for-
              tran_source_compiles():

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS
                     Additional  flags  to pass to the compiler. Note that the
                     contents of CMAKE_Fortran_FLAGS and its  associated  con-
                     figuration-specific  variable  are automatically added to
                     the compiler command before  the  contents  of  CMAKE_RE-
                     QUIRED_FLAGS.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS
                     A  ;-list  of  compiler  definitions of the form -DFOO or
                     -DFOO=bar. A definition for the name  specified  by  <re-
                     sultVar> will also be added automatically.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_INCLUDES
                     A  ;-list of header search paths to pass to the compiler.
                     These will be  the  only  header  search  paths  used  by
                     try_compile(),     i.e.     the     contents    of    the
                     INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES directory property will be ignored.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_LINK_OPTIONS
                     New in version 3.14.

                     A ;-list of options to  add  to  the  link  command  (see
                     try_compile() for further details).

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES
                     A  ;-list  of libraries to add to the link command. These
                     can be the name  of  system  libraries  or  they  can  be
                     Imported Targets (see try_compile() for further details).

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_QUIET
                     If  this  variable evaluates to a boolean true value, all
                     status messages associated with the check  will  be  sup-
                     pressed.

              The  check is only performed once, with the result cached in the
              variable named by <resultVar>. Every subsequent CMake  run  will
              re-use this cached value rather than performing the check again,
              even if the <code> changes.  In order to force the check  to  be
              re-evaluated, the variable named by <resultVar> must be manually
              removed from the cache.

   CheckFortranSourceRuns
       New in version 3.14.

       Check if given Fortran source compiles and links into an executable and
       can subsequently be run.

       check_fortran_source_runs

                 check_fortran_source_runs(<code> <resultVar>
                     [SRC_EXT <extension>])

              Check  that  the  source supplied in <code> can be compiled as a
              Fortran source file, linked as an executable and then  run.  The
              <code>  must  be  a  Fortran  program containing at least an end
              statement--for example:

                 check_fortran_source_runs("real :: x[*]; call co_sum(x); end" F2018coarrayOK)

              This command can help avoid costly build processes when  a  com-
              piler  lacks  support  for  a necessary feature, or a particular
              vendor library is not compatible with the Fortran compiler  ver-
              sion  being  used.  Some of these failures only occur at runtime
              instead of linktime, and a trivial runtime example can catch the
              issue before the main build process.

              If  the <code> could be built and run successfully, the internal
              cache variable specified by <resultVar> will be set to 1, other-
              wise  it will be set to an value that evaluates to boolean false
              (e.g. an empty string or an error message).

              By default, the test source file will be given a .F90  file  ex-
              tension.  The  SRC_EXT  option can be used to override this with
              .<extension> instead.

              The underlying check is performed by the try_run() command.  The
              compile  and  link  commands can be influenced by setting any of
              the   following   variables   prior   to   calling    check_for-
              tran_source_runs():

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS
                     Additional  flags  to pass to the compiler. Note that the
                     contents of CMAKE_Fortran_FLAGS and its  associated  con-
                     figuration-specific  variable  are automatically added to
                     the compiler command before  the  contents  of  CMAKE_RE-
                     QUIRED_FLAGS.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS
                     A  ;-list  of  compiler  definitions of the form -DFOO or
                     -DFOO=bar. A definition for the name  specified  by  <re-
                     sultVar> will also be added automatically.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_INCLUDES
                     A  ;-list of header search paths to pass to the compiler.
                     These will be  the  only  header  search  paths  used  by
                     try_run(),  i.e.  the contents of the INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES
                     directory property will be ignored.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_LINK_OPTIONS
                     A ;-list of options to  add  to  the  link  command  (see
                     try_run() for further details).

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES
                     A  ;-list  of libraries to add to the link command. These
                     can be the name  of  system  libraries  or  they  can  be
                     Imported Targets (see try_run() for further details).

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_QUIET
                     If  this  variable evaluates to a boolean true value, all
                     status messages associated with the check  will  be  sup-
                     pressed.

              The  check is only performed once, with the result cached in the
              variable named by <resultVar>. Every subsequent CMake  run  will
              re-use this cached value rather than performing the check again,
              even if the <code> changes.  In order to force the check  to  be
              re-evaluated, the variable named by <resultVar> must be manually
              removed from the cache.

   CheckFunctionExists
       Check if a C function can be linked

       check_function_exists

                 check_function_exists(<function> <variable>)

              Checks that the <function> is provided by libraries on the  sys-
              tem  and store the result in a <variable>, which will be created
              as an internal cache variable.

       The following variables may be set before calling this macro to  modify
       the way the check is run:

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS
              string of compile command line flags.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS
              a ;-list of macros to define (-DFOO=bar).

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_INCLUDES
              a ;-list of header search paths to pass to the compiler.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_LINK_OPTIONS
              New in version 3.14: a ;-list of options to add to the link com-
              mand.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES
              a ;-list of libraries to add to the  link  command.  See  policy
              CMP0075.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_QUIET
              New in version 3.1: execute quietly without messages.

       NOTE:
          Prefer  using CheckSymbolExists instead of this module, for the fol-
          lowing reasons:

          • check_function_exists() can't detect functions that are inlined in
            headers or specified as a macro.

          • check_function_exists()  can't  detect anything in the 32-bit ver-
            sions of the Win32 API, because of a mismatch in  calling  conven-
            tions.

          • check_function_exists()  only verifies linking, it does not verify
            that the function is declared in system headers.

   CheckIncludeFileCXX
       Provides a macro to check if a header file can be included in CXX.

       CHECK_INCLUDE_FILE_CXX

                 CHECK_INCLUDE_FILE_CXX(<include> <variable> [<flags>])

              Check if the given <include> file  may  be  included  in  a  CXX
              source  file  and  store  the  result in an internal cache entry
              named <variable>.  The optional third argument may  be  used  to
              add  compilation flags to the check (or use CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS
              below).

       The following variables may be set before calling this macro to  modify
       the way the check is run:

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS
              string of compile command line flags.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS
              a ;-list of macros to define (-DFOO=bar).

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_INCLUDES
              a ;-list of header search paths to pass to the compiler.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_LINK_OPTIONS
              New in version 3.14: a ;-list of options to add to the link com-
              mand.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES
              a ;-list of libraries to add to the  link  command.  See  policy
              CMP0075.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_QUIET
              New in version 3.1: execute quietly without messages.

       See  modules CheckIncludeFile and CheckIncludeFiles to check for one or
       more C headers.

   CheckIncludeFile
       Provides a macro to check if a header file can be included in C.

       CHECK_INCLUDE_FILE

                 CHECK_INCLUDE_FILE(<include> <variable> [<flags>])

              Check if the given <include> file may be included in a C  source
              file  and  store  the  result  in  an internal cache entry named
              <variable>.  The optional third argument may be used to add com-
              pilation flags to the check (or use CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS below).

       The  following variables may be set before calling this macro to modify
       the way the check is run:

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS
              string of compile command line flags.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS
              a ;-list of macros to define (-DFOO=bar).

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_INCLUDES
              a ;-list of header search paths to pass to the compiler.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_LINK_OPTIONS
              New in version 3.14: a ;-list of options to add to the link com-
              mand.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES
              a  ;-list  of  libraries  to add to the link command. See policy
              CMP0075.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_QUIET
              New in version 3.1: execute quietly without messages.

       See the CheckIncludeFiles module to check for multiple headers at once.
       See  the  CheckIncludeFileCXX module to check for headers using the CXX
       language.

   CheckIncludeFiles
       Provides a macro to check if a list of one or more header files can  be
       included together.

       CHECK_INCLUDE_FILES

                 CHECK_INCLUDE_FILES("<includes>" <variable> [LANGUAGE <language>])

              Check if the given <includes> list may be included together in a
              source file and store the result  in  an  internal  cache  entry
              named  <variable>.   Specify the <includes> argument as a ;-list
              of header file names.

              If LANGUAGE is set, the specified compiler will be used to  per-
              form the check. Acceptable values are C and CXX. If not set, the
              C compiler will be used if enabled. If the C compiler is not en-
              abled, the C++ compiler will be used if enabled.

       The  following variables may be set before calling this macro to modify
       the way the check is run:

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS
              string of compile command line flags.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS
              a ;-list of macros to define (-DFOO=bar).

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_INCLUDES
              a ;-list of header search paths to pass to the compiler.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_LINK_OPTIONS
              New in version 3.14: a ;-list of options to add to the link com-
              mand.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES
              a  ;-list  of  libraries  to add to the link command. See policy
              CMP0075.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_QUIET
              New in version 3.1: execute quietly without messages.

       See modules CheckIncludeFile and CheckIncludeFileCXX  to  check  for  a
       single header file in C or CXX languages.

   CheckIPOSupported
       New in version 3.9.

       Check  whether  the  compiler  supports an interprocedural optimization
       (IPO/LTO).  Use this before enabling  the  INTERPROCEDURAL_OPTIMIZATION
       target property.

       check_ipo_supported

                 check_ipo_supported([RESULT <result>] [OUTPUT <output>]
                                     [LANGUAGES <lang>...])

              Options are:

              RESULT <result>
                     Set  <result>  variable to YES if IPO is supported by the
                     compiler and NO otherwise.  If this option is  not  given
                     then  the  command will issue a fatal error if IPO is not
                     supported.

              OUTPUT <output>
                     Set <output> variable with details about any error.

              LANGUAGES <lang>...
                     Specify languages whose compilers to check.  Languages C,
                     CXX, and Fortran are supported.

       It makes no sense to use this module when CMP0069 is set to OLD so mod-
       ule will return error in this case. See policy CMP0069 for details.

       New in version 3.13: Add support for Visual Studio generators.

       New in version 3.24: The check uses the caller's CMAKE_<LANG>_FLAGS and
       CMAKE_<LANG>_FLAGS_<CONFIG> values.  See policy CMP0138.

   Examples
          check_ipo_supported() # fatal error if IPO is not supported
          set_property(TARGET foo PROPERTY INTERPROCEDURAL_OPTIMIZATION TRUE)

          # Optional IPO. Do not use IPO if it's not supported by compiler.
          check_ipo_supported(RESULT result OUTPUT output)
          if(result)
            set_property(TARGET foo PROPERTY INTERPROCEDURAL_OPTIMIZATION TRUE)
          else()
            message(WARNING "IPO is not supported: ${output}")
          endif()

   CheckLanguage
       Check if a language can be enabled

       Usage:

          check_language(<lang>)

       where <lang> is a language that may be passed to enable_language() such
       as Fortran.  If CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER is already defined the check does
       nothing.   Otherwise  it tries enabling the language in a test project.
       The result is cached in CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER as the compiler that  was
       found,  or  NOTFOUND  if the language cannot be enabled. For CUDA which
       can have an explicit host compiler, the cache  CMAKE_CUDA_HOST_COMPILER
       variable will be set if it was required for compilation (and cleared if
       it was not).

       Example:

          check_language(Fortran)
          if(CMAKE_Fortran_COMPILER)
            enable_language(Fortran)
          else()
            message(STATUS "No Fortran support")
          endif()

   CheckLibraryExists
       Check if the function exists.

       CHECK_LIBRARY_EXISTS

                 CHECK_LIBRARY_EXISTS(LIBRARY FUNCTION LOCATION VARIABLE)

                 LIBRARY  - the name of the library you are looking for
                 FUNCTION - the name of the function
                 LOCATION - location where the library should be found
                 VARIABLE - variable to store the result
                            Will be created as an internal cache variable.

       The following variables may be set before calling this macro to  modify
       the way the check is run:

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS
              string of compile command line flags.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS
              list of macros to define (-DFOO=bar).

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_LINK_OPTIONS
              New in version 3.14: list of options to pass to link command.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES
              list of libraries to link.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_QUIET
              New in version 3.1: execute quietly without messages.

   CheckLinkerFlag
       New in version 3.18.

       Check whether the compiler supports a given link flag.

       check_linker_flag

                 check_linker_flag(<lang> <flag> <var>)

       Check that the link <flag> is accepted by the <lang> compiler without a
       diagnostic.  Stores the result in an internal cache entry named <var>.

       This command temporarily sets the CMAKE_REQUIRED_LINK_OPTIONS  variable
       and    calls    the    check_source_compiles()    command    from   the
       CheckSourceCompiles module.  See  that  module's  documentation  for  a
       listing of variables that can otherwise modify the build.

       The  underlying  implementation  relies on the LINK_OPTIONS property to
       check the specified flag. The  LINKER:  prefix,  as  described  in  the
       target_link_options() command, can be used as well.

       A  positive result from this check indicates only that the compiler did
       not issue a diagnostic message when given the link flag.   Whether  the
       flag  has any effect or even a specific one is beyond the scope of this
       module.

       NOTE:
          Since the try_compile() command forwards flags from  variables  like
          CMAKE_<LANG>_FLAGS,  unknown  flags  in  such  variables may cause a
          false negative for this check.

   CheckOBJCCompilerFlag
       New in version 3.16.

       Check whether the Objective-C compiler supports a given flag.

       check_objc_compiler_flag

                 check_objc_compiler_flag(<flag> <var>)

              Check that the <flag> is accepted by the compiler without a  di-
              agnostic.   Stores  the  result in an internal cache entry named
              <var>.

       This command temporarily sets the  CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS  variable
       and    calls    the    check_objc_source_compiles    macro   from   the
       CheckOBJCSourceCompiles module.  See documentation of that module for a
       listing of variables that can otherwise modify the build.

       A  positive result from this check indicates only that the compiler did
       not issue a diagnostic message when given the flag.  Whether  the  flag
       has  any effect or even a specific one is beyond the scope of this mod-
       ule.

       NOTE:
          Since the try_compile() command forwards flags from  variables  like
          CMAKE_OBJC_FLAGS,  unknown flags in such variables may cause a false
          negative for this check.

   CheckOBJCSourceCompiles
       New in version 3.16.

       Check if given Objective-C source  compiles  and  links  into  an  exe-
       cutable.

       check_objc_source_compiles

                 check_objc_source_compiles(<code> <resultVar>
                                            [FAIL_REGEX <regex1> [<regex2>...]])

              Check  that  the  source supplied in <code> can be compiled as a
              Objectie-C source file and linked as an executable (so  it  must
              contain  at  least a main() function). The result will be stored
              in the internal cache variable specified by <resultVar>, with  a
              boolean true value for success and boolean false for failure. If
              FAIL_REGEX is provided, then failure is determined  by  checking
              if  anything  in the output matches any of the specified regular
              expressions.

              The underlying check is performed by the try_compile()  command.
              The  compile  and link commands can be influenced by setting any
              of    the    following    variables     prior     to     calling
              check_objc_source_compiles():

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS
                     Additional  flags  to pass to the compiler. Note that the
                     contents of CMAKE_OBJC_FLAGS and its associated  configu-
                     ration-specific  variable  are automatically added to the
                     compiler  command  before  the  contents   of   CMAKE_RE-
                     QUIRED_FLAGS.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS
                     A  ;-list  of  compiler  definitions of the form -DFOO or
                     -DFOO=bar. A definition for the name  specified  by  <re-
                     sultVar> will also be added automatically.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_INCLUDES
                     A  ;-list of header search paths to pass to the compiler.
                     These will be  the  only  header  search  paths  used  by
                     try_compile(),     i.e.     the     contents    of    the
                     INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES directory property will be ignored.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_LINK_OPTIONS
                     A ;-list of options to  add  to  the  link  command  (see
                     try_compile() for further details).

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES
                     A  ;-list  of libraries to add to the link command. These
                     can be the name  of  system  libraries  or  they  can  be
                     Imported Targets (see try_compile() for further details).

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_QUIET
                     If  this  variable evaluates to a boolean true value, all
                     status messages associated with the check  will  be  sup-
                     pressed.

              The  check is only performed once, with the result cached in the
              variable named by <resultVar>. Every subsequent CMake  run  will
              re-use this cached value rather than performing the check again,
              even if the <code> changes.  In order to force the check  to  be
              re-evaluated, the variable named by <resultVar> must be manually
              removed from the cache.

   CheckOBJCSourceRuns
       New in version 3.16.

       Check if given Objective-C source compiles and links into an executable
       and can subsequently be run.

       check_objc_source_runs

                 check_objc_source_runs(<code> <resultVar>)

              Check  that  the  source supplied in <code> can be compiled as a
              Objective-C source file, linked as an executable and  then  run.
              The  <code>  must  contain  at  least  a main() function. If the
              <code> could be built and run successfully, the  internal  cache
              variable specified by <resultVar> will be set to 1, otherwise it
              will be set to an value that evaluates to boolean false (e.g. an
              empty string or an error message).

              The  underlying check is performed by the try_run() command. The
              compile and link commands can be influenced by  setting  any  of
              the      following      variables      prior      to     calling
              check_objc_source_runs():

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS
                     Additional flags to pass to the compiler. Note  that  the
                     contents  of CMAKE_OBJC_FLAGS and its associated configu-
                     ration-specific variable are automatically added  to  the
                     compiler   command   before  the  contents  of  CMAKE_RE-
                     QUIRED_FLAGS.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS
                     A ;-list of compiler definitions of  the  form  -DFOO  or
                     -DFOO=bar.  A  definition  for the name specified by <re-
                     sultVar> will also be added automatically.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_INCLUDES
                     A ;-list of header search paths to pass to the  compiler.
                     These  will  be  the  only  header  search  paths used by
                     try_run(), i.e. the contents of  the  INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES
                     directory property will be ignored.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_LINK_OPTIONS
                     A  ;-list  of  options  to  add  to the link command (see
                     try_run() for further details).

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES
                     A ;-list of libraries to add to the link  command.  These
                     can  be  the  name  of  system  libraries  or they can be
                     Imported Targets (see try_run() for further details).

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_QUIET
                     If this variable evaluates to a boolean true  value,  all
                     status  messages  associated  with the check will be sup-
                     pressed.

              The check is only performed once, with the result cached in  the
              variable  named  by <resultVar>. Every subsequent CMake run will
              re-use this cached value rather than performing the check again,
              even  if  the <code> changes.  In order to force the check to be
              re-evaluated, the variable named by <resultVar> must be manually
              removed from the cache.

   CheckOBJCXXCompilerFlag
       New in version 3.16.

       Check whether the Objective-C++ compiler supports a given flag.

       check_objcxx_compiler_flag

                 check_objcxx_compiler_flag(<flag> <var>)

              Check  that the <flag> is accepted by the compiler without a di-
              agnostic.  Stores the result in an internal  cache  entry  named
              <var>.

       This  command  temporarily sets the CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS variable
       and   calls   the   check_objcxx_source_compiles   macro    from    the
       CheckOBJCXXSourceCompiles module.  See documentation of that module for
       a listing of variables that can otherwise modify the build.

       A positive result from this check indicates only that the compiler  did
       not  issue  a diagnostic message when given the flag.  Whether the flag
       has any effect or even a specific one is beyond the scope of this  mod-
       ule.

       NOTE:
          Since  the  try_compile() command forwards flags from variables like
          CMAKE_OBJCXX_FLAGS, unknown flags in  such  variables  may  cause  a
          false negative for this check.

   CheckOBJCXXSourceCompiles
       New in version 3.16.

       Check  if  given  Objective-C++  source compiles and links into an exe-
       cutable.

       check_objcxx_source_compiles

                 check_objcxx_source_compiles(<code> <resultVar>
                                              [FAIL_REGEX <regex1> [<regex2>...]])

              Check that the source supplied in <code> can be  compiled  as  a
              Objective-C++  source  file  and  linked as an executable (so it
              must contain at least a main() function).  The  result  will  be
              stored  in the internal cache variable specified by <resultVar>,
              with a boolean true value for  success  and  boolean  false  for
              failure.  If  FAIL_REGEX is provided, then failure is determined
              by checking if anything in the output matches any of the  speci-
              fied regular expressions.

              The  underlying check is performed by the try_compile() command.
              The compile and link commands can be influenced by  setting  any
              of   the   following   variables   prior  to  calling  check_ob-
              jcxx_source_compiles():

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS
                     Additional flags to pass to the compiler. Note  that  the
                     contents of CMAKE_OBJCXX_FLAGS and its associated config-
                     uration-specific variable are automatically added to  the
                     compiler   command   before  the  contents  of  CMAKE_RE-
                     QUIRED_FLAGS.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS
                     A ;-list of compiler definitions of  the  form  -DFOO  or
                     -DFOO=bar.  A  definition  for the name specified by <re-
                     sultVar> will also be added automatically.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_INCLUDES
                     A ;-list of header search paths to pass to the  compiler.
                     These  will  be  the  only  header  search  paths used by
                     try_compile(),    i.e.    the     contents     of     the
                     INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES directory property will be ignored.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_LINK_OPTIONS
                     A  ;-list  of  options  to  add  to the link command (see
                     try_compile() for further details).

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES
                     A ;-list of libraries to add to the link  command.  These
                     can  be  the  name  of  system  libraries  or they can be
                     Imported Targets (see try_compile() for further details).

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_QUIET
                     If this variable evaluates to a boolean true  value,  all
                     status  messages  associated  with the check will be sup-
                     pressed.

              The check is only performed once, with the result cached in  the
              variable  named  by <resultVar>. Every subsequent CMake run will
              re-use this cached value rather than performing the check again,
              even  if  the <code> changes.  In order to force the check to be
              re-evaluated, the variable named by <resultVar> must be manually
              removed from the cache.

   CheckOBJCXXSourceRuns
       New in version 3.16.

       Check  if  given  Objective-C++  source compiles and links into an exe-
       cutable and can subsequently be run.

       check_objcxx_source_runs

                 check_objcxx_source_runs(<code> <resultVar>)

              Check that the source supplied in <code> can be  compiled  as  a
              Objective-C++ source file, linked as an executable and then run.
              The <code> must contain at  least  a  main()  function.  If  the
              <code>  could  be built and run successfully, the internal cache
              variable specified by <resultVar> will be set to 1, otherwise it
              will be set to an value that evaluates to boolean false (e.g. an
              empty string or an error message).

              The underlying check is performed by the try_run() command.  The
              compile  and  link  commands can be influenced by setting any of
              the   following   variables   prior   to    calling    check_ob-
              jcxx_source_runs():

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS
                     Additional  flags  to pass to the compiler. Note that the
                     contents of CMAKE_OBJCXX_FLAGS and its associated config-
                     uration-specific  variable are automatically added to the
                     compiler  command  before  the  contents   of   CMAKE_RE-
                     QUIRED_FLAGS.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS
                     A  ;-list  of  compiler  definitions of the form -DFOO or
                     -DFOO=bar. A definition for the name  specified  by  <re-
                     sultVar> will also be added automatically.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_INCLUDES
                     A  ;-list of header search paths to pass to the compiler.
                     These will be  the  only  header  search  paths  used  by
                     try_run(),  i.e.  the contents of the INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES
                     directory property will be ignored.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_LINK_OPTIONS
                     A ;-list of options to  add  to  the  link  command  (see
                     try_run() for further details).

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES
                     A  ;-list  of libraries to add to the link command. These
                     can be the name  of  system  libraries  or  they  can  be
                     Imported Targets (see try_run() for further details).

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_QUIET
                     If  this  variable evaluates to a boolean true value, all
                     status messages associated with the check  will  be  sup-
                     pressed.

              The  check is only performed once, with the result cached in the
              variable named by <resultVar>. Every subsequent CMake  run  will
              re-use this cached value rather than performing the check again,
              even if the <code> changes.  In order to force the check  to  be
              re-evaluated, the variable named by <resultVar> must be manually
              removed from the cache.

   CheckPIESupported
       New in version 3.14.

       Check whether the linker supports Position Independent Code (PIE) or No
       Position Independent Code (NO_PIE) for executables.  Use this to ensure
       that the POSITION_INDEPENDENT_CODE target property for executables will
       be honored at link time.

       check_pie_supported

                 check_pie_supported([OUTPUT_VARIABLE <output>]
                                     [LANGUAGES <lang>...])

              Options are:

              OUTPUT_VARIABLE <output>
                     Set  <output>  variable  with details about any error. If
                     the check is bypassed because it uses cached results from
                     a  previous call, the output will be empty even if errors
                     were present in the previous call.

              LANGUAGES <lang>...
                     Check the linkers used for each  of  the  specified  lan-
                     guages.   If  this  option  is  not provided, the command
                     checks all enabled languages.

                     C, CXX, Fortran are supported.

                     New in version 3.23: OBJC, OBJCXX, CUDA, and HIP are sup-
                     ported.

       It makes no sense to use this module when CMP0083 is set to OLD, so the
       command will return an error in this case.  See policy CMP0083 for  de-
       tails.

   Variables
       For each language checked, two boolean cache variables are defined.

          CMAKE_<lang>_LINK_PIE_SUPPORTED
                 Set  to true if PIE is supported by the linker and false oth-
                 erwise.

          CMAKE_<lang>_LINK_NO_PIE_SUPPORTED
                 Set to true if NO_PIE is supported by the  linker  and  false
                 otherwise.

   Examples
          check_pie_supported()
          set_property(TARGET foo PROPERTY POSITION_INDEPENDENT_CODE TRUE)

          # Retrieve any error message.
          check_pie_supported(OUTPUT_VARIABLE output LANGUAGES C)
          set_property(TARGET foo PROPERTY POSITION_INDEPENDENT_CODE TRUE)
          if(NOT CMAKE_C_LINK_PIE_SUPPORTED)
            message(WARNING "PIE is not supported at link time: ${output}.\n"
                            "PIE link options will not be passed to linker.")
          endif()

   CheckPrototypeDefinition
       Check if the prototype we expect is correct.

       check_prototype_definition

                 check_prototype_definition(FUNCTION PROTOTYPE RETURN HEADER VARIABLE)

                 FUNCTION - The name of the function (used to check if prototype exists)
                 PROTOTYPE- The prototype to check.
                 RETURN - The return value of the function.
                 HEADER - The header files required.
                 VARIABLE - The variable to store the result.
                            Will be created as an internal cache variable.

              Example:

                 check_prototype_definition(getpwent_r
                  "struct passwd *getpwent_r(struct passwd *src, char *buf, int buflen)"
                  "NULL"
                  "unistd.h;pwd.h"
                  SOLARIS_GETPWENT_R)

       The following variables may be set before calling this function to mod-
       ify the way the check is run:

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS
              string of compile command line flags.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS
              list of macros to define (-DFOO=bar).

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_INCLUDES
              list of include directories.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_LINK_OPTIONS
              New in version 3.14: list of options to pass to link command.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES
              list of libraries to link.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_QUIET
              New in version 3.1: execute quietly without messages.

   CheckSourceCompiles
       New in version 3.19.

       Check if given source compiles and links into an executable.

       check_source_compiles

                 check_source_compiles(<lang> <code> <resultVar>
                                       [FAIL_REGEX <regex1> [<regex2>...]]
                                       [SRC_EXT <extension>])

              Check that the source supplied in <code> can be  compiled  as  a
              source  file  for  the  requested language and linked as an exe-
              cutable (so it must contain at least a main() function). The re-
              sult  will be stored in the internal cache variable specified by
              <resultVar>, with a boolean true value for success  and  boolean
              false  for  failure.  If FAIL_REGEX is provided, then failure is
              determined by checking if anything in the output matches any  of
              the specified regular expressions.

              By  default, the test source file will be given a file extension
              that matches the requested language. The SRC_EXT option  can  be
              used to override this with .<extension> instead.

              The  underlying check is performed by the try_compile() command.
              The compile and link commands can be influenced by  setting  any
              of  the  following  variables prior to calling check_source_com-
              piles():

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS
                     Additional flags to pass to the compiler. Note  that  the
                     contents of CMAKE_<LANG>_FLAGS and its associated config-
                     uration-specific variable are automatically added to  the
                     compiler   command   before  the  contents  of  CMAKE_RE-
                     QUIRED_FLAGS.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS
                     A ;-list of compiler definitions of  the  form  -DFOO  or
                     -DFOO=bar.  A  definition  for the name specified by <re-
                     sultVar> will also be added automatically.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_INCLUDES
                     A ;-list of header search paths to pass to the  compiler.
                     These  will  be  the  only  header  search  paths used by
                     try_compile(),    i.e.    the     contents     of     the
                     INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES directory property will be ignored.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_LINK_OPTIONS
                     A  ;-list  of  options  to  add  to the link command (see
                     try_compile() for further details).

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES
                     A ;-list of libraries to add to the link  command.  These
                     can  be  the  name  of  system  libraries  or they can be
                     Imported Targets (see try_compile() for further details).

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_QUIET
                     If this variable evaluates to a boolean true  value,  all
                     status  messages  associated  with the check will be sup-
                     pressed.

              The check is only performed once, with the result cached in  the
              variable  named  by <resultVar>. Every subsequent CMake run will
              re-use this cached value rather than performing the check again,
              even  if  the <code> changes.  In order to force the check to be
              re-evaluated, the variable named by <resultVar> must be manually
              removed from the cache.

   CheckSourceRuns
       New in version 3.19.

       Check  if  given  source  compiles and links into an executable and can
       subsequently be run.

       check_source_runs

                 check_source_runs(<lang> <code> <resultVar>
                                   [SRC_EXT <extension>])

              Check that the source supplied in <code> can be  compiled  as  a
              source  file for the requested language, linked as an executable
              and then run.  The <code> must contain at least a  main()  func-
              tion. If the <code> could be built and run successfully, the in-
              ternal cache variable specified by <resultVar> will be set to 1,
              otherwise  it  will be set to an value that evaluates to boolean
              false (e.g. an empty string or an error message).

              By default, the test source file will be given a file  extension
              that  matches  the requested language. The SRC_EXT option can be
              used to override this with .<extension> instead.

              The underlying check is performed by the try_run() command.  The
              compile  and  link  commands can be influenced by setting any of
              the     following      variables      prior      to      calling
              check_objc_source_runs():

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS
                     Additional  flags  to pass to the compiler. Note that the
                     contents of CMAKE_OBJC_FLAGS and its associated  configu-
                     ration-specific  variable  are automatically added to the
                     compiler  command  before  the  contents   of   CMAKE_RE-
                     QUIRED_FLAGS.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS
                     A  ;-list  of  compiler  definitions of the form -DFOO or
                     -DFOO=bar. A definition for the name  specified  by  <re-
                     sultVar> will also be added automatically.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_INCLUDES
                     A  ;-list of header search paths to pass to the compiler.
                     These will be  the  only  header  search  paths  used  by
                     try_run(),  i.e.  the contents of the INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES
                     directory property will be ignored.

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_LINK_OPTIONS
                     A ;-list of options to  add  to  the  link  command  (see
                     try_run() for further details).

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES
                     A  ;-list  of libraries to add to the link command. These
                     can be the name  of  system  libraries  or  they  can  be
                     Imported Targets (see try_run() for further details).

              CMAKE_REQUIRED_QUIET
                     If  this  variable evaluates to a boolean true value, all
                     status messages associated with the check  will  be  sup-
                     pressed.

              The  check is only performed once, with the result cached in the
              variable named by <resultVar>. Every subsequent CMake  run  will
              re-use this cached value rather than performing the check again,
              even if the <code> changes.  In order to force the check  to  be
              re-evaluated, the variable named by <resultVar> must be manually
              removed from the cache.

   CheckStructHasMember
       Check if the given struct or class has the specified member variable

       CHECK_STRUCT_HAS_MEMBER

                 CHECK_STRUCT_HAS_MEMBER(<struct> <member> <header> <variable>
                                         [LANGUAGE <language>])

                 <struct> - the name of the struct or class you are interested in
                 <member> - the member which existence you want to check
                 <header> - the header(s) where the prototype should be declared
                 <variable> - variable to store the result
                 <language> - the compiler to use (C or CXX)

       The following variables may be set before calling this macro to  modify
       the way the check is run:

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS
              string of compile command line flags.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS
              list of macros to define (-DFOO=bar).

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_INCLUDES
              list of include directories.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_LINK_OPTIONS
              New in version 3.14: list of options to pass to link command.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES
              list of libraries to link.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_QUIET
              New in version 3.1: execute quietly without messages.

       Example:

          CHECK_STRUCT_HAS_MEMBER("struct timeval" tv_sec sys/select.h
                                  HAVE_TIMEVAL_TV_SEC LANGUAGE C)

   CheckSymbolExists
       Provides  a  macro to check if a symbol exists as a function, variable,
       or macro in C.

       check_symbol_exists

                 check_symbol_exists(<symbol> <files> <variable>)

              Check that the  <symbol>  is  available  after  including  given
              header  <files>  and  store the result in a <variable>.  Specify
              the list of files in one argument as a semicolon-separated list.
              <variable> will be created as an internal cache variable.

       If  the  header  files  define  the  symbol as a macro it is considered
       available and assumed to work.  If the header files declare the  symbol
       as  a  function  or variable then the symbol must also be available for
       linking (so intrinsics may not be detected).  If the symbol is a  type,
       enum  value,  or  intrinsic  it  will not be recognized (consider using
       CheckTypeSize or CheckSourceCompiles).  If the check needs to  be  done
       in C++, consider using CheckCXXSymbolExists instead.

       The  following variables may be set before calling this macro to modify
       the way the check is run:

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS
              string of compile command line flags.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS
              a ;-list of macros to define (-DFOO=bar).

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_INCLUDES
              a ;-list of header search paths to pass to the compiler.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_LINK_OPTIONS
              New in version 3.14: a ;-list of options to add to the link com-
              mand.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES
              a  ;-list  of  libraries  to add to the link command. See policy
              CMP0075.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_QUIET
              New in version 3.1: execute quietly without messages.

       For example:

          include(CheckSymbolExists)

          # Check for macro SEEK_SET
          check_symbol_exists(SEEK_SET "stdio.h" HAVE_SEEK_SET)
          # Check for function fopen
          check_symbol_exists(fopen "stdio.h" HAVE_FOPEN)

   CheckTypeSize
       Check sizeof a type

       check_type_size

                 check_type_size(<type> <variable> [BUILTIN_TYPES_ONLY]
                                                   [LANGUAGE <language>])

              Check if the type exists and determine its  size.   Results  are
              reported in the following variables:

              HAVE_<variable>
                     Holds  a  true or false value indicating whether the type
                     exists.

              <variable>
                     Holds one of the following values:

                     <size> Type has non-zero size <size>.

                     0      Type has architecture-dependent  size.   This  may
                            occur  when  CMAKE_OSX_ARCHITECTURES  has multiple
                            architectures.  In this case <variable>_CODE  con-
                            tains  C  preprocessor tests mapping from each ar-
                            chitecture macro to the corresponding  type  size.
                            The  list  of  architecture  macros  is  stored in
                            <variable>_KEYS, and the value  for  each  key  is
                            stored in <variable>-<key>.

                      (empty string)
                            Type does not exist.

              <variable>_CODE
                     Holds  C preprocessor code to define the macro <variable>
                     to the size of the type, or to leave the macro  undefined
                     if the type does not exist.

              The options are:

              BUILTIN_TYPES_ONLY
                 Support only compiler-builtin types.  If not given, the macro
                 checks for headers <sys/types.h>, <stdint.h>, and <stddef.h>,
                 and  saves  results  in  HAVE_SYS_TYPES_H, HAVE_STDINT_H, and
                 HAVE_STDDEF_H.  The type size  check  automatically  includes
                 the  available  headers,  thus supporting checks of types de-
                 fined in the headers.

              LANGUAGE <language>
                     Use the <language> compiler to perform  the  check.   Ac-
                     ceptable values are C and CXX.

       Despite  the name of the macro you may use it to check the size of more
       complex expressions, too.  To check e.g.  for the size of a struct mem-
       ber you can do something like this:

          check_type_size("((struct something*)0)->member" SIZEOF_MEMBER)

       The  following variables may be set before calling this macro to modify
       the way the check is run:

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS
              string of compile command line flags.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS
              list of macros to define (-DFOO=bar).

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_INCLUDES
              list of include directories.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_LINK_OPTIONS
              New in version 3.14: list of options to pass to link command.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES
              list of libraries to link.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_QUIET
              New in version 3.1: execute quietly without messages.

       CMAKE_EXTRA_INCLUDE_FILES
              list of extra headers to include.

   CheckVariableExists
       Check if the variable exists.

       CHECK_VARIABLE_EXISTS

                 CHECK_VARIABLE_EXISTS(VAR VARIABLE)

                 VAR      - the name of the variable
                 VARIABLE - variable to store the result
                            Will be created as an internal cache variable.

              This macro is only for C variables.

       The following variables may be set before calling this macro to  modify
       the way the check is run:

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS
              string of compile command line flags.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS
              list of macros to define (-DFOO=bar).

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_LINK_OPTIONS
              New in version 3.14: list of options to pass to link command.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES
              list of libraries to link.

       CMAKE_REQUIRED_QUIET
              New in version 3.1: execute quietly without messages.

   CMakeAddFortranSubdirectory
       Add a fortran-only subdirectory, find a fortran compiler, and build.

       The  cmake_add_fortran_subdirectory  function  adds a subdirectory to a
       project that contains a fortran-only subproject.  The module will check
       the  current compiler and see if it can support fortran.  If no fortran
       compiler is found and the compiler is MSVC, then this module will  find
       the MinGW gfortran.  It will then use an external project to build with
       the MinGW tools.  It will also create  imported  targets  for  the  li-
       braries created.  This will only work if the fortran code is built into
       a dll, so BUILD_SHARED_LIBS is turned on in the project.   In  addition
       the CMAKE_GNUtoMS option is set to on, so that Microsoft .lib files are
       created.  Usage is as follows:

          cmake_add_fortran_subdirectory(
           <subdir>                # name of subdirectory
           PROJECT <project_name>  # project name in subdir top CMakeLists.txt
           ARCHIVE_DIR <dir>       # dir where project places .lib files
           RUNTIME_DIR <dir>       # dir where project places .dll files
           LIBRARIES <lib>...      # names of library targets to import
           LINK_LIBRARIES          # link interface libraries for LIBRARIES
            [LINK_LIBS <lib> <dep>...]...
           CMAKE_COMMAND_LINE ...  # extra command line flags to pass to cmake
           NO_EXTERNAL_INSTALL     # skip installation of external project
           )

       Relative paths in ARCHIVE_DIR and RUNTIME_DIR are interpreted with  re-
       spect  to  the build directory corresponding to the source directory in
       which the function is invoked.

       Limitations:

       NO_EXTERNAL_INSTALL is required for forward compatibility with a future
       version  that  supports  installation  of the external project binaries
       during make install.

   CMakeBackwardCompatibilityCXX
       define a bunch of backwards compatibility variables

          CMAKE_ANSI_CXXFLAGS - flag for ansi c++
          CMAKE_HAS_ANSI_STRING_STREAM - has <strstream>
          include(TestForANSIStreamHeaders)
          include(CheckIncludeFileCXX)
          include(TestForSTDNamespace)
          include(TestForANSIForScope)

   CMakeDependentOption
       Macro to provide an option dependent on other options.

       This macro presents an option to the user only if a set of other condi-
       tions are true.

       cmake_dependent_option

                 cmake_dependent_option(<option> "<help_text>" <value> <depends> <force>)

              Makes  <option> available to the user if the semicolon-separated
              list of conditions in <depends> are all true.  Otherwise, a  lo-
              cal variable named <option> is set to <force>.

              When  <option>  is  available, the given <help_text> and initial
              <value> are used. Otherwise, any value set by the user  is  pre-
              served for when <depends> is satisfied in the future.

              Note that the <option> variable only has a value which satisfies
              the <depends> condition within the scope of the  caller  because
              it is a local variable.

       Example invocation:

          cmake_dependent_option(USE_FOO "Use Foo" ON "USE_BAR;NOT USE_ZOT" OFF)

       If USE_BAR is true and USE_ZOT is false, this provides an option called
       USE_FOO that defaults to ON. Otherwise, it  sets  USE_FOO  to  OFF  and
       hides  the  option  from  the user. If the status of USE_BAR or USE_ZOT
       ever changes, any value for the USE_FOO option is saved  so  that  when
       the option is re-enabled it retains its old value.

       New  in version 3.22: Full Condition Syntax is now supported.  See pol-
       icy CMP0127.

   CMakeFindDependencyMacro
       find_dependency
              The find_dependency() macro wraps a find_package()  call  for  a
              package dependency:

                 find_dependency(<dep> [...])

              It  is  designed  to  be  used  in  a Package Configuration File
              (<PackageName>Config.cmake).  find_dependency forwards the  cor-
              rect  parameters for QUIET and REQUIRED which were passed to the
              original find_package() call.  Any additional  arguments  speci-
              fied are forwarded to find_package().

              If  the dependency could not be found it sets an informative di-
              agnostic message and calls return() to  end  processing  of  the
              calling   package   configuration   file   and   return  to  the
              find_package() command that loaded it.

              NOTE:
                 The call to return() makes this macro unsuitable to call from
                 Find Modules.

   CMakeFindFrameworks
       helper module to find OSX frameworks

       This module reads hints about search locations from variables:

          CMAKE_FIND_FRAMEWORK_EXTRA_LOCATIONS - Extra directories

   CMakeFindPackageMode
       This  file  is  executed by cmake when invoked with --find-package.  It
       expects that the following variables are set using -D:

       NAME   name of the package

       COMPILER_ID
              the CMake compiler ID for which  the  result  is,  i.e.  GNU/In-
              tel/Clang/MSVC, etc.

       LANGUAGE
              language  for  which  the  result  will be used, i.e. C/CXX/For-
              tran/ASM

       MODE

              EXIST  only check for existence of the given package

              COMPILE
                     print the flags needed for compiling an object file which
                     uses the given package

              LINK   print  the  flags needed for linking when using the given
                     package

       QUIET  if TRUE, don't print anything

   CMakeGraphVizOptions
       The builtin Graphviz support of CMake.

   Generating Graphviz files
       CMake can generate Graphviz files showing the dependencies between  the
       targets  in  a  project, as well as external libraries which are linked
       against.

       When running CMake with the --graphviz=foo.dot option, it produces:

       • a foo.dot file, showing all dependencies in the project

       • a foo.dot.<target> file for each target, showing on which other  tar-
         gets it depends

       • a  foo.dot.<target>.dependers  file  for  each  target, showing which
         other targets depend on it

       Those .dot files can be converted to images using the dot command  from
       the Graphviz package:

          dot -Tpng -o foo.png foo.dot

       New  in  version 3.10: The different dependency types PUBLIC, INTERFACE
       and PRIVATE are represented as solid, dashed and dotted edges.

   Variables specific to the Graphviz support
       The resulting graphs can be huge.  The look and content of  the  gener-
       ated   graphs   can  be  controlled  using  the  file  CMakeGraphVizOp-
       tions.cmake.  This file is first searched in CMAKE_BINARY_DIR, and then
       in CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR.  If found, the variables set in it are used to ad-
       just options for the generated Graphviz files.

       GRAPHVIZ_GRAPH_NAME
              The graph name.

              • Mandatory: NO

              • Default: value of CMAKE_PROJECT_NAME

       GRAPHVIZ_GRAPH_HEADER
              The header written at the top of the Graphviz files.

              • Mandatory: NO

              • Default: "node [ fontsize = "12" ];"

       GRAPHVIZ_NODE_PREFIX
              The prefix for each node in the Graphviz files.

              • Mandatory: NO

              • Default: "node"

       GRAPHVIZ_EXECUTABLES
              Set to FALSE to exclude executables from the generated graphs.

              • Mandatory: NO

              • Default: TRUE

       GRAPHVIZ_STATIC_LIBS
              Set to FALSE to exclude  static  libraries  from  the  generated
              graphs.

              • Mandatory: NO

              • Default: TRUE

       GRAPHVIZ_SHARED_LIBS
              Set  to  FALSE  to  exclude  shared libraries from the generated
              graphs.

              • Mandatory: NO

              • Default: TRUE

       GRAPHVIZ_MODULE_LIBS
              Set to FALSE to exclude  module  libraries  from  the  generated
              graphs.

              • Mandatory: NO

              • Default: TRUE

       GRAPHVIZ_INTERFACE_LIBS
              Set  to  FALSE to exclude interface libraries from the generated
              graphs.

              • Mandatory: NO

              • Default: TRUE

       GRAPHVIZ_OBJECT_LIBS
              Set to FALSE to exclude  object  libraries  from  the  generated
              graphs.

              • Mandatory: NO

              • Default: TRUE

       GRAPHVIZ_UNKNOWN_LIBS
              Set  to  FALSE  to  exclude unknown libraries from the generated
              graphs.

              • Mandatory: NO

              • Default: TRUE

       GRAPHVIZ_EXTERNAL_LIBS
              Set to FALSE to exclude external libraries  from  the  generated
              graphs.

              • Mandatory: NO

              • Default: TRUE

       GRAPHVIZ_CUSTOM_TARGETS
              Set to TRUE to include custom targets in the generated graphs.

              • Mandatory: NO

              • Default: FALSE

       GRAPHVIZ_IGNORE_TARGETS
              A  list  of  regular expressions for names of targets to exclude
              from the generated graphs.

              • Mandatory: NO

              • Default: empty

       GRAPHVIZ_GENERATE_PER_TARGET
              Set to FALSE to not generate per-target graphs foo.dot.<target>.

              • Mandatory: NO

              • Default: TRUE

       GRAPHVIZ_GENERATE_DEPENDERS
              Set to FALSE  to  not  generate  depender  graphs  foo.dot.<tar-
              get>.dependers.

              • Mandatory: NO

              • Default: TRUE

   CMakePackageConfigHelpers
       Helpers  functions  for  creating  config files that can be included by
       other projects to find and use a package.

       Adds          the          configure_package_config_file()          and
       write_basic_package_version_file() commands.

   Generating a Package Configuration File
       configure_package_config_file
              Create a config file for a project:

                 configure_package_config_file(<input> <output>
                   INSTALL_DESTINATION <path>
                   [PATH_VARS <var1> <var2> ... <varN>]
                   [NO_SET_AND_CHECK_MACRO]
                   [NO_CHECK_REQUIRED_COMPONENTS_MACRO]
                   [INSTALL_PREFIX <path>]
                   )

       configure_package_config_file()  should  be  used  instead of the plain
       configure_file() command when creating the <PackageName>Config.cmake or
       <PackageName>-config.cmake  file  for  installing a project or library.
       It helps making the resulting package relocatable by avoiding hardcoded
       paths in the installed Config.cmake file.

       In  a  FooConfig.cmake file there may be code like this to make the in-
       stall destinations know to the using project:

          set(FOO_INCLUDE_DIR   "@CMAKE_INSTALL_FULL_INCLUDEDIR@" )
          set(FOO_DATA_DIR   "@CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX@/@RELATIVE_DATA_INSTALL_DIR@" )
          set(FOO_ICONS_DIR   "@CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX@/share/icons" )
          #...logic to determine installedPrefix from the own location...
          set(FOO_CONFIG_DIR  "${installedPrefix}/@CONFIG_INSTALL_DIR@" )

       All 4 options shown above are not sufficient, since the first  3  hard-
       code  the  absolute directory locations, and the 4th case works only if
       the logic to determine the installedPrefix  is  correct,  and  if  CON-
       FIG_INSTALL_DIR  contains  a  relative path, which in general cannot be
       guaranteed.  This has the effect  that  the  resulting  FooConfig.cmake
       file  would  work poorly under Windows and OSX, where users are used to
       choose the install location of a binary package at install time,  inde-
       pendent from how CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX was set at build/cmake time.

       Using configure_package_config_file helps.  If used correctly, it makes
       the resulting FooConfig.cmake file relocatable.  Usage:

       1. write a FooConfig.cmake.in file as you are used to

       2. insert a line containing only the string @PACKAGE_INIT@

       3. instead  of  set(FOO_DIR  "@SOME_INSTALL_DIR@"),   use   set(FOO_DIR
          "@PACKAGE_SOME_INSTALL_DIR@") (this must be after the @PACKAGE_INIT@
          line)

       4. instead of using the normal  configure_file(),  use  configure_pack-
          age_config_file()

       The  <input>  and <output> arguments are the input and output file, the
       same way as in configure_file().

       The <path> given to INSTALL_DESTINATION must be the  destination  where
       the FooConfig.cmake file will be installed to.  This path can either be
       absolute, or relative to the INSTALL_PREFIX path.

       The variables <var1> to <varN> given as  PATH_VARS  are  the  variables
       which  contain  install  destinations.  For each of them the macro will
       create a helper variable PACKAGE_<var...>.  These helper variables must
       be  used in the FooConfig.cmake.in file for setting the installed loca-
       tion.  They are calculated  by  configure_package_config_file  so  that
       they  are  always  relative  to  the installed location of the package.
       This works both for relative and also for absolute locations.  For  ab-
       solute  locations it works only if the absolute location is a subdirec-
       tory of INSTALL_PREFIX.

       New in version 3.1: If the INSTALL_PREFIX argument is passed,  this  is
       used  as base path to calculate all the relative paths.  The <path> ar-
       gument must be an absolute path.  If this argument is not  passed,  the
       CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX  variable will be used instead.  The default value
       is good when generating a FooConfig.cmake file to use your package from
       the  install  tree.  When generating a FooConfig.cmake file to use your
       package from the build tree this option should be used.

       By default  configure_package_config_file  also  generates  two  helper
       macros,   set_and_check()   and  check_required_components()  into  the
       FooConfig.cmake file.

       set_and_check() should be used instead of the normal set() command  for
       setting  directories  and  file locations.  Additionally to setting the
       variable it also checks that the referenced file or directory  actually
       exists  and  fails  with a FATAL_ERROR otherwise.  This makes sure that
       the created FooConfig.cmake file does  not  contain  wrong  references.
       When using the NO_SET_AND_CHECK_MACRO, this macro is not generated into
       the FooConfig.cmake file.

       check_required_components(<PackageName>) should be called at the end of
       the  FooConfig.cmake  file.  This  macro  checks whether all requested,
       non-optional components have been found, and if this is not  the  case,
       sets the Foo_FOUND variable to FALSE, so that the package is considered
       to be not found.  It does that  by  testing  the  Foo_<Component>_FOUND
       variables  for all requested required components.  This macro should be
       called even if the package doesn't provide any components to make  sure
       users  are  not  specifying  components  erroneously.   When  using the
       NO_CHECK_REQUIRED_COMPONENTS_MACRO option, this macro is not  generated
       into the FooConfig.cmake file.

       For     an     example     see     below    the    documentation    for
       write_basic_package_version_file().

   Generating a Package Version File
       write_basic_package_version_file
              Create a version file for a project:

                 write_basic_package_version_file(<filename>
                   [VERSION <major.minor.patch>]
                   COMPATIBILITY <AnyNewerVersion|SameMajorVersion|SameMinorVersion|ExactVersion>
                   [ARCH_INDEPENDENT] )

       Writes a file  for  use  as  <PackageName>ConfigVersion.cmake  file  to
       <filename>.   See  the  documentation  of find_package() for details on
       this.

       <filename> is the output filename, it should  be  in  the  build  tree.
       <major.minor.patch>  is  the  version  number  of the project to be in-
       stalled.

       If no VERSION is given, the PROJECT_VERSION variable is used.  If  this
       hasn't been set, it errors out.

       The COMPATIBILITY mode AnyNewerVersion means that the installed package
       version will be considered compatible if it is  newer  or  exactly  the
       same  as  the requested version.  This mode should be used for packages
       which are fully backward compatible, also across  major  versions.   If
       SameMajorVersion  is  used  instead,  then  the  behavior  differs from
       AnyNewerVersion in that the major version number must be  the  same  as
       requested,  e.g.   version 2.0 will not be considered compatible if 1.0
       is requested.  This mode should be used for  packages  which  guarantee
       backward compatibility within the same major version.  If SameMinorVer-
       sion is used, the behavior is the same as  SameMajorVersion,  but  both
       major  and minor version must be the same as requested, e.g version 0.2
       will not be compatible if 0.1 is requested.  If ExactVersion  is  used,
       then the package is only considered compatible if the requested version
       matches exactly its own version number (not considering the tweak  ver-
       sion).  For example, version 1.2.3 of a package is only considered com-
       patible to requested version 1.2.3.  This mode is for packages  without
       compatibility  guarantees.  If your project has more elaborated version
       matching rules, you will need  to  write  your  own  custom  ConfigVer-
       sion.cmake file instead of using this macro.

       New in version 3.11: The SameMinorVersion compatibility mode.

       New  in version 3.14: If ARCH_INDEPENDENT is given, the installed pack-
       age version will be considered compatible even if it was  built  for  a
       different  architecture than the requested architecture.  Otherwise, an
       architecture check will be performed, and the package will  be  consid-
       ered compatible only if the architecture matches exactly.  For example,
       if the package is built for a 32-bit architecture, the package is  only
       considered  compatible  if  it is used on a 32-bit architecture, unless
       ARCH_INDEPENDENT is given, in which case the package is considered com-
       patible on any architecture.

       NOTE:
          ARCH_INDEPENDENT  is  intended  for header-only libraries or similar
          packages with no binaries.

       New in version 3.19: The version  file  generated  by  AnyNewerVersion,
       SameMajorVersion and SameMinorVersion arguments of COMPATIBILITY handle
       the version range if any is specified (see find_package()  command  for
       the  details).   ExactVersion  mode is incompatible with version ranges
       and will display an author warning if one is specified.

       Internally, this macro executes configure_file() to create the  result-
       ing  version  file.   Depending on the COMPATIBILITY, the corresponding
       BasicConfigVersion-<COMPATIBILITY>.cmake.in file is used.  Please  note
       that  these  files  are  internal  to  CMake  and  you  should not call
       configure_file() on them yourself, but they can  be  used  as  starting
       point to create more sophisticted custom ConfigVersion.cmake files.

   Example Generating Package Files
       Example   using   both  configure_package_config_file()  and  write_ba-
       sic_package_version_file():

       CMakeLists.txt:

          set(INCLUDE_INSTALL_DIR include/ ... CACHE )
          set(LIB_INSTALL_DIR lib/ ... CACHE )
          set(SYSCONFIG_INSTALL_DIR etc/foo/ ... CACHE )
          #...
          include(CMakePackageConfigHelpers)
          configure_package_config_file(FooConfig.cmake.in
            ${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/FooConfig.cmake
            INSTALL_DESTINATION ${LIB_INSTALL_DIR}/Foo/cmake
            PATH_VARS INCLUDE_INSTALL_DIR SYSCONFIG_INSTALL_DIR)
          write_basic_package_version_file(
            ${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/FooConfigVersion.cmake
            VERSION 1.2.3
            COMPATIBILITY SameMajorVersion )
          install(FILES ${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/FooConfig.cmake
                        ${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/FooConfigVersion.cmake
                  DESTINATION ${LIB_INSTALL_DIR}/Foo/cmake )

       FooConfig.cmake.in:

          set(FOO_VERSION x.y.z)
          ...
          @PACKAGE_INIT@
          ...
          set_and_check(FOO_INCLUDE_DIR "@PACKAGE_INCLUDE_INSTALL_DIR@")
          set_and_check(FOO_SYSCONFIG_DIR "@PACKAGE_SYSCONFIG_INSTALL_DIR@")

          check_required_components(Foo)

   CMakePrintHelpers
       Convenience functions for printing  properties  and  variables,  useful
       e.g. for debugging.

          cmake_print_properties(<TARGETS       [<target1> ...] |
                                  SOURCES       [<source1> ...] |
                                  DIRECTORIES   [<dir1> ...]    |
                                  TESTS         [<test1> ...]   |
                                  CACHE_ENTRIES [<entry1> ...]  >
                                 PROPERTIES [<prop1> ...]         )

       This function prints the values of the properties of the given targets,
       source files, directories, tests or cache entries.  Exactly one of  the
       scope  keywords must be used.  The scope keyword and its arguments must
       come before the PROPERTIES keyword, in the arguments list.

       Example:

          cmake_print_properties(TARGETS foo bar PROPERTIES
                                 LOCATION INTERFACE_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES)

       This will print the LOCATION and INTERFACE_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES  proper-
       ties for both targets foo and bar.

          cmake_print_variables(var1 var2 ..  varN)

       This  function  will  print  the  name of each variable followed by its
       value.  Example:

          cmake_print_variables(CMAKE_C_COMPILER CMAKE_MAJOR_VERSION DOES_NOT_EXIST)

       Gives:

          -- CMAKE_C_COMPILER="/usr/bin/gcc" ; CMAKE_MAJOR_VERSION="2" ; DOES_NOT_EXIST=""

   CMakePrintSystemInformation
       Print system information.

       This module serves diagnostic purposes. Just include it in a project to
       see various internal CMake variables.

   CMakePushCheckState
       This    module    defines    three   macros:   CMAKE_PUSH_CHECK_STATE()
       CMAKE_POP_CHECK_STATE() and CMAKE_RESET_CHECK_STATE() These macros  can
       be  used to save, restore and reset (i.e., clear contents) the state of
       the   variables    CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS,    CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS,
       CMAKE_REQUIRED_LINK_OPTIONS,     CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES,    CMAKE_RE-
       QUIRED_INCLUDES  and  CMAKE_EXTRA_INCLUDE_FILES  used  by  the  various
       Check-files  coming  with CMake, like e.g. check_function_exists() etc.
       The variable contents are pushed on a stack, pushing multiple times  is
       supported.   This  is  useful  e.g.   when  executing  such  tests in a
       Find-module, where they have to be set, but after the  Find-module  has
       been executed they should have the same value as they had before.

       CMAKE_PUSH_CHECK_STATE()   macro   receives  optional  argument  RESET.
       Whether it's specified, CMAKE_PUSH_CHECK_STATE() will set all CMAKE_RE-
       QUIRED_*  variables  to empty values, same as CMAKE_RESET_CHECK_STATE()
       call will do.

       Usage:

          cmake_push_check_state(RESET)
          set(CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS -DSOME_MORE_DEF)
          check_function_exists(...)
          cmake_reset_check_state()
          set(CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS -DANOTHER_DEF)
          check_function_exists(...)
          cmake_pop_check_state()

   CMakeVerifyManifest
       CMakeVerifyManifest.cmake

       This script is used to verify that embedded manifests and side by  side
       manifests  for  a project match.  To run this script, cd to a directory
       and run the script with cmake -P.  On the command line you can pass  in
       versions that are OK even if not found in the .manifest files.  For ex-
       ample, cmake  -Dallow_versions=8.0.50608.0  -PCmakeVerifyManifest.cmake
       could  be  used to allow an embedded manifest of 8.0.50608.0 to be used
       in a project even if that version was not found in the .manifest file.

   CPack
       Configure generators for binary installers and source packages.

   Introduction
       The CPack module generates the  configuration  files  CPackConfig.cmake
       and  CPackSourceConfig.cmake. They are intended for use in a subsequent
       run of  the cpack program where they steer the generation of installers
       or/and source packages.

       Depending on the CMake generator, the CPack module may also add two new
       build targets, package and package_source. See  the  packaging  targets
       section below for details.

       The  generated  binary installers will contain all files that have been
       installed via CMake's install() command (and  the  deprecated  commands
       install_files(),  install_programs(), and install_targets()). Note that
       the DESTINATION option of the install()  command  must  be  a  relative
       path; otherwise installed files are ignored by CPack.

       Certain  kinds  of  binary installers can be configured such that users
       can select individual  application  components  to  install.   See  the
       CPackComponent module for further details.

       Source  packages (configured through CPackSourceConfig.cmake and gener-
       ated by the CPack Archive Generator) will contain all source  files  in
       the     project     directory     except     those     specified     in
       CPACK_SOURCE_IGNORE_FILES.

   CPack Generators
       The CPACK_GENERATOR variable has different meanings in  different  con-
       texts.   In a CMakeLists.txt file, CPACK_GENERATOR is a list of genera-
       tors: and when cpack is run with no other arguments,  it  will  iterate
       over  that  list  and  produce  one  package  for each generator.  In a
       CPACK_PROJECT_CONFIG_FILE, CPACK_GENERATOR is a string naming a  single
       generator.   If  you  need  per-cpack-generator  logic to control other
       cpack settings, then you need a CPACK_PROJECT_CONFIG_FILE.  If set, the
       CPACK_PROJECT_CONFIG_FILE  is included automatically on a per-generator
       basis.  It only need contain overrides.

       Here's how it works:

       • cpack runs

       • it includes CPackConfig.cmake

       • it iterates over the generators given by the -G command line  option,
         or if no such option was specified, over the list of generators given
         by the CPACK_GENERATOR variable set in  the  CPackConfig.cmake  input
         file.

       • foreach generator, it then

         • sets CPACK_GENERATOR to the one currently being iterated

         • includes the CPACK_PROJECT_CONFIG_FILE

         • produces the package for that generator

       This is the key: For each generator listed in CPACK_GENERATOR in CPack-
       Config.cmake, cpack will reset CPACK_GENERATOR internally  to  the  one
       currently being used and then include the CPACK_PROJECT_CONFIG_FILE.

       For a list of available generators, see cpack-generators(7).

   Targets package and package_source
       If  CMake is run with the Makefile, Ninja, or Xcode generator, then in-
       clude(CPack) generates a target package.  This  makes  it  possible  to
       build  a binary installer from CMake, Make, or Ninja: Instead of cpack,
       one may call cmake --build . --target package or make package or  ninja
       package. The VS generator creates an uppercase target PACKAGE.

       If  CMake  is  run  with  the  Makefile  or  Ninja  generator, then in-
       clude(CPack) also generates a target package_source. To build a  source
       package,  instead  of cpack -G TGZ --config CPackSourceConfig.cmake one
       may call cmake --build . --target package_source, make  package_source,
       or ninja package_source.

   Variables common to all CPack Generators
       Before  including  this CPack module in your CMakeLists.txt file, there
       are a variety of variables that can be set to customize  the  resulting
       installers.  The most commonly-used variables are:

       CPACK_PACKAGE_NAME
              The  name of the package (or application).  If not specified, it
              defaults to the project name.

       CPACK_PACKAGE_VENDOR
              The name of the package vendor. (e.g., "Kitware").  The  default
              is "Humanity".

       CPACK_PACKAGE_DIRECTORY
              The  directory  in which CPack is doing its packaging.  If it is
              not set then this will default (internally) to  the  build  dir.
              This  variable may be defined in a CPack config file or from the
              cpack command line option -B.  If set, the command  line  option
              overrides the value found in the config file.

       CPACK_PACKAGE_VERSION_MAJOR
              Package  major  version.   This variable will always be set, but
              its default value depends on whether or not version details were
              given  to  the project() command in the top level CMakeLists.txt
              file.  If version details were given, the default value will  be
              CMAKE_PROJECT_VERSION_MAJOR.   If no version details were given,
              a  default  version  of  0.1.1  will  be  assumed,  leading   to
              CPACK_PACKAGE_VERSION_MAJOR having a default value of 0.

       CPACK_PACKAGE_VERSION_MINOR
              Package minor version.  The default value is determined based on
              whether or not version details were given to the project()  com-
              mand  in  the top level CMakeLists.txt file.  If version details
              were     given,     the     default      value      will      be
              CMAKE_PROJECT_VERSION_MINOR,  but  if no minor version component
              was specified then CPACK_PACKAGE_VERSION_MINOR will be left  un-
              set.   If no project version was given at all, a default version
              of 0.1.1 will be assumed, leading to CPACK_PACKAGE_VERSION_MINOR
              having a default value of 1.

       CPACK_PACKAGE_VERSION_PATCH
              Package patch version.  The default value is determined based on
              whether or not version details were given to the project()  com-
              mand  in  the top level CMakeLists.txt file.  If version details
              were     given,     the     default      value      will      be
              CMAKE_PROJECT_VERSION_PATCH,  but  if no patch version component
              was specified then CPACK_PACKAGE_VERSION_PATCH will be left  un-
              set.   If no project version was given at all, a default version
              of 0.1.1 will be assumed, leading to CPACK_PACKAGE_VERSION_PATCH
              having a default value of 1.

       CPACK_PACKAGE_DESCRIPTION
              A  description of the project, used in places such as the intro-
              duction screen of CPack-generated Windows  installers.   If  not
              set, the value of this variable is populated from the file named
              by CPACK_PACKAGE_DESCRIPTION_FILE.

       CPACK_PACKAGE_DESCRIPTION_FILE
              A   text   file   used   to   describe    the    project    when
              CPACK_PACKAGE_DESCRIPTION  is  not  explicitly set.  The default
              value for CPACK_PACKAGE_DESCRIPTION_FILE points  to  a  built-in
              template file Templates/CPack.GenericDescription.txt.

       CPACK_PACKAGE_DESCRIPTION_SUMMARY
              Short  description  of  the  project (only a few words).  If the
              CMAKE_PROJECT_DESCRIPTION variable is set, it is used as the de-
              fault value, otherwise the default will be a string generated by
              CMake based on CMAKE_PROJECT_NAME.

       CPACK_PACKAGE_HOMEPAGE_URL
              Project homepage URL.  The  default  value  is  taken  from  the
              CMAKE_PROJECT_HOMEPAGE_URL  variable,  which  is  set by the top
              level project() command, or else the default will be empty if no
              URL was provided to project().

       CPACK_PACKAGE_FILE_NAME
              The  name of the package file to generate, not including the ex-
              tension.   For  example,  cmake-2.6.1-Linux-i686.   The  default
              value is:

                 ${CPACK_PACKAGE_NAME}-${CPACK_PACKAGE_VERSION}-${CPACK_SYSTEM_NAME}

       CPACK_PACKAGE_INSTALL_DIRECTORY
              Installation directory on the target system. This may be used by
              some CPack generators like NSIS to create an installation direc-
              tory  e.g.,  "CMake 2.5" below the installation prefix.  All in-
              stalled elements will be put inside this directory.

       CPACK_PACKAGE_ICON
              A branding image that will be  displayed  inside  the  installer
              (used by GUI installers).

       CPACK_PACKAGE_CHECKSUM
              New in version 3.7.

              An  algorithm  that  will be used to generate an additional file
              with the checksum of the package.  The output file name will be:

                 ${CPACK_PACKAGE_FILE_NAME}.${CPACK_PACKAGE_CHECKSUM}

              Supported algorithms are those listed by the string(<HASH>) com-
              mand.

       CPACK_PROJECT_CONFIG_FILE
              CPack-time  project  CPack configuration file.  This file is in-
              cluded at cpack time, once per generator  after  CPack  has  set
              CPACK_GENERATOR  to  the actual generator being used.  It allows
              per-generator setting of CPACK_* variables at cpack time.

       CPACK_RESOURCE_FILE_LICENSE
              License to be embedded in the installer.  It will  typically  be
              displayed  to  the user by the produced installer (often with an
              explicit "Accept" button, for graphical installers) prior to in-
              stallation.   This  license  file  is NOT added to the installed
              files but is used by some CPack generators like  NSIS.   If  you
              want  to  use  UTF-8 characters, the file needs to be encoded in
              UTF-8 BOM.  If you want to install a license file  (may  be  the
              same  as  this one) along with your project, you must add an ap-
              propriate CMake install() command in your CMakeLists.txt.

       CPACK_RESOURCE_FILE_README
              ReadMe file to be embedded in the installer.  It  typically  de-
              scribes in some detail the purpose of the project during the in-
              stallation.  Not all CPack generators use this file.

       CPACK_RESOURCE_FILE_WELCOME
              Welcome file to be embedded in the installer.  It welcomes users
              to  this  installer.  Typically used in the graphical installers
              on Windows and Mac OS X.

       CPACK_MONOLITHIC_INSTALL
              Disables the component-based installation mechanism.  When  set,
              the  component  specification is ignored and all installed items
              are put in a single "MONOLITHIC" package.  Some CPack generators
              do monolithic packaging by default and may be asked to do compo-
              nent packaging by setting  CPACK_<GENNAME>_COMPONENT_INSTALL  to
              TRUE.

       CPACK_GENERATOR
              List  of  CPack generators to use.  If not specified, CPack will
              create  a  set  of  options   following   the   naming   pattern
              CPACK_BINARY_<GENNAME>  (e.g.  CPACK_BINARY_NSIS)  allowing  the
              user to enable/disable individual generators.  If the -G  option
              is  given on the cpack command line, it will override this vari-
              able and any CPACK_BINARY_<GENNAME> options.

       CPACK_OUTPUT_CONFIG_FILE
              The name of the CPack binary configuration file.  This  file  is
              the CPack configuration generated by the CPack module for binary
              installers.  Defaults to CPackConfig.cmake.

       CPACK_PACKAGE_EXECUTABLES
              Lists each of the executables and associated text  label  to  be
              used  to create Start Menu shortcuts.  For example, setting this
              to the list ccmake;CMake will create a  shortcut  named  "CMake"
              that  will  execute  the  installed  executable ccmake.  Not all
              CPack generators use it (at least NSIS, and WIX do).

       CPACK_STRIP_FILES
              List of files  to  be  stripped.   Starting  with  CMake  2.6.0,
              CPACK_STRIP_FILES  will  be  a  boolean  variable  which enables
              stripping of all files (a list of files  evaluates  to  TRUE  in
              CMake, so this change is compatible).

       CPACK_VERBATIM_VARIABLES
              New in version 3.4.

              If set to TRUE, values of variables prefixed with CPACK_ will be
              escaped before being written to the configuration files, so that
              the  cpack program receives them exactly as they were specified.
              If not, characters like quotes and backslashes can cause parsing
              errors  or  alter  the value received by the cpack program.  De-
              faults to FALSE for backwards compatibility.

       CPACK_THREADS
              New in version 3.20.

              Number of threads to use  when  performing  parallelized  opera-
              tions, such as compressing the installer package.

              Some compression methods used by CPack generators such as Debian
              or Archive may take advantage of multiple CPU cores to speed  up
              compression.   CPACK_THREADS  can  be  set  to  specify how many
              threads will be used for compression.

              A positive integer can be  used  to  specify  an  exact  desired
              thread count.

              When  given a negative integer CPack will use the absolute value
              as the upper limit but may choose a lower  value  based  on  the
              available hardware concurrency.

              Given 0 CPack will try to use all available CPU cores.

              By default CPACK_THREADS is set to 1.

              The following compression methods may take advantage of multiple
              cores:

              xz     Supported if CMake is built with a liblzma that  supports
                     parallel compression.

                     New in version 3.21: Official CMake binaries available on
                     cmake.org now ship with a liblzma that supports  parallel
                     compression.  Older versions did not.

              zstd   New in version 3.24.

                     Supported  if  CMake  is  built  with  libarchive  3.6 or
                     higher.  Official CMake binaries available  on  cmake.org
                     support it.

              Other  compression  methods  ignore  this value and use only one
              thread.

   Variables for Source Package Generators
       The following CPack variables are specific to source packages, and will
       not affect binary packages:

       CPACK_SOURCE_PACKAGE_FILE_NAME
              The name of the source package.  For example cmake-2.6.1.

       CPACK_SOURCE_STRIP_FILES
              List  of files in the source tree that will be stripped.  Start-
              ing with CMake 2.6.0, CPACK_SOURCE_STRIP_FILES will be a boolean
              variable  which  enables stripping of all files (a list of files
              evaluates to TRUE in CMake, so this change is compatible).

       CPACK_SOURCE_GENERATOR
              List of generators  used  for  the  source  packages.   As  with
              CPACK_GENERATOR, if this is not specified then CPack will create
              a set of options (e.g. CPACK_SOURCE_ZIP) allowing users  to  se-
              lect which packages will be generated.

       CPACK_SOURCE_OUTPUT_CONFIG_FILE
              The  name  of the CPack source configuration file.  This file is
              the CPack configuration generated by the CPack module for source
              installers.  Defaults to CPackSourceConfig.cmake.

       CPACK_SOURCE_IGNORE_FILES
              Pattern  of files in the source tree that won't be packaged when
              building a source package.  This is a list of regular expression
              patterns    (that    must    be    properly    escaped),   e.g.,
              /CVS/;/\\.svn/;\\.swp$;\\.#;/#;.*~;cscope.*

   Variables for Advanced Use
       The following variables are for advanced uses of CPack:

       CPACK_CMAKE_GENERATOR
              What CMake generator should be used if the project  is  a  CMake
              project.   Defaults  to the value of CMAKE_GENERATOR.  Few users
              will want to change this setting.

       CPACK_INSTALL_CMAKE_PROJECTS
              List of four values that specify what project to  install.   The
              four  values  are: Build directory, Project Name, Project Compo-
              nent, Directory.  If omitted, CPack will build an installer that
              installs everything.

       CPACK_SYSTEM_NAME
              System  name, defaults to the value of CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME, except
              on Windows where it will be win32 or win64.

       CPACK_PACKAGE_VERSION
              Package full version, used  internally.   By  default,  this  is
              built              from             CPACK_PACKAGE_VERSION_MAJOR,
              CPACK_PACKAGE_VERSION_MINOR, and CPACK_PACKAGE_VERSION_PATCH.

       CPACK_TOPLEVEL_TAG
              Directory for the installed files.

       CPACK_INSTALL_COMMANDS
              Extra commands to install components.  The environment  variable
              CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX  is  set to the temporary install directory
              during execution.

       CPACK_INSTALL_SCRIPTS
              New in version 3.16.

              Extra CMake scripts executed by CPack during its  local  staging
              installation.   They are executed before installing the files to
              be packaged.  The scripts are not called by a standalone install
              (e.g.: make install).  For every script, the following variables
              will be set: CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR,  CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR
              and  CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX  (which  is set to the staging install
              directory).  The singular form CMAKE_INSTALL_SCRIPT is supported
              as an alternative variable for historical reasons, but its value
              is ignored if CMAKE_INSTALL_SCRIPTS is set and a warning will be
              issued.

              See  also  CPACK_PRE_BUILD_SCRIPTS  and CPACK_POST_BUILD_SCRIPTS
              which can be used to specify scripts to be executed later in the
              packaging process.

       CPACK_PRE_BUILD_SCRIPTS
              New in version 3.19.

              List  of  CMake scripts to execute after CPack has installed the
              files to be packaged into a staging directory and before produc-
              ing    the    package(s)    from    those    files.   See   also
              CPACK_INSTALL_SCRIPTS and CPACK_POST_BUILD_SCRIPTS.

       CPACK_POST_BUILD_SCRIPTS
              New in version 3.19.

              List of CMake scripts to execute after CPack  has  produced  the
              resultant packages and before copying them back to the build di-
              rectory.         See         also         CPACK_INSTALL_SCRIPTS,
              CPACK_PRE_BUILD_SCRIPTS and CPACK_PACKAGE_FILES.

       CPACK_PACKAGE_FILES
              New in version 3.19.

              List  of  package  files  created in the staging directory, with
              each file provided as a full absolute path.   This  variable  is
              populated  by  CPack just before invoking the post-build scripts
              listed in CPACK_POST_BUILD_SCRIPTS.  It is the preferred way for
              the post-build scripts to know the set of package files to oper-
              ate on.  Projects should not try  to  set  this  variable  them-
              selves.

       CPACK_INSTALLED_DIRECTORIES
              Extra directories to install.

       CPACK_PACKAGE_INSTALL_REGISTRY_KEY
              Registry  key  used  when installing this project.  This is only
              used by installers for Windows.  The default value is  based  on
              the installation directory.

       CPACK_CREATE_DESKTOP_LINKS
              List  of  desktop links to create.  Each desktop link requires a
              corresponding   start    menu    shortcut    as    created    by
              CPACK_PACKAGE_EXECUTABLES.

       CPACK_BINARY_<GENNAME>
              CPack  generated options for binary generators.  The CPack.cmake
              module generates (when CPACK_GENERATOR is  not  set)  a  set  of
              CMake  options  (see  CMake  option() command) which may then be
              used to select the CPack generator(s) to be used  when  building
              the package target or when running cpack without the -G option.

       CPACK_READELF_EXECUTABLE
              New in version 3.25.

              Specify  the readelf executable path used by CPack.  The default
              value will be CMAKE_READELF when set.   Otherwise,  the  default
              value  will be empty and CPack will use find_program() to deter-
              mine the readelf path when needed.

       CPACK_OBJCOPY_EXECUTABLE
              New in version 3.25.

              Specify the objcopy executable path used by CPack.  The  default
              value  will  be  CMAKE_OBJCOPY when set.  Otherwise, the default
              value will be empty and CPack will use find_program() to  deter-
              mine the objcopy path when needed.

       CPACK_OBJDUMP_EXECUTABLE
              New in version 3.25.

              Specify  the objdump executable path used by CPack.  The default
              value will be CMAKE_OBJDUMP when set.   Otherwise,  the  default
              value  will be empty and CPack will use find_program() to deter-
              mine the objdump path when needed.

   CPackComponent
       Configure components for binary installers and source packages.

   Introduction
       This module is automatically included by CPack.

       Certain binary installers (especially the graphical installers)  gener-
       ated  by  CPack allow users to select individual application components
       to install.  This module allows developers to configure  the  packaging
       of such components.

       Contents is assigned to components by the COMPONENT argument of CMake's
       install() command.  Components  can  be  annotated  with  user-friendly
       names and descriptions, inter-component dependencies, etc., and grouped
       in various ways to customize the resulting installer,  using  the  com-
       mands described below.

       To  specify  different  groupings  for different CPack generators use a
       CPACK_PROJECT_CONFIG_FILE.

   Variables
       The following variables influence the component-specific packaging:

       CPACK_COMPONENTS_ALL
              The list of component to install.

              The default value of this variable is computed by CPack and con-
              tains  all  components defined by the project.  The user may set
              it to only include the specified components.

              Instead of specifying all the desired components, it is possible
              to  obtain  a list of all defined components and then remove the
              unwanted ones from the list.  The  get_cmake_property()  command
              can  be  used  to  obtain  the  COMPONENTS  property,  then  the
              list(REMOVE_ITEM) command can be used  to  remove  the  unwanted
              ones.  For example, to use all defined components except foo and
              bar:

                 get_cmake_property(CPACK_COMPONENTS_ALL COMPONENTS)
                 list(REMOVE_ITEM CPACK_COMPONENTS_ALL "foo" "bar")

       CPACK_<GENNAME>_COMPONENT_INSTALL
              Enable/Disable component install for CPack generator <GENNAME>.

              Each CPack Generator (RPM, DEB, ARCHIVE, NSIS, DMG, etc...)  has
              a  legacy default behavior.  e.g.  RPM builds monolithic whereas
              NSIS builds component.  One can change the default  behavior  by
              setting this variable to 0/1 or OFF/ON.

       CPACK_COMPONENTS_GROUPING
              Specify  how  components  are  grouped  for multi-package compo-
              nent-aware CPack generators.

              Some generators like RPM or ARCHIVE (TGZ, ZIP, ...) may generate
              several  packages  files when there are components, depending on
              the value of this variable:

              • ONE_PER_GROUP (default):  create  one  package  per  component
                group

              • IGNORE : create one package per component (ignore the groups)

              • ALL_COMPONENTS_IN_ONE  :  create a single package with all re-
                quested components

       CPACK_COMPONENT_<compName>_DISPLAY_NAME
              The name to be displayed for a component.

       CPACK_COMPONENT_<compName>_DESCRIPTION
              The description of a component.

       CPACK_COMPONENT_<compName>_GROUP
              The group of a component.

       CPACK_COMPONENT_<compName>_DEPENDS
              The dependencies (list of components) on  which  this  component
              depends.

       CPACK_COMPONENT_<compName>_HIDDEN
              True if this component is hidden from the user.

       CPACK_COMPONENT_<compName>_REQUIRED
              True if this component is required.

       CPACK_COMPONENT_<compName>_DISABLED
              True  if  this  component is not selected to be installed by de-
              fault.

   Commands
   Add component
       cpack_add_component

       Describe an installation component.

          cpack_add_component(compname
                              [DISPLAY_NAME name]
                              [DESCRIPTION description]
                              [HIDDEN | REQUIRED | DISABLED ]
                              [GROUP group]
                              [DEPENDS comp1 comp2 ... ]
                              [INSTALL_TYPES type1 type2 ... ]
                              [DOWNLOADED]
                              [ARCHIVE_FILE filename]
                              [PLIST filename])

       compname is the name of an installation component, as  defined  by  the
       COMPONENT  argument  of one or more CMake install() commands.  With the
       cpack_add_component command one can set  a  name,  a  description,  and
       other  attributes  of an installation component.  One can also assign a
       component to a component group.

       DISPLAY_NAME is the displayed name of the component, used in  graphical
       installers  to  display  the  component  name.   This  value can be any
       string.

       DESCRIPTION is an extended description of the component, used in graph-
       ical  installers to give the user additional information about the com-
       ponent.  Descriptions can span multiple lines using \n as the line sep-
       arator.   Typically,  these  descriptions  should be no more than a few
       lines long.

       HIDDEN indicates that this component will be hidden  in  the  graphical
       installer,  so  that  the user cannot directly change whether it is in-
       stalled or not.

       REQUIRED indicates that this component is required, and therefore  will
       always  be  installed.   It will be visible in the graphical installer,
       but it cannot be unselected.  (Typically, required components are shown
       greyed out).

       DISABLED  indicates that this component should be disabled (unselected)
       by default.  The user is free to select this  component  for  installa-
       tion, unless it is also HIDDEN.

       DEPENDS  lists the components on which this component depends.  If this
       component is selected, then each of the components listed must also  be
       selected.   The  dependency information is encoded within the installer
       itself, so that users cannot install inconsistent sets of components.

       GROUP names the component group of which this component is a part.   If
       not provided, the component will be a standalone component, not part of
       any  component  group.   Component  groups  are  described   with   the
       cpack_add_component_group command, detailed below.

       INSTALL_TYPES lists the installation types of which this component is a
       part.  When one of these installations types is selected,  this  compo-
       nent  will automatically be selected.  Installation types are described
       with the cpack_add_install_type command, detailed below.

       DOWNLOADED  indicates  that  this  component   should   be   downloaded
       on-the-fly by the installer, rather than packaged in with the installer
       itself.  For more information, see the  cpack_configure_downloads  com-
       mand.

       ARCHIVE_FILE  provides  a name for the archive file created by CPack to
       be used for downloaded components.  If not supplied, CPack will  create
       a  file with some name based on CPACK_PACKAGE_FILE_NAME and the name of
       the component.  See cpack_configure_downloads for more information.

       PLIST gives a filename that is passed to  pkgbuild  with  the  --compo-
       nent-plist argument when using the productbuild generator.

   Add component group
       cpack_add_component_group

       Describes a group of related CPack installation components.

          cpack_add_component_group(groupname
                                   [DISPLAY_NAME name]
                                   [DESCRIPTION description]
                                   [PARENT_GROUP parent]
                                   [EXPANDED]
                                   [BOLD_TITLE])

       The  cpack_add_component_group describes a group of installation compo-
       nents, which will be placed together within  the  listing  of  options.
       Typically,  component  groups  allow the user to select/deselect all of
       the components within a single group via a single  group-level  option.
       Use  component  groups to reduce the complexity of installers with many
       options.  groupname is an arbitrary name used to identify the group  in
       the GROUP argument of the cpack_add_component command, which is used to
       place a component in a group.  The name of the group must not  conflict
       with the name of any component.

       DISPLAY_NAME  is  the  displayed  name  of the component group, used in
       graphical installers to display the component group name.   This  value
       can be any string.

       DESCRIPTION  is an extended description of the component group, used in
       graphical installers to give the user additional information about  the
       components within that group.  Descriptions can span multiple lines us-
       ing \n as the line separator.  Typically, these descriptions should  be
       no more than a few lines long.

       PARENT_GROUP,  if supplied, names the parent group of this group.  Par-
       ent groups are used to establish a hierarchy of  groups,  providing  an
       arbitrary hierarchy of groups.

       EXPANDED  indicates  that, by default, the group should show up as "ex-
       panded", so that the user immediately sees all of the components within
       the group.  Otherwise, the group will initially show up as a single en-
       try.

       BOLD_TITLE indicates that the group title should  appear  in  bold,  to
       call the user's attention to the group.

   Add installation type
       cpack_add_install_type

       Add  a  new  installation type containing a set of predefined component
       selections to the graphical installer.

          cpack_add_install_type(typename
                                 [DISPLAY_NAME name])

       The cpack_add_install_type command identifies a set of preselected com-
       ponents  that represents a common use case for an application.  For ex-
       ample, a "Developer" install type might include  an  application  along
       with  its  header  and  library files, while an "End user" install type
       might just include the application's executable.  Each component  iden-
       tifies  itself with one or more install types via the INSTALL_TYPES ar-
       gument to cpack_add_component.

       DISPLAY_NAME is the displayed name of the install type, which will typ-
       ically  show  up in a drop-down box within a graphical installer.  This
       value can be any string.

   Configure downloads
       cpack_configure_downloads

       Configure CPack to download selected components on-the-fly as  part  of
       the installation process.

          cpack_configure_downloads(site
                                    [UPLOAD_DIRECTORY dirname]
                                    [ALL]
                                    [ADD_REMOVE|NO_ADD_REMOVE])

       The   cpack_configure_downloads  command  configures  installation-time
       downloads of selected components.   For  each  downloadable  component,
       CPack will create an archive containing the contents of that component,
       which should be uploaded to the given site.  When the user selects that
       component for installation, the installer will download and extract the
       component in place.  This feature is useful for creating small install-
       ers that only download the requested components, saving bandwidth.  Ad-
       ditionally, the installers are small enough that they will be installed
       as  part of the normal installation process, and the "Change" button in
       Windows Add/Remove Programs control panel will allow one to add or  re-
       move parts of the application after the original installation.  On Win-
       dows,  the  downloaded-components  functionality  requires  the  ZipDLL
       plug-in for NSIS, available at:

          http://nsis.sourceforge.net/ZipDLL_plug-in

       On  macOS,  installers  that download components on-the-fly can only be
       built and installed on system using macOS 10.5 or later.

       The site argument is a URL where the archives for  downloadable  compo-
       nents  will reside, e.g., https://cmake.org/files/v3.25/ All of the ar-
       chives produced by CPack should be uploaded to that location.

       UPLOAD_DIRECTORY is the local directory where  CPack  will  create  the
       various  archives for each of the components.  The contents of this di-
       rectory should be uploaded to a location accessible by the URL given in
       the  site  argument.   If omitted, CPack will use the directory CPackU-
       ploads inside the CMake binary directory to  store  the  generated  ar-
       chives.

       The  ALL  flag indicates that all components be downloaded.  Otherwise,
       only those components explicitly marked as DOWNLOADED or  that  have  a
       specified  ARCHIVE_FILE  will be downloaded.  Additionally, the ALL op-
       tion implies ADD_REMOVE (unless NO_ADD_REMOVE is specified).

       ADD_REMOVE indicates that CPack should install a copy of the  installer
       that  can  be  called from Windows' Add/Remove Programs dialog (via the
       "Modify" button) to change the set of installed components.  NO_ADD_RE-
       MOVE turns off this behavior.  This option is ignored on Mac OS X.

   CPackIFW
       New in version 3.1.

       This  module  looks for the location of the command-line utilities sup-
       plied with the Qt Installer Framework (QtIFW).

       The module also defines several commands to control the behavior of the
       CPack IFW Generator.

   Commands
       The module defines the following commands:

       cpack_ifw_configure_component
              Sets the arguments specific to the CPack IFW generator.

                 cpack_ifw_configure_component(<compname> [COMMON] [ESSENTIAL] [VIRTUAL]
                                     [FORCED_INSTALLATION] [REQUIRES_ADMIN_RIGHTS]
                                     [NAME <name>]
                                     [DISPLAY_NAME <display_name>] # Note: Internationalization supported
                                     [DESCRIPTION <description>] # Note: Internationalization supported
                                     [UPDATE_TEXT <update_text>]
                                     [VERSION <version>]
                                     [RELEASE_DATE <release_date>]
                                     [SCRIPT <script>]
                                     [PRIORITY|SORTING_PRIORITY <sorting_priority>] # Note: PRIORITY is deprecated
                                     [DEPENDS|DEPENDENCIES <com_id> ...]
                                     [AUTO_DEPEND_ON <comp_id> ...]
                                     [LICENSES <display_name> <file_path> ...]
                                     [DEFAULT <value>]
                                     [USER_INTERFACES <file_path> <file_path> ...]
                                     [TRANSLATIONS <file_path> <file_path> ...]
                                     [REPLACES <comp_id> ...]
                                     [CHECKABLE <value>])

              This  command  should be called after cpack_add_component() com-
              mand.

              COMMON if set, then the component will be packaged and installed
                     as part of a group to which it belongs.

              ESSENTIAL
                     New in version 3.6.

                     if  set,  then  the  package manager stays disabled until
                     that component is updated.

              VIRTUAL
                     New in version 3.8.

                     if set, then the component will be hidden  from  the  in-
                     staller.   It  is  a equivalent of the HIDDEN option from
                     the cpack_add_component() command.

              FORCED_INSTALLATION
                     New in version 3.8.

                     if set, then the component must always be installed.   It
                     is   a   equivalent  of  the  REQUIRED  option  from  the
                     cpack_add_component() command.

              REQUIRES_ADMIN_RIGHTS
                     New in version 3.8.

                     set it if the component needs to be installed  with  ele-
                     vated permissions.

              NAME   is  used  to  create  domain-like identification for this
                     component.  By default used origin component name.

              DISPLAY_NAME
                     New in version 3.8.

                     set   to   rewrite   original    name    configured    by
                     cpack_add_component() command.

              DESCRIPTION
                     New in version 3.8.

                     set   to   rewrite  original  description  configured  by
                     cpack_add_component() command.

              UPDATE_TEXT
                     New in version 3.8.

                     will be added to the component description if this is  an
                     update to the component.

              VERSION
                     is    version    of    component.     By   default   used
                     CPACK_PACKAGE_VERSION.

              RELEASE_DATE
                     New in version 3.8.

                     keep empty to auto generate.

              SCRIPT is a relative or absolute path to operations  script  for
                     this component.

              SORTING_PRIORITY
                     New in version 3.8.

                     is priority of the component in the tree.

              PRIORITY
                     Deprecated since version 3.8: Old name for SORTING_PRIOR-
                     ITY.

              DEPENDS, DEPENDENCIES
                     New in version 3.8.

                     list of dependency component or component  group  identi-
                     fiers in QtIFW style.

                     New in version 3.21.

                     Component  or group names listed as dependencies may con-
                     tain hyphens.  This requires QtIFW 3.1 or later.

              AUTO_DEPEND_ON
                     New in version 3.8.

                     list of identifiers of component or  component  group  in
                     QtIFW  style  that this component has an automatic depen-
                     dency on.

              LICENSES
                     pair of <display_name> and <file_path>  of  license  text
                     for  this  component.  You  can specify more then one li-
                     cense.

              DEFAULT
                     New in version 3.8.

                     Possible values are: TRUE, FALSE,  and  SCRIPT.   Set  to
                     FALSE  to  disable  the  component in the installer or to
                     SCRIPT to resolved during runtime (don't forget  add  the
                     file of the script as a value of the SCRIPT option).

              USER_INTERFACES
                     New in version 3.7.

                     is a list of <file_path> ('.ui' files) representing pages
                     to load.

              TRANSLATIONS
                     New in version 3.8.

                     is a  list  of  <file_path>  ('.qm'  files)  representing
                     translations to load.

              REPLACES
                     New in version 3.10.

                     list  of  identifiers  of component or component group to
                     replace.

              CHECKABLE
                     New in version 3.10.

                     Possible values are: TRUE, FALSE.  Set to  FALSE  if  you
                     want  to  hide  the checkbox for an item.  This is useful
                     when only a few subcomponents should be selected  instead
                     of all.

       cpack_ifw_configure_component_group
              Sets the arguments specific to the CPack IFW generator.

                 cpack_ifw_configure_component_group(<groupname> [VIRTUAL]
                                     [FORCED_INSTALLATION] [REQUIRES_ADMIN_RIGHTS]
                                     [NAME <name>]
                                     [DISPLAY_NAME <display_name>] # Note: Internationalization supported
                                     [DESCRIPTION <description>] # Note: Internationalization supported
                                     [UPDATE_TEXT <update_text>]
                                     [VERSION <version>]
                                     [RELEASE_DATE <release_date>]
                                     [SCRIPT <script>]
                                     [PRIORITY|SORTING_PRIORITY <sorting_priority>] # Note: PRIORITY is deprecated
                                     [DEPENDS|DEPENDENCIES <com_id> ...]
                                     [AUTO_DEPEND_ON <comp_id> ...]
                                     [LICENSES <display_name> <file_path> ...]
                                     [DEFAULT <value>]
                                     [USER_INTERFACES <file_path> <file_path> ...]
                                     [TRANSLATIONS <file_path> <file_path> ...]
                                     [REPLACES <comp_id> ...]
                                     [CHECKABLE <value>])

              This  command should be called after cpack_add_component_group()
              command.

              VIRTUAL
                     New in version 3.8.

                     if set, then the group will be hidden from the installer.
                     Note that setting this on a root component does not work.

              FORCED_INSTALLATION
                     New in version 3.8.

                     if set, then the group must always be installed.

              REQUIRES_ADMIN_RIGHTS
                     New in version 3.8.

                     set  it if the component group needs to be installed with
                     elevated permissions.

              NAME   is used to create  domain-like  identification  for  this
                     component  group.  By default used origin component group
                     name.

              DISPLAY_NAME
                     New in version 3.8.

                     set   to   rewrite   original    name    configured    by
                     cpack_add_component_group() command.

              DESCRIPTION
                     New in version 3.8.

                     set   to   rewrite  original  description  configured  by
                     cpack_add_component_group() command.

              UPDATE_TEXT
                     New in version 3.8.

                     will be added to the component group description if  this
                     is an update to the component group.

              VERSION
                     is   version   of   component  group.   By  default  used
                     CPACK_PACKAGE_VERSION.

              RELEASE_DATE
                     New in version 3.8.

                     keep empty to auto generate.

              SCRIPT is a relative or absolute path to operations  script  for
                     this component group.

              SORTING_PRIORITY
                     is priority of the component group in the tree.

              PRIORITY
                     Deprecated since version 3.8: Old name for SORTING_PRIOR-
                     ITY.

              DEPENDS, DEPENDENCIES
                     New in version 3.8.

                     list of dependency component or component  group  identi-
                     fiers in QtIFW style.

                     New in version 3.21.

                     Component  or group names listed as dependencies may con-
                     tain hyphens.  This requires QtIFW 3.1 or later.

              AUTO_DEPEND_ON
                     New in version 3.8.

                     list of identifiers of component or  component  group  in
                     QtIFW  style  that  this component group has an automatic
                     dependency on.

              LICENSES
                     pair of <display_name> and <file_path>  of  license  text
                     for  this  component group. You can specify more then one
                     license.

              DEFAULT
                     New in version 3.8.

                     Possible values are: TRUE, FALSE,  and  SCRIPT.   Set  to
                     TRUE  to preselect the group in the installer (this takes
                     effect only on groups that have no visible  child  compo-
                     nents)  or  to  SCRIPT  to resolved during runtime (don't
                     forget add the file of the  script  as  a  value  of  the
                     SCRIPT option).

              USER_INTERFACES
                     New in version 3.7.

                     is a list of <file_path> ('.ui' files) representing pages
                     to load.

              TRANSLATIONS
                     New in version 3.8.

                     is a  list  of  <file_path>  ('.qm'  files)  representing
                     translations to load.

              REPLACES
                     New in version 3.10.

                     list  of  identifiers  of component or component group to
                     replace.

              CHECKABLE
                     New in version 3.10.

                     Possible values are: TRUE, FALSE.  Set to  FALSE  if  you
                     want  to  hide  the checkbox for an item.  This is useful
                     when only a few subcomponents should be selected  instead
                     of all.

       cpack_ifw_add_repository
              Add QtIFW specific remote repository to binary installer.

                 cpack_ifw_add_repository(<reponame> [DISABLED]
                                     URL <url>
                                     [USERNAME <username>]
                                     [PASSWORD <password>]
                                     [DISPLAY_NAME <display_name>])

              This  command will also add the <reponame> repository to a vari-
              able CPACK_IFW_REPOSITORIES_ALL.

              DISABLED
                     if set, then the repository will be disabled by default.

              URL    is points to a list of available components.

              USERNAME
                     is used as user on a protected repository.

              PASSWORD
                     is password to use on a protected repository.

              DISPLAY_NAME
                     is string to display instead of the URL.

       cpack_ifw_update_repository
              New in version 3.6.

              Update QtIFW specific repository from remote repository.

                 cpack_ifw_update_repository(<reponame>
                                     [[ADD|REMOVE] URL <url>]|
                                      [REPLACE OLD_URL <old_url> NEW_URL <new_url>]]
                                     [USERNAME <username>]
                                     [PASSWORD <password>]
                                     [DISPLAY_NAME <display_name>])

              This command will also add the <reponame> repository to a  vari-
              able CPACK_IFW_REPOSITORIES_ALL.

              URL    is points to a list of available components.

              OLD_URL
                     is points to a list that will replaced.

              NEW_URL
                     is points to a list that will replace to.

              USERNAME
                     is used as user on a protected repository.

              PASSWORD
                     is password to use on a protected repository.

              DISPLAY_NAME
                     is string to display instead of the URL.

       cpack_ifw_add_package_resources
              New in version 3.7.

              Add additional resources in the installer binary.

                 cpack_ifw_add_package_resources(<file_path> <file_path> ...)

              This  command  will  also  add the specified files to a variable
              CPACK_IFW_PACKAGE_RESOURCES.

   CPackIFWConfigureFile
       New in version 3.8.

       The module defines configure_file() similar command to  configure  file
       templates prepared in QtIFW/SDK/Creator style.

   Commands
       The module defines the following commands:

       cpack_ifw_configure_file
              Copy a file to another location and modify its contents.

                 cpack_ifw_configure_file(<input> <output>)

              Copies an <input> file to an <output> file and substitutes vari-
              able values referenced as %{VAR} or %VAR% in the input file con-
              tent.  Each variable reference will be replaced with the current
              value of the variable, or the empty string if  the  variable  is
              not defined.

   CSharpUtilities
       New in version 3.8.

       Functions to make configuration of CSharp/.NET targets easier.

       A  collection of CMake utility functions useful for dealing with CSharp
       targets for Visual Studio generators from version 2010 and later.

       The following functions are provided by this module:

       Main functionscsharp_set_windows_forms_properties()csharp_set_designer_cs_properties()csharp_set_xaml_cs_properties()

       Helper functionscsharp_get_filename_keys()csharp_get_filename_key_base()csharp_get_dependentupon_name()

   Main functions provided by the module
       csharp_set_windows_forms_properties
              Sets source file properties for use of Windows Forms. Use  this,
              if your CSharp target uses Windows Forms:

                 csharp_set_windows_forms_properties([<file1> [<file2> [...]]])

              <fileN>
                     List  of  all source files which are relevant for setting
                     the VS_CSHARP_<tagname> properties (including .cs,  .resx
                     and .Designer.cs extensions).

              In  the  list  of all given files for all files ending with .De-
              signer.cs and .resx is searched.  For every designer or resource
              file a file with the same base name but only .cs as extension is
              searched.  If this is found, the VS_CSHARP_<tagname>  properties
              are set as follows:

              for the .cs file:

                     • VS_CSHARP_SubType "Form"

              for the .Designer.cs file (if it exists):

                     • VS_CSHARP_DependentUpon <cs-filename>

                     • VS_CSHARP_DesignTime  ""  (delete tag if previously de-
                       fined)

                     • VS_CSHARP_AutoGen ""(delete tag if previously defined)

              for the .resx file (if it exists):

                     • VS_RESOURCE_GENERATOR "" (delete tag if previously  de-
                       fined)

                     • VS_CSHARP_DependentUpon <cs-filename>

                     • VS_CSHARP_SubType "Designer"

       csharp_set_designer_cs_properties
              Sets  source  file properties of .Designer.cs files depending on
              sibling filenames. Use this, if your CSharp target does not  use
              Windows       Forms       (for       Windows      Forms      use
              csharp_set_designer_cs_properties() instead):

                 csharp_set_designer_cs_properties([<file1> [<file2> [...]]])

              <fileN>
                     List of all source files which are relevant  for  setting
                     the VS_CSHARP_<tagname> properties (including .cs, .resx,
                     .settings and .Designer.cs extensions).

              In the list of all given files for all files  ending  with  .De-
              signer.cs  is  searched.  For every designer file all files with
              the same base name but different extensions are searched.  If  a
              match  is found, the source file properties of the designer file
              are set depending on the extension of the matched file:

              if match is .resx file:

                     • VS_CSHARP_AutoGen "True"

                     • VS_CSHARP_DesignTime "True"

                     • VS_CSHARP_DependentUpon <resx-filename>

              if match is .cs file:

                     • VS_CSHARP_DependentUpon <cs-filename>

              if match is .settings file:

                     • VS_CSHARP_AutoGen "True"

                     • VS_CSHARP_DesignTimeSharedInput "True"

                     • VS_CSHARP_DependentUpon <settings-filename>

       NOTE:
          Because the source file properties of the .Designer.cs file are  set
          according   to   the   found   matches  and  every  match  sets  the
          VS_CSHARP_DependentUpon property, there should only be one match for
          each Designer.cs file.

       csharp_set_xaml_cs_properties
              Sets  source  file  properties  for  use of Windows Presentation
              Foundation (WPF) and XAML. Use this, if your CSharp target  uses
              WPF/XAML:

                 csharp_set_xaml_cs_properties([<file1> [<file2> [...]]])

              <fileN>
                     List  of  all source files which are relevant for setting
                     the VS_CSHARP_<tagname> properties (including .cs, .xaml,
                     and .xaml.cs extensions).

              In  the  list  of  all  given  files  for  all files ending with
              .xaml.cs is searched. For every xaml-cs file, a  file  with  the
              same  base  name but extension .xaml is searched.  If a match is
              found, the source file properties of the .xaml.cs file are set:

                 • VS_CSHARP_DependentUpon <xaml-filename>

   Helper functions which are used by the above ones
       csharp_get_filename_keys
              Helper function which computes a list of key values to  identify
              source  files  independently of relative/absolute paths given in
              cmake and eliminates case sensitivity:

                 csharp_get_filename_keys(OUT [<file1> [<file2> [...]]])

              OUT    Name of the variable in which the list of keys is stored

              <fileN>
                     filename(s)  as  given  to   to   CSharp   target   using
                     add_library() or add_executable()

              In  some  way  the  function  applies  a canonicalization to the
              source names.  This is necessary to find  file  matches  if  the
              files  have  been  added  to the target with different directory
              prefixes:

                 add_library(lib
                   myfile.cs
                   ${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}/myfile.Designer.cs)

                 set_source_files_properties(myfile.Designer.cs PROPERTIES
                   VS_CSHARP_DependentUpon myfile.cs)

                 # this will fail, because in cmake
                 #  - ${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}/myfile.Designer.cs
                 #  - myfile.Designer.cs
                 # are not the same source file. The source file property is not set.

       csharp_get_filename_key_base
              Returns the full filepath and name without extension of  a  key.
              KEY  is  expected  to be a key from csharp_get_filename_keys. In
              BASE the value of KEY without the file extension is returned:

                 csharp_get_filename_key_base(BASE KEY)

              BASE   Name of the variable with the computed "base" of KEY.

              KEY    The key of which the base will be computed.  Expected  to
                     be a upper case full filename.

       csharp_get_dependentupon_name
              Computes a string which can be used as value for the source file
              property VS_CSHARP_<tagname> with target being DependentUpon:

                 csharp_get_dependentupon_name(NAME FILE)

              NAME   Name of the variable with the result value

              FILE   Filename to convert to <DependentUpon> value

              Actually this is only the filename without any path given at the
              moment.

   CTest
       Configure a project for testing with CTest/CDash

       Include  this module in the top CMakeLists.txt file of a project to en-
       able testing with CTest and dashboard submissions to CDash:

          project(MyProject)
          ...
          include(CTest)

       The module automatically creates a BUILD_TESTING  option  that  selects
       whether to enable testing support (ON by default).  After including the
       module, use code like:

          if(BUILD_TESTING)
            # ... CMake code to create tests ...
          endif()

       to creating tests when testing is enabled.

       To enable submissions to a CDash  server,  create  a  CTestConfig.cmake
       file at the top of the project with content such as:

          set(CTEST_NIGHTLY_START_TIME "01:00:00 UTC")
          set(CTEST_SUBMIT_URL "http://my.cdash.org/submit.php?project=MyProject")

       (the  CDash  server can provide the file to a project administrator who
       configures MyProject).  Settings in the config file are shared by  both
       this  CTest  module and the ctest(1) command-line Dashboard Client mode
       (ctest -S).

       While building a project for submission to CDash, CTest scans the build
       output  for  errors and warnings and reports them with surrounding con-
       text from the build log.  This generic approach  works  for  all  build
       tools, but does not give details about the command invocation that pro-
       duced a given problem.  One may get more detailed  reports  by  setting
       the CTEST_USE_LAUNCHERS variable:

          set(CTEST_USE_LAUNCHERS 1)

       in the CTestConfig.cmake file.

   CTestCoverageCollectGCOV
       New in version 3.2.

       This module provides the ctest_coverage_collect_gcov function.

       This function runs gcov on all .gcda files found in the binary tree and
       packages the resulting .gcov files into a tar file.  This tarball  also
       contains the following:

       • data.json defines the source and build directories for use by CDash.

       • Labels.json  indicates  any  LABELS  that have been set on the source
         files.

       • The  uncovered  directory  holds  any  uncovered   files   found   by
         CTEST_EXTRA_COVERAGE_GLOB.

       After  generating  this  tar  file, it can be sent to CDash for display
       with the ctest_submit(CDASH_UPLOAD) command.

       ctest_coverage_collect_gcov

                 ctest_coverage_collect_gcov(TARBALL <tarfile>
                   [SOURCE <source_dir>][BUILD <build_dir>]
                   [GCOV_COMMAND <gcov_command>]
                   [GCOV_OPTIONS <options>...]
                   )

              Run gcov and package a tar file for CDash.  The options are:

              TARBALL <tarfile>
                     Specify the location of the .tar file to be  created  for
                     later  upload  to  CDash.   Relative paths will be inter-
                     preted with respect to the top-level build directory.

              TARBALL_COMPRESSION <option>
                     New in version 3.18.

                     Specify a compression  algorithm  for  the  TARBALL  data
                     file.   Using  this  option  reduces the size of the data
                     file before it is submitted to CDash.  <option>  must  be
                     one  of GZIP, BZIP2, XZ, ZSTD, FROM_EXT, or an expression
                     that CMake evaluates  as  FALSE.  The  default  value  is
                     BZIP2.

                     If FROM_EXT is specified, the resulting file will be com-
                     pressed based on the  file  extension  of  the  <tarfile>
                     (i.e. .tar.gz will use GZIP compression). File extensions
                     that will  produce  compressed  output  include  .tar.gz,
                     .tgz, .tar.bzip2, .tbz, .tar.xz, and .txz.

              SOURCE <source_dir>
                     Specify  the  top-level  source  directory for the build.
                     Default is the value of CTEST_SOURCE_DIRECTORY.

              BUILD <build_dir>
                     Specify the top-level build directory for the build.  De-
                     fault is the value of CTEST_BINARY_DIRECTORY.

              GCOV_COMMAND <gcov_command>
                     Specify the full path to the gcov command on the machine.
                     Default is the value of CTEST_COVERAGE_COMMAND.

              GCOV_OPTIONS <options>...
                     Specify options to be passed to gcov.  The  gcov  command
                     is  run  as  gcov <options>... -o <gcov-dir> <file>.gcda.
                     If not specified, the default option is just -b -x.

              GLOB   New in version 3.6.

                     Recursively search for .gcda files  in  build_dir  rather
                     than determining search locations by reading TargetDirec-
                     tories.txt.

              DELETE New in version 3.6.

                     Delete coverage files after they've  been  packaged  into
                     the .tar.

              QUIET  Suppress  non-error  messages  that  otherwise would have
                     been printed out by this function.

              New    in    version    3.3:    Added    support     for     the
              CTEST_CUSTOM_COVERAGE_EXCLUDE variable.

   CTestScriptMode
       This file is read by ctest in script mode (-S)

   CTestUseLaunchers
       Set the RULE_LAUNCH_* global properties when CTEST_USE_LAUNCHERS is on.

       CTestUseLaunchers  is  automatically  included when you include(CTest).
       However, it is split out into its own module file so projects  can  use
       the CTEST_USE_LAUNCHERS functionality independently.

       To use launchers, set CTEST_USE_LAUNCHERS to ON in a ctest -S dashboard
       script, and then also set it in the cache of  the  configured  project.
       Both  cmake and ctest need to know the value of it for the launchers to
       work properly.  CMake needs to know in order to generate  proper  build
       rules,  and  ctest,  in  order  to produce the proper error and warning
       analysis.

       For convenience, you may set the ENV  variable  CTEST_USE_LAUNCHERS_DE-
       FAULT  in  your ctest -S script, too.  Then, as long as your CMakeLists
       uses include(CTest) or  include(CTestUseLaunchers),  it  will  use  the
       value  of  the  ENV  variable to initialize a CTEST_USE_LAUNCHERS cache
       variable.   This  cache  variable   initialization   only   occurs   if
       CTEST_USE_LAUNCHERS is not already defined.

       New  in  version 3.8: If CTEST_USE_LAUNCHERS is on in a ctest -S script
       the ctest_configure command will add -DCTEST_USE_LAUNCHERS:BOOL=TRUE to
       the cmake command used to configure the project.

   Dart
       Configure a project for testing with CTest or old Dart Tcl Client

       This  file  is the backwards-compatibility version of the CTest module.
       It supports using the old Dart 1 Tcl client for driving dashboard  sub-
       missions as well as testing with CTest.  This module should be included
       in the CMakeLists.txt file at the top of a project.  Typical usage:

          include(Dart)
          if(BUILD_TESTING)
            # ... testing related CMake code ...
          endif()

       The BUILD_TESTING option is created by the  Dart  module  to  determine
       whether testing support should be enabled.  The default is ON.

   DeployQt4
       Functions to help assemble a standalone Qt4 executable.

       A  collection  of CMake utility functions useful for deploying Qt4 exe-
       cutables.

       The following functions are provided by this module:

          write_qt4_conf
          resolve_qt4_paths
          fixup_qt4_executable
          install_qt4_plugin_path
          install_qt4_plugin
          install_qt4_executable

       Requires CMake 2.6  or  greater  because  it  uses  function  and  PAR-
       ENT_SCOPE.  Also depends on BundleUtilities.cmake.

          write_qt4_conf(<qt_conf_dir> <qt_conf_contents>)

       Writes a qt.conf file with the <qt_conf_contents> into <qt_conf_dir>.

          resolve_qt4_paths(<paths_var> [<executable_path>])

       Loop through <paths_var> list and if any don't exist resolve them rela-
       tive to the <executable_path> (if supplied) or  the  CMAKE_INSTALL_PRE-
       FIX.

          fixup_qt4_executable(<executable>
            [<qtplugins> <libs> <dirs> <plugins_dir> <request_qt_conf>])

       Copies Qt plugins, writes a Qt configuration file (if needed) and fixes
       up a Qt4 executable using BundleUtilities so it is standalone  and  can
       be drag-and-drop copied to another machine as long as all of the system
       libraries are compatible.

       <executable> should point to the executable to be fixed-up.

       <qtplugins> should contain a list of the names or paths of any Qt plug-
       ins to be installed.

       <libs>  will  be  passed to BundleUtilities and should be a list of any
       already  installed  plugins,  libraries  or  executables  to  also   be
       fixed-up.

       <dirs>  will be passed to BundleUtilities and should contain and direc-
       tories to be searched to find library dependencies.

       <plugins_dir> allows an custom plugins directory to be used.

       <request_qt_conf> will force a qt.conf file to be written even  if  not
       needed.

          install_qt4_plugin_path(plugin executable copy installed_plugin_path_var
                                  <plugins_dir> <component> <configurations>)

       Install  (or copy) a resolved <plugin> to the default plugins directory
       (or <plugins_dir>) relative to <executable> and  store  the  result  in
       <installed_plugin_path_var>.

       If  <copy>  is  set to TRUE then the plugins will be copied rather than
       installed.  This is to allow this module  to  be  used  at  CMake  time
       rather than install time.

       If <component> is set then anything installed will use this COMPONENT.

          install_qt4_plugin(plugin executable copy installed_plugin_path_var
                             <plugins_dir> <component>)

       Install  (or copy) an unresolved <plugin> to the default plugins direc-
       tory (or <plugins_dir>) relative to <executable> and store  the  result
       in    <installed_plugin_path_var>.     See    documentation    of   IN-
       STALL_QT4_PLUGIN_PATH.

          install_qt4_executable(<executable>
            [<qtplugins> <libs> <dirs> <plugins_dir> <request_qt_conf> <component>])

       Installs Qt plugins, writes a Qt configuration  file  (if  needed)  and
       fixes up a Qt4 executable using BundleUtilities so it is standalone and
       can be drag-and-drop copied to another machine as long as  all  of  the
       system  libraries  are  compatible.  The executable will be fixed-up at
       install time.  <component> is the COMPONENT used for bundle  fixup  and
       plugin installation.  See documentation of FIXUP_QT4_BUNDLE.

   ExternalData
       Manage data files stored outside source tree

   Introduction
       Use  this  module  to unambiguously reference data files stored outside
       the source tree and fetch them at build time from arbitrary  local  and
       remote  content-addressed locations.  Functions provided by this module
       recognize arguments with the syntax DATA{<name>} as references  to  ex-
       ternal  data,  replace  them  with  full paths to local copies of those
       data, and create build rules to fetch and update the local copies.

       For example:

          include(ExternalData)
          set(ExternalData_URL_TEMPLATES "file:///local/%(algo)/%(hash)"
                                         "file:////host/share/%(algo)/%(hash)"
                                         "http://data.org/%(algo)/%(hash)")
          ExternalData_Add_Test(MyData
            NAME MyTest
            COMMAND MyExe DATA{MyInput.png}
            )
          ExternalData_Add_Target(MyData)

       When test MyTest runs the DATA{MyInput.png} argument will  be  replaced
       by  the  full  path  to a real instance of the data file MyInput.png on
       disk.  If the source  tree  contains  a  content  link  such  as  MyIn-
       put.png.md5  then  the  MyData target creates a real MyInput.png in the
       build tree.

   Module Functions
       ExternalData_Expand_Arguments
              The ExternalData_Expand_Arguments function evaluates DATA{} ref-
              erences in its arguments and constructs a new list of arguments:

                 ExternalData_Expand_Arguments(
                   <target>   # Name of data management target
                   <outVar>   # Output variable
                   [args...]  # Input arguments, DATA{} allowed
                   )

              It  replaces  each DATA{} reference in an argument with the full
              path of a real data file on disk that will exist after the <tar-
              get> builds.

       ExternalData_Add_Test
              The   ExternalData_Add_Test  function  wraps  around  the  CMake
              add_test() command but supports DATA{} references in  its  argu-
              ments:

                 ExternalData_Add_Test(
                   <target>   # Name of data management target
                   ...        # Arguments of add_test(), DATA{} allowed
                   )

              It  passes  its  arguments through ExternalData_Expand_Arguments
              and then invokes the add_test() command using the results.

       ExternalData_Add_Target
              The ExternalData_Add_Target function creates a custom target  to
              manage local instances of data files stored externally:

                 ExternalData_Add_Target(
                   <target>                  # Name of data management target
                   [SHOW_PROGRESS <ON|OFF>]  # Show progress during the download
                   )

              It  creates  custom  commands in the target as necessary to make
              data files available for each DATA{} reference previously evalu-
              ated by other functions provided by this module.  Data files may
              be fetched from one of the URL templates specified in the Exter-
              nalData_URL_TEMPLATES  variable,  or may be found locally in one
              of the paths specified in the  ExternalData_OBJECT_STORES  vari-
              able.

              New in version 3.20: The SHOW_PROGRESS argument may be passed to
              suppress progress information during the download of objects. If
              not  provided, it defaults to OFF for Ninja and Ninja Multi-Con-
              fig generators and ON otherwise.

              Typically only one target is needed to manage all external  data
              within a project.  Call this function once at the end of config-
              uration after all data references have been processed.

   Module Variables
       The following variables configure behavior.  They should be set  before
       calling any of the functions provided by this module.

       ExternalData_BINARY_ROOT
              The  ExternalData_BINARY_ROOT  variable may be set to the direc-
              tory to hold the real data files named by expanded DATA{} refer-
              ences.   The  default is CMAKE_BINARY_DIR.  The directory layout
              will   mirror   that   of   content   links   under    External-
              Data_SOURCE_ROOT.

       ExternalData_CUSTOM_SCRIPT_<key>
              New in version 3.2.

              Specify  a  full path to a .cmake custom fetch script identified
              by <key> in entries of the ExternalData_URL_TEMPLATES list.  See
              Custom Fetch Scripts.

       ExternalData_LINK_CONTENT
              The ExternalData_LINK_CONTENT variable may be set to the name of
              a supported hash algorithm to  enable  automatic  conversion  of
              real  data  files  referenced  by the DATA{} syntax into content
              links.  For each such <file> a content link named <file><ext> is
              created.   The  original  file is renamed to the form .External-
              Data_<algo>_<hash> to stage it for future transmission to one of
              the locations in the list of URL templates (by means outside the
              scope of this module).  The data fetch rule created for the con-
              tent link will use the staged object if it cannot be found using
              any URL template.

       ExternalData_NO_SYMLINKS
              New in version 3.3.

              The real data files named by expanded DATA{} references  may  be
              made  available  under  ExternalData_BINARY_ROOT  using symbolic
              links on some platforms.  The ExternalData_NO_SYMLINKS  variable
              may  be  set  to disable use of symbolic links and enable use of
              copies instead.

       ExternalData_OBJECT_STORES
              The ExternalData_OBJECT_STORES variable may be set to a list  of
              local   directories   that   store   objects  using  the  layout
              <dir>/%(algo)/%(hash).  These directories will be searched first
              for  a  needed  object.   If  the object is not available in any
              store then it will be fetched remotely using the  URL  templates
              and  added  to  the  first local store listed.  If no stores are
              specified the default is a location inside the build tree.

       ExternalData_SERIES_PARSE

       ExternalData_SERIES_PARSE_PREFIX

       ExternalData_SERIES_PARSE_NUMBER

       ExternalData_SERIES_PARSE_SUFFIX

       ExternalData_SERIES_MATCH
              See Referencing File Series.

       ExternalData_SOURCE_ROOT
              The ExternalData_SOURCE_ROOT variable may be set to the  highest
              source  directory  containing  any path named by a DATA{} refer-
              ence.    The    default    is    CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR.     External-
              Data_SOURCE_ROOT  and CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR must refer to directories
              within a single source distribution (e.g.  they come together in
              one tarball).

       ExternalData_TIMEOUT_ABSOLUTE
              The ExternalData_TIMEOUT_ABSOLUTE variable sets the download ab-
              solute timeout, in seconds, with a default of 300 seconds.   Set
              to 0 to disable enforcement.

       ExternalData_TIMEOUT_INACTIVITY
              The  ExternalData_TIMEOUT_INACTIVITY  variable sets the download
              inactivity timeout, in seconds, with a default  of  60  seconds.
              Set to 0 to disable enforcement.

       ExternalData_URL_ALGO_<algo>_<key>
              New in version 3.3.

              Specify  a  custom  URL component to be substituted for URL tem-
              plate placeholders of the form %(algo:<key>), where <key>  is  a
              valid  C identifier, when fetching an object referenced via hash
              algorithm <algo>.  If not defined, the default URL component  is
              just <algo> for any <key>.

       ExternalData_URL_TEMPLATES
              The  ExternalData_URL_TEMPLATES  may be set to provide a list of
              URL templates using the placeholders %(algo) and %(hash) in each
              template.   Data  fetch  rules try each URL template in order by
              substituting the hash algorithm name for %(algo)  and  the  hash
              value for %(hash).  Alternatively one may use %(algo:<key>) with
              ExternalData_URL_ALGO_<algo>_<key> variables to gain more flexi-
              bility in remote URLs.

   Referencing Files
   Referencing Single Files
       The  DATA{} syntax is literal and the <name> is a full or relative path
       within the source tree.  The source tree must  contain  either  a  real
       data  file  at  <name>  or a "content link" at <name><ext> containing a
       hash of the real file using a hash algorithm  corresponding  to  <ext>.
       For  example,  the  argument DATA{img.png} may be satisfied by either a
       real img.png file in the current source directory or a img.png.md5 file
       containing its MD5 sum.

       New  in  version 3.8: Multiple content links of the same name with dif-
       ferent  hash  algorithms  are  supported   (e.g.   img.png.sha256   and
       img.png.sha1)  so  long  as  they all correspond to the same real file.
       This allows objects to be fetched from  sources  indexed  by  different
       hash algorithms.

   Referencing File Series
       The  DATA{}  syntax  can  be told to fetch a file series using the form
       DATA{<name>,:}, where the : is literal.  If the source tree contains  a
       group of files or content links named like a series then a reference to
       one member adds rules to fetch all of them.  Although all members of  a
       series  are fetched, only the file originally named by the DATA{} argu-
       ment is substituted for it.  The default configuration recognizes  file
       series  names ending with #.ext, _#.ext, .#.ext, or -#.ext where # is a
       sequence of decimal digits and .ext is any single extension.  Configure
       it with a regex that parses <number> and <suffix> parts from the end of
       <name>:

          ExternalData_SERIES_PARSE = regex of the form (<number>)(<suffix>)$

       For more complicated cases set:

          ExternalData_SERIES_PARSE = regex with at least two () groups
          ExternalData_SERIES_PARSE_PREFIX = <prefix> regex group number, if any
          ExternalData_SERIES_PARSE_NUMBER = <number> regex group number
          ExternalData_SERIES_PARSE_SUFFIX = <suffix> regex group number

       Configure series number matching with a regex that matches the <number>
       part of series members named <prefix><number><suffix>:

          ExternalData_SERIES_MATCH = regex matching <number> in all series members

       Note  that  the  <suffix> of a series does not include a hash-algorithm
       extension.

   Referencing Associated Files
       The DATA{} syntax can alternatively match  files  associated  with  the
       named  file  and contained in the same directory.  Associated files may
       be      specified      by      options      using      the       syntax
       DATA{<name>,<opt1>,<opt2>,...}.   Each  option  may specify one file by
       name or specify a regular expression to match file names using the syn-
       tax REGEX:<regex>.  For example, the arguments:

          DATA{MyData/MyInput.mhd,MyInput.img}                   # File pair
          DATA{MyData/MyFrames00.png,REGEX:MyFrames[0-9]+\\.png} # Series

       will pass MyInput.mha and MyFrames00.png on the command line but ensure
       that the associated files are present next to them.

   Referencing Directories
       The DATA{} syntax may reference a directory using a trailing slash  and
       a  list  of associated files.  The form DATA{<name>/,<opt1>,<opt2>,...}
       adds rules to fetch any files in the directory that match  one  of  the
       associated   file   options.    For   example,  the  argument  DATA{My-
       DataDir/,REGEX:.*} will pass the full path to a MyDataDir directory  on
       the  command  line  and ensure that the directory contains files corre-
       sponding to every file or content link in the MyDataDir  source  direc-
       tory.

       New  in  version 3.3: In order to match associated files in subdirecto-
       ries,   specify   a   RECURSE:   option,    e.g.    DATA{MyDataDir/,RE-
       CURSE:,REGEX:.*}.

   Hash Algorithms
       The following hash algorithms are supported:

          %(algo)     <ext>     Description
          -------     -----     -----------
          MD5         .md5      Message-Digest Algorithm 5, RFC 1321
          SHA1        .sha1     US Secure Hash Algorithm 1, RFC 3174
          SHA224      .sha224   US Secure Hash Algorithms, RFC 4634
          SHA256      .sha256   US Secure Hash Algorithms, RFC 4634
          SHA384      .sha384   US Secure Hash Algorithms, RFC 4634
          SHA512      .sha512   US Secure Hash Algorithms, RFC 4634
          SHA3_224    .sha3-224 Keccak SHA-3
          SHA3_256    .sha3-256 Keccak SHA-3
          SHA3_384    .sha3-384 Keccak SHA-3
          SHA3_512    .sha3-512 Keccak SHA-3

       New in version 3.8: Added the SHA3_* hash algorithms.

       Note  that  the hashes are used only for unique data identification and
       download verification.

   Custom Fetch Scripts
       New in version 3.2.

       When a data file must be fetched from one of the URL  templates  speci-
       fied  in  the ExternalData_URL_TEMPLATES variable, it is normally down-
       loaded using the file(DOWNLOAD) command.  One may specify  usage  of  a
       custom  fetch  script by using a URL template of the form ExternalData-
       CustomScript://<key>/<loc>.  The <key> must be a C identifier, and  the
       <loc>  must  contain  the %(algo) and %(hash) placeholders.  A variable
       corresponding to the key, ExternalData_CUSTOM_SCRIPT_<key>, must be set
       to  the full path to a .cmake script file.  The script will be included
       to perform the actual fetch, and provided with the following variables:

       ExternalData_CUSTOM_LOCATION
              When a custom fetch script is loaded, this variable  is  set  to
              the location part of the URL, which will contain the substituted
              hash algorithm name and content hash value.

       ExternalData_CUSTOM_FILE
              When a custom fetch script is loaded, this variable  is  set  to
              the  full  path  to  a  file  in which the script must store the
              fetched content.  The name of the file is unspecified and should
              not be interpreted in any way.

       The  custom  fetch  script  is expected to store fetched content in the
       file or set a variable:

       ExternalData_CUSTOM_ERROR
              When a custom fetch script fails to fetch the requested content,
              it must set this variable to a short one-line message describing
              the reason for failure.

   ExternalProject
   Commands
   External Project Definition
       ExternalProject_Add
              The ExternalProject_Add() function creates a  custom  target  to
              drive download, update/patch, configure, build, install and test
              steps of an external project:

                 ExternalProject_Add(<name> [<option>...])

              The individual steps within the process can be  driven  indepen-
              dently  if required (e.g. for CDash submission) and extra custom
              steps can be defined, along with the ability to control the step
              dependencies. The directory structure used for the management of
              the external project can also be customized. The  function  sup-
              ports  a large number of options which can be used to tailor the
              external project behavior.

              Directory Options:
                     Most of the time, the default directory layout is  suffi-
                     cient.  It  is  largely an implementation detail that the
                     main project usually doesn't need to change. In some cir-
                     cumstances,  however,  control  over the directory layout
                     can be useful or necessary. The directory options are po-
                     tentially  more  useful  from  the point of view that the
                     main build  can  use  the  ExternalProject_Get_Property()
                     command  to  retrieve  their values, thereby allowing the
                     main project to refer to build artifacts of the  external
                     project.

                     PREFIX <dir>
                            Root  directory  for  the external project. Unless
                            otherwise noted below, all other directories asso-
                            ciated  with  the external project will be created
                            under here.

                     TMP_DIR <dir>
                            Directory in which to store temporary files.

                     STAMP_DIR <dir>
                            Directory in which to store the timestamps of each
                            step.  Log  files  from  individual steps are also
                            created in here unless overridden by LOG_DIR  (see
                            Logging Options below).

                     LOG_DIR <dir>
                            New in version 3.14.

                            Directory in which to store the logs of each step.

                     DOWNLOAD_DIR <dir>
                            Directory  in  which to store downloaded files be-
                            fore unpacking them. This directory is  only  used
                            by  the  URL  download  method, all other download
                            methods use SOURCE_DIR directly instead.

                     SOURCE_DIR <dir>
                            Source directory into  which  downloaded  contents
                            will be unpacked, or for non-URL download methods,
                            the directory in which the  repository  should  be
                            checked out, cloned, etc. If no download method is
                            specified, this must point to an  existing  direc-
                            tory  where  the external project has already been
                            unpacked or cloned/checked out.

                            NOTE:
                               If a download method is specified, any existing
                               contents   of   the  source  directory  may  be
                               deleted. Only the URL  download  method  checks
                               whether  this  directory  is  either missing or
                               empty before initiating the download,  stopping
                               with  an  error  if  it is not empty. All other
                               download methods silently discard any  previous
                               contents of the source directory.

                     BINARY_DIR <dir>
                            Specify  the build directory location. This option
                            is ignored if BUILD_IN_SOURCE is enabled.

                     INSTALL_DIR <dir>
                            Installation prefix  to  be  placed  in  the  <IN-
                            STALL_DIR>  placeholder.   This  does not actually
                            configure the external project to install  to  the
                            given  prefix. That must be done by passing appro-
                            priate arguments to the external project  configu-
                            ration step, e.g. using <INSTALL_DIR>.

                     If  any  of  the above ..._DIR options are not specified,
                     their defaults are computed as follows. If the PREFIX op-
                     tion is given or the EP_PREFIX directory property is set,
                     then an external project is built and installed under the
                     specified prefix:

                        TMP_DIR      = <prefix>/tmp
                        STAMP_DIR    = <prefix>/src/<name>-stamp
                        DOWNLOAD_DIR = <prefix>/src
                        SOURCE_DIR   = <prefix>/src/<name>
                        BINARY_DIR   = <prefix>/src/<name>-build
                        INSTALL_DIR  = <prefix>
                        LOG_DIR      = <STAMP_DIR>

                     Otherwise,  if the EP_BASE directory property is set then
                     components of an external project are  stored  under  the
                     specified base:

                        TMP_DIR      = <base>/tmp/<name>
                        STAMP_DIR    = <base>/Stamp/<name>
                        DOWNLOAD_DIR = <base>/Download/<name>
                        SOURCE_DIR   = <base>/Source/<name>
                        BINARY_DIR   = <base>/Build/<name>
                        INSTALL_DIR  = <base>/Install/<name>
                        LOG_DIR      = <STAMP_DIR>

                     If  no  PREFIX,  EP_PREFIX, or EP_BASE is specified, then
                     the default is to set PREFIX to  <name>-prefix.  Relative
                     paths     are     interpreted     with     respect     to
                     CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR at the point where  ExternalPro-
                     ject_Add() is called.

              Download Step Options:
                     A download method can be omitted if the SOURCE_DIR option
                     is used to point to an existing non-empty directory. Oth-
                     erwise,  one of the download methods below must be speci-
                     fied (multiple download methods should not be given) or a
                     custom DOWNLOAD_COMMAND provided.

                     DOWNLOAD_COMMAND <cmd>...
                            Overrides  the  command used for the download step
                            (generator expressions are supported). If this op-
                            tion is specified, all other download options will
                            be ignored. Providing an empty  string  for  <cmd>
                            effectively disables the download step.

                     URL Download

                            URL <url1> [<url2>...]
                                   List of paths and/or URL(s) of the external
                                   project's source. When more than one URL is
                                   given,  they  are  tried  in turn until one
                                   succeeds. A URL may be an ordinary path  in
                                   the  local  file  system  (in which case it
                                   must be the only URL provided) or any down-
                                   loadable     URL     supported    by    the
                                   file(DOWNLOAD) command. A local  filesystem
                                   path may refer to either an existing direc-
                                   tory or to an archive file, whereas  a  URL
                                   is expected to point to a file which can be
                                   treated as an archive. When an  archive  is
                                   used, it will be unpacked automatically un-
                                   less the DOWNLOAD_NO_EXTRACT option is  set
                                   to  prevent  it. The archive type is deter-
                                   mined  by  inspecting  the  actual  content
                                   rather  than  using logic based on the file
                                   extension.

                                   Changed in version 3.7: Multiple  URLs  are
                                   allowed.

                            URL_HASH <algo>=<hashValue>
                                   Hash  of the archive file to be downloaded.
                                   The  argument  should  be   of   the   form
                                   <algo>=<hashValue> where algo can be any of
                                   the hashing  algorithms  supported  by  the
                                   file()  command.  Specifying this option is
                                   strongly recommended for URL downloads,  as
                                   it  ensures the integrity of the downloaded
                                   content. It is also used as a check  for  a
                                   previously  downloaded  file, allowing con-
                                   nection  to  the  remote  location  to   be
                                   avoided  altogether  if the local directory
                                   already has a file from an earlier download
                                   that matches the specified hash.

                            URL_MD5 <md5>
                                   Equivalent to URL_HASH MD5=<md5>.

                            DOWNLOAD_NAME <fname>
                                   File  name  to use for the downloaded file.
                                   If not given, the end of the URL is used to
                                   determine  the  file  name.  This option is
                                   rarely needed, the default name  is  gener-
                                   ally suitable and is not normally used out-
                                   side of code internal to  the  ExternalPro-
                                   ject module.

                            DOWNLOAD_EXTRACT_TIMESTAMP <bool>
                                   New in version 3.24.

                                   When specified with a true value, the time-
                                   stamps of the extracted  files  will  match
                                   those in the archive. When false, the time-
                                   stamps of the extracted files will  reflect
                                   the  time  at which the extraction was per-
                                   formed. If the download URL changes,  time-
                                   stamps  based  off those in the archive can
                                   result in dependent targets not  being  re-
                                   built  when  they  potentially  should have
                                   been. Therefore, unless the file timestamps
                                   are significant to the project in some way,
                                   use a false value for this option. If DOWN-
                                   LOAD_EXTRACT_TIMESTAMP  is  not  given, the
                                   default is false. See policy CMP0135.

                            DOWNLOAD_NO_EXTRACT <bool>
                                   New in version 3.6.

                                   Allows the extraction part of the  download
                                   step  to  be  disabled by passing a boolean
                                   true value for this option. If this  option
                                   is  not given, the downloaded contents will
                                   be unpacked automatically if  required.  If
                                   extraction has been disabled, the full path
                                   to the  downloaded  file  is  available  as
                                   <DOWNLOADED_FILE> in subsequent steps or as
                                   the  property  DOWNLOADED_FILE   with   the
                                   ExternalProject_Get_Property() command.

                            DOWNLOAD_NO_PROGRESS <bool>
                                   Can be used to disable logging the download
                                   progress. If  this  option  is  not  given,
                                   download progress messages will be logged.

                            TIMEOUT <seconds>
                                   Maximum  time allowed for file download op-
                                   erations.

                            INACTIVITY_TIMEOUT <seconds>
                                   New in version 3.19.

                                   Terminate the operation after a  period  of
                                   inactivity.

                            HTTP_USERNAME <username>
                                   New in version 3.7.

                                   Username  for the download operation if au-
                                   thentication is required.

                            HTTP_PASSWORD <password>
                                   New in version 3.7.

                                   Password for the download operation if  au-
                                   thentication is required.

                            HTTP_HEADER <header1> [<header2>...]
                                   New in version 3.7.

                                   Provides  an arbitrary list of HTTP headers
                                   for the download operation.   This  can  be
                                   useful  for  accessing  content  in systems
                                   like AWS, etc.

                            TLS_VERIFY <bool>
                                   Specifies whether certificate  verification
                                   should be performed for https URLs. If this
                                   option is not provided, the default  behav-
                                   ior  is  determined by the CMAKE_TLS_VERIFY
                                   variable (see file(DOWNLOAD)). If  that  is
                                   also not set, certificate verification will
                                   not  be  performed.  In  situations   where
                                   URL_HASH  cannot  be  provided, this option
                                   can be an alternative verification measure.

                                   Changed in version 3.6:  This  option  also
                                   applies to git clone invocations.

                            TLS_CAINFO <file>
                                   Specify a custom certificate authority file
                                   to use if TLS_VERIFY is  enabled.  If  this
                                   option  is  not specified, the value of the
                                   CMAKE_TLS_CAINFO variable will be used  in-
                                   stead (see file(DOWNLOAD))

                            NETRC <level>
                                   New in version 3.11.

                                   Specify  whether  the  .netrc file is to be
                                   used for operation.  If this option is  not
                                   specified,  the  value  of  the CMAKE_NETRC
                                   variable  will   be   used   instead   (see
                                   file(DOWNLOAD)).  Valid levels are:

                                   IGNORED
                                          The .netrc file is ignored.  This is
                                          the default.

                                   OPTIONAL
                                          The .netrc file is optional, and in-
                                          formation  in  the URL is preferred.
                                          The file will  be  scanned  to  find
                                          which ever information is not speci-
                                          fied in the URL.

                                   REQUIRED
                                          The .netrc file is required, and in-
                                          formation in the URL is ignored.

                            NETRC_FILE <file>
                                   New in version 3.11.

                                   Specify  an  alternative .netrc file to the
                                   one in your home  directory  if  the  NETRC
                                   level  is OPTIONAL or REQUIRED. If this op-
                                   tion is not specified,  the  value  of  the
                                   CMAKE_NETRC_FILE  variable will be used in-
                                   stead (see file(DOWNLOAD))

                            New  in  version  3.1:  Added  support  for  tbz2,
                            .tar.xz, .txz, and .7z extensions.

                     Git    NOTE:  A git version of 1.6.5 or later is required
                            if this download method is used.

                            GIT_REPOSITORY <url>
                                   URL of the git repository. Any  URL  under-
                                   stood by the git command may be used.

                            GIT_TAG <tag>
                                   Git  branch  name, tag or commit hash. Note
                                   that branch names and tags should generally
                                   be  specified  as  remote  names (i.e. ori-
                                   gin/myBranch rather than simply  myBranch).
                                   This ensures that if the remote end has its
                                   tag moved  or  branch  rebased  or  history
                                   rewritten,  the  local  clone will still be
                                   updated  correctly.  In  general,  however,
                                   specifying  a  commit  hash  should be pre-
                                   ferred for a number of reasons:

                                   • If the local clone already has the commit
                                     corresponding  to  the hash, no git fetch
                                     needs  to  be  performed  to  check   for
                                     changes  each  time CMake is re-run. This
                                     can result in a significant speed  up  if
                                     many external projects are being used.

                                   • Using  a  specific  git hash ensures that
                                     the main project's own history  is  fully
                                     traceable  to a specific point in the ex-
                                     ternal project's evolution. If  a  branch
                                     or  tag name is used instead, then check-
                                     ing out a specific  commit  of  the  main
                                     project doesn't necessarily pin the whole
                                     build to a specific point in the life  of
                                     the  external  project.  The lack of such
                                     deterministic  behavior  makes  the  main
                                     project lose traceability and repeatabil-
                                     ity.

                                   If  GIT_SHALLOW  is  enabled  then  GIT_TAG
                                   works  only  with branch names and tags.  A
                                   commit hash is not allowed.

                                   Note that if not provided, GIT_TAG defaults
                                   to master, not the default Git branch name.

                            GIT_REMOTE_NAME <name>
                                   The  optional  name  of the remote. If this
                                   option is not  specified,  it  defaults  to
                                   origin.

                            GIT_SUBMODULES <module>...
                                   Specific git submodules that should also be
                                   updated. If this option  is  not  provided,
                                   all git submodules will be updated.

                                   Changed  in  version  3.16: When CMP0097 is
                                   set to NEW, if this  value  is  set  to  an
                                   empty  string  then  no submodules are ini-
                                   tialized or updated.

                            GIT_SUBMODULES_RECURSE <bool>
                                   New in version 3.17.

                                   Specify whether  git  submodules  (if  any)
                                   should  update  recursively  by passing the
                                   --recursive flag to git  submodule  update.
                                   If not specified, the default is on.

                            GIT_SHALLOW <bool>
                                   New in version 3.6.

                                   When  this option is enabled, the git clone
                                   operation will be given the --depth  1  op-
                                   tion.  This performs a shallow clone, which
                                   avoids downloading the  whole  history  and
                                   instead  retrieves  just the commit denoted
                                   by the GIT_TAG option.

                            GIT_PROGRESS <bool>
                                   New in version 3.8.

                                   When enabled, this option instructs the git
                                   clone  operation  to report its progress by
                                   passing it the --progress  option.  Without
                                   this  option,  the  clone  step  for  large
                                   projects  may  appear  to  make  the  build
                                   stall,  since  nothing will be logged until
                                   the clone operation  finishes.  While  this
                                   option  can  be used to provide progress to
                                   prevent the appearance of the build  having
                                   stalled,  it may also make the build overly
                                   noisy if  lots  of  external  projects  are
                                   used.

                            GIT_CONFIG <option1> [<option2>...]
                                   New in version 3.8.

                                   Specify a list of config options to pass to
                                   git  clone.  Each  option  listed  will  be
                                   transformed  into its own --config <option>
                                   on the git clone command  line,  with  each
                                   option   required   to   be   in  the  form
                                   key=value.

                            GIT_REMOTE_UPDATE_STRATEGY <strategy>
                                   New in version 3.18.

                                   When GIT_TAG refers  to  a  remote  branch,
                                   this  option can be used to specify how the
                                   update step behaves.  The  <strategy>  must
                                   be one of the following:

                                   CHECKOUT
                                          Ignore  the  local branch and always
                                          checkout  the  branch  specified  by
                                          GIT_TAG.

                                   REBASE Try  to rebase the current branch to
                                          the one specified  by  GIT_TAG.   If
                                          there are local uncommitted changes,
                                          they  will  be  stashed  first   and
                                          popped again after rebasing.  If re-
                                          basing or  popping  stashed  changes
                                          fail, abort the rebase and halt with
                                          an   error.    When   GIT_REMOTE_UP-
                                          DATE_STRATEGY  is  not present, this
                                          is the default strategy  unless  the
                                          default  has  been  overridden  with
                                          CMAKE_EP_GIT_REMOTE_UPDATE_STRATEGY
                                          (see   below).   Note  that  if  the
                                          branch specified in GIT_TAG is  dif-
                                          ferent  to  the upstream branch cur-
                                          rently being tracked, it is not safe
                                          to  perform a rebase. In that situa-
                                          tion,  REBASE   will   silently   be
                                          treated as CHECKOUT instead.

                                   REBASE_CHECKOUT
                                          Same  as REBASE except if the rebase
                                          fails, an annotated tag will be cre-
                                          ated  at  the original HEAD position
                                          from  before  the  rebase  and  then
                                          checkout   GIT_TAG   just  like  the
                                          CHECKOUT  strategy.    The   message
                                          stored  on  the  annotated  tag will
                                          give information about what was  at-
                                          tempted  and  the  tag name will in-
                                          clude  a  timestamp  so  that   each
                                          failed run will add a new tag.  This
                                          strategy ensures no changes will  be
                                          lost, but updates should always suc-
                                          ceed if GIT_TAG refers  to  a  valid
                                          ref  unless  there  are  uncommitted
                                          changes that cannot be  popped  suc-
                                          cessfully.

                                   The     variable    CMAKE_EP_GIT_REMOTE_UP-
                                   DATE_STRATEGY can be set  to  override  the
                                   default strategy.  This variable should not
                                   be set by a project, it is intended for the
                                   user  to set.  It is primarily intended for
                                   use in continuous  integration  scripts  to
                                   ensure  that when history is rewritten on a
                                   remote branch, the  build  doesn't  end  up
                                   with  unintended  changes  or failed builds
                                   resulting from conflicts during rebase  op-
                                   erations.

                     Subversion

                            SVN_REPOSITORY <url>
                                   URL of the Subversion repository.

                            SVN_REVISION -r<rev>
                                   Revision  to  checkout  from the Subversion
                                   repository.

                            SVN_USERNAME <username>
                                   Username for the  Subversion  checkout  and
                                   update.

                            SVN_PASSWORD <password>
                                   Password  for  the  Subversion checkout and
                                   update.

                            SVN_TRUST_CERT <bool>
                                   Specifies whether to trust  the  Subversion
                                   server  site  certificate.  If enabled, the
                                   --trust-server-cert option is passed to the
                                   svn checkout and update commands.

                     Mercurial

                            HG_REPOSITORY <url>
                                   URL of the mercurial repository.

                            HG_TAG <tag>
                                   Mercurial branch name, tag or commit id.

                     CVS

                            CVS_REPOSITORY <cvsroot>
                                   CVSROOT of the CVS repository.

                            CVS_MODULE <mod>
                                   Module to checkout from the CVS repository.

                            CVS_TAG <tag>
                                   Tag to checkout from the CVS repository.

              Update Step Options:
                     Whenever   CMake  is  re-run,  by  default  the  external
                     project's sources will be updated if the download  method
                     supports  updates (e.g. a git repository would be checked
                     if the GIT_TAG does not refer to a specific commit).

                     UPDATE_COMMAND <cmd>...
                            Overrides the download method's update step with a
                            custom command.  The command may use generator ex-
                            pressions.

                     UPDATE_DISCONNECTED <bool>
                            New in version 3.2.

                            When enabled, this option causes the  update  step
                            to  be  skipped. It does not, however, prevent the
                            download step. The update step can still be  added
                            as         a        step        target        (see
                            ExternalProject_Add_StepTargets()) and called man-
                            ually.  This is useful if you want to allow devel-
                            opers to build the project when disconnected  from
                            the  network  (the network may still be needed for
                            the download step though).

                            When this option is present, it is  generally  ad-
                            visable  to  make the value a cache variable under
                            the developer's control  rather  than  hard-coding
                            it.  If  this  option  is not present, the default
                            value is taken from the EP_UPDATE_DISCONNECTED di-
                            rectory property. If that is also not defined, up-
                            dates are performed as normal. The  EP_UPDATE_DIS-
                            CONNECTED directory property is intended as a con-
                            venience for controlling  the  UPDATE_DISCONNECTED
                            behavior  for an entire section of a project's di-
                            rectory hierarchy and may  be  a  more  convenient
                            method  of  giving developers control over whether
                            or not to perform updates  (assuming  the  project
                            also  provides a cache variable or some other con-
                            venient method for  setting  the  directory  prop-
                            erty).

                            This  may  cause a step target to be created auto-
                            matically  for  the  download  step.   See  policy
                            CMP0114.

              Patch Step Options:

                     PATCH_COMMAND <cmd>...
                            Specifies  a  custom  command to patch the sources
                            after an update. By default, no patch  command  is
                            defined.  Note  that  it can be quite difficult to
                            define an appropriate patch command that  performs
                            robustly,  especially for download methods such as
                            git where changing the GIT_TAG  will  not  discard
                            changes  from a previous patch, but the patch com-
                            mand will be called again after  updating  to  the
                            new tag.

              Configure Step Options:
                     The  configure  step is run after the download and update
                     steps. By default, the external project is assumed to  be
                     a CMake project, but this can be overridden if required.

                     CONFIGURE_COMMAND <cmd>...
                            The  default  configure  command runs CMake with a
                            few options based on the main  project.   The  op-
                            tions added are typically only those needed to use
                            the same generator as the main  project,  but  the
                            CMAKE_GENERATOR  option  can  be given to override
                            this.  The project is responsible for  adding  any
                            toolchain  details,  flags  or  other  settings it
                            wants to re-use from the main project or otherwise
                            specify   (see  CMAKE_ARGS,  CMAKE_CACHE_ARGS  and
                            CMAKE_CACHE_DEFAULT_ARGS below).

                            For  non-CMake  external  projects,  the   CONFIG-
                            URE_COMMAND  option  must  be used to override the
                            default configure command  (generator  expressions
                            are  supported). For projects that require no con-
                            figure step, specify this  option  with  an  empty
                            string as the command to execute.

                     CMAKE_COMMAND /.../cmake
                            Specify  an  alternative  cmake executable for the
                            configure step (use an  absolute  path).  This  is
                            generally not recommended, since it is usually de-
                            sirable to use the same CMake  version  throughout
                            the  whole build. This option is ignored if a cus-
                            tom configure command has been specified with CON-
                            FIGURE_COMMAND.

                     CMAKE_GENERATOR <gen>
                            Override  the CMake generator used for the config-
                            ure step. Without this option, the same  generator
                            as the main build will be used. This option is ig-
                            nored if a custom configure command has been spec-
                            ified with the CONFIGURE_COMMAND option.

                     CMAKE_GENERATOR_PLATFORM <platform>
                            New in version 3.1.

                            Pass  a  generator-specific  platform  name to the
                            CMake command (see  CMAKE_GENERATOR_PLATFORM).  It
                            is  an  error  to  provide this option without the
                            CMAKE_GENERATOR option.

                     CMAKE_GENERATOR_TOOLSET <toolset>
                            Pass a  generator-specific  toolset  name  to  the
                            CMake command (see CMAKE_GENERATOR_TOOLSET). It is
                            an  error  to  provide  this  option  without  the
                            CMAKE_GENERATOR option.

                     CMAKE_GENERATOR_INSTANCE <instance>
                            New in version 3.11.

                            Pass  a  generator-specific  instance selection to
                            the CMake command (see  CMAKE_GENERATOR_INSTANCE).
                            It  is an error to provide this option without the
                            CMAKE_GENERATOR option.

                     CMAKE_ARGS <arg>...
                            The specified arguments are passed  to  the  cmake
                            command  line.  They can be any argument the cmake
                            command understands, not just cache values defined
                            by -D... arguments (see also CMake Options).

                            New  in  version  3.3: Arguments may use generator
                            expressions.

                     CMAKE_CACHE_ARGS <arg>...
                            This is an alternate way of specifying cache vari-
                            ables  where command line length issues may become
                            a problem. The arguments are expected to be in the
                            form  -Dvar:STRING=value,  which  are  then trans-
                            formed into CMake set() commands  with  the  FORCE
                            option used. These set() commands are written to a
                            pre-load script which is then  applied  using  the
                            cmake -C command line option.

                            New  in  version  3.3: Arguments may use generator
                            expressions.

                     CMAKE_CACHE_DEFAULT_ARGS <arg>...
                            New in version 3.2.

                            This is the same as  the  CMAKE_CACHE_ARGS  option
                            except the set() commands do not include the FORCE
                            keyword. This means the values act as initial  de-
                            faults  only  and  will not override any variables
                            already set from a previous run. Use  this  option
                            with  care,  as  it can lead to different behavior
                            depending on whether the build starts from a fresh
                            build  directory  or  re-uses  previous build con-
                            tents.

                            New in version 3.15: If the CMake generator is the
                            Green Hills MULTI and not overridden, the original
                            project's settings for the GHS toolset and  target
                            system  customization  cache  variables are propa-
                            gated into the external project.

                     SOURCE_SUBDIR <dir>
                            New in version 3.7.

                            When no CONFIGURE_COMMAND option is specified, the
                            configure  step assumes the external project has a
                            CMakeLists.txt file at the top of its source  tree
                            (i.e. in SOURCE_DIR). The SOURCE_SUBDIR option can
                            be used  to  point  to  an  alternative  directory
                            within  the  source  tree to use as the top of the
                            CMake source tree instead. This must be a relative
                            path  and it will be interpreted as being relative
                            to SOURCE_DIR.

                            New in version 3.14: When  BUILD_IN_SOURCE  option
                            is  enabled, the BUILD_COMMAND is used to point to
                            an alternative directory within the source tree.

                     CONFIGURE_HANDLED_BY_BUILD <bool>
                            New in version 3.20.

                            Enabling this option relaxes the  dependencies  of
                            the  configure  step on other external projects to
                            order-only. This means the configure step will  be
                            executed  after  its external project dependencies
                            are built but it will not be marked dirty when one
                            of  its  external project dependencies is rebuilt.
                            This option can be enabled when the build step  is
                            smart  enough  to figure out if the configure step
                            needs to be rerun. CMake and Meson are examples of
                            build  systems whose build step is smart enough to
                            know if the configure step needs to be rerun.

              Build Step Options:
                     If the configure step assumed the external  project  uses
                     CMake as its build system, the build step will also. Oth-
                     erwise, the build step will assume a Makefile-based build
                     and  simply  run  make  with  no arguments as the default
                     build step. This can be overridden with custom build com-
                     mands if required.

                     If  both  the  main  project and the external project use
                     make as their build tool, the build step of the  external
                     project  is  invoked  as  a recursive make using $(MAKE).
                     This will communicate some build tool settings  from  the
                     main project to the external project.  If either the main
                     project or external project is not using make,  no  build
                     tool  settings  will  be  passed  to the external project
                     other than those established by the configure step  (i.e.
                     running  ninja -v in the main project will not pass -v to
                     the external project's build step, even if it  also  uses
                     ninja as its build tool).

                     BUILD_COMMAND <cmd>...
                            Overrides the default build command (generator ex-
                            pressions are supported). If this  option  is  not
                            given, the default build command will be chosen to
                            integrate with the main build in the  most  appro-
                            priate way (e.g. using recursive make for Makefile
                            generators or cmake --build if the project uses  a
                            CMake build). This option can be specified with an
                            empty string as the command to make the build step
                            do nothing.

                     BUILD_IN_SOURCE <bool>
                            When  this  option  is  enabled, the build will be
                            done directly within the external project's source
                            tree. This should generally be avoided, the use of
                            a separate build directory is  usually  preferred,
                            but it can be useful when the external project as-
                            sumes an in-source build.  The  BINARY_DIR  option
                            should not be specified if building in-source.

                     BUILD_ALWAYS <bool>
                            Enabling  this option forces the build step to al-
                            ways be run. This can be the easiest  way  to  ro-
                            bustly  ensure  that  the  external  project's own
                            build dependencies are evaluated rather than rely-
                            ing on the default success timestamp-based method.
                            This option is not normally needed unless develop-
                            ers  are expected to modify something the external
                            project's build depends on in a way  that  is  not
                            detectable  via the step target dependencies (e.g.
                            SOURCE_DIR is used without a download  method  and
                            developers    might    modify   the   sources   in
                            SOURCE_DIR).

                     BUILD_BYPRODUCTS <file>...
                            New in version 3.2.

                            Specifies files that  will  be  generated  by  the
                            build  command  but  which might or might not have
                            their  modification  time  updated  by  subsequent
                            builds.  These  ultimately  get  passed through as
                            BYPRODUCTS to the build step's own underlying call
                            to add_custom_command().

              Install Step Options:
                     If  the  configure step assumed the external project uses
                     CMake as its build system, the install  step  will  also.
                     Otherwise,  the install step will assume a Makefile-based
                     build and simply run make install as  the  default  build
                     step. This can be overridden with custom install commands
                     if required.

                     INSTALL_COMMAND <cmd>...
                            The external project's own install step is invoked
                            as  part  of  the main project's build. It is done
                            after the external project's build step and may be
                            before  or  after the external project's test step
                            (see the TEST_BEFORE_INSTALL  option  below).  The
                            external  project's  install rules are not part of
                            the main project's install rules, so  if  anything
                            from  the  external project should be installed as
                            part of the main build, these need to be specified
                            in  the  main  build  as additional install() com-
                            mands. The default install step builds the install
                            target  of  the  external project, but this can be
                            overridden with a custom command using this option
                            (generator  expressions are supported). Passing an
                            empty string as the <cmd> makes the  install  step
                            do nothing.

                     NOTE:
                        If  the CMAKE_INSTALL_MODE environment variable is set
                        when the main project is built, it will only  have  an
                        effect if the following conditions are met:

                        • The main project's configure step assumed the exter-
                          nal project uses CMake as its build system.

                        • The  external  project's  install  command  actually
                          runs.  Note  that due to the way ExternalProject may
                          use timestamps internally, if  nothing  the  install
                          step depends on needs to be re-executed, the install
                          command might also not need to run.

                        Note also that ExternalProject does not check  whether
                        the  CMAKE_INSTALL_MODE  environment  variable changes
                        from one run to another.

              Test Step Options:
                     The test step is only defined if at least one of the fol-
                     lowing TEST_...  options are provided.

                     TEST_COMMAND <cmd>...
                            Overrides  the default test command (generator ex-
                            pressions are supported). If this  option  is  not
                            given, the default behavior of the test step is to
                            build the external project's own test target. This
                            option  can  be  specified  with <cmd> as an empty
                            string, which allows the test step to still be de-
                            fined,  but it will do nothing. Do not specify any
                            of the other  TEST_...  options  if  providing  an
                            empty  string  as  the test command, but prefer to
                            omit all TEST_... options altogether if  the  test
                            step target is not needed.

                     TEST_BEFORE_INSTALL <bool>
                            When this option is enabled, the test step will be
                            executed before the install step. The default  be-
                            havior  is  for the test step to run after the in-
                            stall step.

                     TEST_AFTER_INSTALL <bool>
                            This option is mainly useful as a way to  indicate
                            that  the test step is desired but all default be-
                            havior is sufficient. Specifying this option  with
                            a  boolean true value ensures the test step is de-
                            fined and that it comes after the install step. If
                            both  TEST_BEFORE_INSTALL  and  TEST_AFTER_INSTALL
                            are enabled, the latter is silently ignored.

                     TEST_EXCLUDE_FROM_MAIN <bool>
                            New in version 3.2.

                            If enabled, the main build's  default  ALL  target
                            will  not  depend  on the test step. This can be a
                            useful way of ensuring the test  step  is  defined
                            but  only  gets  invoked  when manually requested.
                            This may cause a step target to be  created  auto-
                            matically  for  either  the install or build step.
                            See policy CMP0114.

              Output Logging Options:
                     Each of the following LOG_... options can be used to wrap
                     the  relevant  step  in a script to capture its output to
                     files. The log files will be created in LOG_DIR  if  sup-
                     plied or otherwise the STAMP_DIR directory with step-spe-
                     cific file names.

                     LOG_DOWNLOAD <bool>
                            When enabled, the output of the download  step  is
                            logged to files.

                     LOG_UPDATE <bool>
                            When  enabled,  the  output  of the update step is
                            logged to files.

                     LOG_PATCH <bool>
                            New in version 3.14.

                            When enabled, the output  of  the  patch  step  is
                            logged to files.

                     LOG_CONFIGURE <bool>
                            When  enabled, the output of the configure step is
                            logged to files.

                     LOG_BUILD <bool>
                            When enabled, the output  of  the  build  step  is
                            logged to files.

                     LOG_INSTALL <bool>
                            When  enabled,  the  output of the install step is
                            logged to files.

                     LOG_TEST <bool>
                            When enabled, the  output  of  the  test  step  is
                            logged to files.

                     LOG_MERGED_STDOUTERR <bool>
                            New in version 3.14.

                            When enabled, stdout and stderr will be merged for
                            any step whose output is being logged to files.

                     LOG_OUTPUT_ON_FAILURE <bool>
                            New in version 3.14.

                            This option only has an effect if at least one  of
                            the  other  LOG_<step>  options is enabled.  If an
                            error occurs for a step which has logging to  file
                            enabled, that step's output will be printed to the
                            console if LOG_OUTPUT_ON_FAILURE is set  to  true.
                            For  cases  where  a  large  amount  of  output is
                            recorded, just the  end  of  that  output  may  be
                            printed to the console.

              Terminal Access Options:
                     New in version 3.4.

                     Steps  can be given direct access to the terminal in some
                     cases. Giving a step access to the terminal may allow  it
                     to  receive  terminal  input if required, such as for au-
                     thentication details not provided by other options.  With
                     the Ninja generator, these options place the steps in the
                     console job pool. Each step can be given  access  to  the
                     terminal individually via the following options:

                     USES_TERMINAL_DOWNLOAD <bool>
                            Give the download step access to the terminal.

                     USES_TERMINAL_UPDATE <bool>
                            Give the update step access to the terminal.

                     USES_TERMINAL_PATCH <bool>
                            New in version 3.23.

                            Give the patch step access to the terminal.

                     USES_TERMINAL_CONFIGURE <bool>
                            Give the configure step access to the terminal.

                     USES_TERMINAL_BUILD <bool>
                            Give the build step access to the terminal.

                     USES_TERMINAL_INSTALL <bool>
                            Give the install step access to the terminal.

                     USES_TERMINAL_TEST <bool>
                            Give the test step access to the terminal.

              Target Options:

                     DEPENDS <targets>...
                            Specify   other  targets  on  which  the  external
                            project depends. The other targets will be brought
                            up  to  date  before any of the external project's
                            steps are executed. Because the  external  project
                            uses additional custom targets internally for each
                            step, the DEPENDS option is  the  most  convenient
                            way  to  ensure  all  of those steps depend on the
                            other        targets.         Simply         doing
                            add_dependencies(<name>  <targets>)  will not make
                            any of the steps dependent on <targets>.

                     EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL <bool>
                            When enabled, this option  excludes  the  external
                            project  from  the  default ALL target of the main
                            build.

                     STEP_TARGETS <step-target>...
                            Generate custom targets for the  specified  steps.
                            This is required if the steps need to be triggered
                            manually or if they need to be used  as  dependen-
                            cies of other targets. If this option is not spec-
                            ified,  the  default  value  is  taken  from   the
                            EP_STEP_TARGETS     directory    property.     See
                            ExternalProject_Add_StepTargets() below  for  fur-
                            ther discussion of the effects of this option.

                     INDEPENDENT_STEP_TARGETS <step-target>...
                            Deprecated  since  version  3.19:  This is allowed
                            only if policy CMP0114 is not set to NEW.

                            Generates custom targets for the  specified  steps
                            and  prevent  these  targets from having the usual
                            dependencies applied to them. If  this  option  is
                            not specified, the default value is taken from the
                            EP_INDEPENDENT_STEP_TARGETS  directory   property.
                            This option is mostly useful for allowing individ-
                            ual steps to be driven independently, such as  for
                            a  CDash setup where each step should be initiated
                            and reported individually rather than as one whole
                            build. See ExternalProject_Add_StepTargets() below
                            for further discussion of the effects of this  op-
                            tion.

              Miscellaneous Options:

                     LIST_SEPARATOR <sep>
                            For  any  of  the various ..._COMMAND options, and
                            CMAKE_ARGS, replace ; with <sep> in the  specified
                            command  lines.   This  can  be  useful where list
                            variables may be  given  in  commands  where  they
                            should  end up as space-separated arguments (<sep>
                            would be a single space character string  in  this
                            case).

                     COMMAND <cmd>...
                            Any  of the other ..._COMMAND options can have ad-
                            ditional commands appended to  them  by  following
                            them with as many COMMAND ... options as needed (-
                            generator expressions are supported). For example:

                               ExternalProject_Add(example
                                 ... # Download options, etc.
                                 BUILD_COMMAND ${CMAKE_COMMAND} -E echo "Starting $<CONFIG> build"
                                 COMMAND       ${CMAKE_COMMAND} --build <BINARY_DIR> --config $<CONFIG>
                                 COMMAND       ${CMAKE_COMMAND} -E echo "$<CONFIG> build complete"
                               )

              It should also be noted that each build step is  created  via  a
              call  to ExternalProject_Add_Step(). See that command's documen-
              tation for the automatic substitutions that  are  supported  for
              some options.

   Obtaining Project Properties
       ExternalProject_Get_Property
              The  ExternalProject_Get_Property()  function retrieves external
              project target properties:

                 ExternalProject_Get_Property(<name> <prop1> [<prop2>...])

              The function stores property values in  variables  of  the  same
              name. Property names correspond to the keyword argument names of
              ExternalProject_Add().  For example, the source directory  might
              be retrieved like so:

                 ExternalProject_Get_property(myExtProj SOURCE_DIR)
                 message("Source dir of myExtProj = ${SOURCE_DIR}")

   Explicit Step Management
       The  ExternalProject_Add()  function on its own is often sufficient for
       incorporating an external project into the main build. Certain  scenar-
       ios  require  additional  work  to  implement desired behavior, such as
       adding in a custom step or making steps available as manually  trigger-
       able targets. The ExternalProject_Add_Step(), ExternalProject_Add_Step-
       Targets() and  ExternalProject_Add_StepDependencies  functions  provide
       the  lower  level control needed to implement such step-level capabili-
       ties.

       ExternalProject_Add_Step
              The ExternalProject_Add_Step() function specifies an  additional
              custom  step  for an external project defined by an earlier call
              to ExternalProject_Add():

                 ExternalProject_Add_Step(<name> <step> [<option>...])

              <name> is the same as the name passed to the  original  call  to
              ExternalProject_Add().  The  specified <step> must not be one of
              the pre-defined steps (mkdir, download, update,  patch,  config-
              ure, build, install or test). The supported options are:

              COMMAND <cmd>...
                     The  command  line  to be executed by this custom step (-
                     generator expressions are supported). This option can  be
                     repeated  multiple  times to specify multiple commands to
                     be executed in order.

              COMMENT <text>...
                     Text to be printed when the custom step executes.

              DEPENDEES <step>...
                     Other steps (custom or pre-defined) on  which  this  step
                     depends.

              DEPENDERS <step>...
                     Other  steps  (custom or pre-defined) that depend on this
                     new custom step.

              DEPENDS <file>...
                     Files on which this custom step depends.

              INDEPENDENT <bool>
                     New in version 3.19.

                     Specifies whether this step is independent of the  exter-
                     nal dependencies specified by the ExternalProject_Add()'s
                     DEPENDS option.  The default is FALSE.  Steps  marked  as
                     independent  may  depend only on other steps marked inde-
                     pendent.  See policy CMP0114.

                     Note that this use of the term "independent" refers  only
                     to  independence  from  external targets specified by the
                     DEPENDS option and is orthogonal to a step's dependencies
                     on other steps.

                     If  a  step  target is created for an independent step by
                     the ExternalProject_Add() STEP_TARGETS option or  by  the
                     ExternalProject_Add_StepTargets()  function,  it will not
                     depend on the external targets, but may depend on targets
                     for other steps.

              BYPRODUCTS <file>...
                     New in version 3.2.

                     Files  that  will  be  generated  by this custom step but
                     which might or might not have their modification time up-
                     dated by subsequent builds. This list of files will ulti-
                     mately be passed through as the BYPRODUCTS option to  the
                     add_custom_command()  used  to  implement the custom step
                     internally.

              ALWAYS <bool>
                     When enabled, this option specifies that the custom  step
                     should  always  be run (i.e. that it is always considered
                     out of date).

              EXCLUDE_FROM_MAIN <bool>
                     When enabled, this option  specifies  that  the  external
                     project's main target does not depend on the custom step.
                     This may cause step targets to be  created  automatically
                     for  the  steps  on  which this step depends.  See policy
                     CMP0114.

              WORKING_DIRECTORY <dir>
                     Specifies the working directory to set before running the
                     custom  step's  command. If this option is not specified,
                     the   directory   will    be    the    value    of    the
                     CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR  at the point where ExternalPro-
                     ject_Add_Step() was called.

              LOG <bool>
                     If set, this causes the output from the custom step to be
                     captured  to  files  in the external project's LOG_DIR if
                     supplied or STAMP_DIR.

              USES_TERMINAL <bool>
                     If enabled, this gives the custom step direct  access  to
                     the terminal if possible.

              The  command  line, comment, working directory and byproducts of
              every standard and custom step are processed to replace the  to-
              kens  <SOURCE_DIR>, <SOURCE_SUBDIR>, <BINARY_DIR>, <INSTALL_DIR>
              <TMP_DIR>, <DOWNLOAD_DIR> and <DOWNLOADED_FILE> with their  cor-
              responding  property  values  defined  in  the  original call to
              ExternalProject_Add().

              New in version 3.3: Token replacement is extended to byproducts.

              New in version 3.11: The <DOWNLOAD_DIR> substitution token.

       ExternalProject_Add_StepTargets
              The ExternalProject_Add_StepTargets() function generates targets
              for the steps listed. The name of each created target will be of
              the form <name>-<step>:

                 ExternalProject_Add_StepTargets(<name> <step1> [<step2>...])

              Creating a target for a step allows it to be used  as  a  depen-
              dency of another target or to be triggered manually. Having tar-
              gets for specific steps also allows them to be  driven  indepen-
              dently  of  each  other  by  specifying targets on build command
              lines. For example, you may be submitting to a sub-project based
              dashboard  where  you want to drive the configure portion of the
              build, then submit to the dashboard, followed by the build  por-
              tion,  followed by tests. If you invoke a custom target that de-
              pends on a step halfway through the step dependency chain,  then
              all  the previous steps will also run to ensure everything is up
              to date.

              Internally,             ExternalProject_Add()              calls
              ExternalProject_Add_Step() to create each step. If any STEP_TAR-
              GETS were specified, then ExternalProject_Add_StepTargets() will
              also be called after ExternalProject_Add_Step().  Even if a step
              is  not  mentioned  in  the  STEP_TARGETS  option,  ExternalPro-
              ject_Add_StepTargets() can still be called later to manually de-
              fine a target for the step.

              The STEP_TARGETS option for ExternalProject_Add()  is  generally
              the easiest way to ensure targets are created for specific steps
              of interest.   For  custom  steps,  ExternalProject_Add_StepTar-
              gets() must be called explicitly if a target should also be cre-
              ated for that custom step.  An alternative to these two  options
              is  to populate the EP_STEP_TARGETS directory property.  It acts
              as a default for the step target options and can save having  to
              repeatedly  specify  the  same set of step targets when multiple
              external projects are being defined.

              New in version 3.19: If CMP0114 is set to NEW, step targets  are
              fully  responsible  for holding the custom commands implementing
              their steps.  The primary target created by  ExternalProject_Add
              depends on the step targets, and the step targets depend on each
              other.  The target-level dependencies match the  file-level  de-
              pendencies  used by the custom commands for each step.  The tar-
              gets for steps created with  ExternalProject_Add_Step()'s  INDE-
              PENDENT  option  do not depend on the external targets specified
              by ExternalProject_Add()'s DEPENDS option.  The predefined steps
              mkdir, download, update, and patch are independent.

              If  CMP0114  is  not  NEW,  the following deprecated behavior is
              available:

              • A deprecated NO_DEPENDS option may  be  specified  immediately
                after the <name> and before the first step.  If the NO_DEPENDS
                option is specified, the step target will not  depend  on  the
                dependencies of the external project (i.e. on any dependencies
                of the <name> custom target created by ExternalProject_Add()).
                This is usually safe for the download, update and patch steps,
                since they do not typically require that the dependencies  are
                updated  and  built.   Using  NO_DEPENDS  for any of the other
                pre-defined steps, however, may break  parallel  builds.  Only
                use  NO_DEPENDS  where it is certain that the named steps gen-
                uinely do not have dependencies. For  custom  steps,  consider
                whether or not the custom commands require the dependencies to
                be configured, built and installed.

              • The INDEPENDENT_STEP_TARGETS option for ExternalProject_Add(),
                or  the  EP_INDEPENDENT_STEP_TARGETS directory property, tells
                the function to call ExternalProject_Add_StepTargets()  inter-
                nally using the NO_DEPENDS option for the specified steps.

       ExternalProject_Add_StepDependencies
              New in version 3.2.

              The  ExternalProject_Add_StepDependencies() function can be used
              to add dependencies to a step. The dependencies  added  must  be
              targets  CMake  already  knows about (these can be ordinary exe-
              cutable or library targets, custom targets or even step  targets
              of another external project):

                 ExternalProject_Add_StepDependencies(<name> <step> <target1> [<target2>...])

              This  function  takes care to set both target and file level de-
              pendencies and will ensure that parallel builds will not  break.
              It  should be used instead of add_dependencies() whenever adding
              a dependency for some of the step targets generated by  the  Ex-
              ternalProject module.

   Examples
       The  following  example  shows how to download and build a hypothetical
       project called FooBar from github:

          include(ExternalProject)
          ExternalProject_Add(foobar
            GIT_REPOSITORY    git@github.com:FooCo/FooBar.git
            GIT_TAG           origin/release/1.2.3
          )

       For the sake of the example, also define a second hypothetical external
       project  called SecretSauce, which is downloaded from a web server. Two
       URLs are given to take advantage of a faster internal network if avail-
       able,  with  a  fallback  to a slower external server. The project is a
       typical Makefile project with no configure step, so some of the default
       commands  are overridden. The build is only required to build the sauce
       target:

          find_program(MAKE_EXE NAMES gmake nmake make)
          ExternalProject_Add(secretsauce
            URL               http://intranet.somecompany.com/artifacts/sauce-2.7.tgz
                              https://www.somecompany.com/downloads/sauce-2.7.zip
            URL_HASH          MD5=d41d8cd98f00b204e9800998ecf8427e
            CONFIGURE_COMMAND ""
            BUILD_COMMAND     ${MAKE_EXE} sauce
          )

       Suppose the build step of secretsauce requires that foobar must already
       be built. This could be enforced like so:

          ExternalProject_Add_StepDependencies(secretsauce build foobar)

       Another  alternative  would  be  to create a custom target for foobar's
       build step and make secretsauce depend on that rather  than  the  whole
       foobar  project.  This  would  mean  foobar  only needs to be built, it
       doesn't need to run its install or test steps before secretsauce can be
       built.  The  dependency  can also be defined along with the secretsauce
       project:

          ExternalProject_Add_StepTargets(foobar build)
          ExternalProject_Add(secretsauce
            URL               http://intranet.somecompany.com/artifacts/sauce-2.7.tgz
                              https://www.somecompany.com/downloads/sauce-2.7.zip
            URL_HASH          MD5=d41d8cd98f00b204e9800998ecf8427e
            CONFIGURE_COMMAND ""
            BUILD_COMMAND     ${MAKE_EXE} sauce
            DEPENDS           foobar-build
          )

       Instead of calling ExternalProject_Add_StepTargets(), the target  could
       be defined along with the foobar project itself:

          ExternalProject_Add(foobar
            GIT_REPOSITORY git@github.com:FooCo/FooBar.git
            GIT_TAG        origin/release/1.2.3
            STEP_TARGETS   build
          )

       If  many  external  projects  should have the same set of step targets,
       setting a directory property may be more  convenient.  The  build  step
       target  could  be  created automatically by setting the EP_STEP_TARGETS
       directory  property  before  creating  the   external   projects   with
       ExternalProject_Add():

          set_property(DIRECTORY PROPERTY EP_STEP_TARGETS build)

       Lastly, suppose that secretsauce provides a script called makedoc which
       can be used to generate its own documentation. Further suppose that the
       script  expects the output directory to be provided as the only parame-
       ter and that it should be run from the secretsauce source directory.  A
       custom  step  and  a custom target to trigger the script can be defined
       like so:

          ExternalProject_Add_Step(secretsauce docs
            COMMAND           <SOURCE_DIR>/makedoc <BINARY_DIR>
            WORKING_DIRECTORY <SOURCE_DIR>
            COMMENT           "Building secretsauce docs"
            ALWAYS            TRUE
            EXCLUDE_FROM_MAIN TRUE
          )
          ExternalProject_Add_StepTargets(secretsauce docs)

       The custom step could then be triggered from the main build like so:

          cmake --build . --target secretsauce-docs

   FeatureSummary
       Functions for generating a summary of enabled/disabled features.

       These functions can be used to generate a summary of enabled  and  dis-
       abled packages and/or feature for a build tree such as:

          -- The following OPTIONAL packages have been found:
          LibXml2 (required version >= 2.4), XML processing lib, <http://xmlsoft.org>
             * Enables HTML-import in MyWordProcessor
             * Enables odt-export in MyWordProcessor
          PNG, A PNG image library., <http://www.libpng.org/pub/png/>
             * Enables saving screenshots
          -- The following OPTIONAL packages have not been found:
          Lua51, The Lua scripting language., <http://www.lua.org>
             * Enables macros in MyWordProcessor
          Foo, Foo provides cool stuff.

   Global Properties
       FeatureSummary_PKG_TYPES

       The  global property FeatureSummary_PKG_TYPES defines the type of pack-
       ages used by FeatureSummary.

       The order in this list is important, the first package type in the list
       is  the least important, the last is the most important. the of a pack-
       age can only be changed to higher types.

       The default package types are , RUNTIME, OPTIONAL, RECOMMENDED and  RE-
       QUIRED,  and their importance is RUNTIME < OPTIONAL < RECOMMENDED < RE-
       QUIRED.

       FeatureSummary_REQUIRED_PKG_TYPES

       The global  property  FeatureSummary_REQUIRED_PKG_TYPES  defines  which
       package types are required.

       If  one  or  more  package in this categories has not been found, CMake
       will abort when  calling  feature_summary()  with  the  'FATAL_ON_MISS-
       ING_REQUIRED_PACKAGES' option enabled.

       The default value for this global property is REQUIRED.

       FeatureSummary_DEFAULT_PKG_TYPE

       The global property FeatureSummary_DEFAULT_PKG_TYPE defines which pack-
       age type is the default one.  When calling  feature_summary(),  if  the
       user  did  not set the package type explicitly, the package will be as-
       signed to this category.

       This   value   must   be   one   of   the   types   defined   in    the
       FeatureSummary_PKG_TYPES global property unless the package type is set
       for all the packages.

       The default value for this global property is OPTIONAL.

       FeatureSummary_<TYPE>_DESCRIPTION

       New in version 3.9.

       The global property FeatureSummary_<TYPE>_DESCRIPTION  can  be  defined
       for  each type to replace the type name with the specified string when-
       ever the package type is used in an output string.

       If not set, the string "<TYPE> packages" is used.

   Functions
       feature_summary

                 feature_summary( [FILENAME <file>]
                                  [APPEND]
                                  [VAR <variable_name>]
                                  [INCLUDE_QUIET_PACKAGES]
                                  [FATAL_ON_MISSING_REQUIRED_PACKAGES]
                                  [DESCRIPTION "<description>" | DEFAULT_DESCRIPTION]
                                  [QUIET_ON_EMPTY]
                                  WHAT (ALL
                                       | PACKAGES_FOUND | PACKAGES_NOT_FOUND
                                       | <TYPE>_PACKAGES_FOUND | <TYPE>_PACKAGES_NOT_FOUND
                                       | ENABLED_FEATURES | DISABLED_FEATURES)
                                )

              The feature_summary() macro can be  used  to  print  information
              about enabled or disabled packages or features of a project.  By
              default, only the names of the features/packages will be printed
              and   their  required  version  when  one  was  specified.   Use
              set_package_properties() to add more  useful  information,  like
              e.g.  a download URL for the respective package or their purpose
              in the project.

              The WHAT option is the only mandatory option.  Here you  specify
              what information will be printed:

              ALL    print everything

              ENABLED_FEATURES
                     the list of all features which are enabled

              DISABLED_FEATURES
                     the list of all features which are disabled

              PACKAGES_FOUND
                     the list of all packages which have been found

              PACKAGES_NOT_FOUND
                     the list of all packages which have not been found

              For    each    package    type    <TYPE>    defined    by    the
              FeatureSummary_PKG_TYPES global property, the following informa-
              tion can also be used:

              <TYPE>_PACKAGES_FOUND
                     only  those packages which have been found which have the
                     type <TYPE>

              <TYPE>_PACKAGES_NOT_FOUND
                     only those packages which have not been found which  have
                     the type <TYPE>

              Changed  in  version  3.1:  With the exception of the ALL value,
              these values can be combined in order to customize  the  output.
              For example:

                 feature_summary(WHAT ENABLED_FEATURES DISABLED_FEATURES)

              If  a  FILENAME  is  given, the information is printed into this
              file.  If APPEND is used, it is appended to this file, otherwise
              the  file  is overwritten if it already existed.  If the VAR op-
              tion is used, the information is "printed"  into  the  specified
              variable.   If  FILENAME is not used, the information is printed
              to the terminal.  Using the DESCRIPTION option a description  or
              headline  can be set which will be printed above the actual con-
              tent.  If only one type of package was requested,  no  title  is
              printed, unless it is explicitly set using either DESCRIPTION to
              use a custom string, or DEFAULT_DESCRIPTION to use a default ti-
              tle for the requested type.  If INCLUDE_QUIET_PACKAGES is given,
              packages which have been searched with  find_package(...  QUIET)
              will  also  be  listed.  By  default  they  are skipped.  If FA-
              TAL_ON_MISSING_REQUIRED_PACKAGES is given, CMake will abort if a
              package  which  is  marked as one of the package types listed in
              the FeatureSummary_REQUIRED_PKG_TYPES global  property  has  not
              been      found.       The     default     value     for     the
              FeatureSummary_REQUIRED_PKG_TYPES global property is REQUIRED.

              New in version 3.9: The DEFAULT_DESCRIPTION option.

              The FeatureSummary_DEFAULT_PKG_TYPE global property can be modi-
              fied  to  change  the default package type assigned when not ex-
              plicitly assigned by the user.

              New in version 3.8: If the QUIET_ON_EMPTY  option  is  used,  if
              only  one type of package was requested, and no packages belong-
              ing to that category were found, then no output  (including  the
              DESCRIPTION) is printed or added to the VAR variable.

              Example 1, append everything to a file:

                 include(FeatureSummary)
                 feature_summary(WHAT ALL
                                 FILENAME ${CMAKE_BINARY_DIR}/all.log APPEND)

              Example 2, print the enabled features into the variable enabled-
              FeaturesText, including QUIET packages:

                 include(FeatureSummary)
                 feature_summary(WHAT ENABLED_FEATURES
                                 INCLUDE_QUIET_PACKAGES
                                 DESCRIPTION "Enabled Features:"
                                 VAR enabledFeaturesText)
                 message(STATUS "${enabledFeaturesText}")

              Example 3, change default package types and print only the cate-
              gories that are not empty:

                 include(FeatureSummary)
                 set_property(GLOBAL APPEND PROPERTY FeatureSummary_PKG_TYPES BUILD)
                 find_package(FOO)
                 set_package_properties(FOO PROPERTIES TYPE BUILD)
                 feature_summary(WHAT BUILD_PACKAGES_FOUND
                                 Description "Build tools found:"
                                 QUIET_ON_EMPTY)
                 feature_summary(WHAT BUILD_PACKAGES_NOT_FOUND
                                 Description "Build tools not found:"
                                 QUIET_ON_EMPTY)

       set_package_properties

                 set_package_properties(<name> PROPERTIES
                                        [ URL <url> ]
                                        [ DESCRIPTION <description> ]
                                        [ TYPE (RUNTIME|OPTIONAL|RECOMMENDED|REQUIRED) ]
                                        [ PURPOSE <purpose> ]
                                       )

              Use  this  macro  to set up information about the named package,
              which can then be displayed via FEATURE_SUMMARY().  This can  be
              done  either directly in the Find-module or in the project which
              uses the module after the find_package() call.  The features for
              which  information  can  be  set  are added automatically by the
              find_package() command.

              URL <url>
                     This should be the homepage of the package, or  something
                     similar.   Ideally  this  is  set already directly in the
                     Find-module.

              DESCRIPTION <description>
                     A short description what that package  is,  at  most  one
                     sentence.   Ideally  this  is set already directly in the
                     Find-module.

              TYPE <type>
                     What type of dependency has the  using  project  on  that
                     package.   Default  is  OPTIONAL.   In  this case it is a
                     package which can be used by the project  when  available
                     at  buildtime,  but it also work without.  RECOMMENDED is
                     similar to OPTIONAL, i.e.  the project will build if  the
                     package  is not present, but the functionality of the re-
                     sulting binaries will be severely limited.  If a REQUIRED
                     package  is  not  available at buildtime, the project may
                     not even build.   This  can  be  combined  with  the  FA-
                     TAL_ON_MISSING_REQUIRED_PACKAGES    argument   for   fea-
                     ture_summary().  Last, a RUNTIME  package  is  a  package
                     which  is  actually not used at all during the build, but
                     which is required for actually running the resulting  bi-
                     naries.  So if such a package is missing, the project can
                     still be built,  but  it  may  not  work  later  on.   If
                     set_package_properties() is called multiple times for the
                     same package with  different  TYPEs,  the  TYPE  is  only
                     changed to higher TYPEs (RUNTIME < OPTIONAL < RECOMMENDED
                     < REQUIRED), lower TYPEs are ignored.  The TYPE  property
                     is project-specific, so it cannot be set by the Find-mod-
                     ule, but must be set in the project.  Type  accepted  can
                     be changed by setting the FeatureSummary_PKG_TYPES global
                     property.

              PURPOSE <purpose>
                     This describes which features this package enables in the
                     project,  i.e.   it  tells the user what functionality he
                     gets in the resulting binaries.   If  set_package_proper-
                     ties()  is  called multiple times for a package, all PUR-
                     POSE properties are appended to a list of purposes of the
                     package  in  the project.  As the TYPE property, also the
                     PURPOSE property is project-specific, so it cannot be set
                     by the Find-module, but must be set in the project.

              Example for setting the info for a package:

                 find_package(LibXml2)
                 set_package_properties(LibXml2 PROPERTIES
                                        DESCRIPTION "A XML processing library."
                                        URL "http://xmlsoft.org/")
                 # or
                 set_package_properties(LibXml2 PROPERTIES
                                        TYPE RECOMMENDED
                                        PURPOSE "Enables HTML-import in MyWordProcessor")
                 # or
                 set_package_properties(LibXml2 PROPERTIES
                                        TYPE OPTIONAL
                                        PURPOSE "Enables odt-export in MyWordProcessor")

                 find_package(DBUS)
                 set_package_properties(DBUS PROPERTIES
                   TYPE RUNTIME
                   PURPOSE "Necessary to disable the screensaver during a presentation")

       add_feature_info

                 add_feature_info(<name> <enabled> <description>)

              Use this macro to add information about a feature with the given
              <name>.  <enabled> contains whether this feature is  enabled  or
              not.  It  can  be a variable or a list of conditions.  <descrip-
              tion> is a text describing the feature.  The information can  be
              displayed  using feature_summary() for ENABLED_FEATURES and DIS-
              ABLED_FEATURES respectively.

              Changed in version 3.8: <enabled> can be a list of conditions.

              Example for setting the info for a feature:

                 option(WITH_FOO "Help for foo" ON)
                 add_feature_info(Foo WITH_FOO "The Foo feature provides very cool stuff.")

   Legacy Macros
       The following macros are provided for compatibility with previous CMake
       versions:

       set_package_info

                 set_package_info(<name> <description> [ <url> [<purpose>] ])

              Use  this  macro  to set up information about the named package,
              which can then be displayed via feature_summary().  This can  be
              done  either directly in the Find-module or in the project which
              uses the module after the find_package() call.  The features for
              which  information  can  be  set  are added automatically by the
              find_package() command.

       set_feature_info

                 set_feature_info(<name> <description> [<url>])

              Does the same as:

                 set_package_info(<name> <description> <url>)

       print_enabled_features

                 print_enabled_features()

              Does the same as

                 feature_summary(WHAT ENABLED_FEATURES DESCRIPTION "Enabled features:")

       print_disabled_features

                 print_disabled_features()

              Does the same as

                 feature_summary(WHAT DISABLED_FEATURES DESCRIPTION "Disabled features:")

   FetchContent
       New in version 3.11.

       NOTE:
          The Using Dependencies Guide provides a high-level  introduction  to
          this  general  topic.  It  provides  a broader overview of where the
          FetchContent module fits into the bigger picture, including its  re-
          lationship  to the find_package() command.  The guide is recommended
          pre-reading before moving on to the details below.

   Overview
       This module enables populating content at configure time via any method
       supported by the ExternalProject module.  Whereas ExternalProject_Add()
       downloads at build time, the FetchContent module makes  content  avail-
       able  immediately,  allowing  the  configure step to use the content in
       commands like add_subdirectory(), include() or file() operations.

       Content population details should be defined separately from  the  com-
       mand that performs the actual population.  This separation ensures that
       all the dependency details are defined before anything might try to use
       them  to populate content.  This is particularly important in more com-
       plex project hierarchies where dependencies may be shared between  mul-
       tiple projects.

       The  following shows a typical example of declaring content details for
       some dependencies and then ensuring they are populated with a  separate
       call:

          FetchContent_Declare(
            googletest
            GIT_REPOSITORY https://github.com/google/googletest.git
            GIT_TAG        703bd9caab50b139428cea1aaff9974ebee5742e # release-1.10.0
          )
          FetchContent_Declare(
            myCompanyIcons
            URL      https://intranet.mycompany.com/assets/iconset_1.12.tar.gz
            URL_HASH MD5=5588a7b18261c20068beabfb4f530b87
          )

          FetchContent_MakeAvailable(googletest myCompanyIcons)

       The FetchContent_MakeAvailable() command ensures the named dependencies
       have been populated, either by an earlier call or  by  populating  them
       itself.   When  performing the population, it will also add them to the
       main build, if possible, so that the main build can use  the  populated
       projects'  targets, etc.  See the command's documentation for how these
       steps are performed.

       When using a hierarchical project arrangement, projects at higher  lev-
       els  in the hierarchy are able to override the declared details of con-
       tent specified anywhere lower in the project hierarchy.  The first  de-
       tails to be declared for a given dependency take precedence, regardless
       of where in the project hierarchy that occurs.   Similarly,  the  first
       call  that tries to populate a dependency "wins", with subsequent popu-
       lations reusing the result of the first instead of repeating the  popu-
       lation again.  See the Examples which demonstrate this scenario.

       In  some  cases, the main project may need to have more precise control
       over the population, or it may be required  to  explicitly  define  the
       population  steps  in a way that cannot be captured by the declared de-
       tails    alone.     For    such    situations,    the    lower    level
       FetchContent_GetProperties()  and  FetchContent_Populate() commands can
       be   used.    These   lack   the   richer    features    provided    by
       FetchContent_MakeAvailable() though, so their direct use should be con-
       sidered a last resort.  The typical pattern of such custom steps  looks
       like this:

          # NOTE: Where possible, prefer to use FetchContent_MakeAvailable()
          #       instead of custom logic like this

          # Check if population has already been performed
          FetchContent_GetProperties(depname)
          if(NOT depname_POPULATED)
            # Fetch the content using previously declared details
            FetchContent_Populate(depname)

            # Set custom variables, policies, etc.
            # ...

            # Bring the populated content into the build
            add_subdirectory(${depname_SOURCE_DIR} ${depname_BINARY_DIR})
          endif()

       The  FetchContent  module also supports defining and populating content
       in a single call, with no check for whether the content has been  popu-
       lated  elsewhere already.  This should not be done in projects, but may
       be appropriate for populating content  in  CMake's  script  mode.   See
       FetchContent_Populate() for details.

   Commands
       FetchContent_Declare

                 FetchContent_Declare(
                   <name>
                   <contentOptions>...
                   [SYSTEM]
                   [OVERRIDE_FIND_PACKAGE |
                    FIND_PACKAGE_ARGS args...]
                 )

              The FetchContent_Declare() function records the options that de-
              scribe how to populate the specified content.  If  such  details
              have  already  been recorded earlier in this project (regardless
              of where in the project hierarchy), this and all later calls for
              the  same  content  <name>  are ignored.  This "first to record,
              wins" approach is what allows hierarchical projects to have par-
              ent projects override content details of child projects.

              The  content  <name>  can be any string without spaces, but good
              practice would be to use only letters, numbers and  underscores.
              The name will be treated case-insensitively and it should be ob-
              vious for the content it represents, often being the name of the
              child project or the value given to its top level project() com-
              mand  (if  it  is  a  CMake  project).   For  well-known  public
              projects,  the name should generally be the official name of the
              project.  Choosing an unusual name makes it unlikely that  other
              projects needing that same content will use the same name, lead-
              ing to the content being populated multiple times.

              The <contentOptions> can be any of the download, update or patch
              options that the ExternalProject_Add() command understands.  The
              configure, build, install and test steps are explicitly disabled
              and  therefore  options  related  to  them will be ignored.  The
              SOURCE_SUBDIR     option     is      an      exception,      see
              FetchContent_MakeAvailable() for details on how that affects be-
              havior.

              In most cases, <contentOptions> will just be a couple of options
              defining  the download method and method-specific details like a
              commit tag or archive hash.  For example:

                 FetchContent_Declare(
                   googletest
                   GIT_REPOSITORY https://github.com/google/googletest.git
                   GIT_TAG        703bd9caab50b139428cea1aaff9974ebee5742e # release-1.10.0
                 )

                 FetchContent_Declare(
                   myCompanyIcons
                   URL      https://intranet.mycompany.com/assets/iconset_1.12.tar.gz
                   URL_HASH MD5=5588a7b18261c20068beabfb4f530b87
                 )

                 FetchContent_Declare(
                   myCompanyCertificates
                   SVN_REPOSITORY svn+ssh://svn.mycompany.com/srv/svn/trunk/certs
                   SVN_REVISION   -r12345
                 )

              Where contents are being fetched from a remote location and  you
              do  not  control  that server, it is advisable to use a hash for
              GIT_TAG rather than a branch or tag name.  A commit hash is more
              secure  and  helps  to  confirm that the downloaded contents are
              what you expected.

              Changed in version 3.14: Commands for the  download,  update  or
              patch  steps  can  access  the terminal.  This may be needed for
              things like password prompts or  real-time  display  of  command
              progress.

              New  in  version  3.22:  The CMAKE_TLS_VERIFY, CMAKE_TLS_CAINFO,
              CMAKE_NETRC and CMAKE_NETRC_FILE variables now provide  the  de-
              faults  for  their corresponding content options, just like they
              do for ExternalProject_Add(). Previously, these  variables  were
              ignored by the FetchContent module.

              New in version 3.24:

              FIND_PACKAGE_ARGS
                     This     option    is    for    scenarios    where    the
                     FetchContent_MakeAvailable() command may first try a call
                     to  find_package()  to satisfy the dependency for <name>.
                     By default,  such  a  call  would  be  simply  find_pack-
                     age(<name>), but FIND_PACKAGE_ARGS can be used to provide
                     additional arguments to be  appended  after  the  <name>.
                     FIND_PACKAGE_ARGS  can  also  be given with nothing after
                     it, which indicates  that  find_package()  can  still  be
                     called  if  FETCHCONTENT_TRY_FIND_PACKAGE_MODE  is set to
                     OPT_IN or is not set.

                     Everything after the  FIND_PACKAGE_ARGS  keyword  is  ap-
                     pended  to  the  find_package()  call, so all other <con-
                     tentOptions> must come before the FIND_PACKAGE_ARGS  key-
                     word.   If the CMAKE_FIND_PACKAGE_TARGETS_GLOBAL variable
                     is set to true  at  the  time  FetchContent_Declare()  is
                     called,   a  GLOBAL  keyword  will  be  appended  to  the
                     find_package() arguments if it was not already specified.
                     It  will  also  be  appended if FIND_PACKAGE_ARGS was not
                     given, but FETCHCONTENT_TRY_FIND_PACKAGE_MODE was set  to
                     ALWAYS.

                     OVERRIDE_FIND_PACKAGE  cannot  be  used  when  FIND_PACK-
                     AGE_ARGS is given.

                     Dependency   Providers   discusses   another   way   that
                     FetchContent_MakeAvailable()  calls  can  be  redirected.
                     FIND_PACKAGE_ARGS  is  intended  for   project   control,
                     whereas  dependency  providers  allow  users  to override
                     project behavior.

              OVERRIDE_FIND_PACKAGE
                     When a  FetchContent_Declare(<name>  ...)  call  includes
                     this option, subsequent calls to find_package(<name> ...)
                     will ensure that  FetchContent_MakeAvailable(<name>)  has
                     been  called,  then  use  the config package files in the
                     CMAKE_FIND_PACKAGE_REDIRECTS_DIR  directory  (which   are
                     usually  created  by FetchContent_MakeAvailable()).  This
                     effectively makes  FetchContent_MakeAvailable()  override
                     find_package()  for  the  named  dependency, allowing the
                     former to satisfy the package requirements of the latter.
                     FIND_PACKAGE_ARGS cannot be used when OVERRIDE_FIND_PACK-
                     AGE is given.

                     If a dependency provider has been  set  and  the  project
                     calls  find_package()  for  the  <name> dependency, OVER-
                     RIDE_FIND_PACKAGE will not prevent the provider from see-
                     ing  that call.  Dependency providers always have the op-
                     portunity to intercept any direct call to find_package(),
                     except if that call contains the BYPASS_PROVIDER option.

              New in version 3.25:

              SYSTEM If  the  SYSTEM  argument is provided, targets created by
                     the dependency will have their  SYSTEM  property  set  to
                     true when populated by FetchContent_MakeAvailable().  The
                     entries in their  INTERFACE_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES  will  be
                     treated as SYSTEM include directories when compiling con-
                     sumers.

       FetchContent_MakeAvailable
              New in version 3.14.

                 FetchContent_MakeAvailable(<name1> [<name2>...])

              This command ensures that each of  the  named  dependencies  are
              made  available  to  the  project by the time it returns.  There
              must have been a call to FetchContent_Declare() for each  depen-
              dency,  and the first such call will control how that dependency
              will be made available, as described below.

              If <lowercaseName>_SOURCE_DIR is not set:

              • New in version 3.24: If a dependency provider is set, call the
                provider's  command  with FETCHCONTENT_MAKEAVAILABLE_SERIAL as
                the first argument, followed by the  arguments  of  the  first
                call  to  FetchContent_Declare() for <name>.  If SOURCE_DIR or
                BINARY_DIR were not part of the original  declared  arguments,
                they   will   be   added   with   their  default  values.   If
                FETCHCONTENT_TRY_FIND_PACKAGE_MODE was set to NEVER  when  the
                details  were declared, any FIND_PACKAGE_ARGS will be omitted.
                The OVERRIDE_FIND_PACKAGE keyword is also always omitted.   If
                the  provider  fulfilled  the request, FetchContent_MakeAvail-
                able() will consider that dependency handled, skip the remain-
                ing  steps  below  and  move  on to the next dependency in the
                list.

              • New  in  version  3.24:  If   permitted,   find_package(<name>
                [<args>...])   will be called, where <args>... may be provided
                by the  FIND_PACKAGE_ARGS  option  in  FetchContent_Declare().
                The  value  of the FETCHCONTENT_TRY_FIND_PACKAGE_MODE variable
                at  the  time  FetchContent_Declare()  was  called  determines
                whether  FetchContent_MakeAvailable() can call find_package().
                If the CMAKE_FIND_PACKAGE_TARGETS_GLOBAL variable  is  set  to
                true when FetchContent_MakeAvailable() is called, it still af-
                fects any imported targets created when  that  in  turn  calls
                find_package(),  even if that variable was false when the cor-
                responding details were declared.

              If  the  dependency  was  not  satisfied  by  a  provider  or  a
              find_package()  call, FetchContent_MakeAvailable() then uses the
              following logic to make the dependency available:

              • If the dependency has already been populated earlier  in  this
                run,    set    the    <lowercaseName>_POPULATED,   <lowercase-
                Name>_SOURCE_DIR and <lowercaseName>_BINARY_DIR  variables  in
                the  same  way as a call to FetchContent_GetProperties(), then
                skip the remaining steps below and move on to the next  depen-
                dency in the list.

              • Call  FetchContent_Populate() to populate the dependency using
                the   details    recorded    by    an    earlier    call    to
                FetchContent_Declare().   Halt  with  a fatal error if no such
                details            have             been             recorded.
                FETCHCONTENT_SOURCE_DIR_<uppercaseName>  can  be used to over-
                ride the declared details and  use  content  provided  at  the
                specified location instead.

              • New        in       version       3.24:       Ensure       the
                CMAKE_FIND_PACKAGE_REDIRECTS_DIR directory contains a  <lower-
                caseName>-config.cmake   and   a   <lowercaseName>-config-ver-
                sion.cmake  file  (or  equivalently   <name>Config.cmake   and
                <name>ConfigVersion.cmake).     The    directory    that   the
                CMAKE_FIND_PACKAGE_REDIRECTS_DIR variable points to is cleared
                at  the  start  of  every CMake run.  If no config file exists
                when FetchContent_Populate() returns, a minimal  one  will  be
                written  which  includes  any  <lowercaseName>-extra.cmake  or
                <name>Extra.cmake file with the OPTIONAL flag  (so  the  files
                can  be  missing and won't generate a warning).  Similarly, if
                no config version file exists, a very simple one will be writ-
                ten  which  sets  PACKAGE_VERSION_COMPATIBLE  and PACKAGE_VER-
                SION_EXACT  to  true.   This  ensures  all  future  calls   to
                find_package() for the dependency will use the redirected con-
                fig file, regardless of any version requirements.  CMake  can-
                not automatically determine an arbitrary dependency's version,
                so it cannot set PACKAGE_VERSION.  When a dependency is pulled
                in  via  add_subdirectory() in the next step, it may choose to
                overwrite   the   generated    config    version    file    in
                CMAKE_FIND_PACKAGE_REDIRECTS_DIR with one that also sets PACK-
                AGE_VERSION.  The dependency  may  also  write  a  <lowercase-
                Name>-extra.cmake  or <name>Extra.cmake file to perform custom
                processing or define any  variables  that  their  normal  (in-
                stalled)  package  config  file would otherwise usually define
                (many projects don't do any custom processing or set any vari-
                ables  and  therefore  have no need to do this).  If required,
                the main project can write these files instead if  the  depen-
                dency  project doesn't do so.  This allows the main project to
                add missing details from older dependencies  that  haven't  or
                can't   be   updated   to  support  this  functionality.   See
                Integrating With find_package() for examples.

              • If the top directory  of  the  populated  content  contains  a
                CMakeLists.txt  file, call add_subdirectory() to add it to the
                main build.  It is not an error for  there  to  be  no  CMake-
                Lists.txt file, which allows the command to be used for depen-
                dencies that make downloaded content available at a known  lo-
                cation,  but which do not need or support being added directly
                to the build.

                New in version 3.18: The SOURCE_SUBDIR option can be given  in
                the declared details to look somewhere below the top directory
                instead (i.e. the same way that SOURCE_SUBDIR is used  by  the
                ExternalProject_Add()   command).    The  path  provided  with
                SOURCE_SUBDIR must be relative and will be treated as relative
                to  the  top directory.  It can also point to a directory that
                does not contain a CMakeLists.txt file or even to a  directory
                that  doesn't  exist.   This  can  be  used  to avoid adding a
                project that contains a CMakeLists.txt file in its top  direc-
                tory.

              Projects  should  aim to declare the details of all dependencies
              they might use before they call FetchContent_MakeAvailable() for
              any  of  them.  This ensures that if any of the dependencies are
              also sub-dependencies of one or more of  the  others,  the  main
              project still controls the details that will be used (because it
              will declare them first before the  dependencies  get  a  chance
              to).   In the following code samples, assume that the uses_other
              dependency also uses FetchContent to add  the  other  dependency
              internally:

                 # WRONG: Should declare all details first
                 FetchContent_Declare(uses_other ...)
                 FetchContent_MakeAvailable(uses_other)

                 FetchContent_Declare(other ...)    # Will be ignored, uses_other beat us to it
                 FetchContent_MakeAvailable(other)  # Would use details declared by uses_other

                 # CORRECT: All details declared first, so they will take priority
                 FetchContent_Declare(uses_other ...)
                 FetchContent_Declare(other ...)
                 FetchContent_MakeAvailable(uses_other other)

              Note  that  CMAKE_VERIFY_INTERFACE_HEADER_SETS is explicitly set
              to false upon entry to FetchContent_MakeAvailable(), and is  re-
              stored to its original value before the command returns.  Devel-
              opers typically only want to verify header sets  from  the  main
              project,  not those from any dependencies.  This local manipula-
              tion of the CMAKE_VERIFY_INTERFACE_HEADER_SETS variable provides
              that   intuitive   behavior.    You   can   use  variables  like
              CMAKE_PROJECT_INCLUDE or CMAKE_PROJECT_<PROJECT-NAME>_INCLUDE to
              turn verification back on for all or some dependencies.  You can
              also set the VERIFY_INTERFACE_HEADER_SETS property of individual
              targets.

       FetchContent_Populate
              NOTE:
                 Where  possible,  prefer  to use FetchContent_MakeAvailable()
                 instead of implementing population manually  with  this  com-
                 mand.

                 FetchContent_Populate(<name>)

              In  most  cases,  the  only argument given to FetchContent_Popu-
              late() is the <name>.  When used this way, the  command  assumes
              the  content  details  have  been recorded by an earlier call to
              FetchContent_Declare().  The details  are  stored  in  a  global
              property,  so they are unaffected by things like variable or di-
              rectory scope.   Therefore,  it  doesn't  matter  where  in  the
              project  the  details  were previously declared, as long as they
              have been declared before the call  to  FetchContent_Populate().
              Those  saved  details  are  then  used  to  construct  a call to
              ExternalProject_Add() in a private sub-build to perform the con-
              tent population immediately.  The implementation of ExternalPro-
              ject_Add() ensures that if the content has  already  been  popu-
              lated  in  a  previous  CMake  run,  that content will be reused
              rather than repopulating them again.  For the common case  where
              population  involves  downloading content, the cost of the down-
              load is only paid once.

              An internal global property records when  a  particular  content
              population  request  has  been processed.  If FetchContent_Popu-
              late() is called more than once for the same content name within
              a  configure  run,  the  second  call  will  halt with an error.
              Projects can and should check whether content population has al-
              ready  been processed with the FetchContent_GetProperties() com-
              mand before calling FetchContent_Populate().

              FetchContent_Populate() will set three variables in the scope of
              the caller:

              <lowercaseName>_POPULATED
                     This will always be set to TRUE by the call.

              <lowercaseName>_SOURCE_DIR
                     The  location  where  the  populated content can be found
                     upon return.

              <lowercaseName>_BINARY_DIR
                     A directory intended for use as a corresponding build di-
                     rectory.

              The main use case for the <lowercaseName>_SOURCE_DIR and <lower-
              caseName>_BINARY_DIR variables is to call add_subdirectory() im-
              mediately after population:

                 FetchContent_Populate(FooBar)
                 add_subdirectory(${foobar_SOURCE_DIR} ${foobar_BINARY_DIR})

              The  values  of  the  three variables can also be retrieved from
              anywhere    in    the    project     hierarchy     using     the
              FetchContent_GetProperties() command.

              The  FetchContent_Populate()  command also supports a syntax al-
              lowing the content details to be specified directly rather  than
              using any saved details.  This is more low-level and use of this
              form is generally to be avoided in favor of using saved  content
              details  as outlined above.  Nevertheless, in certain situations
              it can be useful to invoke the content population as an isolated
              operation  (typically  as part of implementing some other higher
              level feature or when using CMake in script mode):

                 FetchContent_Populate(
                   <name>
                   [QUIET]
                   [SUBBUILD_DIR <subBuildDir>]
                   [SOURCE_DIR <srcDir>]
                   [BINARY_DIR <binDir>]
                   ...
                 )

              This form has a number of key differences  to  that  where  only
              <name> is provided:

              • All  required population details are assumed to have been pro-
                vided directly in the  call  to  FetchContent_Populate().  Any
                saved details for <name> are ignored.

              • No  check  is  made for whether content for <name> has already
                been populated.

              • No global property is set to record that  the  population  has
                occurred.

              • No  global  properties record the source or binary directories
                used for the populated content.

              • The   FETCHCONTENT_FULLY_DISCONNECTED   and   FETCHCONTENT_UP-
                DATES_DISCONNECTED cache variables are ignored.

              The  <lowercaseName>_SOURCE_DIR  and  <lowercaseName>_BINARY_DIR
              variables are still returned to the caller, but since these  lo-
              cations  are  not  stored as global properties when this form is
              used, they are only available to the  calling  scope  and  below
              rather  than  the  entire  project  hierarchy.   No  <lowercase-
              Name>_POPULATED variable is set in the caller's scope with  this
              form.

              The  supported  options for FetchContent_Populate() are the same
              as those for FetchContent_Declare().  Those  few  options  shown
              just  above  are  either  specific to FetchContent_Populate() or
              their    behavior    is    slightly    modified     from     how
              ExternalProject_Add() treats them:

              QUIET  The  QUIET option can be given to hide the output associ-
                     ated with populating the specified content.  If the popu-
                     lation  fails,  the  output  will  be shown regardless of
                     whether this option was given or not so that the cause of
                     the  failure  can  be  diagnosed.   The  global FETCHCON-
                     TENT_QUIET cache variable  has  no  effect  on  FetchCon-
                     tent_Populate()  calls where the content details are pro-
                     vided directly.

              SUBBUILD_DIR
                     The SUBBUILD_DIR argument can be provided to  change  the
                     location  of the sub-build created to perform the popula-
                     tion.    The   default   value   is   ${CMAKE_CURRENT_BI-
                     NARY_DIR}/<lowercaseName>-subbuild  and  it  would be un-
                     usual to need to override this default.   If  a  relative
                     path  is specified, it will be interpreted as relative to
                     CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR.  This option should not be con-
                     fused  with  the  SOURCE_SUBDIR option which only affects
                     the FetchContent_MakeAvailable() command.

              SOURCE_DIR, BINARY_DIR
                     The SOURCE_DIR and BINARY_DIR arguments are supported  by
                     ExternalProject_Add(),  but  different default values are
                     used by FetchContent_Populate().  SOURCE_DIR defaults  to
                     ${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/<lowercaseName>-src  and  BI-
                     NARY_DIR defaults to  ${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/<lower-
                     caseName>-build.   If  a  relative  path is specified, it
                     will     be     interpreted      as      relative      to
                     CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR.

              In  addition  to  the above explicit options, any other unrecog-
              nized    options    are    passed    through    unmodified    to
              ExternalProject_Add()  to perform the download, patch and update
              steps.  The following options are  explicitly  prohibited  (they
              are disabled by the FetchContent_Populate() command):

              • CONFIGURE_COMMANDBUILD_COMMANDINSTALL_COMMANDTEST_COMMAND

              If  using FetchContent_Populate() within CMake's script mode, be
              aware that the implementation sets up a sub-build  which  there-
              fore  requires a CMake generator and build tool to be available.
              If these cannot be found by default,  then  the  CMAKE_GENERATOR
              and/or  CMAKE_MAKE_PROGRAM  variables will need to be set appro-
              priately on the command line invoking the script.

              New in version 3.18: Added support for  the  DOWNLOAD_NO_EXTRACT
              option.

       FetchContent_GetProperties
              When    using    saved    content    details,    a    call    to
              FetchContent_MakeAvailable() or FetchContent_Populate()  records
              information  in  global  properties  which can be queried at any
              time.  This information may include the source and binary direc-
              tories  associated  with the content and also whether or not the
              content population has been processed during the current config-
              ure run.

                 FetchContent_GetProperties(
                   <name>
                   [SOURCE_DIR <srcDirVar>]
                   [BINARY_DIR <binDirVar>]
                   [POPULATED <doneVar>]
                 )

              The  SOURCE_DIR, BINARY_DIR and POPULATED options can be used to
              specify which properties should be retrieved.  Each  option  ac-
              cepts  a  value  which  is  the name of the variable in which to
              store that property.  Most of the time though,  only  <name>  is
              given,  in  which case the call will then set the same variables
              as    a    call    to    FetchContent_MakeAvailable(name)     or
              FetchContent_Populate(name).   Note  that the SOURCE_DIR and BI-
              NARY_DIR values can be empty if  the  call  is  fulfilled  by  a
              dependency provider.

              This     command     is     rarely     needed     when     using
              FetchContent_MakeAvailable().  It is more commonly used as  part
              of      implementing      the     following     pattern     with
              FetchContent_Populate(), which ensures that the  relevant  vari-
              ables  will  always  be defined regardless of whether or not the
              population has been performed elsewhere in the project already:

                 # Check if population has already been performed
                 FetchContent_GetProperties(depname)
                 if(NOT depname_POPULATED)
                   # Fetch the content using previously declared details
                   FetchContent_Populate(depname)

                   # Set custom variables, policies, etc.
                   # ...

                   # Bring the populated content into the build
                   add_subdirectory(${depname_SOURCE_DIR} ${depname_BINARY_DIR})
                 endif()

       FetchContent_SetPopulated
              New in version 3.24.

              NOTE:
                 This command should only be called by  dependency  providers.
                 Calling  it  in  any  other context is unsupported and future
                 CMake versions may halt with a fatal error in such cases.

                 FetchContent_SetPopulated(
                   <name>
                   [SOURCE_DIR <srcDir>]
                   [BINARY_DIR <binDir>]
                 )

              If a provider command fulfills a  FETCHCONTENT_MAKEAVAILABLE_SE-
              RIAL  request, it must call this function before returning.  The
              SOURCE_DIR and BINARY_DIR arguments can be used to  specify  the
              values  that  FetchContent_GetProperties() should return for its
              corresponding arguments.  Only provide SOURCE_DIR and BINARY_DIR
              if  they  have the same meaning as if they had been populated by
              the built-in FetchContent_MakeAvailable() implementation.

   Variables
       A number of cache variables can influence the  behavior  where  details
       from a FetchContent_Declare() call are used to populate content.

       NOTE:
          All  of  these variables are intended for the developer to customize
          behavior.  They should not normally be set by the project.

       FETCHCONTENT_BASE_DIR
              In most cases, the saved details do not specify any options  re-
              lating to the directories to use for the internal sub-build, fi-
              nal source and build areas.  It is generally best to leave these
              decisions  up  to  the  FetchContent  module  to  handle  on the
              project's behalf.  The FETCHCONTENT_BASE_DIR cache variable con-
              trols  the  point under which all content population directories
              are collected, but in most cases, developers would not  need  to
              change this.  The default location is ${CMAKE_BINARY_DIR}/_deps,
              but if developers change this value, they should aim to keep the
              path  short  and  just  below the top level of the build tree to
              avoid running into path length problems on Windows.

       FETCHCONTENT_QUIET
              The logging output during population can be quite verbose,  mak-
              ing  the  configure stage quite noisy.  This cache option (ON by
              default) hides all population output unless an error is  encoun-
              tered.   If experiencing problems with hung downloads, temporar-
              ily switching this option off may help  diagnose  which  content
              population is causing the issue.

       FETCHCONTENT_FULLY_DISCONNECTED
              When  this  option is enabled, no attempt is made to download or
              update any content.  It is assumed that all content has  already
              been  populated in a previous run or the source directories have
              been pointed at existing contents  the  developer  has  provided
              manually  (using options described further below).  When the de-
              veloper knows that no changes have been made to any content  de-
              tails,  turning  this  option  ON can significantly speed up the
              configure stage.  It is OFF by default.

       FETCHCONTENT_UPDATES_DISCONNECTED
              This is  a  less  severe  download/update  control  compared  to
              FETCHCONTENT_FULLY_DISCONNECTED.  Instead of bypassing all down-
              load and update  logic,  FETCHCONTENT_UPDATES_DISCONNECTED  only
              disables  the  update stage.  Therefore, if content has not been
              downloaded previously, it will still be downloaded when this op-
              tion is enabled.  This can speed up the configure stage, but not
              as much as FETCHCONTENT_FULLY_DISCONNECTED.  It is  OFF  by  de-
              fault.

       FETCHCONTENT_TRY_FIND_PACKAGE_MODE
              New in version 3.24.

              This  variable  modifies the details that FetchContent_Declare()
              records for a given dependency.  While  it  ultimately  controls
              the  behavior  of  FetchContent_MakeAvailable(), it is the vari-
              able's value when FetchContent_Declare()  is  called  that  gets
              used.   It  makes no difference what the variable is set to when
              FetchContent_MakeAvailable()  is  called.   Since  the  variable
              should  only be set by the user and not by projects directly, it
              will typically have the same value throughout  anyway,  so  this
              distinction is not usually noticeable.

              FETCHCONTENT_TRY_FIND_PACKAGE_MODE  ultimately  controls whether
              FetchContent_MakeAvailable() is allowed to  call  find_package()
              to  satisfy a dependency.  The variable can be set to one of the
              following values:

              OPT_IN FetchContent_MakeAvailable()     will      only      call
                     find_package()  if  the  FetchContent_Declare()  call in-
                     cluded a FIND_PACKAGE_ARGS keyword.  This is also the de-
                     fault  behavior  if FETCHCONTENT_TRY_FIND_PACKAGE_MODE is
                     not set.

              ALWAYS find_package()       can       be        called        by
                     FetchContent_MakeAvailable()  regardless  of  whether the
                     FetchContent_Declare() call included a  FIND_PACKAGE_ARGS
                     keyword  or  not.   If  no  FIND_PACKAGE_ARGS keyword was
                     given, the behavior will be as  though  FIND_PACKAGE_ARGS
                     had been provided, with no additional arguments after it.

              NEVER  FetchContent_MakeAvailable()      will      not      call
                     find_package().   Any  FIND_PACKAGE_ARGS  given  to   the
                     FetchContent_Declare() call will be ignored.

              As         a         special         case,         if        the
              FETCHCONTENT_SOURCE_DIR_<uppercaseName> variable has a non-empty
              value  for a dependency, it is assumed that the user is overrid-
              ing all other  methods  of  making  that  dependency  available.
              FETCHCONTENT_TRY_FIND_PACKAGE_MODE  will  have no effect on that
              dependency and FetchContent_MakeAvailable() will not try to call
              find_package() for it.

       In  addition to the above, the following variables are also defined for
       each content name:

       FETCHCONTENT_SOURCE_DIR_<uppercaseName>
              If this is set, no download or update steps  are  performed  for
              the  specified  content and the <lowercaseName>_SOURCE_DIR vari-
              able returned to the caller is pointed at this  location.   This
              gives  developers  a way to have a separate checkout of the con-
              tent that they can modify freely without interference  from  the
              build.  The build simply uses that existing source, but it still
              defines <lowercaseName>_BINARY_DIR to point inside its own build
              area.   Developers are strongly encouraged to use this mechanism
              rather than editing the sources populated in the  default  loca-
              tion,  as changes to sources in the default location can be lost
              when content population details are changed by the project.

       FETCHCONTENT_UPDATES_DISCONNECTED_<uppercaseName>
              This      is      the      per-content       equivalent       of
              FETCHCONTENT_UPDATES_DISCONNECTED.  If the global option or this
              option is ON, then updates will be disabled for the  named  con-
              tent.   Disabling  updates  for individual content can be useful
              for content whose details rarely  change,  while  still  leaving
              other frequently changing content with updates enabled.

   Examples
   Typical Case
       This  first  fairly  straightforward  example ensures that some popular
       testing frameworks are available to the main build:

          include(FetchContent)
          FetchContent_Declare(
            googletest
            GIT_REPOSITORY https://github.com/google/googletest.git
            GIT_TAG        703bd9caab50b139428cea1aaff9974ebee5742e # release-1.10.0
          )
          FetchContent_Declare(
            Catch2
            GIT_REPOSITORY https://github.com/catchorg/Catch2.git
            GIT_TAG        de6fe184a9ac1a06895cdd1c9b437f0a0bdf14ad # v2.13.4
          )

          # After the following call, the CMake targets defined by googletest and
          # Catch2 will be available to the rest of the build
          FetchContent_MakeAvailable(googletest Catch2)

   Integrating With find_package()
       For the previous example, if the user wanted to try to find  googletest
       and Catch2 via find_package() first before trying to download and build
       them from source, they could set the FETCHCONTENT_TRY_FIND_PACKAGE_MODE
       variable  to  ALWAYS.   This  would  also  affect  any  other  calls to
       FetchContent_Declare() throughout the project, which might not  be  ac-
       ceptable.   The behavior can be enabled for just these two dependencies
       instead by adding FIND_PACKAGE_ARGS to the declared details and leaving
       FETCHCONTENT_TRY_FIND_PACKAGE_MODE unset, or set to OPT_IN:

          include(FetchContent)
          FetchContent_Declare(
            googletest
            GIT_REPOSITORY https://github.com/google/googletest.git
            GIT_TAG        703bd9caab50b139428cea1aaff9974ebee5742e # release-1.10.0
            FIND_PACKAGE_ARGS NAMES GTest
          )
          FetchContent_Declare(
            Catch2
            GIT_REPOSITORY https://github.com/catchorg/Catch2.git
            GIT_TAG        de6fe184a9ac1a06895cdd1c9b437f0a0bdf14ad # v2.13.4
            FIND_PACKAGE_ARGS
          )

          # This will try calling find_package() first for both dependencies
          FetchContent_MakeAvailable(googletest Catch2)

       For Catch2, no additional arguments to find_package() are needed, so no
       additional arguments are provided after the FIND_PACKAGE_ARGS  keyword.
       For googletest, its package is more commonly called GTest, so arguments
       are added to support it being found by that name.

       If the user wanted to disable FetchContent_MakeAvailable() from calling
       find_package()  for  any  dependency,  even  if  it provided FIND_PACK-
       AGE_ARGS    in    its    declared    details,    they     could     set
       FETCHCONTENT_TRY_FIND_PACKAGE_MODE to NEVER.

       If the project wanted to indicate that these two dependencies should be
       downloaded and built from source and that find_package()  calls  should
       be  redirected to use the built dependencies, the OVERRIDE_FIND_PACKAGE
       option should be used when declaring the content details:

          include(FetchContent)
          FetchContent_Declare(
            googletest
            GIT_REPOSITORY https://github.com/google/googletest.git
            GIT_TAG        703bd9caab50b139428cea1aaff9974ebee5742e # release-1.10.0
            OVERRIDE_FIND_PACKAGE
          )
          FetchContent_Declare(
            Catch2
            GIT_REPOSITORY https://github.com/catchorg/Catch2.git
            GIT_TAG        de6fe184a9ac1a06895cdd1c9b437f0a0bdf14ad # v2.13.4
            OVERRIDE_FIND_PACKAGE
          )

          # The following will automatically forward through to FetchContent_MakeAvailable()
          find_package(googletest)
          find_package(Catch2)

       CMake provides a FindGTest module which  defines  some  variables  that
       older  projects may use instead of linking to the imported targets.  To
       support those cases, we can provide an extra file.  In keeping with the
       "first  to  define, wins" philosophy of FetchContent, we only write out
       that file if something else hasn't already done so.

          FetchContent_MakeAvailable(googletest)

          if(NOT EXISTS ${CMAKE_FIND_PACKAGE_REDIRECTS_DIR}/googletest-extra.cmake AND
             NOT EXISTS ${CMAKE_FIND_PACKAGE_REDIRECTS_DIR}/googletestExtra.cmake)
            file(WRITE ${CMAKE_FIND_PACKAGE_REDIRECTS_DIR}/googletest-extra.cmake
          [=[
          if("${GTEST_LIBRARIES}" STREQUAL "" AND TARGET GTest::gtest)
            set(GTEST_LIBRARIES GTest::gtest)
          endif()
          if("${GTEST_MAIN_LIBRARIES}" STREQUAL "" AND TARGET GTest::gtest_main)
            set(GTEST_MAIN_LIBRARIES GTest::gtest_main)
          endif()
          if("${GTEST_BOTH_LIBRARIES}" STREQUAL "")
            set(GTEST_BOTH_LIBRARIES ${GTEST_LIBRARIES} ${GTEST_MAIN_LIBRARIES})
          endif()
          ]=])
          endif()

       Projects will also likely  be  using  find_package(GTest)  rather  than
       find_package(googletest),  but  it  is  possible  to  make  use  of the
       CMAKE_FIND_PACKAGE_REDIRECTS_DIR area to pull in the latter as a depen-
       dency of the former.  This is likely to be sufficient to satisfy a typ-
       ical find_package(GTest) call.

          FetchContent_MakeAvailable(googletest)

          if(NOT EXISTS ${CMAKE_FIND_PACKAGE_REDIRECTS_DIR}/gtest-config.cmake AND
             NOT EXISTS ${CMAKE_FIND_PACKAGE_REDIRECTS_DIR}/GTestConfig.cmake)
            file(WRITE ${CMAKE_FIND_PACKAGE_REDIRECTS_DIR}/gtest-config.cmake
          [=[
          include(CMakeFindDependencyMacro)
          find_dependency(googletest)
          ]=])
          endif()

          if(NOT EXISTS ${CMAKE_FIND_PACKAGE_REDIRECTS_DIR}/gtest-config-version.cmake AND
             NOT EXISTS ${CMAKE_FIND_PACKAGE_REDIRECTS_DIR}/GTestConfigVersion.cmake)
            file(WRITE ${CMAKE_FIND_PACKAGE_REDIRECTS_DIR}/gtest-config-version.cmake
          [=[
          include(${CMAKE_FIND_PACKAGE_REDIRECTS_DIR}/googletest-config-version.cmake OPTIONAL)
          if(NOT PACKAGE_VERSION_COMPATIBLE)
            include(${CMAKE_FIND_PACKAGE_REDIRECTS_DIR}/googletestConfigVersion.cmake OPTIONAL)
          endif()
          ]=])
          endif()

   Overriding Where To Find CMakeLists.txt
       If the sub-project's CMakeLists.txt file is not at the top level of its
       source  tree, the SOURCE_SUBDIR option can be used to tell FetchContent
       where to find it.  The following example shows how to use that  option,
       and  it  also sets a variable which is meaningful to the subproject be-
       fore pulling it into the main build (set as an INTERNAL cache  variable
       to avoid problems with policy CMP0077):

          include(FetchContent)
          FetchContent_Declare(
            protobuf
            GIT_REPOSITORY https://github.com/protocolbuffers/protobuf.git
            GIT_TAG        ae50d9b9902526efd6c7a1907d09739f959c6297 # v3.15.0
            SOURCE_SUBDIR  cmake
          )
          set(protobuf_BUILD_TESTS OFF CACHE INTERNAL "")
          FetchContent_MakeAvailable(protobuf)

   Complex Dependency Hierarchies
       In  more  complex project hierarchies, the dependency relationships can
       be more complicated.  Consider a hierarchy where projA is the top level
       project  and  it  depends  directly  on projects projB and projC.  Both
       projB and projC can be built standalone and they also  both  depend  on
       another  project projD.  projB additionally depends on projE.  This ex-
       ample assumes that all five projects are available  on  a  company  git
       server.   The  CMakeLists.txt  of each project might have sections like
       the following:

       projA:

          include(FetchContent)
          FetchContent_Declare(
            projB
            GIT_REPOSITORY git@mycompany.com:git/projB.git
            GIT_TAG        4a89dc7e24ff212a7b5167bef7ab079d
          )
          FetchContent_Declare(
            projC
            GIT_REPOSITORY git@mycompany.com:git/projC.git
            GIT_TAG        4ad4016bd1d8d5412d135cf8ceea1bb9
          )
          FetchContent_Declare(
            projD
            GIT_REPOSITORY git@mycompany.com:git/projD.git
            GIT_TAG        origin/integrationBranch
          )
          FetchContent_Declare(
            projE
            GIT_REPOSITORY git@mycompany.com:git/projE.git
            GIT_TAG        v2.3-rc1
          )

          # Order is important, see notes in the discussion further below
          FetchContent_MakeAvailable(projD projB projC)

       projB:

          include(FetchContent)
          FetchContent_Declare(
            projD
            GIT_REPOSITORY git@mycompany.com:git/projD.git
            GIT_TAG        20b415f9034bbd2a2e8216e9a5c9e632
          )
          FetchContent_Declare(
            projE
            GIT_REPOSITORY git@mycompany.com:git/projE.git
            GIT_TAG        68e20f674a48be38d60e129f600faf7d
          )

          FetchContent_MakeAvailable(projD projE)

       projC:

          include(FetchContent)
          FetchContent_Declare(
            projD
            GIT_REPOSITORY git@mycompany.com:git/projD.git
            GIT_TAG        7d9a17ad2c962aa13e2fbb8043fb6b8a
          )

          # This particular version of projD requires workarounds
          FetchContent_GetProperties(projD)
          if(NOT projd_POPULATED)
            FetchContent_Populate(projD)

            # Copy an additional/replacement file into the populated source
            file(COPY someFile.c DESTINATION ${projd_SOURCE_DIR}/src)

            add_subdirectory(${projd_SOURCE_DIR} ${projd_BINARY_DIR})
          endif()

       A few key points should be noted in the above:

       • projB and projC define different content details for projD, but projA
         also  defines a set of content details for projD.  Because projA will
         define them first, the details from projB and projC will not be used.
         The  override  details defined by projA are not required to match ei-
         ther of those from projB or projC, but it is up to the  higher  level
         project  to  ensure  that the details it does define still make sense
         for the child projects.

       • In the projA call to FetchContent_MakeAvailable(),  projD  is  listed
         ahead  of  projB  and projC to ensure that projA is in control of how
         projD is populated.

       • While projA defines content details for projE, it does  not  need  to
         explicitly   call   FetchContent_MakeAvailable(projE)   or  FetchCon-
         tent_Populate(projD) itself.  Instead, it leaves that  to  the  child
         projB.   For higher level projects, it is often enough to just define
         the override content details and leave the actual population  to  the
         child projects.  This saves repeating the same thing at each level of
         the project hierarchy unnecessarily.

   Populating Content Without Adding It To The Build
       Projects don't always need to add the populated content to  the  build.
       Sometimes  the project just wants to make the downloaded content avail-
       able at a predictable location.  The next example ensures that a set of
       standard  company  toolchain  files (and potentially even the toolchain
       binaries themselves) is available early enough to be used for that same
       build.

          cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.14)

          include(FetchContent)
          FetchContent_Declare(
            mycom_toolchains
            URL  https://intranet.mycompany.com//toolchains_1.3.2.tar.gz
          )
          FetchContent_MakeAvailable(mycom_toolchains)

          project(CrossCompileExample)

       The project could be configured to use one of the downloaded toolchains
       like so:

          cmake -DCMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE=_deps/mycom_toolchains-src/toolchain_arm.cmake /path/to/src

       When CMake processes the CMakeLists.txt file, it will download and  un-
       pack  the  tarball  into _deps/mycompany_toolchains-src relative to the
       build directory.  The CMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE variable is not  used  until
       the  project()  command  is reached, at which point CMake looks for the
       named toolchain file relative to the build directory.  Because the tar-
       ball  has  already  been downloaded and unpacked by then, the toolchain
       file will be in place, even the very first time that cmake  is  run  in
       the build directory.

   Populating Content In CMake Script Mode
       This  last  example  demonstrates  how  one might download and unpack a
       firmware  tarball   using   CMake's   script   mode.    The   call   to
       FetchContent_Populate()  specifies  all the content details and the un-
       packed firmware will be placed in a firmware directory below  the  cur-
       rent working directory.

       getFirmware.cmake:

          # NOTE: Intended to be run in script mode with cmake -P
          include(FetchContent)
          FetchContent_Populate(
            firmware
            URL        https://mycompany.com/assets/firmware-1.23-arm.tar.gz
            URL_HASH   MD5=68247684da89b608d466253762b0ff11
            SOURCE_DIR firmware
          )

   FindPackageHandleStandardArgs
       This  module provides functions intended to be used in Find Modules im-
       plementing find_package(<PackageName>) calls.

       find_package_handle_standard_args
              This command handles the REQUIRED, QUIET and version-related ar-
              guments of find_package().  It also sets the <PackageName>_FOUND
              variable.  The package is  considered  found  if  all  variables
              listed contain valid results, e.g. valid filepaths.

              There are two signatures:

                 find_package_handle_standard_args(<PackageName>
                   (DEFAULT_MSG|<custom-failure-message>)
                   <required-var>...
                   )

                 find_package_handle_standard_args(<PackageName>
                   [FOUND_VAR <result-var>]
                   [REQUIRED_VARS <required-var>...]
                   [VERSION_VAR <version-var>]
                   [HANDLE_VERSION_RANGE]
                   [HANDLE_COMPONENTS]
                   [CONFIG_MODE]
                   [NAME_MISMATCHED]
                   [REASON_FAILURE_MESSAGE <reason-failure-message>]
                   [FAIL_MESSAGE <custom-failure-message>]
                   )

              The  <PackageName>_FOUND variable will be set to TRUE if all the
              variables <required-var>... are  valid  and  any  optional  con-
              straints are satisfied, and FALSE otherwise.  A success or fail-
              ure message may be displayed based on the results and on whether
              the REQUIRED and/or QUIET option was given to the find_package()
              call.

              The options are:

              (DEFAULT_MSG|<custom-failure-message>)
                     In the simple signature this specifies the  failure  mes-
                     sage.  Use DEFAULT_MSG to ask for a default message to be
                     computed (recommended).  Not valid in the full signature.

              FOUND_VAR <result-var>
                     Deprecated since version 3.3.

                     Specifies   either   <PackageName>_FOUND   or   <PACKAGE-
                     NAME>_FOUND as the result variable.  This exists only for
                     compatibility with older versions of CMake and is now ig-
                     nored.  Result variables of both names are always set for
                     compatibility.

              REQUIRED_VARS <required-var>...
                     Specify the variables which are required for  this  pack-
                     age.  These may be named in the generated failure message
                     asking the user  to  set  the  missing  variable  values.
                     Therefore these should typically be cache entries such as
                     FOO_LIBRARY and not output variables like FOO_LIBRARIES.

                     Changed in version 3.18: If HANDLE_COMPONENTS  is  speci-
                     fied, this option can be omitted.

              VERSION_VAR <version-var>
                     Specify  the name of a variable that holds the version of
                     the package that has been found.  This  version  will  be
                     checked against the (potentially) specified required ver-
                     sion given to the find_package() call, including its  EX-
                     ACT  option.   The  default  messages include information
                     about the required version and the version which has been
                     actually found, both if the version is ok or not.

              HANDLE_VERSION_RANGE
                     New in version 3.19.

                     Enable  handling of a version range, if one is specified.
                     Without this option, a developer  warning  will  be  dis-
                     played if a version range is specified.

              HANDLE_COMPONENTS
                     Enable handling of package components.  In this case, the
                     command will report which components have been found  and
                     which  are  missing, and the <PackageName>_FOUND variable
                     will be set to FALSE if any of  the  required  components
                     (i.e.  not  the ones listed after the OPTIONAL_COMPONENTS
                     option of find_package()) are missing.

              CONFIG_MODE
                     Specify that the calling find module is a wrapper  around
                     a  call  to  find_package(<PackageName> NO_MODULE).  This
                     implies a  VERSION_VAR  value  of  <PackageName>_VERSION.
                     The  command will automatically check whether the package
                     configuration file was found.

              REASON_FAILURE_MESSAGE <reason-failure-message>
                     New in version 3.16.

                     Specify a custom message of the reason  for  the  failure
                     which will be appended to the default generated message.

              FAIL_MESSAGE <custom-failure-message>
                     Specify a custom failure message instead of using the de-
                     fault generated message.  Not recommended.

              NAME_MISMATCHED
                     New in version 3.17.

                     Indicate  that   the   <PackageName>   does   not   match
                     ${CMAKE_FIND_PACKAGE_NAME}. This is usually a mistake and
                     raises a warning, but it may be intentional for usage  of
                     the command for components of a larger package.

       Example for the simple signature:

          find_package_handle_standard_args(LibXml2 DEFAULT_MSG
            LIBXML2_LIBRARY LIBXML2_INCLUDE_DIR)

       The  LibXml2  package is considered to be found if both LIBXML2_LIBRARY
       and LIBXML2_INCLUDE_DIR are valid.  Then also LibXml2_FOUND is  set  to
       TRUE.   If  it  is  not  found  and  REQUIRED was used, it fails with a
       message(FATAL_ERROR), independent whether QUIET was used or not.  If it
       is  found, success will be reported, including the content of the first
       <required-var>.  On repeated CMake runs, the same message will  not  be
       printed again.

       NOTE:
          If  <PackageName>  does  not  match  CMAKE_FIND_PACKAGE_NAME for the
          calling module, a warning that there is a  mismatch  is  given.  The
          FPHSA_NAME_MISMATCHED  variable  may be set to bypass the warning if
          using the old signature and the NAME_MISMATCHED argument  using  the
          new signature. To avoid forcing the caller to require newer versions
          of CMake for usage, the variable's value will  be  used  if  defined
          when  the  NAME_MISMATCHED argument is not passed for the new signa-
          ture (but using both is an error)..

       Example for the full signature:

          find_package_handle_standard_args(LibArchive
            REQUIRED_VARS LibArchive_LIBRARY LibArchive_INCLUDE_DIR
            VERSION_VAR LibArchive_VERSION)

       In this case, the LibArchive package is considered to be found if  both
       LibArchive_LIBRARY and LibArchive_INCLUDE_DIR are valid.  Also the ver-
       sion of LibArchive will be checked by using the  version  contained  in
       LibArchive_VERSION.   Since  no FAIL_MESSAGE is given, the default mes-
       sages will be printed.

       Another example for the full signature:

          find_package(Automoc4 QUIET NO_MODULE HINTS /opt/automoc4)
          find_package_handle_standard_args(Automoc4  CONFIG_MODE)

       In this case, a FindAutmoc4.cmake module wraps  a  call  to  find_pack-
       age(Automoc4 NO_MODULE) and adds an additional search directory for au-
       tomoc4.  Then the call to find_package_handle_standard_args produces  a
       proper success/failure message.

       find_package_check_version
              New in version 3.19.

              Helper  function  which  can  be used to check if a <version> is
              valid against version-related arguments of find_package().

                 find_package_check_version(<version> <result-var>
                   [HANDLE_VERSION_RANGE]
                   [RESULT_MESSAGE_VARIABLE <message-var>]
                   )

              The <result-var> will hold a boolean value giving the result  of
              the check.

              The options are:

              HANDLE_VERSION_RANGE
                     Enable  handling of a version range, if one is specified.
                     Without this option, a developer  warning  will  be  dis-
                     played if a version range is specified.

              RESULT_MESSAGE_VARIABLE <message-var>
                     Specify  a  variable to get back a message describing the
                     result of the check.

       Example for the usage:

          find_package_check_version(1.2.3 result HANDLE_VERSION_RANGE
            RESULT_MESSAGE_VARIABLE reason)
          if (result)
            message (STATUS "${reason}")
          else()
            message (FATAL_ERROR "${reason}")
          endif()

   FindPackageMessage
          find_package_message(<name> "message for user" "find result details")

       This function is intended to be used in  FindXXX.cmake  modules  files.
       It will print a message once for each unique find result.  This is use-
       ful for telling the user where a package was found.  The first argument
       specifies the name (XXX) of the package.  The second argument specifies
       the message to display.  The third argument  lists  details  about  the
       find result so that if they change the message will be displayed again.
       The macro also obeys the QUIET argument to the find_package command.

       Example:

          if(X11_FOUND)
            find_package_message(X11 "Found X11: ${X11_X11_LIB}"
              "[${X11_X11_LIB}][${X11_INCLUDE_DIR}]")
          else()
           ...
          endif()

   FortranCInterface
       Fortran/C Interface Detection

       This module automatically detects the API by which C and  Fortran  lan-
       guages interact.

   Module Variables
       Variables that indicate if the mangling is found:

       FortranCInterface_GLOBAL_FOUND
              Global subroutines and functions.

       FortranCInterface_MODULE_FOUND
              Module  subroutines  and  functions  (declared by "MODULE PROCE-
              DURE").

       This module also provides the following variables to  specify  the  de-
       tected  mangling,  though a typical use case does not need to reference
       them and can use the Module Functions below.

       FortranCInterface_GLOBAL_PREFIX
              Prefix for a global symbol without an underscore.

       FortranCInterface_GLOBAL_SUFFIX
              Suffix for a global symbol without an underscore.

       FortranCInterface_GLOBAL_CASE
              The case for a global symbol without an underscore, either UPPER
              or LOWER.

       FortranCInterface_GLOBAL__PREFIX
              Prefix for a global symbol with an underscore.

       FortranCInterface_GLOBAL__SUFFIX
              Suffix for a global symbol with an underscore.

       FortranCInterface_GLOBAL__CASE
              The case for a global symbol with an underscore, either UPPER or
              LOWER.

       FortranCInterface_MODULE_PREFIX
              Prefix for a module symbol without an underscore.

       FortranCInterface_MODULE_MIDDLE
              Middle of a module symbol without an underscore that appears be-
              tween the name of the module and the name of the symbol.

       FortranCInterface_MODULE_SUFFIX
              Suffix for a module symbol without an underscore.

       FortranCInterface_MODULE_CASE
              The case for a module symbol without an underscore, either UPPER
              or LOWER.

       FortranCInterface_MODULE__PREFIX
              Prefix for a module symbol with an underscore.

       FortranCInterface_MODULE__MIDDLE
              Middle of a module symbol with an underscore  that  appears  be-
              tween the name of the module and the name of the symbol.

       FortranCInterface_MODULE__SUFFIX
              Suffix for a module symbol with an underscore.

       FortranCInterface_MODULE__CASE
              The case for a module symbol with an underscore, either UPPER or
              LOWER.

   Module Functions
       FortranCInterface_HEADER
              The FortranCInterface_HEADER function is provided to generate  a
              C header file containing macros to mangle symbol names:

                 FortranCInterface_HEADER(<file>
                                          [MACRO_NAMESPACE <macro-ns>]
                                          [SYMBOL_NAMESPACE <ns>]
                                          [SYMBOLS [<module>:]<function> ...])

              It generates in <file> definitions of the following macros:

                 #define FortranCInterface_GLOBAL (name,NAME) ...
                 #define FortranCInterface_GLOBAL_(name,NAME) ...
                 #define FortranCInterface_MODULE (mod,name, MOD,NAME) ...
                 #define FortranCInterface_MODULE_(mod,name, MOD,NAME) ...

              These  macros mangle four categories of Fortran symbols, respec-
              tively:

              • Global symbols without '_': call mysub()

              • Global symbols with '_'   : call my_sub()

              • Module symbols without '_': use mymod; call mysub()

              • Module symbols with '_'   : use mymod; call my_sub()

              If mangling for a category is not known, its macro is left unde-
              fined.   All macros require raw names in both lower case and up-
              per case.

              The options are:

              MACRO_NAMESPACE
                     Replace the  default  FortranCInterface_  prefix  with  a
                     given namespace <macro-ns>.

              SYMBOLS
                     List  symbols to mangle automatically with C preprocessor
                     definitions:

                        <function>          ==> #define <ns><function> ...
                        <module>:<function> ==> #define <ns><module>_<function> ...

                     If the mangling for some symbol is not known then no pre-
                     processor  definition  is  created, and a warning is dis-
                     played.

              SYMBOL_NAMESPACE
                     Prefix all preprocessor definitions generated by the SYM-
                     BOLS option with a given namespace <ns>.

       FortranCInterface_VERIFY
              The FortranCInterface_VERIFY function is provided to verify that
              the Fortran and C/C++ compilers work together:

                 FortranCInterface_VERIFY([CXX] [QUIET])

              It tests whether a simple test executable using  Fortran  and  C
              (and  C++  when the CXX option is given) compiles and links suc-
              cessfully.  The result is stored in the cache entry  FortranCIn-
              terface_VERIFIED_C  (or FortranCInterface_VERIFIED_CXX if CXX is
              given) as a boolean.  If the check fails and QUIET is not  given
              the  function  terminates  with a fatal error message describing
              the problem.  The purpose of this check is to stop a build early
              for  incompatible  compiler  combinations.  The test is built in
              the Release configuration.

   Example Usage
          include(FortranCInterface)
          FortranCInterface_HEADER(FC.h MACRO_NAMESPACE "FC_")

       This creates a "FC.h" header that defines mangling macros  FC_GLOBAL(),
       FC_GLOBAL_(), FC_MODULE(), and FC_MODULE_().

          include(FortranCInterface)
          FortranCInterface_HEADER(FCMangle.h
                                   MACRO_NAMESPACE "FC_"
                                   SYMBOL_NAMESPACE "FC_"
                                   SYMBOLS mysub mymod:my_sub)

       This  creates  a  "FCMangle.h" header that defines the same FC_*() man-
       gling macros as the previous example plus preprocessor symbols FC_mysub
       and FC_mymod_my_sub.

   Additional Manglings
       FortranCInterface  is aware of possible GLOBAL and MODULE manglings for
       many Fortran compilers, but it also provides an  interface  to  specify
       new possible manglings.  Set the variables:

          FortranCInterface_GLOBAL_SYMBOLS
          FortranCInterface_MODULE_SYMBOLS

       before  including FortranCInterface to specify manglings of the symbols
       MySub, My_Sub, MyModule:MySub, and My_Module:My_Sub.  For example,  the
       code:

          set(FortranCInterface_GLOBAL_SYMBOLS mysub_ my_sub__ MYSUB_)
            #                                  ^^^^^  ^^^^^^   ^^^^^
          set(FortranCInterface_MODULE_SYMBOLS
              __mymodule_MOD_mysub __my_module_MOD_my_sub)
            #   ^^^^^^^^     ^^^^^   ^^^^^^^^^     ^^^^^^
          include(FortranCInterface)

       tells FortranCInterface to try given GLOBAL and MODULE manglings.  (The
       carets point at raw symbol names for clarity in this  example  but  are
       not needed.)

   GenerateExportHeader
       Function for generation of export macros for libraries

       This module provides the function GENERATE_EXPORT_HEADER().

       New  in  version 3.12: Added support for C projects.  Previous versions
       supported C++ project only.

       The GENERATE_EXPORT_HEADER function can be  used  to  generate  a  file
       suitable  for preprocessor inclusion which contains EXPORT macros to be
       used in library classes:

          GENERATE_EXPORT_HEADER( LIBRARY_TARGET
                    [BASE_NAME <base_name>]
                    [EXPORT_MACRO_NAME <export_macro_name>]
                    [EXPORT_FILE_NAME <export_file_name>]
                    [DEPRECATED_MACRO_NAME <deprecated_macro_name>]
                    [NO_EXPORT_MACRO_NAME <no_export_macro_name>]
                    [INCLUDE_GUARD_NAME <include_guard_name>]
                    [STATIC_DEFINE <static_define>]
                    [NO_DEPRECATED_MACRO_NAME <no_deprecated_macro_name>]
                    [DEFINE_NO_DEPRECATED]
                    [PREFIX_NAME <prefix_name>]
                    [CUSTOM_CONTENT_FROM_VARIABLE <variable>]
          )

       The       target       properties       CXX_VISIBILITY_PRESET       and
       VISIBILITY_INLINES_HIDDEN  can  be  used to add the appropriate compile
       flags for targets.  See the documentation of those  target  properties,
       and   the   convenience   variables   CMAKE_CXX_VISIBILITY_PRESET   and
       CMAKE_VISIBILITY_INLINES_HIDDEN.

       By default GENERATE_EXPORT_HEADER() generates macro  names  in  a  file
       name  determined  by  the  name of the library.  This means that in the
       simplest case, users of GenerateExportHeader will be equivalent to:

          set(CMAKE_CXX_VISIBILITY_PRESET hidden)
          set(CMAKE_VISIBILITY_INLINES_HIDDEN 1)
          add_library(somelib someclass.cpp)
          generate_export_header(somelib)
          install(TARGETS somelib DESTINATION ${LIBRARY_INSTALL_DIR})
          install(FILES
           someclass.h
           ${PROJECT_BINARY_DIR}/somelib_export.h DESTINATION ${INCLUDE_INSTALL_DIR}
          )

       And in the ABI header files:

          #include "somelib_export.h"
          class SOMELIB_EXPORT SomeClass {
            ...
          };

       The CMake fragment will generate  a  file  in  the  ${CMAKE_CURRENT_BI-
       NARY_DIR} called somelib_export.h containing the macros SOMELIB_EXPORT,
       SOMELIB_NO_EXPORT,  SOMELIB_DEPRECATED,  SOMELIB_DEPRECATED_EXPORT  and
       SOMELIB_DEPRECATED_NO_EXPORT.   They  will be followed by content taken
       from the variable specified by the CUSTOM_CONTENT_FROM_VARIABLE option,
       if  any.   The resulting file should be installed with other headers in
       the library.

       The BASE_NAME argument can be used to override the file  name  and  the
       names used for the macros:

          add_library(somelib someclass.cpp)
          generate_export_header(somelib
            BASE_NAME other_name
          )

       Generates  a  file  called  other_name_export.h  containing  the macros
       OTHER_NAME_EXPORT, OTHER_NAME_NO_EXPORT and OTHER_NAME_DEPRECATED etc.

       The BASE_NAME may be overridden by  specifying  other  options  in  the
       function.  For example:

          add_library(somelib someclass.cpp)
          generate_export_header(somelib
            EXPORT_MACRO_NAME OTHER_NAME_EXPORT
          )

       creates  the  macro  OTHER_NAME_EXPORT  instead  of SOMELIB_EXPORT, but
       other macros and the generated file name is as default:

          add_library(somelib someclass.cpp)
          generate_export_header(somelib
            DEPRECATED_MACRO_NAME KDE_DEPRECATED
          )

       creates the macro KDE_DEPRECATED instead of SOMELIB_DEPRECATED.

       If LIBRARY_TARGET is a static library, macros are defined without  val-
       ues.

       If  the  same sources are used to create both a shared and a static li-
       brary, the uppercased symbol ${BASE_NAME}_STATIC_DEFINE should be  used
       when building the static library:

          add_library(shared_variant SHARED ${lib_SRCS})
          add_library(static_variant ${lib_SRCS})
          generate_export_header(shared_variant BASE_NAME libshared_and_static)
          set_target_properties(static_variant PROPERTIES
            COMPILE_FLAGS -DLIBSHARED_AND_STATIC_STATIC_DEFINE)

       This  will  cause  the export macros to expand to nothing when building
       the static library.

       If DEFINE_NO_DEPRECATED is specified, then a macro ${BASE_NAME}_NO_DEP-
       RECATED  will  be  defined  This macro can be used to remove deprecated
       code from preprocessor output:

          option(EXCLUDE_DEPRECATED "Exclude deprecated parts of the library" FALSE)
          if (EXCLUDE_DEPRECATED)
            set(NO_BUILD_DEPRECATED DEFINE_NO_DEPRECATED)
          endif()
          generate_export_header(somelib ${NO_BUILD_DEPRECATED})

       And then in somelib:

          class SOMELIB_EXPORT SomeClass
          {
          public:
          #ifndef SOMELIB_NO_DEPRECATED
            SOMELIB_DEPRECATED void oldMethod();
          #endif
          };

          #ifndef SOMELIB_NO_DEPRECATED
          void SomeClass::oldMethod() {  }
          #endif

       If PREFIX_NAME is specified, the argument will be used as a  prefix  to
       all generated macros.

       For example:

          generate_export_header(somelib PREFIX_NAME VTK_)

       Generates the macros VTK_SOMELIB_EXPORT etc.

       New in version 3.1: Library target can be an OBJECT library.

       New in version 3.7: Added the CUSTOM_CONTENT_FROM_VARIABLE option.

       New in version 3.11: Added the INCLUDE_GUARD_NAME option.

          ADD_COMPILER_EXPORT_FLAGS( [<output_variable>] )

       Deprecated    since    version   3.0:   Set   the   target   properties
       CXX_VISIBILITY_PRESET and VISIBILITY_INLINES_HIDDEN instead.

       The  ADD_COMPILER_EXPORT_FLAGS  function  adds  -fvisibility=hidden  to
       CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS  if supported, and is a no-op on Windows which does not
       need extra compiler flags for exporting support.   You  may  optionally
       pass  a single argument to ADD_COMPILER_EXPORT_FLAGS that will be popu-
       lated with the CXX_FLAGS required to enable visibility support for  the
       compiler/architecture in use.

   GetPrerequisites
       Deprecated  since  version 3.16: Use file(GET_RUNTIME_DEPENDENCIES) in-
       stead.

       Functions to analyze and list executable file prerequisites.

       This module provides functions to list the .dll, .dylib  or  .so  files
       that  an  executable or shared library file depends on.  (Its prerequi-
       sites.)

       It uses various tools to obtain the list  of  required  shared  library
       files:

          dumpbin (Windows)
          objdump (MinGW on Windows)
          ldd (Linux/Unix)
          otool (Mac OSX)

       Changed  in  version  3.16: The tool specified by CMAKE_OBJDUMP will be
       used, if set.

       The following functions are provided by this module:

          get_prerequisites
          list_prerequisites
          list_prerequisites_by_glob
          gp_append_unique
          is_file_executable
          gp_item_default_embedded_path
            (projects can override with gp_item_default_embedded_path_override)
          gp_resolve_item
            (projects can override with gp_resolve_item_override)
          gp_resolved_file_type
            (projects can override with gp_resolved_file_type_override)
          gp_file_type

          GET_PREREQUISITES(<target> <prerequisites_var> <exclude_system> <recurse>
                            <exepath> <dirs> [<rpaths>])

       Get the list of shared library files required by <target>.  The list in
       the  variable  named <prerequisites_var> should be empty on first entry
       to this function.  On exit, <prerequisites_var> will contain  the  list
       of required shared library files.

       <target>  is  the full path to an executable file.  <prerequisites_var>
       is the name of a CMake variable to contain the results.   <exclude_sys-
       tem>  must  be 0 or 1 indicating whether to include or exclude "system"
       prerequisites.  If <recurse> is set to  1  all  prerequisites  will  be
       found  recursively,  if  set to 0 only direct prerequisites are listed.
       <exepath> is the path to  the  top  level  executable  used  for  @exe-
       cutable_path  replacement  on the Mac.  <dirs> is a list of paths where
       libraries might be found: these paths are searched first when a  target
       without  any  path  info  is given.  Then standard system locations are
       also searched: PATH, Framework locations, /usr/lib...

       New in version 3.14: The variable GET_PREREQUISITES_VERBOSE can be  set
       to true to enable verbose output.

          LIST_PREREQUISITES(<target> [<recurse> [<exclude_system> [<verbose>]]])

       Print a message listing the prerequisites of <target>.

       <target>  is  the  name of a shared library or executable target or the
       full path to a shared library or executable file.  If <recurse> is  set
       to  1 all prerequisites will be found recursively, if set to 0 only di-
       rect prerequisites are listed.  <exclude_system> must be 0 or  1  indi-
       cating  whether  to  include  or  exclude "system" prerequisites.  With
       <verbose> set to 0 only the full path names of  the  prerequisites  are
       printed, set to 1 extra information will be displayed.

          LIST_PREREQUISITES_BY_GLOB(<glob_arg> <glob_exp>)

       Print the prerequisites of shared library and executable files matching
       a globbing pattern.  <glob_arg> is GLOB or GLOB_RECURSE and  <glob_exp>
       is  a  globbing expression used with "file(GLOB" or "file(GLOB_RECURSE"
       to retrieve a list of matching files.   If  a  matching  file  is  exe-
       cutable, its prerequisites are listed.

       Any  additional  (optional)  arguments provided are passed along as the
       optional arguments to the list_prerequisites calls.

          GP_APPEND_UNIQUE(<list_var> <value>)

       Append <value> to the list variable <list_var> only if the value is not
       already in the list.

          IS_FILE_EXECUTABLE(<file> <result_var>)

       Return 1 in <result_var> if <file> is a binary executable, 0 otherwise.

          GP_ITEM_DEFAULT_EMBEDDED_PATH(<item> <default_embedded_path_var>)

       Return  the  path that others should refer to the item by when the item
       is embedded inside a bundle.

       Override  on  a  per-project  basis  by  providing  a  project-specific
       gp_item_default_embedded_path_override function.

          GP_RESOLVE_ITEM(<context> <item> <exepath> <dirs> <resolved_item_var>
                          [<rpaths>])

       Resolve an item into an existing full path file.

       Override  on a per-project basis by providing a project-specific gp_re-
       solve_item_override function.

          GP_RESOLVED_FILE_TYPE(<original_file> <file> <exepath> <dirs> <type_var>
                                [<rpaths>])

       Return the type of <file> with respect to <original_file>.  String  de-
       scribing type of prerequisite is returned in variable named <type_var>.

       Use  <exepath>  and  <dirs> if necessary to resolve non-absolute <file>
       values -- but only for non-embedded items.

       Possible types are:

          system
          local
          embedded
          other

       Override on a per-project basis by providing a project-specific  gp_re-
       solved_file_type_override function.

          GP_FILE_TYPE(<original_file> <file> <type_var>)

       Return  the type of <file> with respect to <original_file>.  String de-
       scribing type of prerequisite is returned in variable named <type_var>.

       Possible types are:

          system
          local
          embedded
          other

   GNUInstallDirs
       Define GNU standard installation directories

       Provides install directory variables as defined by the GNU Coding Stan-
       dards.

   Result Variables
       Inclusion of this module defines the following variables:

       CMAKE_INSTALL_<dir>
          Destination  for files of a given type.  This value may be passed to
          the DESTINATION options of install() commands for the  corresponding
          file  type.  It should typically be a path relative to the installa-
          tion prefix so that it can be converted to an absolute path in a re-
          locatable  way (see CMAKE_INSTALL_FULL_<dir>).  However, an absolute
          path is also allowed.

       CMAKE_INSTALL_FULL_<dir>
          The  absolute  path  generated  from  the  corresponding   CMAKE_IN-
          STALL_<dir> value.  If the value is not already an absolute path, an
          absolute path is constructed typically by prepending  the  value  of
          the  CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX variable.  However, there are some special
          cases as documented below.

       where <dir> is one of:

       BINDIR user executables (bin)

       SBINDIR
              system admin executables (sbin)

       LIBEXECDIR
              program executables (libexec)

       SYSCONFDIR
              read-only single-machine data (etc)

       SHAREDSTATEDIR
              modifiable architecture-independent data (com)

       LOCALSTATEDIR
              modifiable single-machine data (var)

       RUNSTATEDIR
              New in version 3.9: run-time variable data (LOCALSTATEDIR/run)

       LIBDIR object code libraries (lib or lib64)

              On   Debian,   this   may    be    lib/<multiarch-tuple>    when
              CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX is /usr.

       INCLUDEDIR
              C header files (include)

       OLDINCLUDEDIR
              C header files for non-gcc (/usr/include)

       DATAROOTDIR
              read-only architecture-independent data root (share)

       DATADIR
              read-only architecture-independent data (DATAROOTDIR)

       INFODIR
              info documentation (DATAROOTDIR/info)

       LOCALEDIR
              locale-dependent data (DATAROOTDIR/locale)

       MANDIR man documentation (DATAROOTDIR/man)

       DOCDIR documentation root (DATAROOTDIR/doc/PROJECT_NAME)

       If the includer does not define a value the above-shown default will be
       used and the value will appear in the cache for editing by the user.

   Special Cases
       New in version 3.4.

       The following values of CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX are special:

       /
          For <dir> other than the SYSCONFDIR, LOCALSTATEDIR and  RUNSTATEDIR,
          the  value of CMAKE_INSTALL_<dir> is prefixed with usr/ if it is not
          user-specified as an absolute path.   For  example,  the  INCLUDEDIR
          value include becomes usr/include.  This is required by the GNU Cod-
          ing Standards, which state:
              When building the complete GNU system, the prefix will be  empty
              and /usr will be a symbolic link to /.

       /usr
          For  <dir>  equal  to  SYSCONFDIR, LOCALSTATEDIR or RUNSTATEDIR, the
          CMAKE_INSTALL_FULL_<dir> is computed by prepending  just  /  to  the
          value of CMAKE_INSTALL_<dir> if it is not user-specified as an abso-
          lute path.  For example, the  SYSCONFDIR  value  etc  becomes  /etc.
          This is required by the GNU Coding Standards.

       /opt/...
          For  <dir>  equal  to  SYSCONFDIR, LOCALSTATEDIR or RUNSTATEDIR, the
          CMAKE_INSTALL_FULL_<dir> is computed by appending the prefix to  the
          value of CMAKE_INSTALL_<dir> if it is not user-specified as an abso-
          lute  path.   For  example,  the  SYSCONFDIR   value   etc   becomes
          /etc/opt/....  This is defined by the Filesystem Hierarchy Standard.

          This behavior does not apply to paths under /opt/homebrew/....

   Macros
       GNUInstallDirs_get_absolute_install_dir

                 GNUInstallDirs_get_absolute_install_dir(absvar var dirname)

              New in version 3.7.

              Set  the  given  variable  absvar to the absolute path contained
              within the variable var.  This is to allow the computation of an
              absolute  path,  accounting for all the special cases documented
              above.   While  this  macro  is  used  to  compute  the  various
              CMAKE_INSTALL_FULL_<dir>  variables,  it  is exposed publicly to
              allow users who create additional path variables to also compute
              absolute  paths  where necessary, using the same logic.  dirname
              is the directory name to get, e.g. BINDIR.

              Changed in version 3.20: Added the <dirname> parameter.   Previ-
              ous  versions  of  CMake  passed this value through the variable
              ${dir}.

   GoogleTest
       New in version 3.9.

       This module defines functions to help use the Google  Test  infrastruc-
       ture.   Two mechanisms for adding tests are provided. gtest_add_tests()
       has been around for  some  time,  originally  via  find_package(GTest).
       gtest_discover_tests() was introduced in CMake 3.10.

       The  (older)  gtest_add_tests()  scans  source files to identify tests.
       This is usually effective, with some caveats, including  in  cross-com-
       piling  environments,  and makes setting additional properties on tests
       more convenient.  However, its handling of parameterized tests is  less
       comprehensive,  and  it  requires re-running CMake to detect changes to
       the list of tests.

       The (newer) gtest_discover_tests() discovers tests by asking  the  com-
       piled  test executable to enumerate its tests.  This is more robust and
       provides better handling of parameterized tests, and does  not  require
       CMake  to  be  re-run when tests change.  However, it may not work in a
       cross-compiling environment, and setting test properties is less conve-
       nient.

       More  details can be found in the documentation of the respective func-
       tions.

       Both commands are intended to replace use  of  add_test()  to  register
       tests,  and will create a separate CTest test for each Google Test test
       case.  Note that this is in some cases less efficient, as common set-up
       and  tear-down  logic cannot be shared by multiple test cases executing
       in the same instance.  However, it provides more fine-grained pass/fail
       information  to  CTest, which is usually considered as more beneficial.
       By default, the CTest test name is the same as  the  Google  Test  name
       (i.e. suite.testcase); see also TEST_PREFIX and TEST_SUFFIX.

       gtest_add_tests
              Automatically  add  tests with CTest by scanning source code for
              Google Test macros:

                 gtest_add_tests(TARGET target
                                 [SOURCES src1...]
                                 [EXTRA_ARGS arg1...]
                                 [WORKING_DIRECTORY dir]
                                 [TEST_PREFIX prefix]
                                 [TEST_SUFFIX suffix]
                                 [SKIP_DEPENDENCY]
                                 [TEST_LIST outVar]
                 )

              gtest_add_tests attempts to identify tests  by  scanning  source
              files.  Although this is generally effective, it uses only a ba-
              sic regular expression match, which can be defeated by  atypical
              test  declarations, and is unable to fully "split" parameterized
              tests.  Additionally, it requires that CMake be re-run  to  dis-
              cover  any  newly  added,  removed or renamed tests (by default,
              this means that CMake is re-run when any  test  source  file  is
              changed,  but  see SKIP_DEPENDENCY).  However, it has the advan-
              tage of declaring tests at CMake time, which somewhat simplifies
              setting  additional  properties  on tests, and always works in a
              cross-compiling environment.

              The options are:

              TARGET target
                     Specifies the Google Test executable,  which  must  be  a
                     known CMake executable target.  CMake will substitute the
                     location of the built executable when running the test.

              SOURCES src1...
                     When provided, only the listed files will be scanned  for
                     test  cases.   If  this  option is not given, the SOURCES
                     property of the specified target will be used  to  obtain
                     the list of sources.

              EXTRA_ARGS arg1...
                     Any  extra  arguments to pass on the command line to each
                     test case.

              WORKING_DIRECTORY dir
                     Specifies the directory in which to  run  the  discovered
                     test  cases.  If this option is not provided, the current
                     binary directory is used.

              TEST_PREFIX prefix
                     Specifies a prefix to be prepended to the  name  of  each
                     discovered  test  case.  This can be useful when the same
                     source  files  are  being  used  in  multiple  calls   to
                     gtest_add_test() but with different EXTRA_ARGS.

              TEST_SUFFIX suffix
                     Similar  to  TEST_PREFIX except the suffix is appended to
                     the name of every discovered test case.  Both TEST_PREFIX
                     and TEST_SUFFIX may be specified.

              SKIP_DEPENDENCY
                     Normally,  the  function  creates a dependency which will
                     cause CMake to be re-run if  any  of  the  sources  being
                     scanned  are changed.  This is to ensure that the list of
                     discovered tests is updated.  If this behavior is not de-
                     sired (as may be the case while actually writing the test
                     cases), this option can be used to prevent the dependency
                     from being added.

              TEST_LIST outVar
                     The  variable  named  by  outVar will be populated in the
                     calling scope with the list  of  discovered  test  cases.
                     This  allows the caller to do things like manipulate test
                     properties of the discovered tests.

              Usage example:

                 include(GoogleTest)
                 add_executable(FooTest FooUnitTest.cxx)
                 gtest_add_tests(TARGET      FooTest
                                 TEST_SUFFIX .noArgs
                                 TEST_LIST   noArgsTests
                 )
                 gtest_add_tests(TARGET      FooTest
                                 EXTRA_ARGS  --someArg someValue
                                 TEST_SUFFIX .withArgs
                                 TEST_LIST   withArgsTests
                 )
                 set_tests_properties(${noArgsTests}   PROPERTIES TIMEOUT 10)
                 set_tests_properties(${withArgsTests} PROPERTIES TIMEOUT 20)

              For backward compatibility, the  following  form  is  also  sup-
              ported:

                 gtest_add_tests(exe args files...)

              exe    The  path  to  the test executable or the name of a CMake
                     target.

              args   A ;-list of extra arguments to be passed  to  executable.
                     The entire list must be passed as a single argument.  En-
                     close it in quotes, or pass "" for no arguments.

              files...
                     A list of source files to search for tests and test  fix-
                     tures.   Alternatively,  use  AUTO to specify that exe is
                     the name of  a  CMake  executable  target  whose  sources
                     should be scanned.

                 include(GoogleTest)
                 set(FooTestArgs --foo 1 --bar 2)
                 add_executable(FooTest FooUnitTest.cxx)
                 gtest_add_tests(FooTest "${FooTestArgs}" AUTO)

       gtest_discover_tests
              Automatically add tests with CTest by querying the compiled test
              executable for available tests:

                 gtest_discover_tests(target
                                      [EXTRA_ARGS arg1...]
                                      [WORKING_DIRECTORY dir]
                                      [TEST_PREFIX prefix]
                                      [TEST_SUFFIX suffix]
                                      [TEST_FILTER expr]
                                      [NO_PRETTY_TYPES] [NO_PRETTY_VALUES]
                                      [PROPERTIES name1 value1...]
                                      [TEST_LIST var]
                                      [DISCOVERY_TIMEOUT seconds]
                                      [XML_OUTPUT_DIR dir]
                                      [DISCOVERY_MODE <POST_BUILD|PRE_TEST>]
                 )

              New in version 3.10.

              gtest_discover_tests() sets up a post-build command on the  test
              executable  that generates the list of tests by parsing the out-
              put from running the test with the --gtest_list_tests  argument.
              Compared  to  the  source parsing approach of gtest_add_tests(),
              this ensures that the full list of tests,  including  instantia-
              tions of parameterized tests, is obtained.  Since test discovery
              occurs at build time, it is not necessary to re-run  CMake  when
              the   list   of   tests  changes.   However,  it  requires  that
              CROSSCOMPILING_EMULATOR is properly set in order to function  in
              a cross-compiling environment.

              Additionally,  setting properties on tests is somewhat less con-
              venient, since the tests are not available at CMake time.  Addi-
              tional  test properties may be assigned to the set of tests as a
              whole using the PROPERTIES option.  If  more  fine-grained  test
              control is needed, custom content may be provided through an ex-
              ternal CTest script using the TEST_INCLUDE_FILES directory prop-
              erty.   The set of discovered tests is made accessible to such a
              script via the <target>_TESTS variable.

              The options are:

              target Specifies the Google Test executable,  which  must  be  a
                     known CMake executable target.  CMake will substitute the
                     location of the built executable when running the test.

              EXTRA_ARGS arg1...
                     Any extra arguments to pass on the command line  to  each
                     test case.

              WORKING_DIRECTORY dir
                     Specifies  the  directory  in which to run the discovered
                     test cases.  If this option is not provided, the  current
                     binary directory is used.

              TEST_PREFIX prefix
                     Specifies  a  prefix  to be prepended to the name of each
                     discovered test case.  This can be useful when  the  same
                     test  executable  is  being  used  in  multiple  calls to
                     gtest_discover_tests() but with different EXTRA_ARGS.

              TEST_SUFFIX suffix
                     Similar to TEST_PREFIX except the suffix is  appended  to
                     the name of every discovered test case.  Both TEST_PREFIX
                     and TEST_SUFFIX may be specified.

              TEST_FILTER expr
                     New in version 3.22.

                     Filter expression to pass as  a  --gtest_filter  argument
                     during  test  discovery.   Note  that the expression is a
                     wildcard-based format that matches against  the  original
                     test  names  as used by gtest.  For type or value-parame-
                     terized tests, these names may be different to the poten-
                     tially pretty-printed test names that ctest uses.

              NO_PRETTY_TYPES
                     By default, the type index of type-parameterized tests is
                     replaced by the actual type name in the CTest test  name.
                     If  this  behavior  is undesirable (e.g. because the type
                     names are unwieldy), this option will suppress  this  be-
                     havior.

              NO_PRETTY_VALUES
                     By  default, the value index of value-parameterized tests
                     is replaced by the actual value in the CTest  test  name.
                     If  this  behavior is undesirable (e.g. because the value
                     strings are unwieldy), this option will suppress this be-
                     havior.

              PROPERTIES name1 value1...
                     Specifies  additional  properties  to be set on all tests
                     discovered by this invocation of gtest_discover_tests().

              TEST_LIST var
                     Make the list of tests available  in  the  variable  var,
                     rather than the default <target>_TESTS.  This can be use-
                     ful when the same test executable is being used in multi-
                     ple  calls  to  gtest_discover_tests().   Note  that this
                     variable is only available in CTest.

              DISCOVERY_TIMEOUT num
                     New in version 3.10.3.

                     Specifies how long (in seconds) CMake will wait  for  the
                     test  to  enumerate  available  tests.  If the test takes
                     longer than this, discovery (and your build)  will  fail.
                     Most  test  executables  will  enumerate their tests very
                     quickly, but under some exceptional circumstances, a test
                     may  require  a  longer  timeout.  The default is 5.  See
                     also the TIMEOUT option of execute_process().

                     NOTE:
                        In CMake versions 3.10.1 and 3.10.2, this  option  was
                        called  TIMEOUT.   This  clashed with the TIMEOUT test
                        property, which is one of the common  properties  that
                        would  be  set  with  the  PROPERTIES keyword, usually
                        leading to legal but unintended behavior.  The keyword
                        was  changed  to  DISCOVERY_TIMEOUT in CMake 3.10.3 to
                        address this problem.  The ambiguous behavior  of  the
                        TIMEOUT keyword in 3.10.1 and 3.10.2 has not been pre-
                        served.

              XML_OUTPUT_DIR dir
                     New in version 3.18.

                     If  specified,  the  parameter  is  passed   along   with
                     --gtest_output=xml:  to  test executable. The actual file
                     name is the same as the test target, including prefix and
                     suffix.   This  should  be  used  instead  of  EXTRA_ARGS
                     --gtest_output=xml to avoid race conditions  writing  the
                     XML result output when using parallel test execution.

              DISCOVERY_MODE
                     New in version 3.18.

                     Provides greater control over when gtest_discover_tests()
                     performs test discovery. By default, POST_BUILD sets up a
                     post-build  command  to  perform  test discovery at build
                     time. In certain scenarios,  like  cross-compiling,  this
                     POST_BUILD  behavior  is  not  desirable.   By  contrast,
                     PRE_TEST delays test discovery until just prior  to  test
                     execution.  This  way test discovery occurs in the target
                     environment where the test has a better chance at finding
                     appropriate runtime dependencies.

                     DISCOVERY_MODE    defaults    to   the   value   of   the
                     CMAKE_GTEST_DISCOVER_TESTS_DISCOVERY_MODE variable if  it
                     is  not  passed when calling gtest_discover_tests(). This
                     provides a mechanism for globally selecting  a  preferred
                     test  discovery  behavior  without  having to modify each
                     call site.

   InstallRequiredSystemLibraries
       Include this module to search for compiler-provided system runtime  li-
       braries and add install rules for them.  Some optional variables may be
       set prior to including the module to adjust behavior:

       CMAKE_INSTALL_SYSTEM_RUNTIME_LIBS
              Specify additional runtime libraries that may not  be  detected.
              After inclusion any detected libraries will be appended to this.

       CMAKE_INSTALL_SYSTEM_RUNTIME_LIBS_SKIP
              Set to TRUE to skip calling the install(PROGRAMS) command to al-
              low the includer to specify its  own  install  rule,  using  the
              value  of  CMAKE_INSTALL_SYSTEM_RUNTIME_LIBS  to get the list of
              libraries.

       CMAKE_INSTALL_DEBUG_LIBRARIES
              Set to TRUE to install the debug runtime libraries  when  avail-
              able with MSVC tools.

       CMAKE_INSTALL_DEBUG_LIBRARIES_ONLY
              Set  to  TRUE  to  install only the debug runtime libraries with
              MSVC tools even if the release runtime libraries are also avail-
              able.

       CMAKE_INSTALL_UCRT_LIBRARIES
              New in version 3.6.

              Set  to  TRUE to install the Windows Universal CRT libraries for
              app-local deployment (e.g. to Windows XP).  This  is  meaningful
              only with MSVC from Visual Studio 2015 or higher.

              New  in version 3.9: One may set a CMAKE_WINDOWS_KITS_10_DIR en-
              vironment variable to an absolute path to tell CMake to look for
              Windows  10  SDKs in a custom location.  The specified directory
              is expected to contain Redist/ucrt/DLLs/* directories.

       CMAKE_INSTALL_MFC_LIBRARIES
              Set to TRUE to install the MSVC MFC runtime libraries.

       CMAKE_INSTALL_OPENMP_LIBRARIES
              Set to TRUE to install the MSVC OpenMP runtime libraries

       CMAKE_INSTALL_SYSTEM_RUNTIME_DESTINATION
              Specify the install(PROGRAMS) command  DESTINATION  option.   If
              not specified, the default is bin on Windows and lib elsewhere.

       CMAKE_INSTALL_SYSTEM_RUNTIME_LIBS_NO_WARNINGS
              Set  to  TRUE  to  disable warnings about required library files
              that do not exist.  (For example, Visual Studio Express editions
              may not provide the redistributable files.)

       CMAKE_INSTALL_SYSTEM_RUNTIME_COMPONENT
              New in version 3.3.

              Specify  the install(PROGRAMS) command COMPONENT option.  If not
              specified, no such option will be used.

       New in version 3.10: Support for installing Intel compiler runtimes.

   ProcessorCount
       ProcessorCount(var)

       Determine the number of processors/cores and save value in ${var}

       Sets the variable named ${var} to the number of physical  cores  avail-
       able on the machine if the information can be determined.  Otherwise it
       is set to 0.  Currently this functionality is implemented for AIX, cyg-
       win, FreeBSD, HPUX, Linux, macOS, QNX, Sun and Windows.

       Changed  in version 3.15: On Linux, returns the container CPU count in-
       stead of the host CPU count.

       This function is guaranteed to return a positive integer  (>=1)  if  it
       succeeds.   It returns 0 if there's a problem determining the processor
       count.

       Example use, in a ctest -S dashboard script:

          include(ProcessorCount)
          ProcessorCount(N)
          if(NOT N EQUAL 0)
            set(CTEST_BUILD_FLAGS -j${N})
            set(ctest_test_args ${ctest_test_args} PARALLEL_LEVEL ${N})
          endif()

       This function is intended to offer an approximation of the value of the
       number of compute cores available on the current machine, such that you
       may use that value for parallel building and parallel testing.   It  is
       meant  to  help utilize as much of the machine as seems reasonable.  Of
       course, knowledge of what else might be running on the machine simulta-
       neously  should  be  used  when deciding whether to request a machine's
       full capacity all for yourself.

   SelectLibraryConfigurations
          select_library_configurations(basename)

       This macro takes a library base name as an argument,  and  will  choose
       good values for the variables

          basename_LIBRARY
          basename_LIBRARIES
          basename_LIBRARY_DEBUG
          basename_LIBRARY_RELEASE

       depending on what has been found and set.

       If  only  basename_LIBRARY_RELEASE is defined, basename_LIBRARY will be
       set to the release value, and basename_LIBRARY_DEBUG  will  be  set  to
       basename_LIBRARY_DEBUG-NOTFOUND.  If only basename_LIBRARY_DEBUG is de-
       fined, then basename_LIBRARY will  take  the  debug  value,  and  base-
       name_LIBRARY_RELEASE will be set to basename_LIBRARY_RELEASE-NOTFOUND.

       If  the  generator  supports configuration types, then basename_LIBRARY
       and basename_LIBRARIES will be set with debug and optimized flags spec-
       ifying the library to be used for the given configuration.  If no build
       type has been set or the generator in use does not  support  configura-
       tion types, then basename_LIBRARY and basename_LIBRARIES will take only
       the release value, or the debug value if the release one is not set.

   SquishTestScript
       This script launches a GUI test using Squish.  You should not call  the
       script  directly; instead, you should access it via the SQUISH_ADD_TEST
       macro that is defined in FindSquish.cmake.

       This script starts the Squish server, launches the test on the  client,
       and  finally  stops the squish server.  If any of these steps fail (in-
       cluding if the tests do not pass) then a fatal error is raised.

   TestBigEndian
       Deprecated    since    version     3.20:     Supserseded     by     the
       CMAKE_<LANG>_BYTE_ORDER variable.

       Check if the target architecture is big endian or little endian.

       test_big_endian

                 test_big_endian(<var>)

              Stores  in  variable  <var> either 1 or 0 indicating whether the
              target architecture is big or little endian.

   TestForANSIForScope
       Check for ANSI for scope support

       Check if the compiler restricts the scope of variables  declared  in  a
       for-init-statement to the loop body.

          CMAKE_NO_ANSI_FOR_SCOPE - holds result

   TestForANSIStreamHeaders
       Test for compiler support of ANSI stream headers iostream, etc.

       check if the compiler supports the standard ANSI iostream header (with-
       out the .h)

          CMAKE_NO_ANSI_STREAM_HEADERS - defined by the results

   TestForSSTREAM
       Test for compiler support of ANSI sstream header

       check if the compiler supports the standard ANSI sstream header

          CMAKE_NO_ANSI_STRING_STREAM - defined by the results

   TestForSTDNamespace
       Test for std:: namespace support

       check if the compiler supports std:: on stl classes

          CMAKE_NO_STD_NAMESPACE - defined by the results

   UseEcos
       This module defines variables and macros required to build eCos  appli-
       cation.

       This file contains the following macros: ECOS_ADD_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES()
       - add  the  eCos  include  dirs  ECOS_ADD_EXECUTABLE(name  source1  ...
       sourceN ) - create an eCos executable ECOS_ADJUST_DIRECTORY(VAR source1
       ...  sourceN ) - adjusts the path of the source files and puts the  re-
       sult into VAR

       Macros  for  selecting the toolchain: ECOS_USE_ARM_ELF_TOOLS() - enable
       the  ARM  ELF  toolchain  for  the  directory  where   it   is   called
       ECOS_USE_I386_ELF_TOOLS()  -  enable the i386 ELF toolchain for the di-
       rectory where it is called ECOS_USE_PPC_EABI_TOOLS() - enable the  Pow-
       erPC toolchain for the directory where it is called

       It  contains  the following variables: ECOS_DEFINITIONS ECOSCONFIG_EXE-
       CUTABLE ECOS_CONFIG_FILE - defaults to ecos.ecc, if your eCos  configu-
       ration file has a different name, adjust this variable for internal use
       only:

          ECOS_ADD_TARGET_LIB

   UseJava
       This file provides support for Java.  It is assumed that  FindJava  has
       already  been loaded.  See FindJava for information on how to load Java
       into your CMake project.

   Synopsis
          Creating and Installing JARS
            add_jar (<target_name> [SOURCES] <source1> [<source2>...] ...)
            install_jar (<target_name> DESTINATION <destination> [COMPONENT <component>])
            install_jni_symlink (<target_name> DESTINATION <destination> [COMPONENT <component>])

          Header Generation
            create_javah ((TARGET <target> | GENERATED_FILES <VAR>) CLASSES <class>... ...)

          Exporting JAR Targets
            install_jar_exports (TARGETS <jars>... FILE <filename> DESTINATION <destination> ...)
            export_jars (TARGETS <jars>... [NAMESPACE <namespace>] FILE <filename>)

          Finding JARs
            find_jar (<VAR> NAMES <name1> [<name2>...] [PATHS <path1> [<path2>... ENV <var>]] ...)

          Creating Java Documentation
            create_javadoc (<VAR> (PACKAGES <pkg1> [<pkg2>...] | FILES <file1> [<file2>...]) ...)

   Creating And Installing JARs
       add_jar
              Creates a jar file containing java objects and, optionally,  re-
              sources:

                 add_jar(<target_name>
                         [SOURCES] <source1> [<source2>...] [<resource1>...]
                         [RESOURCES NAMESPACE <ns1> <resource1>... [NAMESPACE <nsX> <resourceX>...]... ]
                         [INCLUDE_JARS <jar1> [<jar2>...]]
                         [ENTRY_POINT <entry>]
                         [VERSION <version>]
                         [MANIFEST <manifest>]
                         [OUTPUT_NAME <name>]
                         [OUTPUT_DIR <dir>]
                         [GENERATE_NATIVE_HEADERS <target>
                                                  [DESTINATION (<dir>|INSTALL <dir> [BUILD <dir>])]]
                         )

              This command creates a <target_name>.jar.  It compiles the given
              <source> files and adds the given <resource> files  to  the  jar
              file.  Source files can be java files or listing files (prefixed
              by @).  If only resource files are given then just a jar file is
              created.

              SOURCES
                     Compiles  the  specified source files and adds the result
                     in the jar file.

                     New in version 3.4: Support for response files,  prefixed
                     by @.

              RESOURCES
                     New in version 3.21.

                     Adds  the  named <resource> files to the jar by stripping
                     the source file path and placing the  file  beneath  <ns>
                     within the jar.

                     For example:

                        RESOURCES NAMESPACE "/com/my/namespace" "a/path/to/resource.txt"

                     results   in  a  resource  accessible  via  /com/my/name-
                     space/resource.txt within the jar.

                     Resources may be added without adjusting the namespace by
                     adding  them  to the list of SOURCES (original behavior),
                     in  this  case,  resource  paths  must  be  relative   to
                     CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR.  Adding resources without using
                     the RESOURCES parameter in out of source builds will  al-
                     most certainly result in confusion.

                     NOTE:
                        Adding resources via the SOURCES parameter relies upon
                        a hard-coded list of file extensions which are  tested
                        to  determine  whether  they compile (e.g. File.java).
                        SOURCES files which match the extensions are compiled.
                        Files  which do not match are treated as resources. To
                        include uncompiled resources matching those  file  ex-
                        tensions use the RESOURCES parameter.

              INCLUDE_JARS
                     The  list of jars are added to the classpath when compil-
                     ing the java sources and also to the dependencies of  the
                     target. INCLUDE_JARS also accepts other target names cre-
                     ated by add_jar(). For backwards compatibility, jar files
                     listed  as  sources  are ignored (as they have been since
                     the first version of this module).

              ENTRY_POINT
                     Defines an entry point in the jar file.

              VERSION
                     Adds a version to the target output name.

                     The following example will create a  jar  file  with  the
                     name shibboleet-1.2.0.jar and will create a symlink shib-
                     boleet.jar pointing to the jar with the version  informa-
                     tion.

                        add_jar(shibboleet shibbotleet.java VERSION 1.2.0)

              MANIFEST
                     Defines a custom manifest for the jar.

              OUTPUT_NAME
                     Specify a different output name for the target.

              OUTPUT_DIR
                     Sets  the directory where the jar file will be generated.
                     If not specified, CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR is used as the
                     output directory.

              GENERATE_NATIVE_HEADERS
                     New in version 3.11.

                     Generates native header files for methods declared as na-
                     tive. These files provide the connective glue that  allow
                     your  Java  and  C code to interact.  An INTERFACE target
                     will be created for an easy  usage  of  generated  files.
                     Sub-option  DESTINATION can be used to specify the output
                     directory for generated header files.

                     This option requires, at least, version 1.8 of the JDK.

                     For an optimum usage of this option, it is recommended to
                     include module JNI before any call to add_jar(). The pro-
                     duced target for native headers can then be used to  com-
                     pile  C/C++ sources with the target_link_libraries() com-
                     mand.

                        find_package(JNI)
                        add_jar(foo foo.java GENERATE_NATIVE_HEADERS foo-native)
                        add_library(bar bar.cpp)
                        target_link_libraries(bar PRIVATE foo-native)

                     New in version 3.20: DESTINATION sub-option now  supports
                     the  possibility  to specify different output directories
                     for BUILD and INSTALL steps. If BUILD  directory  is  not
                     specified, a default directory will be used.

                     To  export the interface target generated by GENERATE_NA-
                     TIVE_HEADERS option, sub-option INSTALL of DESTINATION is
                     required:

                        add_jar(foo foo.java GENERATE_NATIVE_HEADERS foo-native
                                             DESTINATION INSTALL include)
                        install(TARGETS foo-native EXPORT native)
                        install(DIRECTORY "$<TARGET_PROPERTY:foo-native,NATIVE_HEADERS_DIRECTORY>/"
                                DESTINATION include)
                        install(EXPORT native DESTINATION /to/export NAMESPACE foo)

              Some variables can be set to customize the behavior of add_jar()
              as well as the java compiler:

              CMAKE_JAVA_COMPILE_FLAGS
                     Specify additional flags to java compiler.

              CMAKE_JAVA_INCLUDE_PATH
                     Specify additional paths to the class path.

              CMAKE_JNI_TARGET
                     If the target is a JNI library, sets this  boolean  vari-
                     able  to  TRUE  to enable creation of a JNI symbolic link
                     (see also install_jni_symlink()).

              CMAKE_JAR_CLASSES_PREFIX
                     If multiple jars should be produced from  the  same  java
                     source filetree, to prevent the accumulation of duplicate
                     class    files    in    subsequent    jars,     set/reset
                     CMAKE_JAR_CLASSES_PREFIX prior to calling the add_jar():

                        set(CMAKE_JAR_CLASSES_PREFIX com/redhat/foo)
                        add_jar(foo foo.java)

                        set(CMAKE_JAR_CLASSES_PREFIX com/redhat/bar)
                        add_jar(bar bar.java)

              The  add_jar()  function sets the following target properties on
              <target_name>:

              INSTALL_FILES
                     The files which should be installed.   This  is  used  by
                     install_jar().

              JNI_SYMLINK
                     The  JNI symlink which should be installed.  This is used
                     by install_jni_symlink().

              JAR_FILE
                     The location of the jar file so that you can include it.

              CLASSDIR
                     The directory where the class files can  be  found.   For
                     example to use them with javah.

              NATIVE_HEADERS_DIRECTORY
                     New in version 3.20.

                     The directory where native headers are generated. Defined
                     when option GENERATE_NATIVE_HEADERS is specified.

       install_jar
              This command installs the jar file to the given destination:

                 install_jar(<target_name> <destination>)
                 install_jar(<target_name> DESTINATION <destination> [COMPONENT <component>])

              This command installs the <target_name> file to the given  <des-
              tination>.   It  should be called in the same scope as add_jar()
              or it will fail.

              New in version 3.4: The second signature  with  DESTINATION  and
              COMPONENT options.

              DESTINATION
                     Specify the directory on disk to which a file will be in-
                     stalled.

              COMPONENT
                     Specify an installation component name with which the in-
                     stall  rule is associated, such as "runtime" or "develop-
                     ment".

              The install_jar() command sets the following  target  properties
              on <target_name>:

              INSTALL_DESTINATION
                     Holds  the  <destination> as described above, and is used
                     by install_jar_exports().

       install_jni_symlink
              Installs JNI symlinks for target generated by add_jar():

                 install_jni_symlink(<target_name> <destination>)
                 install_jni_symlink(<target_name> DESTINATION <destination> [COMPONENT <component>])

              This command installs the  <target_name>  JNI  symlinks  to  the
              given  <destination>.   It should be called in the same scope as
              add_jar() or it will fail.

              New in version 3.4: The second signature  with  DESTINATION  and
              COMPONENT options.

              DESTINATION
                     Specify the directory on disk to which a file will be in-
                     stalled.

              COMPONENT
                     Specify an installation component name with which the in-
                     stall  rule is associated, such as "runtime" or "develop-
                     ment".

              Utilize the following commands to create a JNI symbolic link:

                 set(CMAKE_JNI_TARGET TRUE)
                 add_jar(shibboleet shibbotleet.java VERSION 1.2.0)
                 install_jar(shibboleet ${LIB_INSTALL_DIR}/shibboleet)
                 install_jni_symlink(shibboleet ${JAVA_LIB_INSTALL_DIR})

   Header Generation
       create_javah
              New in version 3.4.

              Generates C header files for java classes:

                 create_javah(TARGET <target> | GENERATED_FILES <VAR>
                              CLASSES <class>...
                              [CLASSPATH <classpath>...]
                              [DEPENDS <depend>...]
                              [OUTPUT_NAME <path>|OUTPUT_DIR <path>]
                              )

              Deprecated since version 3.11: This command will  no  longer  be
              supported  starting  with  version  10  of  the  JDK  due to the
              suppression of javah tool.  The add_jar(GENERATE_NATIVE_HEADERS)
              command should be used instead.

              Create C header files from java classes. These files provide the
              connective glue that allow your Java and C code to interact.

              There are two main signatures  for  create_javah().   The  first
              signature  returns generated files through variable specified by
              the GENERATED_FILES option.  For example:

                 create_javah(GENERATED_FILES files_headers
                   CLASSES org.cmake.HelloWorld
                   CLASSPATH hello.jar
                 )

              The second signature for create_javah() creates a  target  which
              encapsulates header files generation. E.g.

                 create_javah(TARGET target_headers
                   CLASSES org.cmake.HelloWorld
                   CLASSPATH hello.jar
                 )

              Both signatures share same options.

              CLASSES
                     Specifies Java classes used to generate headers.

              CLASSPATH
                     Specifies  various  paths to look up classes. Here .class
                     files, jar files or targets created  by  command  add_jar
                     can be used.

              DEPENDS
                     Targets on which the javah target depends.

              OUTPUT_NAME
                     Concatenates  the  resulting  header  files  for  all the
                     classes listed by option CLASSES into <path>.   Same  be-
                     havior as option -o of javah tool.

              OUTPUT_DIR
                     Sets  the directory where the header files will be gener-
                     ated.  Same behavior as option -d of javah tool.  If  not
                     specified, CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR is used as the output
                     directory.

   Exporting JAR Targets
       install_jar_exports
              New in version 3.7.

              Installs a target export file:

                 install_jar_exports(TARGETS <jars>...
                                     [NAMESPACE <namespace>]
                                     FILE <filename>
                                     DESTINATION <destination> [COMPONENT <component>])

              This command installs a target export file  <filename>  for  the
              named  jar  targets  to  the given <destination> directory.  Its
              function is similar to that of install(EXPORT).

              TARGETS
                     List of targets created by add_jar() command.

              NAMESPACE
                     New in version 3.9.

                     The <namespace> value will be prepend to the target names
                     as they are written to the import file.

              FILE   Specify name of the export file.

              DESTINATION
                     Specify the directory on disk to which a file will be in-
                     stalled.

              COMPONENT
                     Specify an installation component name with which the in-
                     stall  rule is associated, such as "runtime" or "develop-
                     ment".

       export_jars
              New in version 3.7.

              Writes a target export file:

                 export_jars(TARGETS <jars>...
                             [NAMESPACE <namespace>]
                             FILE <filename>)

              This command writes a target  export  file  <filename>  for  the
              named  <jars>  targets.   Its  function  is  similar  to that of
              export().

              TARGETS
                     List of targets created by add_jar() command.

              NAMESPACE
                     New in version 3.9.

                     The <namespace> value will be prepend to the target names
                     as they are written to the import file.

              FILE   Specify name of the export file.

   Finding JARs
       find_jar
              Finds the specified jar file:

                 find_jar(<VAR>
                          <name> | NAMES <name1> [<name2>...]
                          [PATHS <path1> [<path2>... ENV <var>]]
                          [VERSIONS <version1> [<version2>]]
                          [DOC "cache documentation string"]
                         )

              This  command  is  used to find a full path to the named jar.  A
              cache entry named by <VAR> is created to  store  the  result  of
              this  command.  If the full path to a jar is found the result is
              stored in the variable and the search will not  repeated  unless
              the  variable  is cleared.  If nothing is found, the result will
              be <VAR>-NOTFOUND, and the search will be attempted  again  next
              time find_jar() is invoked with the same variable.

              NAMES  Specify one or more possible names for the jar file.

              PATHS  Specify  directories to search in addition to the default
                     locations.  The ENV var sub-option  reads  paths  from  a
                     system environment variable.

              VERSIONS
                     Specify jar versions.

              DOC    Specify  the documentation string for the <VAR> cache en-
                     try.

   Creating Java Documentation
       create_javadoc
              Creates java documentation based on files and packages:

                 create_javadoc(<VAR>
                                (PACKAGES <pkg1> [<pkg2>...] | FILES <file1> [<file2>...])
                                [SOURCEPATH <sourcepath>]
                                [CLASSPATH <classpath>]
                                [INSTALLPATH <install path>]
                                [DOCTITLE <the documentation title>]
                                [WINDOWTITLE <the title of the document>]
                                [AUTHOR (TRUE|FALSE)]
                                [USE (TRUE|FALSE)]
                                [VERSION (TRUE|FALSE)]
                                )

              The create_javadoc() command can be used to create java documen-
              tation.  There are two main signatures for create_javadoc().

              The  first  signature  works  with  package names on a path with
              source files:

                 create_javadoc(my_example_doc
                                PACKAGES com.example.foo com.example.bar
                                SOURCEPATH "${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}"
                                CLASSPATH ${CMAKE_JAVA_INCLUDE_PATH}
                                WINDOWTITLE "My example"
                                DOCTITLE "<h1>My example</h1>"
                                AUTHOR TRUE
                                USE TRUE
                                VERSION TRUE
                               )

              The second signature for create_javadoc() works on a given  list
              of files:

                 create_javadoc(my_example_doc
                                FILES java/A.java java/B.java
                                CLASSPATH ${CMAKE_JAVA_INCLUDE_PATH}
                                WINDOWTITLE "My example"
                                DOCTITLE "<h1>My example</h1>"
                                AUTHOR TRUE
                                USE TRUE
                                VERSION TRUE
                               )

              Both  signatures  share  most  of  the options. For more details
              please read the javadoc manpage.

              PACKAGES
                     Specify java packages.

              FILES  Specify java source files. If relative paths  are  speci-
                     fied, they are relative to CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR.

              SOURCEPATH
                     Specify  the directory where to look for packages. By de-
                     fault, CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR directory is used.

              CLASSPATH
                     Specify where to find user class files. Same behavior  as
                     option -classpath of javadoc tool.

              INSTALLPATH
                     Specify  where  to install the java documentation. If you
                     specified,  the  documentation  will  be   installed   to
                     ${CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX}/share/javadoc/<VAR>.

              DOCTITLE
                     Specify  the  title to place near the top of the overview
                     summary file.   Same  behavior  as  option  -doctitle  of
                     javadoc tool.

              WINDOWTITLE
                     Specify  the  title to be placed in the HTML <title> tag.
                     Same behavior as option -windowtitle of javadoc tool.

              AUTHOR When value TRUE is specified, includes the  @author  text
                     in  the  generated docs. Same behavior as option  -author
                     of javadoc tool.

              USE    When value TRUE is specified, creates class  and  package
                     usage  pages.   Includes one Use page for each documented
                     class and  package.  Same  behavior  as  option  -use  of
                     javadoc tool.

              VERSION
                     When  value  TRUE is specified, includes the version text
                     in the generated docs. Same behavior as  option  -version
                     of javadoc tool.

   UseSWIG
       This file provides support for SWIG. It is assumed that FindSWIG module
       has already been loaded.

       Defines the following command for use with SWIG:

       swig_add_library
              New in version 3.8.

              Define swig module with given name and specified language:

                 swig_add_library(<name>
                                  [TYPE <SHARED|MODULE|STATIC|USE_BUILD_SHARED_LIBS>]
                                  LANGUAGE <language>
                                  [NO_PROXY]
                                  [OUTPUT_DIR <directory>]
                                  [OUTFILE_DIR <directory>]
                                  SOURCES <file>...
                                 )

              Targets created with the swig_add_library command have the  same
              capabilities  as targets created with the add_library() command,
              so those targets can be used with any command expecting a target
              (e.g.  target_link_libraries()).

              Changed  in version 3.13: This command creates a target with the
              specified <name> when policy CMP0078 is set to NEW.   Otherwise,
              the  legacy  behavior  will  choose  a different target name and
              store it in the SWIG_MODULE_<name>_REAL_NAME variable.

              Changed in version 3.15: Alternate library name  (set  with  the
              OUTPUT_NAME  property,  for example) will be passed on to Python
              and CSharp wrapper libraries.

              Changed in version 3.21: Generated library use  standard  naming
              conventions  for  CSharp  language when policy CMP0122 is set to
              NEW. Otherwise, the legacy behavior is applied.

              NOTE:
                 For multi-config generators, this  module  does  not  support
                 configuration-specific  files  generated  by  SWIG. All build
                 configurations must result in the same generated source file.

              NOTE:
                 For  Makefile  Generators,  if,   for   some   sources,   the
                 USE_SWIG_DEPENDENCIES  property  is  FALSE,  swig_add_library
                 does  not  track  file  dependencies,  so  depending  on  the
                 <name>_swig_compilation custom target is required for targets
                 which require the swig-generated files to exist. Other gener-
                 ators  may depend on the source files that would be generated
                 by SWIG.

              TYPE   SHARED, MODULE and STATIC have the same semantic  as  for
                     the  add_library()  command.  If USE_BUILD_SHARED_LIBS is
                     specified, the library type  will  be  STATIC  or  SHARED
                     based    on    whether   the   current   value   of   the
                     BUILD_SHARED_LIBS variable is ON. If no  type  is  speci-
                     fied, MODULE will be used.

              LANGUAGE
                     Specify the target language.

                     New in version 3.1: Go and Lua language support.

                     New in version 3.2: R language support.

                     New in version 3.18: Fortran language support.

              NO_PROXY
                     New in version 3.12.

                     Prevent  the  generation  of the wrapper layer (swig -no-
                     proxy option).

              OUTPUT_DIR
                     New in version 3.12.

                     Specify where to write the language specific files  (swig
                     -outdir  option).  If  not  given,  the CMAKE_SWIG_OUTDIR
                     variable will be used.  If neither is specified, the  de-
                     fault  depends on the value of the UseSWIG_MODULE_VERSION
                     variable as follows:

                     • If UseSWIG_MODULE_VERSION is 1 or is undefined,  output
                       is written to the CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR directory.

                     • If  UseSWIG_MODULE_VERSION  is 2, a dedicated directory
                       will be used.  The path of this directory  can  be  re-
                       trieved  from  the  SWIG_SUPPORT_FILES_DIRECTORY target
                       property.

              OUTFILE_DIR
                     New in version 3.12.

                     Specify an output  directory  name  where  the  generated
                     source file will be placed (swig -o option). If not spec-
                     ified, the SWIG_OUTFILE_DIR variable  will  be  used.  If
                     neither  is specified, OUTPUT_DIR or CMAKE_SWIG_OUTDIR is
                     used instead.

              SOURCES
                     List of sources for the library. Files with extension  .i
                     will  be  identified  as sources for the SWIG tool. Other
                     files will be handled in the standard way.

                     New in version 3.14: This behavior can be  overridden  by
                     specifying the variable SWIG_SOURCE_FILE_EXTENSIONS.

              NOTE:
                 If  UseSWIG_MODULE_VERSION is set to 2, it is strongly recom-
                 mended to use a dedicated directory unique to the target when
                 either  the  OUTPUT_DIR option or the CMAKE_SWIG_OUTDIR vari-
                 able are specified.  The output directory contents are erased
                 as  part  of the target build, so to prevent interference be-
                 tween targets or losing other important  files,  each  target
                 should have its own dedicated output directory.

       swig_link_libraries
              Link libraries to swig module:

                 swig_link_libraries(<name> <item>...)

              This  command  has  same capabilities as target_link_libraries()
              command.

              NOTE:
                 If variable UseSWIG_TARGET_NAME_PREFERENCE is  set  to  STAN-
                 DARD,  this command is deprecated and target_link_libraries()
                 command must be used instead.

       Source file properties on module files must be set before  the  invoca-
       tion  of  the  swig_add_library  command to specify special behavior of
       SWIG and ensure generated files will receive the required settings.

       CPLUSPLUS
              Call SWIG in c++ mode.  For example:

                 set_property(SOURCE mymod.i PROPERTY CPLUSPLUS ON)
                 swig_add_library(mymod LANGUAGE python SOURCES mymod.i)

       SWIG_FLAGS
              Deprecated since version 3.12: Replaced  with  the  fine-grained
              properties that follow.

              Pass custom flags to the SWIG executable.

       INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES, COMPILE_DEFINITIONS and COMPILE_OPTIONS
              New in version 3.12.

              Add  custom  flags  to  SWIG  compiler and have same semantic as
              properties    INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES,    COMPILE_DEFINITIONS    and
              COMPILE_OPTIONS.

       USE_TARGET_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES
              New in version 3.13.

              If  set to TRUE, contents of target property INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES
              will be forwarded to SWIG compiler.   If  set  to  FALSE  target
              property INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES will be ignored. If not set, target
              property SWIG_USE_TARGET_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES will be considered.

       GENERATED_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES, GENERATED_COMPILE_DEFINITIONS and GENER-
       ATED_COMPILE_OPTIONS
              New in version 3.12.

              Add  custom flags to the C/C++ generated source. They will fill,
              respectively,          properties           INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES,
              COMPILE_DEFINITIONS and COMPILE_OPTIONS of generated C/C++ file.

       DEPENDS
              New in version 3.12.

              Specify additional dependencies to the source file.

       USE_SWIG_DEPENDENCIES
              New in version 3.20.

              If  set to TRUE, implicit dependencies are generated by the swig
              tool itself. This property  is  only  meaningful  for  Makefile,
              Ninja,  Xcode,  and  Visual  Studio  (Visual  Studio 11 2012 and
              above) generators. Default value is FALSE.

              New in version 3.21: Added the support of Xcode generator.

              New in version 3.22: Added the support of Visual Studio  Genera-
              tors.

       SWIG_MODULE_NAME
              Specify  the actual import name of the module in the target lan-
              guage.  This is required if it cannot be  scanned  automatically
              from source or different from the module file basename.  For ex-
              ample:

                 set_property(SOURCE mymod.i PROPERTY SWIG_MODULE_NAME mymod_realname)

              Changed in version 3.14: If policy CMP0086 is set to NEW,  -mod-
              ule <module_name> is passed to SWIG compiler.

       OUTPUT_DIR
              New in version 3.19.

              Specify where to write the language specific files (swig -outdir
              option) for the considered source file. If  not  specified,  the
              other  ways  to  define  the  output directory applies (see OUT-
              PUT_DIR option of swig_add_library() command).

       OUTFILE_DIR
              New in version 3.19.

              Specify an output directory where the generated source file will
              be  placed  (swig  -o option) for the considered source file. If
              not specified, OUTPUT_DIR source property will be used. If  nei-
              ther  are specified, the other ways to define output file direc-
              tory applies (see OUTFILE_DIR option of swig_add_library()  com-
              mand).

       Target library properties can be set to apply same configuration to all
       SWIG input files.

       SWIG_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES, SWIG_COMPILE_DEFINITIONS and SWIG_COMPILE_OP-
       TIONS
              New in version 3.12.

              These  properties  will  be  applied to all SWIG input files and
              have same semantic  as  target  properties  INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES,
              COMPILE_DEFINITIONS and COMPILE_OPTIONS.

                 set (UseSWIG_TARGET_NAME_PREFERENCE STANDARD)
                 swig_add_library(mymod LANGUAGE python SOURCES mymod.i)
                 set_property(TARGET mymod PROPERTY SWIG_COMPILE_DEFINITIONS MY_DEF1 MY_DEF2)
                 set_property(TARGET mymod PROPERTY SWIG_COMPILE_OPTIONS -bla -blb)

       SWIG_USE_TARGET_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES
              New in version 3.13.

              If  set to TRUE, contents of target property INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES
              will be forwarded to SWIG compiler.  If set to FALSE or not  de-
              fined, target property INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES will be ignored. This
              behavior  can  be  overridden  by  specifying  source   property
              USE_TARGET_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES.

       SWIG_GENERATED_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES,  SWIG_GENERATED_COMPILE_DEFINITIONS
       and SWIG_GENERATED_COMPILE_OPTIONS
              New in version 3.12.

              These  properties  will   populate,   respectively,   properties
              INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES,  COMPILE_DEFINITIONS  and  COMPILE_FLAGS of
              all generated C/C++ files.

       SWIG_DEPENDS
              New in version 3.12.

              Add dependencies to all SWIG input files.

       The following target properties are output properties and can  be  used
       to get information about support files generated by SWIG interface com-
       pilation.

       SWIG_SUPPORT_FILES
              New in version 3.12.

              This output property list of wrapper files generated during SWIG
              compilation.

                 set (UseSWIG_TARGET_NAME_PREFERENCE STANDARD)
                 swig_add_library(mymod LANGUAGE python SOURCES mymod.i)
                 get_property(support_files TARGET mymod PROPERTY SWIG_SUPPORT_FILES)

              NOTE:
                 Only  most  principal  support files are listed. In case some
                 advanced features of SWIG are used (for  example  %template),
                 associated support files may not be listed. Prefer to use the
                 SWIG_SUPPORT_FILES_DIRECTORY  property  to   handle   support
                 files.

       SWIG_SUPPORT_FILES_DIRECTORY
              New in version 3.12.

              This output property specifies the directory where support files
              will be generated.

              NOTE:
                 When source property OUTPUT_DIR is defined, multiple directo-
                 ries  can  be  specified as part of SWIG_SUPPORT_FILES_DIREC-
                 TORY.

       Some variables can be set to customize the behavior of swig_add_library
       as well as SWIG:

       UseSWIG_MODULE_VERSION
              New in version 3.12.

              Specify different behaviors for UseSWIG module.

              • Set to 1 or undefined: Legacy behavior is applied.

              • Set  to  2: A new strategy is applied regarding support files:
                the output directory of support files is  erased  before  SWIG
                interface compilation.

       CMAKE_SWIG_FLAGS
              Add flags to all swig calls.

       CMAKE_SWIG_OUTDIR
              Specify where to write the language specific files (swig -outdir
              option).

       SWIG_OUTFILE_DIR
              New in version 3.8.

              Specify an output directory name where the generated source file
              will be placed.  If not specified, CMAKE_SWIG_OUTDIR is used.

       SWIG_MODULE_<name>_EXTRA_DEPS
              Specify extra dependencies for the generated module for <name>.

       SWIG_SOURCE_FILE_EXTENSIONS
              New in version 3.14.

              Specify a list of source file extensions to override the default
              behavior of considering only .i files as sources  for  the  SWIG
              tool. For example:

                 set(SWIG_SOURCE_FILE_EXTENSIONS ".i" ".swg")

       SWIG_USE_SWIG_DEPENDENCIES
              New in version 3.20.

              If  set to TRUE, implicit dependencies are generated by the swig
              tool itself. This variable  is  only  meaningful  for  Makefile,
              Ninja,  Xcode,  and  Visual  Studio  (Visual  Studio 11 2012 and
              above) generators. Default value is FALSE.

              Source file property USE_SWIG_DEPENDENCIES, if not defined, will
              be initialized with the value of this variable.

              New in version 3.21: Added the support of Xcode generator.

              New  in version 3.22: Added the support of Visual Studio Genera-
              tors.

   UsewxWidgets
       Convenience include for using wxWidgets library.

       Determines if wxWidgets was FOUND and sets the  appropriate  libs,  in-
       cdirs,   flags,  etc.   INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES  and  LINK_DIRECTORIES  are
       called.

       USAGE

          # Note that for MinGW users the order of libs is important!
          find_package(wxWidgets REQUIRED net gl core base)
          include(${wxWidgets_USE_FILE})
          # and for each of your dependent executable/library targets:
          target_link_libraries(<YourTarget> ${wxWidgets_LIBRARIES})

       DEPRECATED

          LINK_LIBRARIES is not called in favor of adding dependencies per target.

       AUTHOR

          Jan Woetzel <jw -at- mip.informatik.uni-kiel.de>

FIND MODULES
       These modules search  for  third-party  software.   They  are  normally
       called through the find_package() command.

   FindALSA
       Find Advanced Linux Sound Architecture (ALSA)

       Find the alsa libraries (asound)

   IMPORTED Targets
       New in version 3.12.

       This module defines IMPORTED target ALSA::ALSA, if ALSA has been found.

   Result Variables
       This module defines the following variables:

       ALSA_FOUND
              True if ALSA_INCLUDE_DIR & ALSA_LIBRARY are found

       ALSA_LIBRARIES
              List of libraries when using ALSA.

       ALSA_INCLUDE_DIRS
              Where to find the ALSA headers.

   Cache variables
       The following cache variables may also be set:

       ALSA_INCLUDE_DIR
              the ALSA include directory

       ALSA_LIBRARY
              the absolute path of the asound library

   FindArmadillo
       Find  the Armadillo C++ library.  Armadillo is a library for linear al-
       gebra & scientific computing.

       New in version 3.18: Support for  linking  wrapped  libraries  directly
       (ARMA_DONT_USE_WRAPPER).

       Using Armadillo:

          find_package(Armadillo REQUIRED)
          include_directories(${ARMADILLO_INCLUDE_DIRS})
          add_executable(foo foo.cc)
          target_link_libraries(foo ${ARMADILLO_LIBRARIES})

       This module sets the following variables:

          ARMADILLO_FOUND - set to true if the library is found
          ARMADILLO_INCLUDE_DIRS - list of required include directories
          ARMADILLO_LIBRARIES - list of libraries to be linked
          ARMADILLO_VERSION_MAJOR - major version number
          ARMADILLO_VERSION_MINOR - minor version number
          ARMADILLO_VERSION_PATCH - patch version number
          ARMADILLO_VERSION_STRING - version number as a string (ex: "1.0.4")
          ARMADILLO_VERSION_NAME - name of the version (ex: "Antipodean Antileech")

   FindASPELL
       Try to find ASPELL

       Once done this will define

          ASPELL_FOUND - system has ASPELL
          ASPELL_EXECUTABLE - the ASPELL executable
          ASPELL_INCLUDE_DIR - the ASPELL include directory
          ASPELL_LIBRARIES - The libraries needed to use ASPELL
          ASPELL_DEFINITIONS - Compiler switches required for using ASPELL

   FindAVIFile
       Locate AVIFILE library and include paths

       AVIFILE  (https://avifile.sourceforge.net/)  is  a set of libraries for
       i386 machines to use various AVI codecs.   Support  is  limited  beyond
       Linux.   Windows  provides native AVI support, and so doesn't need this
       library.  This module defines

          AVIFILE_INCLUDE_DIR, where to find avifile.h , etc.
          AVIFILE_LIBRARIES, the libraries to link against
          AVIFILE_DEFINITIONS, definitions to use when compiling
          AVIFILE_FOUND, If false, don't try to use AVIFILE

   FindBacktrace
       Find provider for backtrace(3).

       Checks if OS supports backtrace(3) via either libc or  custom  library.
       This module defines the following variables:

       Backtrace_HEADER
              The  header  file  needed  for  backtrace(3).  Cached.  Could be
              forcibly set by user.

       Backtrace_INCLUDE_DIRS
              The include directories needed to use backtrace(3) header.

       Backtrace_LIBRARIES
              The libraries (linker flags) needed to use backtrace(3), if any.

       Backtrace_FOUND
              Is set if and only if backtrace(3) support detected.

       The following cache variables are also available to set or use:

       Backtrace_LIBRARY
              The external library providing backtrace, if any.

       Backtrace_INCLUDE_DIR
              The directory holding the backtrace(3) header.

       Typical usage is to generate of header file using configure_file() with
       the contents like the following:

          #cmakedefine01 Backtrace_FOUND
          #if Backtrace_FOUND
          # include <${Backtrace_HEADER}>
          #endif

       And then reference that generated header file in actual source.

   FindBISON
       Find  bison  executable  and  provide  a macro to generate custom build
       rules.

       The module defines the following variables:

       BISON_EXECUTABLE
              path to the bison program

       BISON_VERSION
              version of bison

       BISON_FOUND
              "True" if the program was found

       The minimum required version of bison can be specified using the  stan-
       dard CMake syntax, e.g.  find_package(BISON 2.1.3).

       If bison is found, the module defines the macro:

          BISON_TARGET(<Name> <YaccInput> <CodeOutput>
                       [COMPILE_FLAGS <flags>]
                       [DEFINES_FILE <file>]
                       [VERBOSE [<file>]]
                       [REPORT_FILE <file>]
                       )

       which  will  create a custom rule to generate a parser.  <YaccInput> is
       the path to a yacc file.  <CodeOutput> is the name of the  source  file
       generated  by  bison.  A header file is also be generated, and contains
       the token list.

       Changed in version 3.14: When CMP0088 is set to NEW, bison runs in  the
       CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR directory.

       The options are:

       COMPILE_FLAGS <flags>
              Specify flags to be added to the bison command line.

       DEFINES_FILE <file>
              New in version 3.4.

              Specify a non-default header <file> to be generated by bison.

       VERBOSE [<file>]
              Tell bison to write a report file of the grammar and parser.

              Deprecated  since  version 3.7: If <file> is given, it specifies
              path the report file is copied to.  [<file>] is left  for  back-
              ward  compatibility  of  this  module.   Use VERBOSE REPORT_FILE
              <file>.

       REPORT_FILE <file>
              New in version 3.7.

              Specify a non-default report <file>, if generated.

       The macro defines the following variables:

       BISON_<Name>_DEFINED
              True is the macro ran successfully

       BISON_<Name>_INPUT
              The input source file, an alias for <YaccInput>

       BISON_<Name>_OUTPUT_SOURCE
              The source file generated by bison

       BISON_<Name>_OUTPUT_HEADER
              The header file generated by bison

       BISON_<Name>_OUTPUTS
              All files generated by bison including the  source,  the  header
              and the report

       BISON_<Name>_COMPILE_FLAGS
              Options used in the bison command line

       Example usage:

          find_package(BISON)
          BISON_TARGET(MyParser parser.y ${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/parser.cpp
                       DEFINES_FILE ${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/parser.h)
          add_executable(Foo main.cpp ${BISON_MyParser_OUTPUTS})

   FindBLAS
       Find Basic Linear Algebra Subprograms (BLAS) library

       This module finds an installed Fortran library that implements the BLAS
       linear-algebra interface.

       At least one of the C, CXX, or Fortran languages must be enabled.

   Input Variables
       The following variables may be set to influence this module's behavior:

       BLA_STATIC
              if ON use static linkage

       BLA_VENDOR
              Set to one of the BLAS/LAPACK Vendors to search  for  BLAS  only
              from  the specified vendor.  If not set, all vendors are consid-
              ered.

       BLA_F95
              if ON tries to find the BLAS95 interfaces

       BLA_PREFER_PKGCONFIG
              New in version 3.11.

              if set pkg-config will be used to  search  for  a  BLAS  library
              first and if one is found that is preferred

       BLA_PKGCONFIG_BLAS
              New in version 3.25.

              If set, the pkg-config method will look for this module name in-
              stead of just blas.

       BLA_SIZEOF_INTEGER
              New in version 3.22.

              Specify the BLAS/LAPACK library integer size:

              4      Search for a BLAS/LAPACK with 32-bit integer interfaces.

              8      Search for a BLAS/LAPACK with 64-bit integer interfaces.

              ANY    Search for any BLAS/LAPACK.  Most likely,  a  BLAS/LAPACK
                     with 32-bit integer interfaces will be found.

   Imported targets
       This module defines the following IMPORTED targets:

       BLAS::BLAS
              New in version 3.18.

              The libraries to use for BLAS, if found.

   Result Variables
       This module defines the following variables:

       BLAS_FOUND
              library implementing the BLAS interface is found

       BLAS_LINKER_FLAGS
              uncached list of required linker flags (excluding -l and -L).

       BLAS_LIBRARIES
              uncached  list  of  libraries  (using  full  path  name) to link
              against to use BLAS (may be empty if compiler  implicitly  links
              BLAS)

       BLAS95_LIBRARIES
              uncached  list  of  libraries  (using  full  path  name) to link
              against to use BLAS95 interface

       BLAS95_FOUND
              library implementing the BLAS95 interface is found

   BLAS/LAPACK Vendors
       Generic
              Generic reference implementation

       ACML, ACML_MP, ACML_GPU
              AMD Core Math Library

       Apple, NAS
              Apple BLAS (Accelerate), and Apple NAS (vecLib)

       Arm, Arm_mp, Arm_ilp64, Arm_ilp64_mp
              New in version 3.18.

              Arm Performance Libraries

       ATLAS  Automatically Tuned Linear Algebra Software

       CXML, DXML
              Compaq/Digital Extended Math Library

       EML, EML_mt
              New in version 3.20.

              Elbrus Math Library

       FLAME  New in version 3.11.

              BLIS Framework

       FlexiBLAS
              New in version 3.19.

       Fujitsu_SSL2, Fujitsu_SSL2BLAMP, Fujitsu_SSL2SVE, Fujitsu_SSL2BLAMPSVE
              New in version 3.20.

              Fujitsu SSL2 serial and parallel blas/lapack with  SVE  instruc-
              tions

       Goto   GotoBLAS

       IBMESSL, IBMESSL_SMP
          IBM Engineering and Scientific Subroutine Library

       Intel  Intel MKL 32 bit and 64 bit obsolete versions

       Intel10_32
              Intel MKL v10 32 bit, threaded code

       Intel10_64lp
              Intel MKL v10+ 64 bit, threaded code, lp64 model

       Intel10_64lp_seq
              Intel MKL v10+ 64 bit, sequential code, lp64 model

       Intel10_64ilp
              New in version 3.13.

              Intel MKL v10+ 64 bit, threaded code, ilp64 model

       Intel10_64ilp_seq
              New in version 3.13.

              Intel MKL v10+ 64 bit, sequential code, ilp64 model

       Intel10_64_dyn
              New in version 3.17.

              Intel MKL v10+ 64 bit, single dynamic library

       NVHPC  New in version 3.21.

              NVIDIA HPC SDK

       OpenBLAS
              New in version 3.6.

       PhiPACK
              Portable High Performance ANSI C (PHiPAC)

       SCSL, SCSL_mp
              Scientific Computing Software Library

       SGIMATH
              SGI Scientific Mathematical Library

       SunPerf
              Sun Performance Library

   Intel MKL
       To  use  the Intel MKL implementation of BLAS, a project must enable at
       least one of the C or CXX languages.  Set BLA_VENDOR to  an  Intel  MKL
       variant  either  on the command-line as -DBLA_VENDOR=Intel10_64lp or in
       project code:

          set(BLA_VENDOR Intel10_64lp)
          find_package(BLAS)

       In order to build a project using Intel MKL, and end  user  must  first
       establish an Intel MKL environment:

       Intel oneAPI
              Source the full Intel environment script:

                 . /opt/intel/oneapi/setvars.sh

              Or, source the MKL component environment script:

                 . /opt/intel/oneapi/mkl/latest/env/vars.sh

       Intel Classic
              Source the full Intel environment script:

                 . /opt/intel/bin/compilervars.sh intel64

              Or, source the MKL component environment script:

                 . /opt/intel/mkl/bin/mklvars.sh intel64

       The  above  environment scripts set the MKLROOT environment variable to
       the top of the MKL installation.  They also add  the  location  of  the
       runtime  libraries  to  the dynamic library loader environment variable
       for your platform (e.g. LD_LIBRARY_PATH).  This is necessary  for  pro-
       grams linked against MKL to run.

       NOTE:
          As  of  Intel oneAPI 2021.2, loading only the MKL component does not
          make all of its dependencies available.  In  particular,  the  iomp5
          library  must  be  available separately, or provided by also loading
          the compiler component environment:

              . /opt/intel/oneapi/compiler/latest/env/vars.sh

   FindBoost
       Find Boost include dirs and libraries

       Use this module by invoking find_package() with the form:

          find_package(Boost
            [version] [EXACT]      # Minimum or EXACT version e.g. 1.67.0
            [REQUIRED]             # Fail with error if Boost is not found
            [COMPONENTS <libs>...] # Boost libraries by their canonical name
                                   # e.g. "date_time" for "libboost_date_time"
            [OPTIONAL_COMPONENTS <libs>...]
                                   # Optional Boost libraries by their canonical name)
            )                      # e.g. "date_time" for "libboost_date_time"

       This module finds headers and requested component libraries OR a  CMake
       package  configuration file provided by a "Boost CMake" build.  For the
       latter case skip to the Boost CMake section below.

       New in version 3.7: bzip2 and zlib components (Windows only).

       New in version 3.11: The OPTIONAL_COMPONENTS option.

       New in version 3.13: stacktrace_* components.

       New in version 3.19: bzip2 and zlib components on all platforms.

   Result Variables
       This module defines the following variables:

       Boost_FOUND
              True if headers and requested libraries were found.

       Boost_INCLUDE_DIRS
              Boost include directories.

       Boost_LIBRARY_DIRS
              Link directories for Boost libraries.

       Boost_LIBRARIES
              Boost component libraries to be linked.

       Boost_<COMPONENT>_FOUND
              True if component <COMPONENT> was found (<COMPONENT> name is up-
              per-case).

       Boost_<COMPONENT>_LIBRARY
              Libraries   to  link  for  component  <COMPONENT>  (may  include
              target_link_libraries() debug/optimized keywords).

       Boost_VERSION_MACRO
              BOOST_VERSION value from boost/version.hpp.

       Boost_VERSION_STRING
              Boost version number in X.Y.Z format.

       Boost_VERSION
              Boost  version  number  in  X.Y.Z  format  (same  as  Boost_VER-
              SION_STRING).

              Changed  in version 3.15: In previous CMake versions, this vari-
              able used the raw version string from the Boost header (same  as
              Boost_VERSION_MACRO).  See policy CMP0093.

       Boost_LIB_VERSION
              Version string appended to library filenames.

       Boost_VERSION_MAJOR, Boost_MAJOR_VERSION
              Boost major version number (X in X.Y.Z).

       Boost_VERSION_MINOR, Boost_MINOR_VERSION
              Boost minor version number (Y in X.Y.Z).

       Boost_VERSION_PATCH, Boost_SUBMINOR_VERSION
              Boost subminor version number (Z in X.Y.Z).

       Boost_VERSION_COUNT
              Amount of version components (3).

       Boost_LIB_DIAGNOSTIC_DEFINITIONS (Windows-specific)
              Pass  to  add_definitions() to have diagnostic information about
              Boost's automatic linking displayed during compilation

       New in version 3.15: The Boost_VERSION_<PART> variables.

   Cache variables
       Search results are saved persistently in CMake cache entries:

       Boost_INCLUDE_DIR
              Directory containing Boost headers.

       Boost_LIBRARY_DIR_RELEASE
              Directory containing release Boost libraries.

       Boost_LIBRARY_DIR_DEBUG
              Directory containing debug Boost libraries.

       Boost_<COMPONENT>_LIBRARY_DEBUG
              Component <COMPONENT> library debug variant.

       Boost_<COMPONENT>_LIBRARY_RELEASE
              Component <COMPONENT> library release variant.

       New in version 3.3: Per-configuration  variables  Boost_LIBRARY_DIR_RE-
       LEASE and Boost_LIBRARY_DIR_DEBUG.

   Hints
       This module reads hints about search locations from variables:

       BOOST_ROOT, BOOSTROOT
              Preferred installation prefix.

       BOOST_INCLUDEDIR
              Preferred include directory e.g. <prefix>/include.

       BOOST_LIBRARYDIR
              Preferred library directory e.g. <prefix>/lib.

       Boost_NO_SYSTEM_PATHS
              Set  to  ON  to  disable searching in locations not specified by
              these hint variables. Default is OFF.

       Boost_ADDITIONAL_VERSIONS
              List of Boost versions not known to this module.  (Boost install
              locations may contain the version).

       Users may set these hints or results as CACHE entries.  Projects should
       not read these entries directly but instead use the above result  vari-
       ables.   Note  that some hint names start in upper-case BOOST.  One may
       specify these as environment variables if they  are  not  specified  as
       CMake variables or cache entries.

       This  module  first searches for the Boost header files using the above
       hint variables (excluding BOOST_LIBRARYDIR) and  saves  the  result  in
       Boost_INCLUDE_DIR.   Then it searches for requested component libraries
       using the  above  hints  (excluding  BOOST_INCLUDEDIR  and  Boost_ADDI-
       TIONAL_VERSIONS), "lib" directories near Boost_INCLUDE_DIR, and the li-
       brary name configuration settings below.  It saves the library directo-
       ries in Boost_LIBRARY_DIR_DEBUG and Boost_LIBRARY_DIR_RELEASE and indi-
       vidual  library  locations   in   Boost_<COMPONENT>_LIBRARY_DEBUG   and
       Boost_<COMPONENT>_LIBRARY_RELEASE.   When  one changes settings used by
       previous searches in the same build tree (excluding  environment  vari-
       ables)  this  module  discards  previous search results affected by the
       changes and searches again.

   Imported Targets
       New in version 3.5.

       This module defines the following IMPORTED targets:

       Boost::boost
              Target for header-only dependencies. (Boost include directory).

       Boost::headers
              New in version 3.15: Alias for Boost::boost.

       Boost::<component>
              Target for specific component dependency (shared or  static  li-
              brary); <component> name is lower-case.

       Boost::diagnostic_definitions
              Interface  target to enable diagnostic information about Boost's
              automatic linking during compilation (adds  -DBOOST_LIB_DIAGNOS-
              TIC).

       Boost::disable_autolinking
              Interface  target  to  disable automatic linking with MSVC (adds
              -DBOOST_ALL_NO_LIB).

       Boost::dynamic_linking
              Interface target to  enable  dynamic  linking  with  MSVC  (adds
              -DBOOST_ALL_DYN_LINK).

       Implicit dependencies such as Boost::filesystem requiring Boost::system
       will be automatically detected and satisfied, even  if  system  is  not
       specified  when  using find_package() and if Boost::system is not added
       to   target_link_libraries().     If    using    Boost::thread,    then
       Threads::Threads will also be added automatically.

       It  is  important  to note that the imported targets behave differently
       than  variables   created   by   this   module:   multiple   calls   to
       find_package(Boost)  in the same directory or sub-directories with dif-
       ferent options (e.g. static or shared) will not override the values  of
       the targets created by the first call.

   Other Variables
       Boost  libraries  come  in  many  variants  encoded in their file name.
       Users or projects may tell this module which variant to find by setting
       variables:

       Boost_USE_DEBUG_LIBS
              New in version 3.10.

              Set  to ON or OFF to specify whether to search and use the debug
              libraries.  Default is ON.

       Boost_USE_RELEASE_LIBS
              New in version 3.10.

              Set to ON or OFF to specify whether to search and  use  the  re-
              lease libraries.  Default is ON.

       Boost_USE_MULTITHREADED
              Set  to  OFF  to use the non-multithreaded libraries ("mt" tag).
              Default is ON.

       Boost_USE_STATIC_LIBS
              Set to ON to force the use of the static libraries.  Default  is
              OFF.

       Boost_USE_STATIC_RUNTIME
              Set  to  ON  or  OFF  to specify whether to use libraries linked
              statically to the C++ runtime ("s" tag).   Default  is  platform
              dependent.

       Boost_USE_DEBUG_RUNTIME
              Set  to  ON or OFF to specify whether to use libraries linked to
              the MS debug C++ runtime ("g" tag).  Default is ON.

       Boost_USE_DEBUG_PYTHON
              Set to ON to use libraries compiled with a  debug  Python  build
              ("y" tag).  Default is OFF.

       Boost_USE_STLPORT
              Set  to ON to use libraries compiled with STLPort ("p" tag). De-
              fault is OFF.

       Boost_USE_STLPORT_DEPRECATED_NATIVE_IOSTREAMS
              Set to ON to use libraries compiled with STLPort deprecated "na-
              tive iostreams" ("n" tag).  Default is OFF.

       Boost_COMPILER
              Set  to the compiler-specific library suffix (e.g. -gcc43).  De-
              fault is auto-computed for the C++ compiler in use.

              Changed in version 3.9: A list may be used if multiple  compati-
              ble  suffixes should be tested for, in decreasing order of pref-
              erence.

       Boost_LIB_PREFIX
              New in version 3.18.

              Set to the platform-specific library name prefix (e.g. lib) used
              by  Boost  static  libs.  This is needed only on platforms where
              CMake does not know the prefix by default.

       Boost_ARCHITECTURE
              New in version 3.13.

              Set to the architecture-specific  library  suffix  (e.g.  -x64).
              Default is auto-computed for the C++ compiler in use.

       Boost_THREADAPI
              Suffix  for  thread  component  library name, such as pthread or
              win32.  Names with and without this suffix will both be tried.

       Boost_NAMESPACE
              Alternate namespace used to build boost with e.g. if set to  my-
              boost, will search for myboost_thread instead of boost_thread.

       Other variables one may set to control this module are:

       Boost_DEBUG
              Set  to ON to enable debug output from FindBoost.  Please enable
              this before filing any bug report.

       Boost_REALPATH
              Set to ON to resolve symlinks for discovered libraries to assist
              with packaging.  For example, the "system" component library may
              be resolved  to  /usr/lib/libboost_system.so.1.67.0  instead  of
              /usr/lib/libboost_system.so.   This  does not affect linking and
              should not be enabled unless the user needs this information.

       Boost_LIBRARY_DIR
              Default  value  for  Boost_LIBRARY_DIR_RELEASE   and   Boost_LI-
              BRARY_DIR_DEBUG.

       Boost_NO_WARN_NEW_VERSIONS
              New in version 3.20.

              Set to ON to suppress the warning about unknown dependencies for
              new Boost versions.

       On Visual Studio and Borland compilers Boost headers request  automatic
       linking  to  corresponding libraries.  This requires matching libraries
       to be linked explicitly or available in the link library  search  path.
       In  this  case setting Boost_USE_STATIC_LIBS to OFF may not achieve dy-
       namic linking.  Boost automatic linking typically requests  static  li-
       braries with a few exceptions (such as Boost.Python).  Use:

          add_definitions(${Boost_LIB_DIAGNOSTIC_DEFINITIONS})

       to ask Boost to report information about automatic linking requests.

   Examples
       Find Boost headers only:

          find_package(Boost 1.36.0)
          if(Boost_FOUND)
            include_directories(${Boost_INCLUDE_DIRS})
            add_executable(foo foo.cc)
          endif()

       Find Boost libraries and use imported targets:

          find_package(Boost 1.56 REQUIRED COMPONENTS
                       date_time filesystem iostreams)
          add_executable(foo foo.cc)
          target_link_libraries(foo Boost::date_time Boost::filesystem
                                    Boost::iostreams)

       Find Boost Python 3.6 libraries and use imported targets:

          find_package(Boost 1.67 REQUIRED COMPONENTS
                       python36 numpy36)
          add_executable(foo foo.cc)
          target_link_libraries(foo Boost::python36 Boost::numpy36)

       Find Boost headers and some static (release only) libraries:

          set(Boost_USE_STATIC_LIBS        ON)  # only find static libs
          set(Boost_USE_DEBUG_LIBS        OFF)  # ignore debug libs and
          set(Boost_USE_RELEASE_LIBS       ON)  # only find release libs
          set(Boost_USE_MULTITHREADED      ON)
          set(Boost_USE_STATIC_RUNTIME    OFF)
          find_package(Boost 1.66.0 COMPONENTS date_time filesystem system ...)
          if(Boost_FOUND)
            include_directories(${Boost_INCLUDE_DIRS})
            add_executable(foo foo.cc)
            target_link_libraries(foo ${Boost_LIBRARIES})
          endif()

   Boost CMake
       If  Boost  was built using the boost-cmake project or from Boost 1.70.0
       on it provides a package configuration file for use with find_package's
       config  mode.   This  module  looks  for the package configuration file
       called BoostConfig.cmake or boost-config.cmake and stores the result in
       CACHE  entry  Boost_DIR.   If  found, the package configuration file is
       loaded and this module returns with no further action.  See  documenta-
       tion  of  the  Boost CMake package configuration for details on what it
       provides.

       Set Boost_NO_BOOST_CMAKE to ON, to disable the search for boost-cmake.

   FindBullet
       Try to find the Bullet physics engine

          This module defines the following variables

          BULLET_FOUND - Was bullet found
          BULLET_INCLUDE_DIRS - the Bullet include directories
          BULLET_LIBRARIES - Link to this, by default it includes
                             all bullet components (Dynamics,
                             Collision, LinearMath, & SoftBody)

          This module accepts the following variables

          BULLET_ROOT - Can be set to bullet install path or Windows build path

   FindBZip2
       Try to find BZip2

   IMPORTED Targets
       New in version 3.12.

       This module defines IMPORTED target BZip2::BZip2,  if  BZip2  has  been
       found.

   Result Variables
       This module defines the following variables:

       BZIP2_FOUND
              system has BZip2

       BZIP2_INCLUDE_DIRS
              New in version 3.12: the BZip2 include directories

       BZIP2_LIBRARIES
              Link these to use BZip2

       BZIP2_NEED_PREFIX
              this is set if the functions are prefixed with BZ2_

       BZIP2_VERSION_STRING
              the version of BZip2 found

   Cache variables
       The following cache variables may also be set:

       BZIP2_INCLUDE_DIR
              the BZip2 include directory

   FindCABLE
       Find CABLE

       This  module  finds  if CABLE is installed and determines where the in-
       clude files and libraries are.  This code sets the following variables:

          CABLE             the path to the cable executable
          CABLE_TCL_LIBRARY the path to the Tcl wrapper library
          CABLE_INCLUDE_DIR the path to the include directory

       To build Tcl wrappers, you should add shared library  and  link  it  to
       ${CABLE_TCL_LIBRARY}.   You  should also add ${CABLE_INCLUDE_DIR} as an
       include directory.

   FindCoin3D
       Find Coin3D (Open Inventor)

       Coin3D is an implementation of the Open Inventor API.  It provides data
       structures and algorithms for 3D visualization.

       This module defines the following variables

          COIN3D_FOUND         - system has Coin3D - Open Inventor
          COIN3D_INCLUDE_DIRS  - where the Inventor include directory can be found
          COIN3D_LIBRARIES     - Link to this to use Coin3D

   FindCUDAToolkit
       New in version 3.17.

       This  script  locates  the  NVIDIA  CUDA toolkit and the associated li-
       braries, but does not require the CUDA language be enabled for a  given
       project. This module does not search for the NVIDIA CUDA Samples.

       New in version 3.19: QNX support.

   Search Behavior
       The CUDA Toolkit search behavior uses the following order:

       1. If the CUDA language has been enabled we will use the directory con-
          taining the compiler as the first search location for nvcc.

       2. If the CUDAToolkit_ROOT cmake configuration variable (e.g.,  -DCUDA-
          Toolkit_ROOT=/some/path) or environment variable is defined, it will
          be searched.  If both an environment variable  and  a  configuration
          variable are specified, the configuration variable takes precedence.

          The  directory  specified here must be such that the executable nvcc
          or the appropriate version.txt file  can  be  found  underneath  the
          specified directory.

       3. If  the  CUDA_PATH  environment  variable  is  defined,  it  will be
          searched for nvcc.

       4. The user's path is searched for nvcc using find_program().  If  this
          is  found,  no  subsequent search attempts are performed.  Users are
          responsible for ensuring that the first nvcc to show up in the  path
          is the desired path in the event that multiple CUDA Toolkits are in-
          stalled.

       5. On Unix systems, if the symbolic link /usr/local/cuda  exists,  this
          is  used.   No subsequent search attempts are performed.  No default
          symbolic link location exists for the Windows platform.

       6. The platform specific default install locations  are  searched.   If
          exactly  one  candidate  is  found,  this is used.  The default CUDA
          Toolkit install locations searched are:

                       ┌───────────┬────────────────────────────┐
                       │Platform   │ Search Pattern             │
                       ├───────────┼────────────────────────────┤
                       │macOS      │ /Developer/NVIDIA/CUDA-X.Y │
                       ├───────────┼────────────────────────────┤
                       │Other Unix │ /usr/local/cuda-X.Y        │
                       ├───────────┼────────────────────────────┤
                       │Windows    │ C:\Program    Files\NVIDIA │
                       │           │ GPU     Computing    Tool- │
                       │           │ kit\CUDA\vX.Y              │
                       └───────────┴────────────────────────────┘

          Where X.Y would be a specific version of the CUDA Toolkit,  such  as
          /usr/local/cuda-9.0  or  C:\Program Files\NVIDIA GPU Computing Tool-
          kit\CUDA\v9.0

          NOTE:
             When multiple CUDA Toolkits are installed in the default location
             of   a   system  (e.g.,  both  /usr/local/cuda-9.0  and  /usr/lo-
             cal/cuda-10.0 exist but the /usr/local/cuda  symbolic  link  does
             not exist), this package is marked as not found.

             There  are too many factors involved in making an automatic deci-
             sion in the presence of multiple CUDA Toolkits  being  installed.
             In  this  situation, users are encouraged to either (1) set CUDA-
             Toolkit_ROOT or (2) ensure that the correct nvcc executable shows
             up in $PATH for find_program() to find.

   Arguments
       [<version>]
              The [<version>] argument requests a version with which the pack-
              age found should be compatible. See find_package version  format
              for more details.

   Options
       REQUIRED
              If  specified, configuration will error if a suitable CUDA Tool-
              kit is not found.

       QUIET  If specified, the search for a suitable CUDA  Toolkit  will  not
              produce any messages.

       EXACT  If  specified,  the CUDA Toolkit is considered found only if the
              exact VERSION specified is recovered.

   Imported targets
       An imported target named CUDA::toolkit is provided.

       This module defines IMPORTED targets for  each  of  the  following  li-
       braries that are part of the CUDAToolkit:

       • CUDA Runtime LibraryCUDA Driver LibrarycuBLAScuFilecuFFTcuRANDcuSOLVERcuSPARSEcuPTINPPnvBLASnvGRAPHnvJPEGnvidia-MLnvPTX CompilernvRTCnvToolsExtnvtx3OpenCLcuLIBOS

   CUDA Runtime Library
       The CUDA Runtime library (cudart) are what most applications will typi-
       cally need to link against to make any calls such  as  cudaMalloc,  and
       cudaFree.

       Targets Created:

       • CUDA::cudartCUDA::cudart_static

   CUDA Driver Library
       The  CUDA Driver library (cuda) are used by applications that use calls
       such as cuMemAlloc, and cuMemFree.

       Targets Created:

       • CUDA::cuda_driver

   cuBLAS
       The cuBLAS library.

       Targets Created:

       • CUDA::cublasCUDA::cublas_staticCUDA::cublasLt starting in CUDA 10.1

       • CUDA::cublasLt_static starting in CUDA 10.1

   cuFile
       New in version 3.25.

       The NVIDIA GPUDirect Storage cuFile library.

       Targets Created:

       • CUDA::cuFile starting in CUDA 11.4

       • CUDA::cuFile_static starting in CUDA 11.4

       • CUDA::cuFile_rdma starting in CUDA 11.4

       • CUDA::cuFile_rdma_static starting in CUDA 11.4

   cuFFT
       The cuFFT library.

       Targets Created:

       • CUDA::cufftCUDA::cufftwCUDA::cufft_staticCUDA::cufft_static_nocallback starting in CUDA  9.2,  requires  CMake
         3.23+

       • CUDA::cufftw_static

   cuRAND
       The cuRAND library.

       Targets Created:

       • CUDA::curandCUDA::curand_static

   cuSOLVER
       The cuSOLVER library.

       Targets Created:

       • CUDA::cusolverCUDA::cusolver_static

   cuSPARSE
       The cuSPARSE library.

       Targets Created:

       • CUDA::cusparseCUDA::cusparse_static

   cupti
       The NVIDIA CUDA Profiling Tools Interface.

       Targets Created:

       • CUDA::cuptiCUDA::cupti_static

   NPP
       The NPP libraries.

       Targets Created:

       • nppc:

         • CUDA::nppcCUDA::nppc_staticnppial:  Arithmetic  and  logical  operation functions in nppi_arith-
         metic_and_logical_operations.hCUDA::nppialCUDA::nppial_staticnppicc: Color conversion and sampling functions in nppi_color_conver-
         sion.hCUDA::nppiccCUDA::nppicc_staticnppicom:  JPEG  compression  and decompression functions in nppi_com-
         pression_functions.h Removed starting in CUDA 11.0,  use  nvJPEG  in-
         stead.

         • CUDA::nppicomCUDA::nppicom_staticnppidei:  Data exchange and initialization functions in nppi_data_ex-
         change_and_initialization.hCUDA::nppideiCUDA::nppidei_staticnppif: Filtering and computer vision functions  in  nppi_filter_func-
         tions.hCUDA::nppifCUDA::nppif_staticnppig:   Geometry   transformation  functions  found  in  nppi_geome-
         try_transforms.hCUDA::nppigCUDA::nppig_staticnppim: Morphological operation functions  found  in  nppi_morphologi-
         cal_operations.hCUDA::nppimCUDA::nppim_staticnppist:  Statistics  and  linear  transform  in nppi_statistics_func-
         tions.h and nppi_linear_transforms.hCUDA::nppistCUDA::nppist_staticnppisu: Memory support functions in nppi_support_functions.hCUDA::nppisuCUDA::nppisu_staticnppitc: Threshold and compare  operation  functions  in  nppi_thresh-
         old_and_compare_operations.hCUDA::nppitcCUDA::nppitc_staticnpps:

         • CUDA::nppsCUDA::npps_static

   nvBLAS
       The nvBLAS libraries.  This is a shared library only.

       Targets Created:

       • CUDA::nvblas

   nvGRAPH
       The nvGRAPH library.  Removed starting in CUDA 11.0

       Targets Created:

       • CUDA::nvgraphCUDA::nvgraph_static

   nvJPEG
       The nvJPEG library.  Introduced in CUDA 10.

       Targets Created:

       • CUDA::nvjpegCUDA::nvjpeg_static

   nvPTX Compiler
       New in version 3.25.

       The  nvPTX  (PTX Compilation) library.  The PTX Compiler APIs are a set
       of APIs which can be used to compile a PTX program  into  GPU  assembly
       code.  Introduced in CUDA 11.1 This is a static library only.

       Targets Created:

       • CUDA::nvptxcompiler_static starting in CUDA 11.1

   nvRTC
       The  nvRTC  (Runtime  Compilation)  library.   This is a shared library
       only.

       Targets Created:

       • CUDA::nvrtc

   nvidia-ML
       The NVIDIA Management Library.  This is a shared library only.

       Targets Created:

       • CUDA::nvml

   nvToolsExt
       Deprecated since version 3.25: With CUDA 10.0+, use nvtx3.

       The NVIDIA Tools Extension.  This is a shared library only.

       Targets Created:

       • CUDA::nvToolsExt

   nvtx3
       New in version 3.25.

       The header-only NVIDIA Tools Extension  Library.   Introduced  in  CUDA
       10.0.

       Targets created:

       • CUDA::nvtx3

   OpenCL
       The NVIDIA OpenCL Library.  This is a shared library only.

       Targets Created:

       • CUDA::OpenCL

   cuLIBOS
       The cuLIBOS library is a backend thread abstraction layer library which
       is  static  only.   The   CUDA::cublas_static,   CUDA::cusparse_static,
       CUDA::cufft_static, CUDA::curand_static, and (when implemented) NPP li-
       braries all automatically have this dependency linked.

       Target Created:

       • CUDA::culibos

       Note: direct usage of this target by consumers should not be necessary.

   Result variables
       CUDAToolkit_FOUND
              A boolean specifying whether or not the CUDA Toolkit was found.

       CUDAToolkit_VERSION
              The exact version of the CUDA Toolkit found (as reported by nvcc
              --version or version.txt).

       CUDAToolkit_VERSION_MAJOR
              The major version of the CUDA Toolkit.

       CUDAToolkit_VERSION_MINOR
              The minor version of the CUDA Toolkit.

       CUDAToolkit_VERSION_PATCH
              The patch version of the CUDA Toolkit.

       CUDAToolkit_BIN_DIR
              The path to the CUDA Toolkit library directory that contains the
              CUDA executable nvcc.

       CUDAToolkit_INCLUDE_DIRS
              The path to the  CUDA  Toolkit  include  folder  containing  the
              header files required to compile a project linking against CUDA.

       CUDAToolkit_LIBRARY_DIR
              The path to the CUDA Toolkit library directory that contains the
              CUDA Runtime library cudart.

       CUDAToolkit_LIBRARY_ROOT
              New in version 3.18.

              The path to the CUDA Toolkit directory containing the  nvvm  di-
              rectory and version.txt.

       CUDAToolkit_TARGET_DIR
              The  path to the CUDA Toolkit directory including the target ar-
              chitecture when cross-compiling. When not  cross-compiling  this
              will   be   equivalent   to   the   parent  directory  of  CUDA-
              Toolkit_BIN_DIR.

       CUDAToolkit_NVCC_EXECUTABLE
              The path to the NVIDIA CUDA compiler nvcc.  Note that this  path
              may  not be the same as CMAKE_CUDA_COMPILER.  nvcc must be found
              to determine the CUDA Toolkit version  as  well  as  determining
              other  features  of  the  Toolkit.  This variable is set for the
              convenience of modules that depend on this one.

   FindCups
       Find the Common UNIX Printing System (CUPS).

       Set CUPS_REQUIRE_IPP_DELETE_ATTRIBUTE to TRUE if  you  need  a  version
       which features this function (i.e. at least 1.1.19)

   Imported targets
       New in version 3.15.

       This module defines IMPORTED target Cups::Cups, if Cups has been found.

   Result variables
       This module will set the following variables in your project:

       CUPS_FOUND
              true if CUPS headers and libraries were found

       CUPS_INCLUDE_DIRS
              the directory containing the Cups headers

       CUPS_LIBRARIES
              the libraries to link against to use CUPS.

       CUPS_VERSION_STRING
              the version of CUPS found (since CMake 2.8.8)

   Cache variables
       The following cache variables may also be set:

       CUPS_INCLUDE_DIR
              the directory containing the Cups headers

   FindCURL
       Find the native CURL headers and libraries.

       New  in  version  3.14: This module accept optional COMPONENTS to check
       supported features and protocols:

          PROTOCOLS: ICT FILE FTP FTPS GOPHER HTTP HTTPS IMAP IMAPS LDAP LDAPS POP3
                     POP3S RTMP RTSP SCP SFTP SMB SMBS SMTP SMTPS TELNET TFTP
          FEATURES:  SSL IPv6 UnixSockets libz AsynchDNS IDN GSS-API PSL SPNEGO
                     Kerberos NTLM NTLM_WB TLS-SRP HTTP2 HTTPS-proxy

   IMPORTED Targets
       New in version 3.12.

       This module defines IMPORTED target CURL::libcurl,  if  curl  has  been
       found.

   Result Variables
       This module defines the following variables:

       CURL_FOUND
              "True" if curl found.

       CURL_INCLUDE_DIRS
              where to find curl/curl.h, etc.

       CURL_LIBRARIES
              List of libraries when using curl.

       CURL_VERSION_STRING
              The version of curl found.

       New in version 3.13: Debug and Release variants are found separately.

   CURL CMake
       New in version 3.17.

       If  CURL was built using the CMake buildsystem then it provides its own
       CURLConfig.cmake file for use with the find_package() command's  config
       mode.  This  module  looks for this file and, if found, returns its re-
       sults with no further action.

       Set CURL_NO_CURL_CMAKE to ON to disable this search.

   FindCurses
       Find the curses or ncurses include file and library.

   Result Variables
       This module defines the following variables:

       CURSES_FOUND
              True if Curses is found.

       CURSES_INCLUDE_DIRS
              The include directories needed to use Curses.

       CURSES_LIBRARIES
              The libraries needed to use Curses.

       CURSES_CFLAGS
              New in version 3.16.

              Parameters which ought be given to C/C++  compilers  when  using
              Curses.

       CURSES_HAVE_CURSES_H
              True if curses.h is available.

       CURSES_HAVE_NCURSES_H
              True if ncurses.h is available.

       CURSES_HAVE_NCURSES_NCURSES_H
              True if ncurses/ncurses.h is available.

       CURSES_HAVE_NCURSES_CURSES_H
              True if ncurses/curses.h is available.

       Set CURSES_NEED_NCURSES to TRUE before the find_package(Curses) call if
       NCurses functionality is required.

       New in version 3.10: Set CURSES_NEED_WIDE to TRUE before the find_pack-
       age(Curses) call if unicode functionality is required.

   Backward Compatibility
       The following variable are provided for backward compatibility:

       CURSES_INCLUDE_DIR
              Path to Curses include.  Use CURSES_INCLUDE_DIRS instead.

       CURSES_LIBRARY
              Path to Curses library.  Use CURSES_LIBRARIES instead.

   FindCVS
       Find the Concurrent Versions System (CVS).

       The module defines the following variables:

          CVS_EXECUTABLE - path to cvs command line client
          CVS_FOUND - true if the command line client was found

       Example usage:

          find_package(CVS)
          if(CVS_FOUND)
            message("CVS found: ${CVS_EXECUTABLE}")
          endif()

   FindCxxTest
       Find CxxTest unit testing framework.

       Find  the  CxxTest  suite  and declare a helper macro for creating unit
       tests and integrating them with CTest.  For more details on CxxTest see
       https://cxxtest.com

       INPUT Variables

          CXXTEST_USE_PYTHON [deprecated since 1.3]
              Only used in the case both Python & Perl
              are detected on the system to control
              which CxxTest code generator is used.
              Valid only for CxxTest version 3.

          NOTE: In older versions of this Find Module,
          this variable controlled if the Python test
          generator was used instead of the Perl one,
          regardless of which scripting language the
          user had installed.

          CXXTEST_TESTGEN_ARGS (since CMake 2.8.3)
              Specify a list of options to pass to the CxxTest code
              generator.  If not defined, --error-printer is
              passed.

       OUTPUT Variables

          CXXTEST_FOUND
              True if the CxxTest framework was found
          CXXTEST_INCLUDE_DIRS
              Where to find the CxxTest include directory
          CXXTEST_PERL_TESTGEN_EXECUTABLE
              The perl-based test generator
          CXXTEST_PYTHON_TESTGEN_EXECUTABLE
              The python-based test generator
          CXXTEST_TESTGEN_EXECUTABLE (since CMake 2.8.3)
              The test generator that is actually used (chosen using user preferences
              and interpreters found in the system)
          CXXTEST_TESTGEN_INTERPRETER (since CMake 2.8.3)
              The full path to the Perl or Python executable on the system, on
              platforms where the script cannot be executed using its shebang line.

       MACROS for optional use by CMake users:

          CXXTEST_ADD_TEST(<test_name> <gen_source_file> <input_files_to_testgen...>)
             Creates a CxxTest runner and adds it to the CTest testing suite
             Parameters:
                 test_name               The name of the test
                 gen_source_file         The generated source filename to be
                                         generated by CxxTest
                 input_files_to_testgen  The list of header files containing the
                                         CxxTest::TestSuite's to be included in
                                         this runner

          #==============
          Example Usage:

          find_package(CxxTest)
          if(CXXTEST_FOUND)
              include_directories(${CXXTEST_INCLUDE_DIR})
              enable_testing()

              CXXTEST_ADD_TEST(unittest_foo foo_test.cc
                                ${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}/foo_test.h)
              target_link_libraries(unittest_foo foo) # as needed
          endif()

          This will (if CxxTest is found):
          1. Invoke the testgen executable to autogenerate foo_test.cc in the
             binary tree from "foo_test.h" in the current source directory.
          2. Create an executable and test called unittest_foo.

          #=============
          Example foo_test.h:

          #include <cxxtest/TestSuite.h>

          class MyTestSuite : public CxxTest::TestSuite
          {
          public:
             void testAddition( void )
             {
                TS_ASSERT( 1 + 1 > 1 );
                TS_ASSERT_EQUALS( 1 + 1, 2 );
             }
          };

   FindCygwin
       Find  Cygwin,  a POSIX-compatible environment that runs natively on Mi-
       crosoft Windows

   FindDart
       Find DART

       This module looks for the dart testing software and sets  DART_ROOT  to
       point to where it found it.

   FindDCMTK
       Find DICOM ToolKit (DCMTK) libraries and applications

       The module defines the following variables:

          DCMTK_INCLUDE_DIRS  - Directories to include to use DCMTK
          DCMTK_LIBRARIES     - Files to link against to use DCMTK
          DCMTK_FOUND         - If false, don't try to use DCMTK
          DCMTK_DIR           - (optional) Source directory for DCMTK

   Compatibility
       This  module  is  able to find a version of DCMTK that does or does not
       export a DCMTKConfig.cmake file. It applies a two step process:

       • Step 1:  Attempt to find DCMTK version providing a  DCMTKConfig.cmake
         file.

       • Step  2:   If  step  1 failed, rely on FindDCMTK.cmake to set DCMTK_*
         variables details below.

       Recent DCMTK provides a DCMTKConfig.cmake package  configuration  file.
       To  exclusively  use  the  package configuration file (recommended when
       possible), pass the NO_MODULE option to  find_package().  For  example,
       find_package(DCMTK  NO_MODULE).   This requires official DCMTK snapshot
       3.6.1_20140617 or newer.

       Until all clients update to the more recent DCMTK, build  systems  will
       need to support different versions of DCMTK.

       On any given system, the following combinations of DCMTK versions could
       be considered:

             ┌───────┬─────────────────┬─────────────────┬─────────────┐
             │       │ SYSTEM DCMTK    │ LOCAL DCMTK     │ Supported ? │
             ├───────┼─────────────────┼─────────────────┼─────────────┤
             │Case A │ NA              │ [ ] DCMTKConfig │ YES         │
             ├───────┼─────────────────┼─────────────────┼─────────────┤
             │Case B │ NA              │ [X] DCMTKConfig │ YES         │
             ├───────┼─────────────────┼─────────────────┼─────────────┤
             │Case C │ [ ] DCMTKConfig │ NA              │ YES         │
             ├───────┼─────────────────┼─────────────────┼─────────────┤
             │Case D │ [X] DCMTKConfig │ NA              │ YES         │
             ├───────┼─────────────────┼─────────────────┼─────────────┤
             │Case E │ [ ] DCMTKConfig │ [ ] DCMTKConfig │ YES (*)     │
             ├───────┼─────────────────┼─────────────────┼─────────────┤
             │Case F │ [X] DCMTKConfig │ [ ] DCMTKConfig │ NO          │
             ├───────┼─────────────────┼─────────────────┼─────────────┤
             │Case G │ [ ] DCMTKConfig │ [X] DCMTKConfig │ YES         │
             ├───────┼─────────────────┼─────────────────┼─────────────┤
             │Case H │ [X] DCMTKConfig │ [X] DCMTKConfig │ YES         │
             └───────┴─────────────────┴─────────────────┴─────────────┘
          (*) See Troubleshooting section.

       Legend:
          NA ...............: Means that no System or Local DCMTK is available

          [ ] DCMTKConfig ..: Means that the version of DCMTK does NOT  export
          a DCMTKConfig.cmake file.

          [X] DCMTKConfig ..: Means that the version of DCMTK exports a DCMTK-
          Config.cmake file.

   Troubleshooting
       What to do if my project finds a different version of DCMTK?

       Remove DCMTK entry from the CMake cache per  find_package()  documenta-
       tion.

   FindDevIL
       This     module     locates     the    developer's    image    library.
       https://openil.sourceforge.net/

   IMPORTED Targets
       New in version 3.21.

       This module defines the IMPORTED targets:

       DevIL::IL
              Defined if the system has DevIL.

       DevIL::ILU
              Defined if the system has DevIL Utilities.

       DevIL::ILUT
              Defined if the system has DevIL Utility Toolkit.

   Result Variables
       This module sets:

       IL_LIBRARIES
              The name of the IL library. These include the full path  to  the
              core  DevIL library. This one has to be linked into the applica-
              tion.

       ILU_LIBRARIES
              The name of the ILU library. Again, the full path. This  library
              is  for filters and effects, not actual loading. It doesn't have
              to be linked if the functionality it provides is not used.

       ILUT_LIBRARIES
              The name of the ILUT library. Full path. This part  of  the  li-
              brary  interfaces  with OpenGL. It is not strictly needed in ap-
              plications.

       IL_INCLUDE_DIR
              where to find the il.h, ilu.h and ilut.h files.

       DevIL_FOUND
              This is set to TRUE if all the above variables were  set.   This
              will  be set to false if ILU or ILUT are not found, even if they
              are not needed. In most systems, if one library is found all the
              others  are as well. That's the way the DevIL developers release
              it.

       DevIL_ILUT_FOUND
              New in version 3.21.

              This is set to TRUE if the ILUT library is found.

   FindDoxygen
       Doxygen     is     a     documentation     generation     tool     (see
       https://www.doxygen.nl).   This  module  looks for Doxygen and some op-
       tional tools it supports:

       dot    Graphviz dot utility used to render various graphs.

       mscgen Message Chart Generator utility used by Doxygen's \msc and \msc-
              file commands.

       dia    Dia the diagram editor used by Doxygen's \diafile command.

       New  in  version  3.9:  These  tools are available as components in the
       find_package() command.  For example:

          # Require dot, treat the other components as optional
          find_package(Doxygen
                       REQUIRED dot
                       OPTIONAL_COMPONENTS mscgen dia)

       The following variables are defined by this module:

       DOXYGEN_FOUND
              True if the doxygen executable was found.

       DOXYGEN_VERSION
              The version reported by doxygen --version.

       New in version 3.9: The module defines IMPORTED targets for Doxygen and
       each  component  found.   These can be used as part of custom commands,
       etc. and should be preferred over old-style (and now deprecated)  vari-
       ables like DOXYGEN_EXECUTABLE. The following import targets are defined
       if their corresponding executable could be found (the component  import
       targets will only be defined if that component was requested):

          Doxygen::doxygen
          Doxygen::dot
          Doxygen::mscgen
          Doxygen::dia

   Functions
       doxygen_add_docs
              New in version 3.9.

              This  function  is intended as a convenience for adding a target
              for generating documentation with Doxygen. It  aims  to  provide
              sensible  defaults  so  that projects can generally just provide
              the input files and directories and that will be  sufficient  to
              give sensible results. The function supports the ability to cus-
              tomize the Doxygen configuration used to  build  the  documenta-
              tion.

                 doxygen_add_docs(targetName
                     [filesOrDirs...]
                     [ALL]
                     [USE_STAMP_FILE]
                     [WORKING_DIRECTORY dir]
                     [COMMENT comment])

              The  function  constructs a Doxyfile and defines a custom target
              that runs Doxygen on that generated file. The listed  files  and
              directories  are used as the INPUT of the generated Doxyfile and
              they can contain wildcards.  Any files that are  listed  explic-
              itly  will also be added as SOURCES of the custom target so they
              will show up in an IDE project's source list.

              So that relative input paths work as expected,  by  default  the
              working  directory  of  the  Doxygen command will be the current
              source directory (i.e.  CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR). This  can  be
              overridden  with  the WORKING_DIRECTORY option to change the di-
              rectory used as the relative base point. Note  also  that  Doxy-
              gen's  default  behavior  is to strip the working directory from
              relative  paths  in  the  generated   documentation   (see   the
              STRIP_FROM_PATH Doxygen config option for details).

              If  provided, the optional comment will be passed as the COMMENT
              for the add_custom_target() command used to  create  the  custom
              target internally.

              New  in version 3.12: If ALL is set, the target will be added to
              the default build target.

              New in version 3.16: If USE_STAMP_FILE is set, the  custom  com-
              mand  defined by this function will create a stamp file with the
              name <targetName>.stamp in the current binary directory whenever
              doxygen  is  re-run.   With  this  option  present, all items in
              <filesOrDirs> must be files (i.e. no  directories,  symlinks  or
              wildcards)  and  each  of the files must exist at the time doxy-
              gen_add_docs() is called.  An error will be raised if any of the
              items  listed is missing or is not a file when USE_STAMP_FILE is
              given.  A dependency will be created on each  of  the  files  so
              that doxygen will only be re-run if one of the files is updated.
              Without the USE_STAMP_FILE option, doxygen will always be re-run
              if  the  <targetName> target is built regardless of whether any-
              thing listed in <filesOrDirs> has changed.

              The contents of the generated Doxyfile can be customized by set-
              ting  CMake  variables  before  calling  doxygen_add_docs(). Any
              variable with a name of the form  DOXYGEN_<tag>  will  have  its
              value  substituted for the corresponding <tag> configuration op-
              tion in the Doxyfile. See the Doxygen documentation for the full
              list of supported configuration options.

              Some of Doxygen's defaults are overridden to provide more appro-
              priate behavior for a CMake project. Each of the following  will
              be explicitly set unless the variable already has a value before
              doxygen_add_docs() is called (with some exceptions noted):

              DOXYGEN_HAVE_DOT
                     Set to YES if the dot component was requested and it  was
                     found,   NO   otherwise.  Any  existing  value  of  DOXY-
                     GEN_HAVE_DOT is ignored.

              DOXYGEN_DOT_MULTI_TARGETS
                     Set to YES by this module (note that this requires a  dot
                     version  newer than 1.8.10). This option is only meaning-
                     ful if DOXYGEN_HAVE_DOT is also set to YES.

              DOXYGEN_GENERATE_LATEX
                     Set to NO by this module.

              DOXYGEN_WARN_FORMAT
                     For Visual Studio based generators, this is  set  to  the
                     form  recognized by the Visual Studio IDE: $file($line) :
                     $text. For all other generators, Doxygen's default  value
                     is not overridden.

              DOXYGEN_PROJECT_NAME
                     Populated  with  the  name  of  the current project (i.e.
                     PROJECT_NAME).

              DOXYGEN_PROJECT_NUMBER
                     Populated with the version of the current  project  (i.e.
                     PROJECT_VERSION).

              DOXYGEN_PROJECT_BRIEF
                     Populated  with  the  description  of the current project
                     (i.e.  PROJECT_DESCRIPTION).

              DOXYGEN_INPUT
                     Projects should not set this variable. It will  be  popu-
                     lated  with  the  set  of files and directories passed to
                     doxygen_add_docs(), thereby providing consistent behavior
                     with  the  other built-in commands like add_executable(),
                     add_library()  and  add_custom_target().  If  a  variable
                     named DOXYGEN_INPUT is set by the project, it will be ig-
                     nored and a warning will be issued.

              DOXYGEN_RECURSIVE
                     Set to YES by this module.

              DOXYGEN_EXCLUDE_PATTERNS
                     If the set of inputs includes directories, this  variable
                     will  specify  patterns  used to exclude files from them.
                     The following patterns are added by doxygen_add_docs() to
                     ensure  CMake-specific  files and directories are not in-
                     cluded in the input.  If  the  project  sets  DOXYGEN_EX-
                     CLUDE_PATTERNS,  those contents are merged with these ad-
                     ditional patterns rather than replacing them:

                        */.git/*
                        */.svn/*
                        */.hg/*
                        */CMakeFiles/*
                        */_CPack_Packages/*
                        DartConfiguration.tcl
                        CMakeLists.txt
                        CMakeCache.txt

              DOXYGEN_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY
                     Set to CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR by this module. Note that
                     if  the project provides its own value for this and it is
                     a relative path, it will be converted to an absolute path
                     relative  to the current binary directory. This is neces-
                     sary because doxygen will normally be run from  a  direc-
                     tory within the source tree so that relative source paths
                     work as expected. If this directory does  not  exist,  it
                     will  be recursively created prior to executing the doxy-
                     gen commands.

       To change any of these defaults or override any  other  Doxygen  config
       option,  set  relevant variables before calling doxygen_add_docs(). For
       example:

              set(DOXYGEN_GENERATE_HTML NO)
              set(DOXYGEN_GENERATE_MAN YES)

              doxygen_add_docs(
                  doxygen
                  ${PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR}
                  COMMENT "Generate man pages"
              )

       A number of Doxygen config options accept lists of values, but  Doxygen
       requires them to be separated by whitespace. CMake variables hold lists
       as a string with items separated by semi-colons, so a conversion  needs
       to be performed. The doxygen_add_docs() command specifically checks the
       following Doxygen config options  and  will  convert  their  associated
       CMake  variable's  contents  into the required form if set. CMake vari-
       ables are named DOXYGEN_<name> for the Doxygen settings specified here.

          ABBREVIATE_BRIEF
          ALIASES
          CITE_BIB_FILES
          DIAFILE_DIRS
          DOTFILE_DIRS
          DOT_FONTPATH
          ENABLED_SECTIONS
          EXAMPLE_PATH
          EXAMPLE_PATTERNS
          EXCLUDE
          EXCLUDE_PATTERNS
          EXCLUDE_SYMBOLS
          EXPAND_AS_DEFINED
          EXTENSION_MAPPING
          EXTRA_PACKAGES
          EXTRA_SEARCH_MAPPINGS
          FILE_PATTERNS
          FILTER_PATTERNS
          FILTER_SOURCE_PATTERNS
          HTML_EXTRA_FILES
          HTML_EXTRA_STYLESHEET
          IGNORE_PREFIX
          IMAGE_PATH
          INCLUDE_FILE_PATTERNS
          INCLUDE_PATH
          INPUT
          LATEX_EXTRA_FILES
          LATEX_EXTRA_STYLESHEET
          MATHJAX_EXTENSIONS
          MSCFILE_DIRS
          PLANTUML_INCLUDE_PATH
          PREDEFINED
          QHP_CUST_FILTER_ATTRS
          QHP_SECT_FILTER_ATTRS
          STRIP_FROM_INC_PATH
          STRIP_FROM_PATH
          TAGFILES
          TCL_SUBST

       The following single value Doxygen options will be quoted automatically
       if they contain at least one space:

          CHM_FILE
          DIA_PATH
          DOCBOOK_OUTPUT
          DOCSET_FEEDNAME
          DOCSET_PUBLISHER_NAME
          DOT_FONTNAME
          DOT_PATH
          EXTERNAL_SEARCH_ID
          FILE_VERSION_FILTER
          GENERATE_TAGFILE
          HHC_LOCATION
          HTML_FOOTER
          HTML_HEADER
          HTML_OUTPUT
          HTML_STYLESHEET
          INPUT_FILTER
          LATEX_FOOTER
          LATEX_HEADER
          LATEX_OUTPUT
          LAYOUT_FILE
          MAN_OUTPUT
          MAN_SUBDIR
          MATHJAX_CODEFILE
          MSCGEN_PATH
          OUTPUT_DIRECTORY
          PERL_PATH
          PLANTUML_JAR_PATH
          PROJECT_BRIEF
          PROJECT_LOGO
          PROJECT_NAME
          QCH_FILE
          QHG_LOCATION
          QHP_CUST_FILTER_NAME
          QHP_VIRTUAL_FOLDER
          RTF_EXTENSIONS_FILE
          RTF_OUTPUT
          RTF_STYLESHEET_FILE
          SEARCHDATA_FILE
          USE_MDFILE_AS_MAINPAGE
          WARN_FORMAT
          WARN_LOGFILE
          XML_OUTPUT

       New  in  version 3.11: There are situations where it may be undesirable
       for a particular config option to  be  automatically  quoted  by  doxy-
       gen_add_docs(),  such  as ALIASES which may need to include its own em-
       bedded quoting.  The DOXYGEN_VERBATIM_VARS  variable  can  be  used  to
       specify  a  list  of  Doxygen variables (including the leading DOXYGEN_
       prefix) which should not be quoted.  The project  is  then  responsible
       for  ensuring  that  those variables' values make sense when placed di-
       rectly in the Doxygen input file.  In the case of list variables,  list
       items  are  still separated by spaces, it is only the automatic quoting
       that is skipped.  For example, the following allows  doxygen_add_docs()
       to  apply  quoting  to  DOXYGEN_PROJECT_BRIEF, but not each item in the
       DOXYGEN_ALIASES list (bracket syntax can also be used to  make  working
       with embedded quotes easier):

          set(DOXYGEN_PROJECT_BRIEF "String with spaces")
          set(DOXYGEN_ALIASES
              [[somealias="@some_command param"]]
              "anotherAlias=@foobar"
          )
          set(DOXYGEN_VERBATIM_VARS DOXYGEN_ALIASES)

       The resultant Doxyfile will contain the following lines:

          PROJECT_BRIEF = "String with spaces"
          ALIASES       = somealias="@some_command param" anotherAlias=@foobar

   Deprecated Result Variables
       Deprecated since version 3.9.

       For  compatibility with previous versions of CMake, the following vari-
       ables are also defined but they are deprecated and should no longer  be
       used:

       DOXYGEN_EXECUTABLE
              The  path  to  the doxygen command. If projects need to refer to
              the doxygen executable  directly,  they  should  use  the  Doxy-
              gen::doxygen import target instead.

       DOXYGEN_DOT_FOUND
              True if the dot executable was found.

       DOXYGEN_DOT_EXECUTABLE
              The  path  to  the dot command. If projects need to refer to the
              dot executable directly, they should use the Doxygen::dot import
              target instead.

       DOXYGEN_DOT_PATH
              The  path  to the directory containing the dot executable as re-
              ported in DOXYGEN_DOT_EXECUTABLE.  The  path  may  have  forward
              slashes even on Windows and is not suitable for direct substitu-
              tion into a Doxyfile.in template.  If you need this  value,  get
              the  IMPORTED_LOCATION  property  of the Doxygen::dot target and
              use get_filename_component() to extract the  directory  part  of
              that    path.    You   may   also   want   to   consider   using
              file(TO_NATIVE_PATH) to prepare the path for a Doxygen  configu-
              ration file.

   Deprecated Hint Variables
       Deprecated since version 3.9.

       DOXYGEN_SKIP_DOT
              This variable has no effect for the component form of find_pack-
              age.  In backward compatibility mode  (i.e.  without  components
              list)   it   prevents  the  finder  module  from  searching  for
              Graphviz's dot utility.

   FindEnvModules
       New in version 3.15.

       Locate an environment module implementation and make commands available
       to  CMake  scripts to use them.  This is compatible with both Lua-based
       Lmod and TCL-based EnvironmentModules.

       This module is intended for the use case of setting up the compiler and
       library  environment  within a CTest Script (ctest -S).  It can also be
       used in a CMake Script (cmake -P).

       NOTE:
          The loaded environment will not survive past the end of the  calling
          process.   Do  not  use  this module in project code (CMakeLists.txt
          files) to load a compiler environment; it will not be available dur-
          ing the build.  Instead load the environment manually before running
          CMake or using the generated build system.

   Example Usage
          set(CTEST_BUILD_NAME "CrayLinux-CrayPE-Cray-dynamic")
          set(CTEST_BUILD_CONFIGURATION Release)
          set(CTEST_BUILD_FLAGS "-k -j8")
          set(CTEST_CMAKE_GENERATOR "Unix Makefiles")

          ...

          find_package(EnvModules REQUIRED)

          env_module(purge)
          env_module(load modules)
          env_module(load craype)
          env_module(load PrgEnv-cray)
          env_module(load craype-knl)
          env_module(load cray-mpich)
          env_module(load cray-libsci)

          set(ENV{CRAYPE_LINK_TYPE} dynamic)

          ...

   Result Variables
       This module will set the following variables in your project:

       EnvModules_FOUND
              True if a compatible environment modules framework was found.

   Cache Variables
       The following cache variable will be set:

       EnvModules_COMMAND
              The low level module command to use.  Currently supported imple-
              mentations  are the Lua based Lmod and TCL based EnvironmentMod-
              ules.

   Environment Variables
       ENV{MODULESHOME}
              Usually set by the module environment implementation, used as  a
              hint to locate the module command to execute.

   Provided Functions
       This  defines  the following CMake functions for interacting with envi-
       ronment modules:

       env_module
              Execute an aribitrary module command:

                 env_module(cmd arg1 ... argN)
                 env_module(
                   COMMAND cmd arg1 ... argN
                   [OUTPUT_VARIABLE <out-var>]
                   [RESULT_VARIABLE <ret-var>]
                 )

              The options are:

              cmd arg1 ... argN
                     The module sub-command and arguments  to  execute  as  if
                     they  were  passed directly to the module command in your
                     shell environment.

              OUTPUT_VARIABLE <out-var>
                     The standard output from executing the module command.

              RESULT_VARIABLE <ret-var>
                     The return code from executing the module command.

       env_module_swap
              Swap one module for another:

                 env_module_swap(out_mod in_mod
                   [OUTPUT_VARIABLE <out-var>]
                   [RESULT_VARIABLE <ret-var>]
                 )

              This is functionally  equivalent  to  the  module  swap  out_mod
              in_mod shell command.  The options are:

              OUTPUT_VARIABLE <out-var>
                     The standard output from executing the module command.

              RESULT_VARIABLE <ret-var>
                     The return code from executing the module command.

       env_module_list
              Retrieve the list of currently loaded modules:

                 env_module_list(<out-var>)

              This  is  functionally  equivalent to the module list shell com-
              mand.  The result is stored in <out-var> as a properly formatted
              CMake semicolon-separated list variable.

       env_module_avail
              Retrieve the list of available modules:

                 env_module_avail([<mod-prefix>] <out-var>)

              This is functionally equivalent to the module avail <mod-prefix>
              shell command.  The result is stored in <out-var> as a  properly
              formatted CMake semicolon-separated list variable.

   FindEXPAT
       Find  the native Expat headers and library.  Expat is a stream-oriented
       XML parser library written in C.

   Imported Targets
       New in version 3.10.

       This module defines the following IMPORTED targets:

       EXPAT::EXPAT
              The Expat expat library, if found.

   Result Variables
       This module will set the following variables in your project:

       EXPAT_INCLUDE_DIRS
              where to find expat.h, etc.

       EXPAT_LIBRARIES
              the libraries to link against to use Expat.

       EXPAT_FOUND
              true if the Expat headers and libraries were found.

   FindFLEX
       Find Fast Lexical Analyzer (Flex) executable and provides  a  macro  to
       generate custom build rules

       The module defines the following variables:

          FLEX_FOUND - True is flex executable is found
          FLEX_EXECUTABLE - the path to the flex executable
          FLEX_VERSION - the version of flex
          FLEX_LIBRARIES - The flex libraries
          FLEX_INCLUDE_DIRS - The path to the flex headers

       The  minimum  required version of flex can be specified using the stan-
       dard syntax, e.g.  find_package(FLEX 2.5.13)

       If flex is found on the system, the module provides the macro:

          FLEX_TARGET(Name FlexInput FlexOutput
                      [COMPILE_FLAGS <string>]
                      [DEFINES_FILE <string>]
                      )

       which creates a custom command to generate the FlexOutput file from the
       FlexInput  file.   Name  is an alias used to get details of this custom
       command.  If COMPILE_FLAGS option is specified, the next  parameter  is
       added to the flex command line.

       New  in version 3.5: If flex is configured to output a header file, the
       DEFINES_FILE option may be used to specify its name.

       Changed in version 3.17: When CMP0098 is set to NEW, flex runs  in  the
       CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR directory.

       The macro defines the following variables:

          FLEX_${Name}_DEFINED - true is the macro ran successfully
          FLEX_${Name}_OUTPUTS - the source file generated by the custom rule, an
          alias for FlexOutput
          FLEX_${Name}_INPUT - the flex source file, an alias for ${FlexInput}
          FLEX_${Name}_OUTPUT_HEADER - the header flex output, if any.

       Flex  scanners often use tokens defined by Bison: the code generated by
       Flex depends of the header generated by Bison.  This  module  also  de-
       fines a macro:

          ADD_FLEX_BISON_DEPENDENCY(FlexTarget BisonTarget)

       which adds the required dependency between a scanner and a parser where
       FlexTarget and BisonTarget are the  first  parameters  of  respectively
       FLEX_TARGET and BISON_TARGET macros.

          ====================================================================
          Example:

          find_package(BISON)
          find_package(FLEX)

          BISON_TARGET(MyParser parser.y ${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/parser.cpp)
          FLEX_TARGET(MyScanner lexer.l  ${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/lexer.cpp)
          ADD_FLEX_BISON_DEPENDENCY(MyScanner MyParser)

           include_directories(${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR})
           add_executable(Foo
              Foo.cc
              ${BISON_MyParser_OUTPUTS}
              ${FLEX_MyScanner_OUTPUTS}
           )
           target_link_libraries(Foo ${FLEX_LIBRARIES})
          ====================================================================

   FindFLTK
       Find the Fast Light Toolkit (FLTK) library

   Input Variables
       By  default  this module will search for all of the FLTK components and
       add them to the FLTK_LIBRARIES variable.  You can limit the  components
       which  get placed in FLTK_LIBRARIES by defining one or more of the fol-
       lowing three options:

       FLTK_SKIP_OPENGL
              Set to true to disable searching for the FLTK GL library

       FLTK_SKIP_FORMS
              Set to true to disable searching for the FLTK Forms library

       FLTK_SKIP_IMAGES
              Set to true to disable searching for the FLTK Images library

       FLTK is composed also by a binary tool. You can set the  following  op-
       tion:

       FLTK_SKIP_FLUID
              Set to true to not look for the FLUID binary

   Result Variables
       The following variables will be defined:

       FLTK_FOUND
              True if all components not skipped were found

       FLTK_INCLUDE_DIR
              Path to the include directory for FLTK header files

       FLTK_LIBRARIES
              List of the FLTK libraries found

       FLTK_FLUID_EXECUTABLE
              Path to the FLUID binary tool

       FLTK_WRAP_UI
              True if FLUID is found, used to enable the FLTK_WRAP_UI command

   Cache Variables
       The following cache variables are also available to set or use:

       FLTK_BASE_LIBRARY_RELEASE
              The FLTK base library (optimized)

       FLTK_BASE_LIBRARY_DEBUG
              The FLTK base library (debug)

       FLTK_GL_LIBRARY_RELEASE
              The FLTK GL library (optimized)

       FLTK_GL_LIBRARY_DEBUG
              The FLTK GL library (debug)

       FLTK_FORMS_LIBRARY_RELEASE
              The FLTK Forms library (optimized)

       FLTK_FORMS_LIBRARY_DEBUG
              The FLTK Forms library (debug)

       FLTK_IMAGES_LIBRARY_RELEASE
              The FLTK Images protobuf library (optimized)

       FLTK_IMAGES_LIBRARY_DEBUG
              The FLTK Images library (debug)

       New  in  version  3.11: Debug and Release variants are found separately
       and use per-configuration variables.

   FindFLTK2
       Find the native FLTK 2.0 includes and library

       The following settings are defined

          FLTK2_FLUID_EXECUTABLE, where to find the Fluid tool
          FLTK2_WRAP_UI, This enables the FLTK2_WRAP_UI command
          FLTK2_INCLUDE_DIR, where to find include files
          FLTK2_LIBRARIES, list of fltk2 libraries
          FLTK2_FOUND, Don't use FLTK2 if false.

       The following settings should not be used in general.

          FLTK2_BASE_LIBRARY   = the full path to fltk2.lib
          FLTK2_GL_LIBRARY     = the full path to fltk2_gl.lib
          FLTK2_IMAGES_LIBRARY = the full path to fltk2_images.lib

   FindFontconfig
       New in version 3.14.

       Find Fontconfig headers and library.

   Imported Targets
       Fontconfig::Fontconfig
              The Fontconfig library, if found.

   Result Variables
       This will define the following variables in your project:

       Fontconfig_FOUND
              true if (the requested version of) Fontconfig is available.

       Fontconfig_VERSION
              the version of Fontconfig.

       Fontconfig_LIBRARIES
              the libraries to link against to use Fontconfig.

       Fontconfig_INCLUDE_DIRS
              where to find the Fontconfig headers.

       Fontconfig_COMPILE_OPTIONS
              this should be passed to target_compile_options(), if the target
              is not used for linking

   FindFreetype
       Find the FreeType font renderer includes and library.

   Imported Targets
       New in version 3.10.

       This module defines the following IMPORTED target:

       Freetype::Freetype
              The Freetype freetype library, if found

   Result Variables
       This module will set the following variables in your project:

       FREETYPE_FOUND
              true if the Freetype headers and libraries were found

       FREETYPE_INCLUDE_DIRS
              directories  containing  the  Freetype headers. This is the con-
              catenation of the variables:

              FREETYPE_INCLUDE_DIR_ft2build
                     directory holding the  main  Freetype  API  configuration
                     header

              FREETYPE_INCLUDE_DIR_freetype2
                     directory holding Freetype public headers

       FREETYPE_LIBRARIES
              the library to link against

       FREETYPE_VERSION_STRING
              the version of freetype found

       New in version 3.7: Debug and Release variants are found separately.

   Hints
       The  user may set the environment variable FREETYPE_DIR to the root di-
       rectory of a Freetype installation.

   FindGCCXML
       Find the GCC-XML front-end executable.

       This module will define the following variables:

          GCCXML - the GCC-XML front-end executable.

   FindGDAL
       Find Geospatial Data Abstraction Library (GDAL).

   IMPORTED Targets
       New in version 3.14.

       This module defines IMPORTED target GDAL::GDAL if GDAL has been found.

   Result Variables
       This module will set the following variables in your project:

       GDAL_FOUND
              True if GDAL is found.

       GDAL_INCLUDE_DIRS
              Include directories for GDAL headers.

       GDAL_LIBRARIES
              Libraries to link to GDAL.

       GDAL_VERSION
              New in version 3.14: The version of GDAL found.

   Cache variables
       The following cache variables may also be set:

       GDAL_LIBRARY
              The libgdal library file.

       GDAL_INCLUDE_DIR
              The directory containing gdal.h.

   Hints
       Set GDAL_DIR or GDAL_ROOT in the environment to specify  the  GDAL  in-
       stallation prefix.

       The following variables may be set to modify the search strategy:

       FindGDAL_SKIP_GDAL_CONFIG
              If  set,  gdal-config  will  not  be used. This can be useful if
              there are GDAL libraries built with autotools (which provide the
              tool) and CMake (which do not) in the same environment.

       GDAL_ADDITIONAL_LIBRARY_VERSIONS
              Extra versions of library names to search for.

   FindGettext
       Find GNU gettext tools

       This  module  looks for the GNU gettext tools.  This module defines the
       following values:

          GETTEXT_MSGMERGE_EXECUTABLE: the full path to the msgmerge tool.
          GETTEXT_MSGFMT_EXECUTABLE: the full path to the msgfmt tool.
          GETTEXT_FOUND: True if gettext has been found.
          GETTEXT_VERSION_STRING: the version of gettext found (since CMake 2.8.8)

       Additionally it provides the following macros:

       GETTEXT_CREATE_TRANSLATIONS ( outputFile [ALL] file1 ...  fileN )

          This will create a target "translations" which will convert the
          given input po files into the binary output mo file. If the
          ALL option is used, the translations will also be created when
          building the default target.

       GETTEXT_PROCESS_POT_FILE( <potfile> [ALL]  [INSTALL_DESTINATION  <dest-
       dir>] LANGUAGES <lang1> <lang2> ...  )

          Process the given pot file to mo files.
          If INSTALL_DESTINATION is given then automatically install rules will
          be created, the language subdirectory will be taken into account
          (by default use share/locale/).
          If ALL is specified, the pot file is processed when building the all target.
          It creates a custom target "potfile".

       GETTEXT_PROCESS_PO_FILES(   <lang>  [ALL]  [INSTALL_DESTINATION  <dir>]
       PO_FILES <po1> <po2> ...  )

          Process the given po files to mo files for the given language.
          If INSTALL_DESTINATION is given then automatically install rules will
          be created, the language subdirectory will be taken into account
          (by default use share/locale/).
          If ALL is specified, the po files are processed when building the all target.
          It creates a custom target "pofiles".

       New in version 3.2: If you wish to use the Gettext  library  (libintl),
       use FindIntl.

   FindGIF
       This finds the Graphics Interchange Format (GIF) library (giflib)

   Imported targets
       This module defines the following IMPORTED target:

       GIF::GIF
              The giflib library, if found.

   Result variables
       This module will set the following variables in your project:

       GIF_FOUND
              If false, do not try to use GIF.

       GIF_INCLUDE_DIRS
              where to find gif_lib.h, etc.

       GIF_LIBRARIES
              the libraries needed to use GIF.

       GIF_VERSION
              3, 4 or a full version string (eg 5.1.4) for versions >= 4.1.6.

   Cache variables
       The following cache variables may also be set:

       GIF_INCLUDE_DIR
              where to find the GIF headers.

       GIF_LIBRARY
              where to find the GIF library.

   Hints
       GIF_DIR  is an environment variable that would correspond to the ./con-
       figure --prefix=$GIF_DIR.

   FindGit
       The module defines the following variables:

       GIT_EXECUTABLE
              Path to Git command-line client.

       Git_FOUND, GIT_FOUND
              True if the Git command-line client was found.

       GIT_VERSION_STRING
              The version of Git found.

       New in version 3.14: The module defines the following IMPORTED  targets
       (when CMAKE_ROLE is PROJECT):

       Git::Git
              Executable of the Git command-line client.

       Example usage:

          find_package(Git)
          if(Git_FOUND)
            message("Git found: ${GIT_EXECUTABLE}")
          endif()

   FindGLEW
       Find the OpenGL Extension Wrangler Library (GLEW)

   Input Variables
       The following variables may be set to influence this module's behavior:

       GLEW_USE_STATIC_LIBS
              to find and create IMPORTED target for static linkage.

       GLEW_VERBOSE
              to output a detailed log of this module.

   Imported Targets
       New in version 3.1.

       This module defines the following Imported Targets:

       GLEW::glew
              The GLEW shared library.

       GLEW::glew_s
              The GLEW static library, if GLEW_USE_STATIC_LIBS is set to TRUE.

       GLEW::GLEW
              Duplicates either GLEW::glew or GLEW::glew_s based on availabil-
              ity.

   Result Variables
       This module defines the following variables:

       GLEW_INCLUDE_DIRS
              include directories for GLEW

       GLEW_LIBRARIES
              libraries to link against GLEW

       GLEW_SHARED_LIBRARIES
              libraries to link against shared GLEW

       GLEW_STATIC_LIBRARIES
              libraries to link against static GLEW

       GLEW_FOUND
              true if GLEW has been found and can be used

       GLEW_VERSION
              GLEW version

       GLEW_VERSION_MAJOR
              GLEW major version

       GLEW_VERSION_MINOR
              GLEW minor version

       GLEW_VERSION_MICRO
              GLEW micro version

       New in version 3.7: Debug and Release variants are found separately.

   FindGLUT
       Find OpenGL Utility Toolkit (GLUT) library and include files.

   IMPORTED Targets
       New in version 3.1.

       This module defines the IMPORTED targets:

       GLUT::GLUT
              Defined if the system has GLUT.

   Result Variables
       This module defines the following variables:

       GLUT_FOUND
              True if glut was found.

       GLUT_INCLUDE_DIRS
              New in version 3.23.

              Where to find GL/glut.h, etc.

       GLUT_LIBRARIES
              List of libraries for using glut.

   Cache Variables
       This module may set the  following  variables  depending  on  platform.
       These variables may optionally be set to help this module find the cor-
       rect files, but clients should not use these as results:

       GLUT_INCLUDE_DIR
              The full path to the directory containing GL/glut.h, not includ-
              ing GL/.

       GLUT_glut_LIBRARY
              The full path to the glut library.

       GLUT_Xmu_LIBRARY
              The full path to the Xmu library.

       GLUT_Xi_LIBRARY
              The full path to the Xi Library.

   Obsolete Variables
       The following variables may also be provided, for backwards compatibil-
       ity:

       GLUT_INCLUDE_DIR
              This is one of above Cache Variables, but prior  to  CMake  3.23
              was also a result variable.  Prefer to use GLUT_INCLUDE_DIRS in-
              stead in CMake 3.23 and above.

   FindGnuplot
       this module looks for gnuplot

       Once done this will define

          GNUPLOT_FOUND - system has Gnuplot
          GNUPLOT_EXECUTABLE - the Gnuplot executable
          GNUPLOT_VERSION_STRING - the version of Gnuplot found (since CMake 2.8.8)

       GNUPLOT_VERSION_STRING will not work for old versions like 3.7.1.

   FindGnuTLS
       Find the GNU Transport Layer Security library (gnutls)

   IMPORTED Targets
       New in version 3.16.

       This module defines IMPORTED target GnuTLS::GnuTLS, if gnutls has  been
       found.

   Result Variables
       GNUTLS_FOUND
              System has gnutls

       GNUTLS_INCLUDE_DIR
              The gnutls include directory

       GNUTLS_LIBRARIES
              The libraries needed to use gnutls

       GNUTLS_DEFINITIONS
              Compiler switches required for using gnutls

       GNUTLS_VERSION
              version of gnutls.

   FindGSL
       New in version 3.2.

       Find the native GNU Scientific Library (GSL) includes and libraries.

       The  GNU  Scientific Library (GSL) is a numerical library for C and C++
       programmers. It is free software under the GNU General Public License.

   Imported Targets
       If GSL is found, this module defines the following IMPORTED targets:

          GSL::gsl      - The main GSL library.
          GSL::gslcblas - The CBLAS support library used by GSL.

   Result Variables
       This module will set the following variables in your project:

          GSL_FOUND          - True if GSL found on the local system
          GSL_INCLUDE_DIRS   - Location of GSL header files.
          GSL_LIBRARIES      - The GSL libraries.
          GSL_VERSION        - The version of the discovered GSL install.

   Hints
       Set GSL_ROOT_DIR to a directory that contains a GSL installation.

       This script expects to find libraries at $GSL_ROOT_DIR/lib and the  GSL
       headers  at  $GSL_ROOT_DIR/include/gsl.   The library directory may op-
       tionally provide Release and Debug folders. If available, the libraries
       named  gsld, gslblasd or cblasd are recognized as debug libraries.  For
       Unix-like systems, this script  will  use  $GSL_ROOT_DIR/bin/gsl-config
       (if found) to aid in the discovery of GSL.

   Cache Variables
       This  module  may set the following variables depending on platform and
       type of GSL installation discovered.  These variables may optionally be
       set to help this module find the correct files:

          GSL_CBLAS_LIBRARY       - Location of the GSL CBLAS library.
          GSL_CBLAS_LIBRARY_DEBUG - Location of the debug GSL CBLAS library (if any).
          GSL_CONFIG_EXECUTABLE   - Location of the ``gsl-config`` script (if any).
          GSL_LIBRARY             - Location of the GSL library.
          GSL_LIBRARY_DEBUG       - Location of the debug GSL library (if any).

   FindGTest
       Locate the Google C++ Testing Framework.

       New in version 3.20: Upstream GTestConfig.cmake is used if possible.

   Imported targets
       New  in  version  3.20: This module defines the following IMPORTED tar-
       gets:

       GTest::gtest
              The Google Test gtest library, if found; adds Thread::Thread au-
              tomatically

       GTest::gtest_main
              The Google Test gtest_main library, if found

       New in version 3.23.

       GTest::gmock
              The Google Mock gmock library, if found; adds Thread::Thread au-
              tomatically

       GTest::gmock_main
              The Google Mock gmock_main library, if found

       Deprecated since version 3.20: For backwards compatibility, this module
       defines  additionally the following deprecated IMPORTED targets (avail-
       able since 3.5):

       GTest::GTest
              The Google Test gtest library, if found; adds Thread::Thread au-
              tomatically

       GTest::Main
              The Google Test gtest_main library, if found

   Result variables
       This module will set the following variables in your project:

       GTest_FOUND
              Found the Google Testing framework

       GTEST_INCLUDE_DIRS
              the directory containing the Google Test headers

       The library variables below are set as normal variables.  These contain
       debug/optimized keywords when a debugging library is found.

       GTEST_LIBRARIES
              The Google Test gtest library; note  it  also  requires  linking
              with an appropriate thread library

       GTEST_MAIN_LIBRARIES
              The Google Test gtest_main library

       GTEST_BOTH_LIBRARIES
              Both gtest and gtest_main

   Cache variables
       The following cache variables may also be set:

       GTEST_ROOT
              The  root directory of the Google Test installation (may also be
              set as an environment variable)

       GTEST_MSVC_SEARCH
              If compiling with MSVC, this variable can be set  to  MT  or  MD
              (the default) to enable searching a GTest build tree

   Example usage
          enable_testing()
          find_package(GTest REQUIRED)

          add_executable(foo foo.cc)
          target_link_libraries(foo GTest::gtest GTest::gtest_main)

          add_test(AllTestsInFoo foo)

   Deeper integration with CTest
       See   GoogleTest   for   information   on   the  gtest_add_tests()  and
       gtest_discover_tests() commands.

       Changed   in   version   3.9:   Previous   CMake    versions    defined
       gtest_add_tests() macro in this module.

   FindGTK
       Find GTK, glib and GTKGLArea

          GTK_INCLUDE_DIR   - Directories to include to use GTK
          GTK_LIBRARIES     - Files to link against to use GTK
          GTK_FOUND         - GTK was found
          GTK_GL_FOUND      - GTK's GL features were found

   FindGTK2
       Find the GTK2 widget libraries and several of its other optional compo-
       nents like gtkmm, glade, and glademm.

       Specify one or more of the following components as you call  this  find
       module.  See example below.

       • gtkgtkmmgladeglademm

   Imported Targets
       This  module  defines the following IMPORTED targets (subject to compo-
       nent selection):

       GTK2::atk, GTK2::atkmm, GTK2::cairo,  GTK2::cairomm,  GTK2::gdk_pixbuf,
       GTK2::gdk,    GTK2::gdkmm,    GTK2::gio,    GTK2::giomm,   GTK2::glade,
       GTK2::glademm, GTK2::glib, GTK2::glibmm, GTK2::gmodule,  GTK2::gobject,
       GTK2::gthread,  GTK2::gtk,  GTK2::gtkmm,  GTK2::harfbuzz,  GTK2::pango,
       GTK2::pangocairo,   GTK2::pangoft2,   GTK2::pangomm,    GTK2::pangoxft,
       GTK2::sigc.

       New in version 3.16.7: Added the GTK2::harfbuzz target.

   Result Variables
       The following variables will be defined for your use

       GTK2_FOUND
              Were all of your specified components found?

       GTK2_INCLUDE_DIRS
              All include directories

       GTK2_LIBRARIES
              All libraries

       GTK2_TARGETS
              New in version 3.5: All imported targets

       GTK2_DEFINITIONS
              Additional compiler flags

       GTK2_VERSION
              The version of GTK2 found (x.y.z)

       GTK2_MAJOR_VERSION
              The major version of GTK2

       GTK2_MINOR_VERSION
              The minor version of GTK2

       GTK2_PATCH_VERSION
              The patch version of GTK2

       New  in  version  3.5:  When  GTK2_USE_IMPORTED_TARGETS is set to TRUE,
       GTK2_LIBRARIES will list imported targets instead of library paths.

   Input Variables
       Optional variables you can define prior to calling this module:

       GTK2_DEBUG
              Enables verbose debugging of the module

       GTK2_ADDITIONAL_SUFFIXES
              Allows defining additional directories  to  search  for  include
              files

   Example Usage
       Call find_package() once.  Here are some examples to pick from:

       Require GTK 2.6 or later:

          find_package(GTK2 2.6 REQUIRED gtk)

       Require GTK 2.10 or later and Glade:

          find_package(GTK2 2.10 REQUIRED gtk glade)

       Search for GTK/GTKMM 2.8 or later:

          find_package(GTK2 2.8 COMPONENTS gtk gtkmm)

       Use the results:

          if(GTK2_FOUND)
            include_directories(${GTK2_INCLUDE_DIRS})
            add_executable(mygui mygui.cc)
            target_link_libraries(mygui ${GTK2_LIBRARIES})
          endif()

   FindHDF5
       Find Hierarchical Data Format (HDF5), a library for reading and writing
       self describing array data.

       This module invokes the HDF5 wrapper compiler that should be  installed
       alongside  HDF5.   Depending  upon  the HDF5 Configuration, the wrapper
       compiler is called either h5cc or h5pcc.  If this succeeds, the  module
       will  then  call  the compiler with the show argument to see what flags
       are used when compiling an HDF5 client application.

       The module will optionally accept the COMPONENTS argument.  If no  COM-
       PONENTS  are  specified,  then  the find module will default to finding
       only the HDF5 C library.  If one or more COMPONENTS are specified,  the
       module  will  attempt  to  find the language bindings for the specified
       components.  The valid components are C, CXX, Fortran, HL.   HL  refers
       to  the  "high-level"  HDF5 functions for C and Fortran.  If the COMPO-
       NENTS argument is not given, the module will attempt to find only the C
       bindings.   For example, to use Fortran HDF5 and HDF5-HL functions, do:
       find_package(HDF5 COMPONENTS Fortran HL).

       This module will read the variable HDF5_USE_STATIC_LIBRARIES to  deter-
       mine  whether or not to prefer a static link to a dynamic link for HDF5
       and all of it's dependencies.  To use this feature, make sure that  the
       HDF5_USE_STATIC_LIBRARIES variable is set before the call to find_pack-
       age.

       New in version 3.10: Support for HDF5_USE_STATIC_LIBRARIES on Windows.

       Both the serial and parallel HDF5 wrappers are considered and the first
       directory  to  contain either one will be used.  In the event that both
       appear in the same directory the serial version is  preferentially  se-
       lected. This behavior can be reversed by setting the variable HDF5_PRE-
       FER_PARALLEL to TRUE.

       In addition to finding the includes and libraries required  to  compile
       an  HDF5  client  application, this module also makes an effort to find
       tools that come with the HDF5 distribution that may be useful  for  re-
       gression testing.

   Result Variables
       This module will set the following variables in your project:

       HDF5_FOUND
              HDF5 was found on the system

       HDF5_VERSION
              New in version 3.3: HDF5 library version

       HDF5_INCLUDE_DIRS
              Location of the HDF5 header files

       HDF5_DEFINITIONS
              Required compiler definitions for HDF5

       HDF5_LIBRARIES
              Required libraries for all requested bindings

       HDF5_HL_LIBRARIES
              Required libraries for the HDF5 high level API for all bindings,
              if the HL component is enabled

       Available components are: C CXX Fortran and HL.  For each enabled  lan-
       guage binding, a corresponding HDF5_${LANG}_LIBRARIES variable, and po-
       tentially HDF5_${LANG}_DEFINITIONS, will be defined.  If the HL  compo-
       nent  is  enabled,  then  an HDF5_${LANG}_HL_LIBRARIES will also be de-
       fined.  With all components enabled, the following  variables  will  be
       defined:

       HDF5_C_DEFINITIONS
              Required compiler definitions for HDF5 C bindings

       HDF5_CXX_DEFINITIONS
              Required compiler definitions for HDF5 C++ bindings

       HDF5_Fortran_DEFINITIONS
              Required compiler definitions for HDF5 Fortran bindings

       HDF5_C_INCLUDE_DIRS
              Required include directories for HDF5 C bindings

       HDF5_CXX_INCLUDE_DIRS
              Required include directories for HDF5 C++ bindings

       HDF5_Fortran_INCLUDE_DIRS
              Required include directories for HDF5 Fortran bindings

       HDF5_C_LIBRARIES
              Required libraries for the HDF5 C bindings

       HDF5_CXX_LIBRARIES
              Required libraries for the HDF5 C++ bindings

       HDF5_Fortran_LIBRARIES
              Required libraries for the HDF5 Fortran bindings

       HDF5_C_HL_LIBRARIES
              Required libraries for the high level C bindings

       HDF5_CXX_HL_LIBRARIES
              Required libraries for the high level C++ bindings

       HDF5_Fortran_HL_LIBRARIES
              Required libraries for the high level Fortran bindings.

       HDF5_IS_PARALLEL
              HDF5 library has parallel IO support

       HDF5_C_COMPILER_EXECUTABLE
              path to the HDF5 C wrapper compiler

       HDF5_CXX_COMPILER_EXECUTABLE
              path to the HDF5 C++ wrapper compiler

       HDF5_Fortran_COMPILER_EXECUTABLE
              path to the HDF5 Fortran wrapper compiler

       HDF5_C_COMPILER_EXECUTABLE_NO_INTERROGATE
              path to the primary C compiler which is also the HDF5 wrapper

       HDF5_CXX_COMPILER_EXECUTABLE_NO_INTERROGATE
              path to the primary C++ compiler which is also the HDF5 wrapper

       HDF5_Fortran_COMPILER_EXECUTABLE_NO_INTERROGATE
              path  to  the  primary  Fortran  compiler which is also the HDF5
              wrapper

       HDF5_DIFF_EXECUTABLE
              path to the HDF5 dataset comparison tool

       With all components enabled, the following targets will be defined:

       HDF5::HDF5
              All detected HDF5_LIBRARIES.

       hdf5::hdf5
              C library.

       hdf5::hdf5_cpp
              C++ library.

       hdf5::hdf5_fortran
              Fortran library.

       hdf5::hdf5_hl
              High-level C library.

       hdf5::hdf5_hl_cpp
              High-level C++ library.

       hdf5::hdf5_hl_fortran
              High-level Fortran library.

       hdf5::h5diff
              h5diff executable.

   Hints
       The following variables can be set to guide the  search  for  HDF5  li-
       braries and includes:

       HDF5_PREFER_PARALLEL
              New in version 3.4.

              set  true  to  prefer  parallel HDF5 (by default, serial is pre-
              ferred)

       HDF5_FIND_DEBUG
              New in version 3.9.

              Set true to get extra debugging output.

       HDF5_NO_FIND_PACKAGE_CONFIG_FILE
              New in version 3.8.

              Set true to skip trying to find hdf5-config.cmake.

   FindHg
       Extract information from a mercurial working copy.

       The module defines the following variables:

          HG_EXECUTABLE - path to mercurial command line client (hg)
          HG_FOUND - true if the command line client was found
          HG_VERSION_STRING - the version of mercurial found

       New in version 3.1: If the command line client executable is found  the
       following macro is defined:

          HG_WC_INFO(<dir> <var-prefix>)

       Hg_WC_INFO  extracts information of a mercurial working copy at a given
       location.  This macro defines the following variables:

          <var-prefix>_WC_CHANGESET - current changeset
          <var-prefix>_WC_REVISION - current revision

       Example usage:

          find_package(Hg)
          if(HG_FOUND)
            message("hg found: ${HG_EXECUTABLE}")
            HG_WC_INFO(${PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR} Project)
            message("Current revision is ${Project_WC_REVISION}")
            message("Current changeset is ${Project_WC_CHANGESET}")
          endif()

   FindHSPELL
       Try to find Hebrew spell-checker (Hspell) and morphology engine.

       Once done this will define

          HSPELL_FOUND - system has Hspell
          HSPELL_INCLUDE_DIR - the Hspell include directory
          HSPELL_LIBRARIES - The libraries needed to use Hspell
          HSPELL_DEFINITIONS - Compiler switches required for using Hspell

          HSPELL_VERSION_STRING - The version of Hspell found (x.y)
          HSPELL_MAJOR_VERSION  - the major version of Hspell
          HSPELL_MINOR_VERSION  - The minor version of Hspell

   FindHTMLHelp
       This module looks for Microsoft HTML Help Compiler

       It defines:

          HTML_HELP_COMPILER     : full path to the Compiler (hhc.exe)
          HTML_HELP_INCLUDE_PATH : include path to the API (htmlhelp.h)
          HTML_HELP_LIBRARY      : full path to the library (htmlhelp.lib)

   FindIce
       New in version 3.1.

       Find the ZeroC Internet Communication Engine (ICE) programs,  libraries
       and datafiles.

       This  module  supports multiple components.  Components can include any
       of: Freeze, Glacier2, Ice, IceBox, IceDB, IceDiscovery, IceGrid, IceLo-
       catorDiscovery, IcePatch, IceSSL, IceStorm, IceUtil, IceXML, or Slice.

       Ice 3.7 and later also include C++11-specific components: Glacier2++11,
       Ice++11, IceBox++11, IceDiscovery++11 IceGrid, IceLocatorDiscovery++11,
       IceSSL++11, IceStorm++11

       Note that the set of supported components is Ice version-specific.

       New in version 3.4: Imported targets for components and most EXECUTABLE
       variables.

       New in version 3.7: Debug and Release variants are found separately.

       New in version 3.10: Ice 3.7 support, including  new  components,  pro-
       grams and the Nuget package.

       This  module  reports information about the Ice installation in several
       variables.  General variables:

          Ice_VERSION - Ice release version
          Ice_FOUND - true if the main programs and libraries were found
          Ice_LIBRARIES - component libraries to be linked
          Ice_INCLUDE_DIRS - the directories containing the Ice headers
          Ice_SLICE_DIRS - the directories containing the Ice slice interface
                           definitions

       Imported targets:

          Ice::<C>

       Where <C> is the name of an Ice component, for example Ice::Glacier2 or
       Ice++11.

       Ice slice programs are reported in:

          Ice_SLICE2CONFLUENCE_EXECUTABLE - path to slice2confluence executable
          Ice_SLICE2CPP_EXECUTABLE - path to slice2cpp executable
          Ice_SLICE2CS_EXECUTABLE - path to slice2cs executable
          Ice_SLICE2FREEZEJ_EXECUTABLE - path to slice2freezej executable
          Ice_SLICE2FREEZE_EXECUTABLE - path to slice2freeze executable
          Ice_SLICE2HTML_EXECUTABLE - path to slice2html executable
          Ice_SLICE2JAVA_EXECUTABLE - path to slice2java executable
          Ice_SLICE2JS_EXECUTABLE - path to slice2js executable
          Ice_SLICE2MATLAB_EXECUTABLE - path to slice2matlab executable
          Ice_SLICE2OBJC_EXECUTABLE - path to slice2objc executable
          Ice_SLICE2PHP_EXECUTABLE - path to slice2php executable
          Ice_SLICE2PY_EXECUTABLE - path to slice2py executable
          Ice_SLICE2RB_EXECUTABLE - path to slice2rb executable

       New in version 3.14: Variables for slice2confluence and slice2matlab.

       Ice programs are reported in:

          Ice_GLACIER2ROUTER_EXECUTABLE - path to glacier2router executable
          Ice_ICEBOX_EXECUTABLE - path to icebox executable
          Ice_ICEBOXXX11_EXECUTABLE - path to icebox++11 executable
          Ice_ICEBOXADMIN_EXECUTABLE - path to iceboxadmin executable
          Ice_ICEBOXD_EXECUTABLE - path to iceboxd executable
          Ice_ICEBOXNET_EXECUTABLE - path to iceboxnet executable
          Ice_ICEBRIDGE_EXECUTABLE - path to icebridge executable
          Ice_ICEGRIDADMIN_EXECUTABLE - path to icegridadmin executable
          Ice_ICEGRIDDB_EXECUTABLE - path to icegriddb executable
          Ice_ICEGRIDNODE_EXECUTABLE - path to icegridnode executable
          Ice_ICEGRIDNODED_EXECUTABLE - path to icegridnoded executable
          Ice_ICEGRIDREGISTRY_EXECUTABLE - path to icegridregistry executable
          Ice_ICEGRIDREGISTRYD_EXECUTABLE - path to icegridregistryd executable
          Ice_ICEPATCH2CALC_EXECUTABLE - path to icepatch2calc executable
          Ice_ICEPATCH2CLIENT_EXECUTABLE - path to icepatch2client executable
          Ice_ICEPATCH2SERVER_EXECUTABLE - path to icepatch2server executable
          Ice_ICESERVICEINSTALL_EXECUTABLE - path to iceserviceinstall executable
          Ice_ICESTORMADMIN_EXECUTABLE - path to icestormadmin executable
          Ice_ICESTORMDB_EXECUTABLE - path to icestormdb executable
          Ice_ICESTORMMIGRATE_EXECUTABLE - path to icestormmigrate executable

       Ice  db  programs  (Windows only; standard system versions on all other
       platforms) are reported in:

          Ice_DB_ARCHIVE_EXECUTABLE - path to db_archive executable
          Ice_DB_CHECKPOINT_EXECUTABLE - path to db_checkpoint executable
          Ice_DB_DEADLOCK_EXECUTABLE - path to db_deadlock executable
          Ice_DB_DUMP_EXECUTABLE - path to db_dump executable
          Ice_DB_HOTBACKUP_EXECUTABLE - path to db_hotbackup executable
          Ice_DB_LOAD_EXECUTABLE - path to db_load executable
          Ice_DB_LOG_VERIFY_EXECUTABLE - path to db_log_verify executable
          Ice_DB_PRINTLOG_EXECUTABLE - path to db_printlog executable
          Ice_DB_RECOVER_EXECUTABLE - path to db_recover executable
          Ice_DB_STAT_EXECUTABLE - path to db_stat executable
          Ice_DB_TUNER_EXECUTABLE - path to db_tuner executable
          Ice_DB_UPGRADE_EXECUTABLE - path to db_upgrade executable
          Ice_DB_VERIFY_EXECUTABLE - path to db_verify executable
          Ice_DUMPDB_EXECUTABLE - path to dumpdb executable
          Ice_TRANSFORMDB_EXECUTABLE - path to transformdb executable

       Ice component libraries are reported in:

          Ice_<C>_FOUND - ON if component was found
          Ice_<C>_LIBRARIES - libraries for component

       Note that <C> is the uppercased name of the component.

       This module reads hints about search results from:

          Ice_HOME - the root of the Ice installation

       The environment variable ICE_HOME may also be used; the Ice_HOME  vari-
       able takes precedence.

       NOTE:
          On  Windows,  Ice  3.7.0  and  later provide libraries via the NuGet
          package manager.  Appropriate NuGet packages will  be  searched  for
          using CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH, or alternatively Ice_HOME may be set to the
          location of a specific NuGet package to restrict the search.

       The following cache variables may also be set:

          Ice_<P>_EXECUTABLE - the path to executable <P>
          Ice_INCLUDE_DIR - the directory containing the Ice headers
          Ice_SLICE_DIR - the directory containing the Ice slice interface
                          definitions
          Ice_<C>_LIBRARY - the library for component <C>

       NOTE:
          In most cases none of the above variables will require setting,  un-
          less  multiple  Ice versions are available and a specific version is
          required.  On Windows, the most recent version of Ice will be  found
          through  the registry.  On Unix, the programs, headers and libraries
          will usually be in standard locations, but Ice_SLICE_DIRS might  not
          be  automatically  detected (commonly known locations are searched).
          All the other variables are defaulted using Ice_HOME, if set.   It's
          possible  to  set Ice_HOME and selectively specify alternative loca-
          tions for the other components; this  might  be  required  for  e.g.
          newer versions of Visual Studio if the heuristics are not sufficient
          to identify the correct programs and libraries for the specific Vis-
          ual Studio version.

       Other variables one may set to control this module are:

          Ice_DEBUG - Set to ON to enable debug output from FindIce.

   FindIconv
       New in version 3.11.

       This  module  finds the iconv() POSIX.1 functions on the system.  These
       functions might be provided in the regular C library or  externally  in
       the form of an additional library.

       The following variables are provided to indicate iconv support:

       Iconv_FOUND
              Variable indicating if the iconv support was found.

       Iconv_INCLUDE_DIRS
              The directories containing the iconv headers.

       Iconv_LIBRARIES
              The iconv libraries to be linked.

       Iconv_VERSION
              New in version 3.21.

              The version of iconv found (x.y)

       Iconv_VERSION_MAJOR
              New in version 3.21.

              The major version of iconv

       Iconv_VERSION_MINOR
              New in version 3.21.

              The minor version of iconv

       Iconv_IS_BUILT_IN
              A variable indicating whether iconv support is stemming from the
              C library or not. Even if the C library  provides  iconv(),  the
              presence  of  an  external libiconv implementation might lead to
              this being false.

       Additionally, the following IMPORTED target is being provided:

       Iconv::Iconv
              Imported target for using iconv.

       The following cache variables may also be set:

       Iconv_INCLUDE_DIR
              The directory containing the iconv headers.

       Iconv_LIBRARY
              The iconv library (if not implicitly given in the C library).

       NOTE:
          On POSIX platforms, iconv might be part of the  C  library  and  the
          cache variables Iconv_INCLUDE_DIR and Iconv_LIBRARY might be empty.

       NOTE:
          Some  libiconv  implementations  don't  embed  the version number in
          their header files.  In this case the variables Iconv_VERSION*  will
          be empty.

   FindIcotool
       Find icotool

       This module looks for icotool. Convert and create Win32 icon and cursor
       files.  This module defines the following values:

          ICOTOOL_EXECUTABLE: the full path to the icotool tool.
          ICOTOOL_FOUND: True if icotool has been found.
          ICOTOOL_VERSION_STRING: the version of icotool found.

   FindICU
       New in version 3.7.

       Find the International Components for Unicode (ICU) libraries and  pro-
       grams.

       This  module  supports multiple components.  Components can include any
       of: data, i18n, io, le, lx, test, tu and uc.

       Note that on Windows data is named dt and i18n is named in; any of  the
       names  may  be used, and the appropriate platform-specific library name
       will be automatically selected.

       New in version 3.11: Added support for static libraries on Windows.

       This module reports information about the ICU installation  in  several
       variables.  General variables:

          ICU_VERSION - ICU release version
          ICU_FOUND - true if the main programs and libraries were found
          ICU_LIBRARIES - component libraries to be linked
          ICU_INCLUDE_DIRS - the directories containing the ICU headers

       Imported targets:

          ICU::<C>

       Where  <C>  is the name of an ICU component, for example ICU::i18n; <C>
       is lower-case.

       ICU programs are reported in:

          ICU_GENCNVAL_EXECUTABLE - path to gencnval executable
          ICU_ICUINFO_EXECUTABLE - path to icuinfo executable
          ICU_GENBRK_EXECUTABLE - path to genbrk executable
          ICU_ICU-CONFIG_EXECUTABLE - path to icu-config executable
          ICU_GENRB_EXECUTABLE - path to genrb executable
          ICU_GENDICT_EXECUTABLE - path to gendict executable
          ICU_DERB_EXECUTABLE - path to derb executable
          ICU_PKGDATA_EXECUTABLE - path to pkgdata executable
          ICU_UCONV_EXECUTABLE - path to uconv executable
          ICU_GENCFU_EXECUTABLE - path to gencfu executable
          ICU_MAKECONV_EXECUTABLE - path to makeconv executable
          ICU_GENNORM2_EXECUTABLE - path to gennorm2 executable
          ICU_GENCCODE_EXECUTABLE - path to genccode executable
          ICU_GENSPREP_EXECUTABLE - path to gensprep executable
          ICU_ICUPKG_EXECUTABLE - path to icupkg executable
          ICU_GENCMN_EXECUTABLE - path to gencmn executable

       ICU component libraries are reported in:

          ICU_<C>_FOUND - ON if component was found; ``<C>`` is upper-case.
          ICU_<C>_LIBRARIES - libraries for component; ``<C>`` is upper-case.

       ICU datafiles are reported in:

          ICU_MAKEFILE_INC - Makefile.inc
          ICU_PKGDATA_INC - pkgdata.inc

       This module reads hints about search results from:

          ICU_ROOT - the root of the ICU installation

       The environment variable ICU_ROOT may also be used; the ICU_ROOT  vari-
       able takes precedence.

       The following cache variables may also be set:

          ICU_<P>_EXECUTABLE - the path to executable <P>; ``<P>`` is upper-case.
          ICU_INCLUDE_DIR - the directory containing the ICU headers
          ICU_<C>_LIBRARY - the library for component <C>; ``<C>`` is upper-case.

       NOTE:
          In  most cases none of the above variables will require setting, un-
          less multiple ICU versions are available and a specific  version  is
          required.

       Other variables one may set to control this module are:

          ICU_DEBUG - Set to ON to enable debug output from FindICU.

   FindImageMagick
       Find ImageMagick binary suite.

       New in version 3.9: Added support for ImageMagick 7.

       This  module  will  search  for a set of ImageMagick tools specified as
       components in the find_package() call.  Typical components include, but
       are  not  limited  to  (future versions of ImageMagick might have addi-
       tional components not listed here):

          animate
          compare
          composite
          conjure
          convert
          display
          identify
          import
          mogrify
          montage
          stream

       If no component is specified in the find_package() call, then  it  only
       searches  for  the ImageMagick executable directory.  This code defines
       the following variables:

          ImageMagick_FOUND                  - TRUE if all components are found.
          ImageMagick_EXECUTABLE_DIR         - Full path to executables directory.
          ImageMagick_<component>_FOUND      - TRUE if <component> is found.
          ImageMagick_<component>_EXECUTABLE - Full path to <component> executable.
          ImageMagick_VERSION_STRING         - the version of ImageMagick found
                                               (since CMake 2.8.8)

       ImageMagick_VERSION_STRING will not work for old versions like 5.2.3.

       There are also components for the following ImageMagick APIs:

          Magick++
          MagickWand
          MagickCore

       For these components the following variables are set:

          ImageMagick_FOUND                    - TRUE if all components are found.
          ImageMagick_INCLUDE_DIRS             - Full paths to all include dirs.
          ImageMagick_LIBRARIES                - Full paths to all libraries.
          ImageMagick_<component>_FOUND        - TRUE if <component> is found.
          ImageMagick_<component>_INCLUDE_DIRS - Full path to <component> include dirs.
          ImageMagick_<component>_LIBRARIES    - Full path to <component> libraries.

       Example Usages:

          find_package(ImageMagick)
          find_package(ImageMagick COMPONENTS convert)
          find_package(ImageMagick COMPONENTS convert mogrify display)
          find_package(ImageMagick COMPONENTS Magick++)
          find_package(ImageMagick COMPONENTS Magick++ convert)

       Note that the standard find_package()  features  are  supported  (i.e.,
       QUIET, REQUIRED, etc.).

   FindIntl
       New in version 3.2.

       Find the Gettext libintl headers and libraries.

       This  module reports information about the Gettext libintl installation
       in several variables.

       Intl_FOUND
              True if libintl is found.

       Intl_INCLUDE_DIRS
              The directory containing the libintl headers.

       Intl_LIBRARIES
              The intl libraries to be linked.

       Intl_VERSION
              New in version 3.21.

              The version of intl found (x.y.z)

       Intl_VERSION_MAJOR
              New in version 3.21.

              The major version of intl

       Intl_VERSION_MINOR
              New in version 3.21.

              The minor version of intl

       Intl_VERSION_PATCH
              New in version 3.21.

              The patch version of intl

       New in version 3.20: This module defines IMPORTED target Intl::Intl.

       The following cache variables may also be set:

       Intl_INCLUDE_DIR
              The directory containing the libintl headers

       Intl_LIBRARY
              The libintl library (if any)

       Intl_IS_BUILT_IN
              New in version 3.20.

              whether intl is a part of the C library.

       NOTE:
          On some platforms, such as Linux with GNU libc,  the  gettext  func-
          tions  are  present in the C standard library and libintl is not re-
          quired.  Intl_LIBRARIES will be empty in this case.

       NOTE:
          Some libintl implementations don't embed the version number in their
          header  files.   In  this  case  the variables Intl_VERSION* will be
          empty.

       NOTE:
          If you wish to use the Gettext tools (msgmerge, msgfmt,  etc.),  use
          FindGettext.

   FindITK
       This module no longer exists.

       This  module existed in versions of CMake prior to 3.1, but became only
       a thin wrapper around find_package(ITK NO_MODULE) to  provide  compati-
       bility  for  projects  using long-outdated conventions.  Now find_pack-
       age(ITK) will search for ITKConfig.cmake directly.

   FindJasper
       Find the Jasper JPEG2000 library.

   IMPORTED Targets
       Jasper::Jasper
              The jasper library, if found.

   Result Variables
       This module defines the following variables:

       JASPER_FOUND
              system has Jasper

       JASPER_INCLUDE_DIRS
              New in version 3.22.

              the Jasper include directory

       JASPER_LIBRARIES
              the libraries needed to use Jasper

       JASPER_VERSION_STRING
              the version of Jasper found

   Cache variables
       The following cache variables may also be set:

       JASPER_INCLUDE_DIR
              where to find jasper/jasper.h, etc.

       JASPER_LIBRARY_RELEASE
              where to find the Jasper library (optimized).

       JASPER_LIBARRY_DEBUG
              where to find the Jasper library (debug).

   FindJava
       Find Java

       This module finds if Java is installed and determines where the include
       files  and  libraries  are.   The  caller may set variable JAVA_HOME to
       specify a Java installation prefix explicitly.

       See also the FindJNI module to find Java Native Interface (JNI).

       New in version 3.10: Added support for Java 9+ version parsing.

       Specify one or more of the following components as you call  this  find
       module. See example below.

          Runtime     = Java Runtime Environment used to execute Java byte-compiled applications
          Development = Development tools (java, javac, javah, jar and javadoc), includes Runtime component
          IdlJ        = Interface Description Language (IDL) to Java compiler
          JarSigner   = Signer and verifier tool for Java Archive (JAR) files

       This module sets the following result variables:

          Java_JAVA_EXECUTABLE      = the full path to the Java runtime
          Java_JAVAC_EXECUTABLE     = the full path to the Java compiler
          Java_JAVAH_EXECUTABLE     = the full path to the Java header generator
          Java_JAVADOC_EXECUTABLE   = the full path to the Java documentation generator
          Java_IDLJ_EXECUTABLE      = the full path to the Java idl compiler
          Java_JAR_EXECUTABLE       = the full path to the Java archiver
          Java_JARSIGNER_EXECUTABLE = the full path to the Java jar signer
          Java_VERSION_STRING       = Version of java found, eg. 1.6.0_12
          Java_VERSION_MAJOR        = The major version of the package found.
          Java_VERSION_MINOR        = The minor version of the package found.
          Java_VERSION_PATCH        = The patch version of the package found.
          Java_VERSION_TWEAK        = The tweak version of the package found (after '_')
          Java_VERSION              = This is set to: $major[.$minor[.$patch[.$tweak]]]

       New  in  version  3.4:  Added  the  Java_IDLJ_EXECUTABLE  and Java_JAR-
       SIGNER_EXECUTABLE variables.

       The minimum required  version  of  Java  can  be  specified  using  the
       find_package() syntax, e.g.

          find_package(Java 1.8)

       NOTE:  ${Java_VERSION} and ${Java_VERSION_STRING} are not guaranteed to
       be identical.  For example some  java  version  may  return:  Java_VER-
       SION_STRING = 1.8.0_17 and Java_VERSION = 1.8.0.17

       another  example is the Java OEM, with: Java_VERSION_STRING = 1.8.0-oem
       and Java_VERSION = 1.8.0

       For these components the following variables are set:

          Java_FOUND                    - TRUE if all components are found.
          Java_<component>_FOUND        - TRUE if <component> is found.

       Example Usages:

          find_package(Java)
          find_package(Java 1.8 REQUIRED)
          find_package(Java COMPONENTS Runtime)
          find_package(Java COMPONENTS Development)

   FindJNI
       Find Java Native Interface (JNI) headers and libraries.

       JNI enables Java code running in a Java Virtual Machine (JVM) or Dalvik
       Virtual Machine (DVM) on Android to call and be called by native appli-
       cations and libraries written in other languages such as C and C++.

       This module finds if Java is installed and determines where the include
       files  and  libraries are.  It also determines what the name of the li-
       brary is.  The caller may set variable JAVA_HOME to specify a Java  in-
       stallation prefix explicitly.

       New  in  version 3.24: Added imported targets, components AWT, JVM, and
       Android NDK support.  If no components are specified,  the  module  de-
       faults  to  an  empty  components list while targeting Android, and all
       available components otherwise.

       When using Android NDK, the corresponding package version  is  reported
       and  a  specific  release can be requested. At Android API level 31 and
       above, the additional NativeHelper component can be requested.  Native-
       Helper  is  also exposed as an implicit dependency of the JVM component
       (only if this does not cause a conflict) which provides a  uniform  ac-
       cess to JVM functions.

   Imported Targets
       New in version 3.24.

       JNI::JNI
              Main JNI target, defined only if jni.h was found.

       JNI::AWT
              Java AWT Native Interface (JAWT) library, defined only if compo-
              nent AWT was found.

       JNI::JVM
              Java Virtual Machine (JVM) library, defined  only  if  component
              JVM was found.

       JNI::NativeHelper
              When targeting Android API level 31 and above, the import target
              will provide access to libnativehelper.so that exposes JVM func-
              tions such as JNI_CreateJavaVM.

   Result Variables
       This module sets the following result variables:

       JNI_INCLUDE_DIRS
              The include directories to use.

       JNI_LIBRARIES
              The libraries to use (JAWT and JVM).

       JNI_FOUND
              TRUE if JNI headers and libraries were found.

       JNI_<component>_FOUND
              New in version 3.24.

              TRUE if <component> was found.

       JNI_VERSION
              Full  Android  NDK  package  version (including suffixes such as
              -beta3 and -rc1) or undefined otherwise.

       JNI_VERSION_MAJOR
              New in version 3.24.

              Android NDK major version or undefined otherwise.

       JNI_VERSION_MINOR
              New in version 3.24.

              Android NDK minor version or undefined otherwise.

       JNI_VERSION_PATCH
              New in version 3.24.

              Android NDK patch version or undefined otherwise.

   Cache Variables
       The following cache variables are also available to set or use:

       JAVA_AWT_LIBRARY
              The path to the Java AWT Native Interface (JAWT) library.

       JAVA_JVM_LIBRARY
              The path to the Java Virtual Machine (JVM) library.

       JAVA_INCLUDE_PATH
              The include path to jni.h.

       JAVA_INCLUDE_PATH2
              The include path to machine-dependant headers jni_md.h and  jni-
              port.h.  The variable is defined only if jni.h depends on one of
              these headers. In contrast, Android NDK jni.h can  be  typically
              used standalone.

       JAVA_AWT_INCLUDE_PATH
              The include path to jawt.h.

   FindJPEG
       Find the Joint Photographic Experts Group (JPEG) library (libjpeg)

   Imported targets
       New in version 3.12.

       This module defines the following IMPORTED targets:

       JPEG::JPEG
              The JPEG library, if found.

   Result variables
       This module will set the following variables in your project:

       JPEG_FOUND
              If false, do not try to use JPEG.

       JPEG_INCLUDE_DIRS
              where to find jpeglib.h, etc.

       JPEG_LIBRARIES
              the libraries needed to use JPEG.

       JPEG_VERSION
              New in version 3.12: the version of the JPEG library found

   Cache variables
       The following cache variables may also be set:

       JPEG_INCLUDE_DIRS
              where to find jpeglib.h, etc.

       JPEG_LIBRARY_RELEASE
              where to find the JPEG library (optimized).

       JPEG_LIBRARY_DEBUG
              where to find the JPEG library (debug).

       New in version 3.12: Debug and Release variand are found separately.

   Obsolete variables
       JPEG_INCLUDE_DIR
              where to find jpeglib.h, etc. (same as JPEG_INCLUDE_DIRS)

       JPEG_LIBRARY
              where to find the JPEG library.

   FindKDE3
       Find  the KDE3 include and library dirs, KDE preprocessors and define a
       some macros

       This module defines the following variables:

       KDE3_DEFINITIONS
              compiler definitions required for compiling KDE software

       KDE3_INCLUDE_DIR
              the KDE include directory

       KDE3_INCLUDE_DIRS
              the KDE and the Qt include directory, for use  with  include_di-
              rectories()

       KDE3_LIB_DIR
              the  directory  where  the  KDE libraries are installed, for use
              with link_directories()

       QT_AND_KDECORE_LIBS
              this contains both the Qt and the kdecore library

       KDE3_DCOPIDL_EXECUTABLE
              the dcopidl executable

       KDE3_DCOPIDL2CPP_EXECUTABLE
              the dcopidl2cpp executable

       KDE3_KCFGC_EXECUTABLE
              the kconfig_compiler executable

       KDE3_FOUND
              set to TRUE if all of the above has been found

       The following user adjustable options are provided:

       KDE3_BUILD_TESTS
              enable this to build KDE testcases

       It also adds the following macros (from KDE3Macros.cmake)  SRCS_VAR  is
       always  the  variable  which contains the list of source files for your
       application or library.

       KDE3_AUTOMOC(file1 ...  fileN)

          Call this if you want to have automatic moc file handling.
          This means if you include "foo.moc" in the source file foo.cpp
          a moc file for the header foo.h will be created automatically.
          You can set the property SKIP_AUTOMAKE using set_source_files_properties()
          to exclude some files in the list from being processed.

       KDE3_ADD_MOC_FILES(SRCS_VAR file1 ...  fileN )

          If you don't use the KDE3_AUTOMOC() macro, for the files
          listed here moc files will be created (named "foo.moc.cpp")

       KDE3_ADD_DCOP_SKELS(SRCS_VAR header1.h ...  headerN.h )

          Use this to generate DCOP skeletions from the listed headers.

       KDE3_ADD_DCOP_STUBS(SRCS_VAR header1.h ...  headerN.h )

          Use this to generate DCOP stubs from the listed headers.

       KDE3_ADD_UI_FILES(SRCS_VAR file1.ui ...  fileN.ui )

          Use this to add the Qt designer ui files to your application/library.

       KDE3_ADD_KCFG_FILES(SRCS_VAR file1.kcfgc ...  fileN.kcfgc )

          Use this to add KDE kconfig compiler files to your application/library.

       KDE3_INSTALL_LIBTOOL_FILE(target)

          This will create and install a simple libtool file for the given target.

       KDE3_ADD_EXECUTABLE(name file1 ...  fileN )

          Currently identical to add_executable(), may provide some advanced
          features in the future.

       KDE3_ADD_KPART(name [WITH_PREFIX] file1 ...  fileN )

          Create a KDE plugin (KPart, kioslave, etc.) from the given source files.
          If WITH_PREFIX is given, the resulting plugin will have the prefix "lib",
          otherwise it won't.
          It creates and installs an appropriate libtool la-file.

       KDE3_ADD_KDEINIT_EXECUTABLE(name file1 ...  fileN )

          Create a KDE application in the form of a module loadable via kdeinit.
          A library named kdeinit_<name> will be created and a small executable
          which links to it.

       The option KDE3_ENABLE_FINAL to enable  all-in-one  compilation  is  no
       longer supported.

       Author: Alexander Neundorf <neundorf@kde.org>

   FindKDE4
       Find  KDE4  and  provide  all necessary variables and macros to compile
       software for it.  It looks for KDE 4 in the  following  directories  in
       the given order:

          CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX
          KDEDIRS
          /opt/kde4

       Please look in FindKDE4Internal.cmake and KDE4Macros.cmake for more in-
       formation.   They  are  installed  with  the   KDE   4   libraries   in
       $KDEDIRS/share/apps/cmake/modules/.

       Author: Alexander Neundorf <neundorf@kde.org>

   FindLAPACK
       Find Linear Algebra PACKage (LAPACK) library

       This  module  finds  an  installed  Fortran library that implements the
       LAPACK linear-algebra interface.

       At least one of the C, CXX, or Fortran languages must be enabled.

   Input Variables
       The following variables may be set to influence this module's behavior:

       BLA_STATIC
              if ON use static linkage

       BLA_VENDOR
              Set to one of the BLAS/LAPACK Vendors to search  for  BLAS  only
              from  the specified vendor.  If not set, all vendors are consid-
              ered.

       BLA_F95
              if ON tries to find the BLAS95/LAPACK95 interfaces

       BLA_PREFER_PKGCONFIG
              New in version 3.20.

              if set pkg-config will be used to search for  a  LAPACK  library
              first and if one is found that is preferred

       BLA_PKGCONFIG_LAPACK
              New in version 3.25.

              If set, the pkg-config method will look for this module name in-
              stead of just lapack.

       BLA_SIZEOF_INTEGER
              New in version 3.22.

              Specify the BLAS/LAPACK library integer size:

              4      Search for a BLAS/LAPACK with 32-bit integer interfaces.

              8      Search for a BLAS/LAPACK with 64-bit integer interfaces.

              ANY    Search for any BLAS/LAPACK.  Most likely,  a  BLAS/LAPACK
                     with 32-bit integer interfaces will be found.

   Imported targets
       This module defines the following IMPORTED targets:

       LAPACK::LAPACK
              New in version 3.18.

              The libraries to use for LAPACK, if found.

   Result Variables
       This module defines the following variables:

       LAPACK_FOUND
              library implementing the LAPACK interface is found

       LAPACK_LINKER_FLAGS
              uncached list of required linker flags (excluding -l and -L).

       LAPACK_LIBRARIES
              uncached  list  of  libraries  (using  full  path  name) to link
              against to use LAPACK

       LAPACK95_LIBRARIES
              uncached list of  libraries  (using  full  path  name)  to  link
              against to use LAPACK95

       LAPACK95_FOUND
              library implementing the LAPACK95 interface is found

   Intel MKL
       To use the Intel MKL implementation of LAPACK, a project must enable at
       least one of the C or CXX languages.  Set BLA_VENDOR to  an  Intel  MKL
       variant  either  on the command-line as -DBLA_VENDOR=Intel10_64lp or in
       project code:

          set(BLA_VENDOR Intel10_64lp)
          find_package(LAPACK)

       In order to build a project using Intel MKL, and end  user  must  first
       establish an Intel MKL environment.  See the FindBLAS module section on
       Intel MKL for details.

   FindLATEX
       Find LaTeX

       This module finds an installed LaTeX and determines the location of the
       compiler.   Additionally  the  module  looks for Latex-related software
       like BibTeX.

       New in version 3.2: Component processing; support for htlatex, pdftops,
       Biber, xindy, XeLaTeX, LuaLaTeX.

       This module sets the following result variables:

          LATEX_FOUND:          whether found Latex and requested components
          LATEX_<component>_FOUND:  whether found <component>
          LATEX_COMPILER:       path to the LaTeX compiler
          PDFLATEX_COMPILER:    path to the PdfLaTeX compiler
          XELATEX_COMPILER:     path to the XeLaTeX compiler
          LUALATEX_COMPILER:    path to the LuaLaTeX compiler
          BIBTEX_COMPILER:      path to the BibTeX compiler
          BIBER_COMPILER:       path to the Biber compiler
          MAKEINDEX_COMPILER:   path to the MakeIndex compiler
          XINDY_COMPILER:       path to the xindy compiler
          DVIPS_CONVERTER:      path to the DVIPS converter
          DVIPDF_CONVERTER:     path to the DVIPDF converter
          PS2PDF_CONVERTER:     path to the PS2PDF converter
          PDFTOPS_CONVERTER:    path to the pdftops converter
          LATEX2HTML_CONVERTER: path to the LaTeX2Html converter
          HTLATEX_COMPILER:     path to the htlatex compiler

       Possible components are:

          PDFLATEX
          XELATEX
          LUALATEX
          BIBTEX
          BIBER
          MAKEINDEX
          XINDY
          DVIPS
          DVIPDF
          PS2PDF
          PDFTOPS
          LATEX2HTML
          HTLATEX

       Example Usages:

          find_package(LATEX)
          find_package(LATEX COMPONENTS PDFLATEX)
          find_package(LATEX COMPONENTS BIBTEX PS2PDF)

   FindLibArchive
       Find  libarchive  library  and headers.  Libarchive is multi-format ar-
       chive and compression library.

       The module defines the following variables:

          LibArchive_FOUND        - true if libarchive was found
          LibArchive_INCLUDE_DIRS - include search path
          LibArchive_LIBRARIES    - libraries to link
          LibArchive_VERSION      - libarchive 3-component version number

       The module defines the following IMPORTED targets:

          LibArchive::LibArchive  - target for linking against libarchive

       New in version 3.6: Support for new libarchive 3.2 version string  for-
       mat.

       New in version 3.17: Provides an imported target.

   FindLibinput
       New in version 3.14.

       Find libinput headers and library.

   Imported Targets
       Libinput::Libinput
              The libinput library, if found.

   Result Variables
       This will define the following variables in your project:

       Libinput_FOUND
              true if (the requested version of) libinput is available.

       Libinput_VERSION
              the version of libinput.

       Libinput_LIBRARIES
              the libraries to link against to use libinput.

       Libinput_INCLUDE_DIRS
              where to find the libinput headers.

       Libinput_COMPILE_OPTIONS
              this should be passed to target_compile_options(), if the target
              is not used for linking

   FindLibLZMA
       Find LZMA compression algorithm headers and library.

   Imported Targets
       New in version 3.14.

       This module defines IMPORTED target LibLZMA::LibLZMA,  if  liblzma  has
       been found.

   Result variables
       This module will set the following variables in your project:

       LIBLZMA_FOUND
              True if liblzma headers and library were found.

       LIBLZMA_INCLUDE_DIRS
              Directory where liblzma headers are located.

       LIBLZMA_LIBRARIES
              Lzma libraries to link against.

       LIBLZMA_HAS_AUTO_DECODER
              True if lzma_auto_decoder() is found (required).

       LIBLZMA_HAS_EASY_ENCODER
              True if lzma_easy_encoder() is found (required).

       LIBLZMA_HAS_LZMA_PRESET
              True if lzma_lzma_preset() is found (required).

       LIBLZMA_VERSION_MAJOR
              The major version of lzma

       LIBLZMA_VERSION_MINOR
              The minor version of lzma

       LIBLZMA_VERSION_PATCH
              The patch version of lzma

       LIBLZMA_VERSION_STRING
              version number as a string (ex: "5.0.3")

   FindLibXml2
       Find the XML processing library (libxml2).

   IMPORTED Targets
       New in version 3.12.

       The following IMPORTED targets may be defined:

       LibXml2::LibXml2
              libxml2 library.

       LibXml2::xmllint
              New in version 3.17.

              xmllint command-line executable.

   Result variables
       This module will set the following variables in your project:

       LibXml2_FOUND
              true if libxml2 headers and libraries were found

       LIBXML2_INCLUDE_DIR
              the directory containing LibXml2 headers

       LIBXML2_INCLUDE_DIRS
              list of the include directories needed to use LibXml2

       LIBXML2_LIBRARIES
              LibXml2 libraries to be linked

       LIBXML2_DEFINITIONS
              the compiler switches required for using LibXml2

       LIBXML2_XMLLINT_EXECUTABLE
              path to the XML checking tool xmllint coming with LibXml2

       LIBXML2_VERSION_STRING
              the version of LibXml2 found (since CMake 2.8.8)

   Cache variables
       The following cache variables may also be set:

       LIBXML2_INCLUDE_DIR
              the directory containing LibXml2 headers

       LIBXML2_LIBRARY
              path to the LibXml2 library

   FindLibXslt
       Find  the XSL Transformations, Extensible Stylesheet Language Transfor-
       mations (XSLT) library (LibXslt)

   IMPORTED Targets
       New in version 3.18.

       The following IMPORTED targets may be defined:

       LibXslt::LibXslt
              If the libxslt library has been found

       LibXslt::LibExslt
              If the libexslt library has been found

       LibXslt::xsltproc
              If the xsltproc command-line executable has been found

   Result variables
       This module will set the following variables in your project:
          LIBXSLT_FOUND - system has LibXslt LIBXSLT_INCLUDE_DIR - the LibXslt
          include   directory   LIBXSLT_LIBRARIES  -  Link  these  to  LibXslt
          LIBXSLT_DEFINITIONS - Compiler switches required for  using  LibXslt
          LIBXSLT_VERSION_STRING  -  version  of  LibXslt  found  (since CMake
          2.8.8)

       Additionally, the following two variables are set (but not required for
       using xslt):

       LIBXSLT_EXSLT_INCLUDE_DIR
              New in version 3.18: The include directory for exslt.

       LIBXSLT_EXSLT_LIBRARIES
              Link to these if you need to link against the exslt library.

       LIBXSLT_XSLTPROC_EXECUTABLE
              Contains the full path to the xsltproc executable if found.

   FindLTTngUST
       New in version 3.6.

       Find Linux Trace Toolkit Next Generation (LTTng-UST) library.

   Imported target
       This module defines the following IMPORTED target:

       LTTng::UST
              The LTTng-UST library, if found

   Result variables
       This module sets the following

       LTTNGUST_FOUND
              TRUE if system has LTTng-UST

       LTTNGUST_INCLUDE_DIRS
              The LTTng-UST include directories

       LTTNGUST_LIBRARIES
              The libraries needed to use LTTng-UST

       LTTNGUST_VERSION_STRING
              The LTTng-UST version

       LTTNGUST_HAS_TRACEF
              TRUE if the tracef() API is available in the system's LTTng-UST

       LTTNGUST_HAS_TRACELOG
              TRUE  if  the  tracelog()  API  is available in the system's LT-
              Tng-UST

   FindLua
       Locate Lua library.

       New in version 3.18: Support for Lua 5.4.

       This module defines:

       LUA_FOUND
              if false, do not try to link to Lua

       LUA_LIBRARIES
              both lua and lualib

       LUA_INCLUDE_DIR
              where to find lua.h

       LUA_VERSION_STRING
              the version of Lua found

       LUA_VERSION_MAJOR
              the major version of Lua

       LUA_VERSION_MINOR
              the minor version of Lua

       LUA_VERSION_PATCH
              the patch version of Lua

       Note that the expected include convention is

          #include "lua.h"

       and not

          #include <lua/lua.h>

       This is because, the lua location is not standardized and may exist  in
       locations other than lua/

   FindLua50
       Locate Lua library.  This module defines:

          ::
          LUA50_FOUND, if false, do not try to link to Lua LUA_LIBRARIES, both
          lua and lualib LUA_INCLUDE_DIR, where to  find  lua.h  and  lualib.h
          (and probably lauxlib.h)

       Note that the expected include convention is

          #include "lua.h"

       and not

          #include <lua/lua.h>

       This  is because, the lua location is not standardized and may exist in
       locations other than lua/

   FindLua51
       Locate Lua library.  This module defines:

          ::
          LUA51_FOUND, if false, do not  try  to  link  to  Lua  LUA_LIBRARIES
          LUA_INCLUDE_DIR, where to find lua.h LUA_VERSION_STRING, the version
          of Lua found (since CMake 2.8.8)

       Note that the expected include convention is

          #include "lua.h"

       and not

          #include <lua/lua.h>

       This is because, the lua location is not standardized and may exist  in
       locations other than lua/

   FindMatlab
       Finds  Matlab  or  Matlab  Compiler  Runtime  (MCR) and provides Matlab
       tools, libraries and compilers to CMake.

       This package primary purpose is to find the libraries  associated  with
       Matlab  or  the MCR in order to be able to build Matlab extensions (mex
       files). It can also be used:

       • to run specific commands in Matlab in case Matlab is available

       • for declaring Matlab unit test

       • to retrieve various information from Matlab (mex extensions, versions
         and release queries, ...)

       New in version 3.12: Added Matlab Compiler Runtime (MCR) support.

       The module supports the following components:

       • ENG_LIBRARY  and  MAT_LIBRARY: respectively the ENG and MAT libraries
         of Matlab

       • MAIN_PROGRAM the Matlab binary program. Note that this  component  is
         not  available on the MCR version, and will yield an error if the MCR
         is found instead of the regular Matlab installation.

       • MEX_COMPILER the MEX compiler.

       • MCC_COMPILER the MCC compiler,  included  with  the  Matlab  Compiler
         add-on.

       • SIMULINK the Simulink environment.

       New in version 3.7: Added the MAT_LIBRARY component.

       New  in  version  3.13: Added the ENGINE_LIBRARY, DATAARRAY_LIBRARY and
       MCC_COMPILER components.

       Changed in version 3.14: Removed  the  MX_LIBRARY,  ENGINE_LIBRARY  and
       DATAARRAY_LIBRARY  components.   These libraries are found uncondition-
       ally.

       NOTE:
          The version given to the find_package() directive is the Matlab ver-
          sion, which should not be confused with the Matlab release name (eg.
          R2014).      The     matlab_get_version_from_release_name()      and
          matlab_get_release_name_from_version() provide a mapping between the
          release name and the version.

       The variable Matlab_ROOT_DIR may be specified in order to give the path
       of the desired Matlab version. Otherwise, the behavior is platform spe-
       cific:

       • Windows: The installed versions of Matlab/MCR are retrieved from  the
         Windows registry

       • OS  X:  The  installed versions of Matlab/MCR are given by the MATLAB
         default installation paths in /Application. If no such application is
         found,  it  falls  back  to the one that might be accessible from the
         PATH.

       • Unix: The desired Matlab should be accessible  from  the  PATH.  This
         does  not  work  for  MCR  installation and Matlab_ROOT_DIR should be
         specified on this platform.

       Additional information is provided when MATLAB_FIND_DEBUG is set.  When
       a Matlab/MCR installation is found automatically and the MATLAB_VERSION
       is not given, the version is queried from Matlab directly  (on  Windows
       this may pop up a Matlab window) or from the MCR installation.

       The mapping of the release names and the version of Matlab is performed
       by    defining     pairs     (name,     version).      The     variable
       MATLAB_ADDITIONAL_VERSIONS  may  be  provided  before  the  call to the
       find_package() in order to handle additional versions.

       A  Matlab  scripts  can  be  added  to  the  set  of  tests  using  the
       matlab_add_unit_test(). By default, the Matlab unit test framework will
       be used (>= 2013a) to run this script, but regular .m  files  returning
       an exit code can be used as well (0 indicating a success).

   Module Input Variables
       Users or projects may set the following variables to configure the mod-
       ule behavior:

       Matlab_ROOT
              New in version 3.25.

              Default value for Matlab_ROOT_DIR, the root of  the  Matlab  in-
              stallation.

       Matlab_ROOT_DIR
              The root of the Matlab installation.

       MATLAB_FIND_DEBUG
              outputs debug information

       MATLAB_ADDITIONAL_VERSIONS
              additional versions of Matlab for the automatic retrieval of the
              installed versions.

   Imported targets
       New in version 3.22.

       This module defines the following IMPORTED targets:

       Matlab::mex
              The mex library, always available.

       Matlab::mx
              The mx library of Matlab (arrays), always available.

       Matlab::eng
              Matlab engine library. Available only if the ENG_LIBRARY  compo-
              nent is requested.

       Matlab::mat
              Matlab  matrix library. Available only if the MAT_LIBRARY compo-
              nent is requested.

       Matlab::MatlabEngine
              Matlab C++ engine  library,  always  available  for  R2018a  and
              newer.

       Matlab::MatlabDataArray
              Matlab  C++  data array library, always available for R2018a and
              newer.

   Variables defined by the module
   Result variables
       Matlab_FOUND
              TRUE if the Matlab installation is found, FALSE  otherwise.  All
              variable below are defined if Matlab is found.

       Matlab_ROOT_DIR
              the  final  root  of  the  Matlab installation determined by the
              FindMatlab module.

       Matlab_MAIN_PROGRAM
              the Matlab binary  program.  Available  only  if  the  component
              MAIN_PROGRAM is given in the find_package() directive.

       Matlab_INCLUDE_DIRS
              the path of the Matlab libraries headers

       Matlab_MEX_LIBRARY
              library for mex, always available.

       Matlab_MX_LIBRARY
              mx library of Matlab (arrays), always available.

       Matlab_ENG_LIBRARY
              Matlab  engine  library. Available only if the component ENG_LI-
              BRARY is requested.

       Matlab_MAT_LIBRARY
              Matlab matrix library. Available only if the  component  MAT_LI-
              BRARY is requested.

       Matlab_ENGINE_LIBRARY
              New in version 3.13.

              Matlab  C++  engine  library,  always  available  for R2018a and
              newer.

       Matlab_DATAARRAY_LIBRARY
              New in version 3.13.

              Matlab C++ data array library, always available for  R2018a  and
              newer.

       Matlab_LIBRARIES
              the whole set of libraries of Matlab

       Matlab_MEX_COMPILER
              the  mex compiler of Matlab. Currently not used.  Available only
              if the component MEX_COMPILER is requested.

       Matlab_MCC_COMPILER
              New in version 3.13.

              the mcc compiler of Matlab. Included with  the  Matlab  Compiler
              add-on.   Available  only  if  the component MCC_COMPILER is re-
              quested.

   Cached variables
       Matlab_MEX_EXTENSION
              the extension of the mex files for the current  platform  (given
              by Matlab).

       Matlab_ROOT_DIR
              the  location  of  the root of the Matlab installation found. If
              this value is changed by the user, the result variables are  re-
              computed.

   Provided macros
       matlab_get_version_from_release_name()
              returns the version from the release name

       matlab_get_release_name_from_version()
              returns the release name from the Matlab version

   Provided functions
       matlab_add_mex()
              adds a target compiling a MEX file.

       matlab_add_unit_test()
              adds a Matlab unit test file as a test to the project.

       matlab_extract_all_installed_versions_from_registry()
              parses  the  registry for all Matlab versions. Available on Win-
              dows only.  The part of the registry parsed is dependent on  the
              host processor

       matlab_get_all_valid_matlab_roots_from_registry()
              returns  all  the  possible  Matlab or MCR paths, according to a
              previously given list. Only the  existing/accessible  paths  are
              kept.  This is mainly useful for the searching all possible Mat-
              lab installation.

       matlab_get_mex_suffix()
              returns the suffix to be used for the mex files (platform/archi-
              tecture dependent)

       matlab_get_version_from_matlab_run()
              returns  the  version of Matlab/MCR, given the full directory of
              the Matlab/MCR installation path.

   Known issues
       Symbol clash in a MEX target
              By default, every symbols inside a MEX  file  defined  with  the
              command  matlab_add_mex() have hidden visibility, except for the
              entry point. This is the default behavior of the  MEX  compiler,
              which  lowers the risk of symbol collision between the libraries
              shipped with Matlab, and the libraries to which the MEX file  is
              linking to. This is also the default on Windows platforms.

              However,  this  is not sufficient in certain case, where for in-
              stance your MEX file is linking against libraries that  are  al-
              ready  loaded  by Matlab, even if those libraries have different
              SONAMES.  A possible solution is to hide the symbols of the  li-
              braries  to  which  the  MEX  target  is linking to. This can be
              achieved in GNU GCC compilers with the linker  option  -Wl,--ex-
              clude-libs,ALL.

       Tests using GPU resources
              in  case  your MEX file is using the GPU and in order to be able
              to run unit tests on this MEX file, the GPU resources should  be
              properly released by Matlab. A possible solution is to make Mat-
              lab aware of the use of the GPU resources in the session,  which
              can be performed by a command such as D = gpuDevice() at the be-
              ginning of the test script (or via a fixture).

   Reference
       Matlab_ROOT_DIR
              The root folder of the Matlab installation. If  set  before  the
              call  to find_package(), the module will look for the components
              in that path. If not set, then an  automatic  search  of  Matlab
              will be performed. If set, it should point to a valid version of
              Matlab.

       MATLAB_FIND_DEBUG
              If set, the lookup of Matlab and the intermediate  configuration
              steps are outputted to the console.

       MATLAB_ADDITIONAL_VERSIONS
              If  set,  specifies  additional  versions  of Matlab that may be
              looked for.  The variable should be a list of strings, organized
              by pairs of release name and versions, such as follows:

                 set(MATLAB_ADDITIONAL_VERSIONS
                     "release_name1=corresponding_version1"
                     "release_name2=corresponding_version2"
                     ...
                     )

              Example:

                 set(MATLAB_ADDITIONAL_VERSIONS
                     "R2013b=8.2"
                     "R2013a=8.1"
                     "R2012b=8.0")

              The  order of entries in this list matters when several versions
              of Matlab are installed. The priority is set  according  to  the
              ordering in this list.

       matlab_get_version_from_release_name
              Returns  the  version  of  Matlab  (17.58)  from  a release name
              (R2017k)

       matlab_get_release_name_from_version
              Returns the release name (R2017k) from  the  version  of  Matlab
              (17.58)

       matlab_extract_all_installed_versions_from_registry
              This function parses the registry and founds the Matlab versions
              that are installed. The found  versions  are  returned  in  mat-
              lab_versions.  Set win64 to TRUE if the 64 bit version of Matlab
              should be looked for The returned list contains all versions un-
              der  HKLM\\SOFTWARE\\Mathworks\\MATLAB and HKLM\\SOFTWARE\\Math-
              works\\MATLAB Runtime or an empty list in case an error occurred
              (or nothing found).

              NOTE:
                 Only the versions are provided. No check is made over the ex-
                 istence of the installation referenced in the registry,

       matlab_get_all_valid_matlab_roots_from_registry
              Populates the Matlab root with valid versions of Matlab or  Mat-
              lab  Runtime  (MCR).   The returned matlab_roots is organized in
              triplets (type,version_number,matlab_root_path), where type  in-
              dicates either MATLAB or MCR.

                 matlab_get_all_valid_matlab_roots_from_registry(
                     matlab_versions
                     matlab_roots)

              matlab_versions
                     the versions of each of the Matlab or MCR installations

              matlab_roots
                     the location of each of the Matlab or MCR installations

       matlab_get_mex_suffix
              Returns  the  extension  of  the mex files (the suffixes).  This
              function should not be called before the appropriate Matlab root
              has been found.

                 matlab_get_mex_suffix(
                     matlab_root
                     mex_suffix)

              matlab_root
                     the root of the Matlab/MCR installation

              mex_suffix
                     the variable name in which the suffix will be returned.

       matlab_get_version_from_matlab_run
              This function runs Matlab program specified on arguments and ex-
              tracts its version. If the path provided for the Matlab  instal-
              lation  points  to an MCR installation, the version is extracted
              from the installed files.

                 matlab_get_version_from_matlab_run(
                     matlab_binary_path
                     matlab_list_versions)

              matlab_binary_path
                     the location of the matlab binary executable

              matlab_list_versions
                     the version extracted from Matlab

       matlab_add_unit_test
              Adds a Matlab unit test to the test set  of  cmake/ctest.   This
              command  requires  the  component  MAIN_PROGRAM and hence is not
              available for an MCR installation.

              The unit test  uses  the  Matlab  unittest  framework  (default,
              available   starting   Matlab   2013b+)  except  if  the  option
              NO_UNITTEST_FRAMEWORK is given.

              The function expects one Matlab test script file  to  be  given.
              In  the case NO_UNITTEST_FRAMEWORK is given, the unittest script
              file should contain the script to be run, plus an  exit  command
              with the exit value. This exit value will be passed to the ctest
              framework (0 success, non 0 failure). Additional  arguments  ac-
              cepted  by  add_test() can be passed through TEST_ARGS (eg. CON-
              FIGURATION <config> ...).

                 matlab_add_unit_test(
                     NAME <name>
                     UNITTEST_FILE matlab_file_containing_unittest.m
                     [CUSTOM_TEST_COMMAND matlab_command_to_run_as_test]
                     [UNITTEST_PRECOMMAND matlab_command_to_run]
                     [TIMEOUT timeout]
                     [ADDITIONAL_PATH path1 [path2 ...]]
                     [MATLAB_ADDITIONAL_STARTUP_OPTIONS option1 [option2 ...]]
                     [TEST_ARGS arg1 [arg2 ...]]
                     [NO_UNITTEST_FRAMEWORK]
                     )

              The function arguments are:

              NAME   name of the unittest in ctest.

              UNITTEST_FILE
                     the matlab unittest file. Its path will be  automatically
                     added to the Matlab path.

              CUSTOM_TEST_COMMAND
                     Matlab script command to run as the test.  If this is not
                     set,  then   the   following   is   run:   runtests('mat-
                     lab_file_name'),  exit(max([ans(1,:).Failed])) where mat-
                     lab_file_name is the UNITTEST_FILE without the extension.

              UNITTEST_PRECOMMAND
                     Matlab script command to be ran before the file  contain-
                     ing  the  test  (eg.  GPU  device initialization based on
                     CMake variables).

              TIMEOUT
                     the test timeout in seconds. Defaults to 180  seconds  as
                     the Matlab unit test may hang.

              ADDITIONAL_PATH
                     a  list  of paths to add to the Matlab path prior to run-
                     ning the unit test.

              MATLAB_ADDITIONAL_STARTUP_OPTIONS
                     a list of additional option in order to run  Matlab  from
                     the  command  line.   -nosplash -nodesktop -nodisplay are
                     always added.

              TEST_ARGS
                     Additional options  provided  to  the  add_test  command.
                     These options are added to the default options (eg. "CON-
                     FIGURATIONS Release")

              NO_UNITTEST_FRAMEWORK
                     when set, indicates that the  test  should  not  use  the
                     unittest  framework  of Matlab (available for versions >=
                     R2013a).

              WORKING_DIRECTORY
                     This will be the working directory for the test. If spec-
                     ified  it  will also be the output directory used for the
                     log file of the test run.  If not specified the temporary
                     directory  ${CMAKE_BINARY_DIR}/Matlab will be used as the
                     working directory and the log location.

       matlab_add_mex
              Adds a Matlab MEX target.   This  commands  compiles  the  given
              sources  with  the  current tool-chain in order to produce a MEX
              file. The final name of the produced output may be specified, as
              well as additional link libraries, and a documentation entry for
              the MEX file. Remaining arguments of the call are passed to  the
              add_library() or add_executable() command.

                 matlab_add_mex(
                     NAME <name>
                     [EXECUTABLE | MODULE | SHARED]
                     SRC src1 [src2 ...]
                     [OUTPUT_NAME output_name]
                     [DOCUMENTATION file.txt]
                     [LINK_TO target1 target2 ...]
                     [R2017b | R2018a]
                     [EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL]
                     [NO_IMPLICIT_LINK_TO_MATLAB_LIBRARIES]
                     [...]
                 )

              NAME   name of the target.

              SRC    list of source files.

              LINK_TO
                     a list of additional link dependencies.  The target links
                     to  libmex  and  libmx  by  default,  unless  the  NO_IM-
                     PLICIT_LINK_TO_MATLAB_LIBRARIES option is passed.

              OUTPUT_NAME
                     if given, overrides the default name. The default name is
                     the name of the target without any prefix and  with  Mat-
                     lab_MEX_EXTENSION suffix.

              DOCUMENTATION
                     if  given,  the file file.txt will be considered as being
                     the documentation file for the MEX  file.  This  file  is
                     copied  into the same folder without any processing, with
                     the same name as the final mex file, and  with  extension
                     .m. In that case, typing help <name> in Matlab prints the
                     documentation contained in this file.

              R2017b or R2018a
                     New in version 3.14.

                     May be given to specify the version of the C API to  use:
                     R2017b  specifies  the  traditional  (separate complex) C
                     API, and corresponds to the -R2017b flag for the mex com-
                     mand. R2018a specifies the new interleaved complex C API,
                     and corresponds to the -R2018a flag for the mex  command.
                     Ignored  if  MATLAB  version prior to R2018a. Defaults to
                     R2017b.

              MODULE or SHARED
                     New in version 3.7.

                     May be given to specify the type of library  to  be  cre-
                     ated.

              EXECUTABLE
                     New in version 3.7.

                     May  be  given  to  create an executable instead of a li-
                     brary. If no  type  is  given  explicitly,  the  type  is
                     SHARED.

              EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL
                     This  option has the same meaning as for EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL
                     and is forwarded  to  add_library()  or  add_executable()
                     commands.

              NO_IMPLICIT_LINK_TO_MATLAB_LIBRARIES
                     New in version 3.24.

                     This  option  permits to disable the automatic linking of
                     MATLAB libraries, so that only the libraries that are ac-
                     tually required can be linked via the LINK_TO option.

              The  documentation  file  is  not processed and should be in the
              following format:

                 % This is the documentation
                 function ret = mex_target_output_name(input1)

   FindMFC
       Find Microsoft Foundation Class Library (MFC) on Windows

       Find the native MFC - i.e.  decide if an application can  link  to  the
       MFC libraries.

          MFC_FOUND - Was MFC support found

       You don't need to include anything or link anything to use it.

   FindMotif
       Try to find Motif (or lesstif)

       Once done this will define:

          MOTIF_FOUND        - system has MOTIF
          MOTIF_INCLUDE_DIR  - include paths to use Motif
          MOTIF_LIBRARIES    - Link these to use Motif

   FindMPEG
       Find the native MPEG includes and library

       This module defines

          MPEG_INCLUDE_DIR, where to find MPEG.h, etc.
          MPEG_LIBRARIES, the libraries required to use MPEG.
          MPEG_FOUND, If false, do not try to use MPEG.

       also defined, but not for general use are

          MPEG_mpeg2_LIBRARY, where to find the MPEG library.
          MPEG_vo_LIBRARY, where to find the vo library.

   FindMPEG2
       Find the native MPEG2 includes and library

       This module defines

          MPEG2_INCLUDE_DIR, path to mpeg2dec/mpeg2.h, etc.
          MPEG2_LIBRARIES, the libraries required to use MPEG2.
          MPEG2_FOUND, If false, do not try to use MPEG2.

       also defined, but not for general use are

          MPEG2_mpeg2_LIBRARY, where to find the MPEG2 library.
          MPEG2_vo_LIBRARY, where to find the vo library.

   FindMPI
       Find a Message Passing Interface (MPI) implementation.

       The  Message  Passing  Interface  (MPI)  is  a  library  used  to write
       high-performance distributed-memory parallel applications, and is typi-
       cally  deployed  on a cluster.  MPI is a standard interface (defined by
       the MPI forum) for which many implementations are available.

       New in version 3.10: Major overhaul of the module: many new  variables,
       per-language components, support for a wider variety of runtimes.

   Variables for using MPI
       The  module exposes the components C, CXX, MPICXX and Fortran.  Each of
       these controls the various MPI languages to search for.  The difference
       between CXX and MPICXX is that CXX refers to the MPI C API being usable
       from C++, whereas MPICXX refers to the MPI-2 C++ API that  was  removed
       again in MPI-3.

       Depending  on  the  enabled  components the following variables will be
       set:

       MPI_FOUND
              Variable indicating that MPI settings  for  all  requested  lan-
              guages have been found.  If no components are specified, this is
              true if MPI settings for all enabled  languages  were  detected.
              Note that the MPICXX component does not affect this variable.

       MPI_VERSION
              Minimal  version  of MPI detected among the requested languages,
              or all enabled languages if no components were specified.

       This module will set the  following  variables  per  language  in  your
       project, where <lang> is one of C, CXX, or Fortran:

       MPI_<lang>_FOUND
              Variable  indicating  the MPI settings for <lang> were found and
              that simple MPI test programs compile  with  the  provided  set-
              tings.

       MPI_<lang>_COMPILER
              MPI compiler for <lang> if such a program exists.

       MPI_<lang>_COMPILE_OPTIONS
              Compilation  options  for  MPI  programs  in  <lang>, given as a
              ;-list.

       MPI_<lang>_COMPILE_DEFINITIONS
              Compilation definitions for MPI programs in <lang>, given  as  a
              ;-list.

       MPI_<lang>_INCLUDE_DIRS
              Include path(s) for MPI header.

       MPI_<lang>_LINK_FLAGS
              Linker flags for MPI programs.

       MPI_<lang>_LIBRARIES
              All libraries to link MPI programs against.

       New  in  version  3.9: Additionally, the following IMPORTED targets are
       defined:

       MPI::MPI_<lang>
              Target for using MPI from <lang>.

       The following variables indicating which bindings are present  will  be
       defined:

       MPI_MPICXX_FOUND
              Variable  indicating  whether the MPI-2 C++ bindings are present
              (introduced in MPI-2, removed with MPI-3).

       MPI_Fortran_HAVE_F77_HEADER
              True if the Fortran 77 header mpif.h is available.

       MPI_Fortran_HAVE_F90_MODULE
              True if the Fortran 90 module mpi can be used for accessing  MPI
              (MPI-2 and higher only).

       MPI_Fortran_HAVE_F08_MODULE
              True  if  the  Fortran 2008 mpi_f08 is available to MPI programs
              (MPI-3 and higher only).

       If possible, the MPI version will be determined by this module. The fa-
       cilities  to  detect  the MPI version were introduced with MPI-1.2, and
       therefore cannot be found for older MPI versions.

       MPI_<lang>_VERSION_MAJOR
              Major version of MPI implemented for <lang> by the MPI distribu-
              tion.

       MPI_<lang>_VERSION_MINOR
              Minor version of MPI implemented for <lang> by the MPI distribu-
              tion.

       MPI_<lang>_VERSION
              MPI version implemented for <lang> by the MPI distribution.

       Note that there's no variable  for  the  C  bindings  being  accessible
       through  mpi.h, since the MPI standards always have required this bind-
       ing to work in both C and C++ code.

       For running MPI programs, the module sets the following variables

       MPIEXEC_EXECUTABLE
              Executable for running MPI programs, if such exists.

       MPIEXEC_NUMPROC_FLAG
              Flag to pass to mpiexec before giving it the number  of  proces-
              sors to run on.

       MPIEXEC_MAX_NUMPROCS
              Number  of  MPI processors to utilize. Defaults to the number of
              processors detected on the host system.

       MPIEXEC_PREFLAGS
              Flags to pass to mpiexec directly before the executable to run.

       MPIEXEC_POSTFLAGS
              Flags to pass to mpiexec after other flags.

   Variables for locating MPI
       This module performs a four step search for an MPI implementation:

       1. Search for MPIEXEC_EXECUTABLE and, if found, use its base directory.

       2. Check if the compiler has MPI support built-in. This is the case  if
          the  user  passed  a compiler wrapper as CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER or if
          they use Cray system compiler wrappers.

       3. Attempt to find an MPI compiler wrapper and determine  the  compiler
          information from it.

       4. Try  to find an MPI implementation that does not ship such a wrapper
          by guessing settings.  Currently, only Microsoft MPI and  MPICH2  on
          Windows are supported.

       For  controlling  the  MPIEXEC_EXECUTABLE step, the following variables
       may be set:

       MPIEXEC_EXECUTABLE
              Manually specify the location of mpiexec.

       MPI_HOME
              Specify the base directory of the MPI installation.

       ENV{MPI_HOME}
              Environment variable to specify the base directory  of  the  MPI
              installation.

       ENV{I_MPI_ROOT}
              Environment  variable  to  specify the base directory of the MPI
              installation.

       For controlling the compiler wrapper step, the following variables  may
       be set:

       MPI_<lang>_COMPILER
              Search for the specified compiler wrapper and use it.

       MPI_<lang>_COMPILER_FLAGS
              Flags  to pass to the MPI compiler wrapper during interrogation.
              Some compiler wrappers support  linking  debug  or  tracing  li-
              braries  if  a  specific flag is passed and this variable may be
              used to obtain them.

       MPI_COMPILER_FLAGS
              Used to initialize MPI_<lang>_COMPILER_FLAGS if no language spe-
              cific flag has been given.  Empty by default.

       MPI_EXECUTABLE_SUFFIX
              A  suffix  which  is appended to all names that are being looked
              for. For instance you may set this to .mpich or .openmpi to pre-
              fer the one or the other on Debian and its derivatives.

       In  order  to  control the guessing step, the following variable may be
       set:

       MPI_GUESS_LIBRARY_NAME
              Valid values are MSMPI and MPICH2. If set, only  the  given  li-
              brary will be searched for.  By default, MSMPI will be preferred
              over MPICH2 if both are available.  This also sets MPI_SKIP_COM-
              PILER_WRAPPER to true, which may be overridden.

       Each  of  the  search  steps  may be skipped with the following control
       variables:

       MPI_ASSUME_NO_BUILTIN_MPI
              If true, the module assumes that the compiler  itself  does  not
              provide an MPI implementation and skips to step 2.

       MPI_SKIP_COMPILER_WRAPPER
              If true, no compiler wrapper will be searched for.

       MPI_SKIP_GUESSING
              If true, the guessing step will be skipped.

       Additionally,  the  following  control  variable is available to change
       search behavior:

       MPI_CXX_SKIP_MPICXX
              Add some definitions that will disable the MPI-2  C++  bindings.
              Currently supported are MPICH, Open MPI, Platform MPI and deriv-
              atives thereof, for example MVAPICH or Intel MPI.

       If the find procedure fails for a variable MPI_<lang>_WORKS,  then  the
       settings  detected  by  or passed to the module did not work and even a
       simple MPI test program failed to compile.

       If all of these parameters were not sufficient to find  the  right  MPI
       implementation,  a user may disable the entire autodetection process by
       specifying both a list of libraries in MPI_<lang>_LIBRARIES and a  list
       of  include  directories  in  MPI_<lang>_ADDITIONAL_INCLUDE_DIRS.   Any
       other variable may be set in addition to these  two.  The  module  will
       then validate the MPI settings and store the settings in the cache.

   Cache variables for MPI
       The variable MPI_<lang>_INCLUDE_DIRS will be assembled from the follow-
       ing variables.  For C and CXX:

       MPI_<lang>_HEADER_DIR
              Location of the mpi.h header on disk.

       For Fortran:

       MPI_Fortran_F77_HEADER_DIR
              Location of the Fortran 77 header mpif.h, if it exists.

       MPI_Fortran_MODULE_DIR
              Location of the mpi or mpi_f08 modules, if available.

       For all languages the following variables are additionally considered:

       MPI_<lang>_ADDITIONAL_INCLUDE_DIRS
              A ;-list of paths needed in addition to the normal  include  di-
              rectories.

       MPI_<include_name>_INCLUDE_DIR
              Path   variables   for  include  folders  referred  to  by  <in-
              clude_name>.

       MPI_<lang>_ADDITIONAL_INCLUDE_VARS
              A ;-list of <include_name> that will be added to the include lo-
              cations of <lang>.

       The  variable MPI_<lang>_LIBRARIES will be assembled from the following
       variables:

       MPI_<lib_name>_LIBRARY
              The location of a library called <lib_name> for use with MPI.

       MPI_<lang>_LIB_NAMES
              A ;-list of <lib_name> that will be added to the  include  loca-
              tions of <lang>.

   Usage of mpiexec
       When  using  MPIEXEC_EXECUTABLE to execute MPI applications, you should
       typically use all of the MPIEXEC_EXECUTABLE flags as follows:

          ${MPIEXEC_EXECUTABLE} ${MPIEXEC_NUMPROC_FLAG} ${MPIEXEC_MAX_NUMPROCS}
            ${MPIEXEC_PREFLAGS} EXECUTABLE ${MPIEXEC_POSTFLAGS} ARGS

       where EXECUTABLE is the MPI program, and ARGS are the arguments to pass
       to the MPI program.

   Advanced variables for using MPI
       The  module  can perform some advanced feature detections upon explicit
       request.

       Important notice: The following checks cannot be performed without exe-
       cuting  an  MPI  test program.  Consider the special considerations for
       the behavior of try_run() during cross compilation.  Moreover,  running
       an  MPI  program can cause additional issues, like a firewall notifica-
       tion on some systems.  You should only enable these detections  if  you
       absolutely need the information.

       If  the following variables are set to true, the respective search will
       be performed:

       MPI_DETERMINE_Fortran_CAPABILITIES
              Determine for all available Fortran bindings what the values  of
              MPI_SUBARRAYS_SUPPORTED  and  MPI_ASYNC_PROTECTS_NONBLOCKING are
              and make their values available as  MPI_Fortran_<binding>_SUBAR-
              RAYS and MPI_Fortran_<binding>_ASYNCPROT, where <binding> is one
              of F77_HEADER, F90_MODULE and F08_MODULE.

       MPI_DETERMINE_LIBRARY_VERSION
              For each language, find the  output  of  MPI_Get_library_version
              and  make  it  available  as  MPI_<lang>_LIBRARY_VERSION_STRING.
              This information is usually tied to the runtime component of  an
              MPI  implementation  and might differ depending on <lang>.  Note
              that the return value is entirely implementation  defined.  This
              information might be used to identify the MPI vendor and for ex-
              ample pick the correct one of multiple third party binaries that
              matches the MPI vendor.

   Backward Compatibility
       Deprecated since version 3.10.

       For  backward compatibility with older versions of FindMPI, these vari-
       ables are set:

          MPI_COMPILER        MPI_LIBRARY        MPI_EXTRA_LIBRARY
          MPI_COMPILE_FLAGS   MPI_INCLUDE_PATH   MPI_LINK_FLAGS
          MPI_LIBRARIES

       In new projects, please use the MPI_<lang>_XXX equivalents.   Addition-
       ally, the following variables are deprecated:

       MPI_<lang>_COMPILE_FLAGS
              Use  MPI_<lang>_COMPILE_OPTIONS  and  MPI_<lang>_COMPILE_DEFINI-
              TIONS instead.

       MPI_<lang>_INCLUDE_PATH
              For consumption use MPI_<lang>_INCLUDE_DIRS and  for  specifying
              folders use MPI_<lang>_ADDITIONAL_INCLUDE_DIRS instead.

       MPIEXEC
              Use MPIEXEC_EXECUTABLE instead.

   FindMsys
       New in version 3.21.

       Find  MSYS, a POSIX-compatible environment that runs natively on Micro-
       soft Windows

   FindODBC
       New in version 3.12.

       Find an Open Database Connectivity (ODBC)  include  directory  and  li-
       brary.

       On  Windows,  when building with Visual Studio, this module assumes the
       ODBC library is provided by the available Windows SDK.

       On Unix, this module allows to search  for  ODBC  library  provided  by
       unixODBC  or iODBC implementations of ODBC API.  This module reads hint
       about location of the config program:

       ODBC_CONFIG
              Location of odbc_config or iodbc-config program

       Otherwise, this module tries to find the  config  program,  first  from
       unixODBC,  then  from  iODBC.   If no config program found, this module
       searches for ODBC header and library in list of known locations.

   Imported targets
       This module defines the following IMPORTED targets:

       ODBC::ODBC
              Imported target for using the ODBC library, if found.

   Result variables
       ODBC_FOUND
              Set to true if ODBC library found, otherwise false or undefined.

       ODBC_INCLUDE_DIRS
              Paths to include directories listed in one variable for  use  by
              ODBC  client.  May be empty on Windows, where the include direc-
              tory corresponding to the expected Windows SDK is already avail-
              able in the compilation environment.

       ODBC_LIBRARIES
              Paths  to  libraries  to linked against to use ODBC.  May just a
              library name on Windows, where the library directory correspond-
              ing to the expected Windows SDK is already available in the com-
              pilation environment.

       ODBC_CONFIG
              Path to unixODBC or iODBC config program, if found or specified.

   Cache variables
       For users who wish to edit and control the module behavior, this module
       reads hints about search locations from the following variables:

       ODBC_INCLUDE_DIR
              Path to ODBC include directory with sql.h header.

       ODBC_LIBRARY
              Path to ODBC library to be linked.

       These variables should not be used directly by project code.

   Limitations
       On  Windows,  this module does not search for iODBC.  On Unix, there is
       no way to prefer unixODBC over iODBC, or vice versa, other than provid-
       ing  the  config  program  location using the ODBC_CONFIG.  This module
       does not allow to search for a specific ODBC driver.

   FindOpenACC
       New in version 3.10.

       Detect OpenACC support by the compiler.

       This module can be used to detect OpenACC support in  a  compiler.   If
       the  compiler supports OpenACC, the flags required to compile with Ope-
       nACC support are returned in variables  for  the  different  languages.
       Currently, only NVHPC, PGI, GNU and Cray compilers are supported.

   Imported Targets
       New in version 3.16.

       The module provides IMPORTED targets:

       OpenACC::OpenACC_<lang>
              Target for using OpenACC from <lang>.

   Variables
       The module defines the following variables:

       OpenACC_FOUND
              New in version 3.25.

              Variable  indicating  that  OpenACC  flags for at least one lan-
              guages have been found.

       This module will set the  following  variables  per  language  in  your
       project, where <lang> is one of C, CXX, or Fortran:

       OpenACC_<lang>_FOUND
              Variable indicating if OpenACC support for <lang> was detected.

       OpenACC_<lang>_FLAGS
              OpenACC compiler flags for <lang>, separated by spaces.

       OpenACC_<lang>_OPTIONS
              New in version 3.16.

              OpenACC compiler flags for <lang>, as a list. Suitable for usage
              with target_compile_options or target_link_options.

       The module will also try to provide the OpenACC version variables:

       OpenACC_<lang>_SPEC_DATE
              Date of the OpenACC specification implemented by the <lang> com-
              piler.

       OpenACC_<lang>_VERSION_MAJOR
              Major version of OpenACC implemented by the <lang> compiler.

       OpenACC_<lang>_VERSION_MINOR
              Minor version of OpenACC implemented by the <lang> compiler.

       OpenACC_<lang>_VERSION
              OpenACC version implemented by the <lang> compiler.

       The  specification  date is formatted as given in the OpenACC standard:
       yyyymm where yyyy and mm represents the year and month of  the  OpenACC
       specification implemented by the <lang> compiler.

   Input Variables
       OpenACC_ACCEL_TARGET=<target> If set, will the correct target accelera-
       tor  flag  set  to  the   <target>   will   be   returned   with   Ope-
       nACC_<lang>_FLAGS.

   FindOpenAL
       Finds Open Audio Library (OpenAL).

       Projects  using  this  module should use #include "al.h" to include the
       OpenAL header file, not #include <AL/al.h>.  The  reason  for  this  is
       that  the  latter is not entirely portable.  Windows/Creative Labs does
       not by default put their headers in AL/ and macOS uses  the  convention
       <OpenAL/al.h>.

   Hints
       Environment variable $OPENALDIR can be used to set the prefix of OpenAL
       installation to be found.

       By default on macOS, system framework is search first.  In other words,
       OpenAL is searched in the following order:

       1. System  framework: /System/Library/Frameworks, whose priority can be
          changed via setting the CMAKE_FIND_FRAMEWORK variable.

       2. Environment variable $OPENALDIR.

       3. System paths.

       4. User-compiled framework: ~/Library/Frameworks.

       5. Manually compiled framework: /Library/Frameworks.

       6. Add-on package: /opt.

   IMPORTED Targets
       New in version 3.25.

       This module defines the IMPORTED target:

       OpenAL::OpenAL
              The OpenAL library, if found.

   Result Variables
       This module defines the following variables:

       OPENAL_FOUND
              If false, do not try to link to OpenAL

       OPENAL_INCLUDE_DIR
              OpenAL include directory

       OPENAL_LIBRARY
              Path to the OpenAL library

       OPENAL_VERSION_STRING
              Human-readable string containing the version of OpenAL

   FindOpenCL
       New in version 3.1.

       Finds Open Computing Language (OpenCL)

       New in version 3.10: Detection of OpenCL 2.1 and 2.2.

   IMPORTED Targets
       New in version 3.7.

       This module defines IMPORTED target OpenCL::OpenCL, if OpenCL has  been
       found.

   Result Variables
       This module defines the following variables:

          OpenCL_FOUND          - True if OpenCL was found
          OpenCL_INCLUDE_DIRS   - include directories for OpenCL
          OpenCL_LIBRARIES      - link against this library to use OpenCL
          OpenCL_VERSION_STRING - Highest supported OpenCL version (eg. 1.2)
          OpenCL_VERSION_MAJOR  - The major version of the OpenCL implementation
          OpenCL_VERSION_MINOR  - The minor version of the OpenCL implementation

       The module will also define two cache variables:

          OpenCL_INCLUDE_DIR    - the OpenCL include directory
          OpenCL_LIBRARY        - the path to the OpenCL library

   FindOpenGL
       FindModule for OpenGL and OpenGL Utility Library (GLU).

       Changed  in  version  3.2:  X11  is  no longer added as a dependency on
       Unix/Linux systems.

       New in version 3.10: GLVND support on Linux.   See  the  Linux-specific
       section below.

   Optional COMPONENTS
       New in version 3.10.

       This module respects several optional COMPONENTS: EGL, GLX, and OpenGL.
       There are corresponding import targets for each of these flags.

   IMPORTED Targets
       New in version 3.8.

       This module defines the IMPORTED targets:

       OpenGL::GL
              Defined to the platform-specific OpenGL libraries if the  system
              has OpenGL.

       OpenGL::GLU
              Defined if the system has OpenGL Utility Library (GLU).

       New in version 3.10: Additionally, the following GLVND-specific library
       targets are defined:

       OpenGL::OpenGL
              Defined to libOpenGL if the system is GLVND-based.

       OpenGL::GLX
              Defined if the system has OpenGL Extension to the X Window  Sys-
              tem (GLX).

       OpenGL::EGL
              Defined if the system has EGL.

   Result Variables
       This module sets the following variables:

       OPENGL_FOUND
              True, if the system has OpenGL and all components are found.

       OPENGL_XMESA_FOUND
              True, if the system has XMESA.

       OPENGL_GLU_FOUND
              True, if the system has GLU.

       OpenGL_OpenGL_FOUND
              True, if the system has an OpenGL library.

       OpenGL_GLX_FOUND
              True, if the system has GLX.

       OpenGL_EGL_FOUND
              True, if the system has EGL.

       OPENGL_INCLUDE_DIR
              Path to the OpenGL include directory.

       OPENGL_EGL_INCLUDE_DIRS
              Path to the EGL include directory.

       OPENGL_LIBRARIES
              Paths to the OpenGL library, windowing system libraries, and GLU
              libraries.  On Linux, this assumes GLX and is never correct  for
              EGL-based  targets.  Clients are encouraged to use the OpenGL::*
              import targets instead.

       New in version 3.10: Variables for GLVND-specific libraries OpenGL, EGL
       and GLX.

   Cache variables
       The following cache variables may also be set:

       OPENGL_egl_LIBRARY
              Path to the EGL library.

       OPENGL_glu_LIBRARY
              Path to the GLU library.

       OPENGL_glx_LIBRARY
              Path to the GLVND 'GLX' library.

       OPENGL_opengl_LIBRARY
              Path to the GLVND 'OpenGL' library

       OPENGL_gl_LIBRARY
              Path  to  the  OpenGL  library.   New  code  should  prefer  the
              OpenGL::* import targets.

       New in version 3.10: Variables for GLVND-specific libraries OpenGL, EGL
       and GLX.

   Linux-specific
       Some  Linux systems utilize GLVND as a new ABI for OpenGL.  GLVND sepa-
       rates context libraries  from  OpenGL  itself;  OpenGL  lives  in  "li-
       bOpenGL",  and  contexts are defined in "libGLX" or "libEGL".  GLVND is
       currently the only way to get OpenGL 3+ functionality via EGL in a man-
       ner  portable  across  vendors.  Projects may use GLVND explicitly with
       target OpenGL::OpenGL and either OpenGL::GLX or OpenGL::EGL.

       Projects may use the OpenGL::GL target (or  OPENGL_LIBRARIES  variable)
       to  use legacy GL interfaces.  These will use the legacy GL library lo-
       cated by OPENGL_gl_LIBRARY,  if  available.   If  OPENGL_gl_LIBRARY  is
       empty  or  not found and GLVND is available, the OpenGL::GL target will
       use GLVND OpenGL::OpenGL  and  OpenGL::GLX  (and  the  OPENGL_LIBRARIES
       variable   will   use   the   corresponding   libraries).    Thus,  for
       non-EGL-based Linux targets, the OpenGL::GL target is most portable.

       A OpenGL_GL_PREFERENCE variable may be set to specify the preferred way
       to provide legacy GL interfaces in case multiple choices are available.
       The value may be one of:

       GLVND  If the GLVND OpenGL and  GLX  libraries  are  available,  prefer
              them.  This forces OPENGL_gl_LIBRARY to be empty.

              Changed  in  version  3.11:  This  is the default, unless policy
              CMP0072 is set to OLD and no components are requeted (since com-
              ponents correspond to GLVND libraries).

       LEGACY Prefer to use the legacy libGL library, if available.

       For  EGL  targets  the  client must rely on GLVND support on the user's
       system.  Linking should use  the  OpenGL::OpenGL  OpenGL::EGL  targets.
       Using   GLES*   libraries   is   theoretically  possible  in  place  of
       OpenGL::OpenGL, but this module does not currently support  that;  con-
       tributions welcome.

       OPENGL_egl_LIBRARY  and OPENGL_EGL_INCLUDE_DIRS are defined in the case
       of GLVND.  For non-GLVND Linux and other systems these are  left  unde-
       fined.

   macOS-Specific
       On  OSX  FindOpenGL  defaults to using the framework version of OpenGL.
       People will have to change the cache values of  OPENGL_glu_LIBRARY  and
       OPENGL_gl_LIBRARY to use OpenGL with X11 on OSX.

   FindOpenMP
       Finds Open Multi-Processing (OpenMP) support.

       This module can be used to detect OpenMP support in a compiler.  If the
       compiler supports OpenMP, the flags required  to  compile  with  OpenMP
       support  are  returned  in  variables for the different languages.  The
       variables may be empty if the compiler does not need a special flag  to
       support OpenMP.

       New in version 3.5: Clang support.

   Variables
       New in version 3.10: The module exposes the components C, CXX, and For-
       tran.  Each of these controls the various languages  to  search  OpenMP
       support for.

       Depending  on  the  enabled  components the following variables will be
       set:

       OpenMP_FOUND
              Variable indicating that OpenMP flags  for  all  requested  lan-
              guages have been found.  If no components are specified, this is
              true if OpenMP settings for all enabled languages were detected.

       OpenMP_VERSION
              Minimal version of the OpenMP standard detected  among  the  re-
              quested  languages,  or  all  enabled languages if no components
              were specified.

       This module will set the  following  variables  per  language  in  your
       project, where <lang> is one of C, CXX, or Fortran:

       OpenMP_<lang>_FOUND
              Variable indicating if OpenMP support for <lang> was detected.

       OpenMP_<lang>_FLAGS
              OpenMP compiler flags for <lang>, separated by spaces.

       OpenMP_<lang>_INCLUDE_DIRS
              Directories  that  must  be  added to the header search path for
              <lang> when using OpenMP.

       For linking with OpenMP code written in <lang>, the following variables
       are provided:

       OpenMP_<lang>_LIB_NAMES
              ;-list of libraries for OpenMP programs for <lang>.

       OpenMP_<libname>_LIBRARY
              Location  of  the individual libraries needed for OpenMP support
              in <lang>.

       OpenMP_<lang>_LIBRARIES
              A list of libraries needed to link with OpenMP code  written  in
              <lang>.

       Additionally, the module provides IMPORTED targets:

       OpenMP::OpenMP_<lang>
              Target for using OpenMP from <lang>.

       Specifically for Fortran, the module sets the following variables:

       OpenMP_Fortran_HAVE_OMPLIB_HEADER
              Boolean indicating if OpenMP is accessible through omp_lib.h.

       OpenMP_Fortran_HAVE_OMPLIB_MODULE
              Boolean  indicating  if OpenMP is accessible through the omp_lib
              Fortran module.

       The module will also try to provide the OpenMP version variables:

       OpenMP_<lang>_SPEC_DATE
              New in version 3.7.

              Date of the OpenMP specification implemented by the <lang>  com-
              piler.

       OpenMP_<lang>_VERSION_MAJOR
              Major version of OpenMP implemented by the <lang> compiler.

       OpenMP_<lang>_VERSION_MINOR
              Minor version of OpenMP implemented by the <lang> compiler.

       OpenMP_<lang>_VERSION
              OpenMP version implemented by the <lang> compiler.

       The  specification  date  is formatted as given in the OpenMP standard:
       yyyymm where yyyy and mm represents the year and month  of  the  OpenMP
       specification implemented by the <lang> compiler.

       For  some compilers, it may be necessary to add a header search path to
       find the relevant OpenMP headers.  This location may  be  language-spe-
       cific.   Where this is needed, the module may attempt to find the loca-
       tion, but it can be provided directly by setting the  OpenMP_<lang>_IN-
       CLUDE_DIR  cache  variable.  Note that this variable is an _input_ con-
       trol to the module.  Project  code  should  use  the  OpenMP_<lang>_IN-
       CLUDE_DIRS  _output_ variable if it needs to know what include directo-
       ries are needed.

   FindOpenSceneGraph
       Find OpenSceneGraph (3D graphics application programming interface)

       This module searches for the OpenSceneGraph core "osg" library as  well
       as  FindOpenThreads, and whatever additional COMPONENTS (nodekits) that
       you specify.

          See http://www.openscenegraph.org

       NOTE: To use this module effectively you must either require  CMake  >=
       2.6.3 with  cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 2.6.3) or download and place
       FindOpenThreads, Findosg functions, Findosg and  Find<etc>.cmake  files
       into your CMAKE_MODULE_PATH.

                                        ----

       This module accepts the following variables (note mixed case)

          OpenSceneGraph_DEBUG - Enable debugging output

          OpenSceneGraph_MARK_AS_ADVANCED - Mark cache variables as advanced
                                            automatically

       The  following environment variables are also respected for finding the
       OSG and it's various components.  CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH can  also  be  used
       for this (see find_library() CMake documentation).

       <MODULE>_DIR
              (where  MODULE  is  of  the  form  "OSGVOLUME"  and  there  is a
              FindosgVolume.cmake` file)

       OSG_DIR

       OSGDIR

       OSG_ROOT

       [CMake 2.8.10]: The CMake variable OSG_DIR can now be used as  well  to
       influence detection, instead of needing to specify an environment vari-
       able.

       This module defines the following output variables:

          OPENSCENEGRAPH_FOUND - Was the OSG and all of the specified components found?

          OPENSCENEGRAPH_VERSION - The version of the OSG which was found

          OPENSCENEGRAPH_INCLUDE_DIRS - Where to find the headers

          OPENSCENEGRAPH_LIBRARIES - The OSG libraries

       ================================== Example Usage:

          find_package(OpenSceneGraph 2.0.0 REQUIRED osgDB osgUtil)
              # libOpenThreads & libosg automatically searched
          include_directories(${OPENSCENEGRAPH_INCLUDE_DIRS})

          add_executable(foo foo.cc)
          target_link_libraries(foo ${OPENSCENEGRAPH_LIBRARIES})

   FindOpenSP
       New in version 3.25.

       Try to find the OpenSP library.

   Result Variables
       This will define the following variables:

       OpenSP_FOUND
              True if (the requested version of) OpenSP is available

       OpenSP_VERSION
              The version of OpenSP

       OpenSP_VERSION_MAJOR
              The major version of OpenSP

       OpenSP_VERSION_MINOR
              The minor version of OpenSP

       OpenSP_VERSION_PATCH
              The patch version of OpenSP

       OpenSP_INCLUDE_DIRS
              The include dirs of OpenSP with its headers

       OpenSP_LIBRARIES
              The OpenSP library for use with  target_link_libraries().   This
              can be passed to target_link_libraries() instead of the IMPORTED
              OpenSP::OpenSP target

       OpenSP_MULTI_BYTE
              True if SP_MULTI_BYTE was found to be defined in  OpenSP's  con-
              fig.h  header  file, which indicates that the OpenSP library was
              compiled with support for multi-byte characters.  The  consuming
              target  needs to define the SP_MULTI_BYTE to match this value in
              order to avoid issues with character decoding.

   IMPORTED Targets
       This module defines the IMPORTED target OpenSP::OpenSP, if  OpenSP  has
       been found.

   Cache variables
       The following cache variables may also be set:

       OpenSP_INCLUDE_DIR
              the OpenSP include directory

       OpenSP_LIBRARY
              the absolute path of the osp library

   FindOpenSSL
       Find the OpenSSL encryption library.

       This  module finds an installed OpenSSL library and determines its ver-
       sion.

       New in version 3.19: When a version is requested, it can  be  specified
       as  a simple value or as a range. For a detailed description of version
       range usage and capabilities, refer to the find_package() command.

       New in version 3.18: Support for OpenSSL 3.0.

   Optional COMPONENTS
       New in version 3.12.

       This module supports two optional COMPONENTS:  Crypto  and  SSL.   Both
       components have associated imported targets, as described below.

   Imported Targets
       New in version 3.4.

       This module defines the following IMPORTED targets:

       OpenSSL::SSL
              The OpenSSL ssl library, if found.

       OpenSSL::Crypto
              The OpenSSL crypto library, if found.

       OpenSSL::applink
              New in version 3.18.

              The OpenSSL applink components that might be need to be compiled
              into projects under MSVC. This target is available only if found
              OpenSSL  version  is not less than 0.9.8. By linking this target
              the above OpenSSL targets can be linked even if the project  has
              different  MSVC  runtime  configurations  with the above OpenSSL
              targets. This target has no effect on platforms other than MSVC.

       NOTE: Due to how INTERFACE_SOURCES are consumed by the  consuming  tar-
       get,  unless  you  certainly know what you are doing, it is always pre-
       ferred to link OpenSSL::applink target as PRIVATE and to make sure that
       this  target  is  linked at most once for the whole dependency graph of
       any library or executable:

          target_link_libraries(myTarget PRIVATE OpenSSL::applink)

       Otherwise you would probably encounter unexpected random problems  when
       building and linking, as both the ISO C and the ISO C++ standard claims
       almost nothing about what a link process should be.

   Result Variables
       This module will set the following variables in your project:

       OPENSSL_FOUND
              System has the OpenSSL library. If no components  are  requested
              it only requires the crypto library.

       OPENSSL_INCLUDE_DIR
              The OpenSSL include directory.

       OPENSSL_CRYPTO_LIBRARY
              The OpenSSL crypto library.

       OPENSSL_CRYPTO_LIBRARIES
              The OpenSSL crypto library and its dependencies.

       OPENSSL_SSL_LIBRARY
              The OpenSSL SSL library.

       OPENSSL_SSL_LIBRARIES
              The OpenSSL SSL library and its dependencies.

       OPENSSL_LIBRARIES
              All OpenSSL libraries and their dependencies.

       OPENSSL_VERSION
              This is set to $major.$minor.$revision$patch (e.g. 0.9.8s).

       OPENSSL_APPLINK_SOURCE
              The  sources  in  the  target OpenSSL::applink that is mentioned
              above. This variable shall always be undefined if found  openssl
              version is less than 0.9.8 or if platform is not MSVC.

   Hints
       The following variables may be set to control search behavior:

       OPENSSL_ROOT_DIR
              Set to the root directory of an OpenSSL installation.

       OPENSSL_USE_STATIC_LIBS
              New in version 3.4.

              Set to TRUE to look for static libraries.

       OPENSSL_MSVC_STATIC_RT
              New in version 3.5.

              Set to TRUE to choose the MT version of the lib.

       ENV{PKG_CONFIG_PATH}
              On  UNIX-like  systems,  pkg-config is used to locate the system
              OpenSSL.  Set the PKG_CONFIG_PATH environment varialbe  to  look
              in alternate locations.  Useful on multi-lib systems.

   FindOpenThreads
       OpenThreads  is  a  C++  based threading library.  Its largest userbase
       seems to OpenSceneGraph so you might notice I accept OSGDIR as an envi-
       ronment  path.  I consider this part of the Findosg* suite used to find
       OpenSceneGraph components.  Each component is separate and you must opt
       in to each module.

       Locate    OpenThreads    This    module   defines   OPENTHREADS_LIBRARY
       OPENTHREADS_FOUND,  if  false,  do  not  try  to  link  to  OpenThreads
       OPENTHREADS_INCLUDE_DIR, where to find the headers

       $OPENTHREADS_DIR  is  an  environment variable that would correspond to
       the ./configure --prefix=$OPENTHREADS_DIR used in building osg.

       [CMake 2.8.10]: The CMake variables OPENTHREADS_DIR or OSG_DIR can  now
       be  used  as well to influence detection, instead of needing to specify
       an environment variable.

       Created by Eric Wing.

   Findosg
       NOTE: It is highly recommended that  you  use  the  new  FindOpenScene-
       Graph.cmake  introduced in CMake 2.6.3 and not use this Find module di-
       rectly.

       This is part of the Findosg* suite used to find  OpenSceneGraph  compo-
       nents.   Each component is separate and you must opt in to each module.
       You must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and Producer if  needed)
       as  these  modules  won't  do it for you.  This is to allow you control
       over your own system piece by piece in case you need to opt out of cer-
       tain  components  or  change  the Find behavior for a particular module
       (perhaps because the default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn't work  with
       your  system as an example).  If you want to use a more convenient mod-
       ule that includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake  instead
       of the Findosg*.cmake modules.

       Locate osg This module defines

       OSG_FOUND  -  Was  the  Osg  found? OSG_INCLUDE_DIR - Where to find the
       headers OSG_LIBRARIES - The libraries to link against for the OSG  (use
       this)

       OSG_LIBRARY - The OSG library OSG_LIBRARY_DEBUG - The OSG debug library

       $OSGDIR  is an environment variable that would correspond to the ./con-
       figure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.

       Created by Eric Wing.

   Findosg_functions
       This CMake file contains two macros to assist with  searching  for  OSG
       libraries  and  nodekits.  Please see FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake for full
       documentation.

   FindosgAnimation
       This is part of the Findosg* suite used to find  OpenSceneGraph  compo-
       nents.   Each component is separate and you must opt in to each module.
       You must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and Producer if  needed)
       as  these  modules  won't  do it for you.  This is to allow you control
       over your own system piece by piece in case you need to opt out of cer-
       tain  components  or  change  the Find behavior for a particular module
       (perhaps because the default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn't work  with
       your  system as an example).  If you want to use a more convenient mod-
       ule that includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake  instead
       of the Findosg*.cmake modules.

       Locate osgAnimation This module defines

       OSGANIMATION_FOUND - Was osgAnimation found? OSGANIMATION_INCLUDE_DIR -
       Where to find the headers OSGANIMATION_LIBRARIES  -  The  libraries  to
       link against for the OSG (use this)

       OSGANIMATION_LIBRARY - The OSG library OSGANIMATION_LIBRARY_DEBUG - The
       OSG debug library

       $OSGDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to the  ./con-
       figure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.

       Created by Eric Wing.

   FindosgDB
       This  is  part of the Findosg* suite used to find OpenSceneGraph compo-
       nents.  Each component is separate and you must opt in to each  module.
       You  must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and Producer if needed)
       as these modules won't do it for you.  This is  to  allow  you  control
       over your own system piece by piece in case you need to opt out of cer-
       tain components or change the Find behavior  for  a  particular  module
       (perhaps  because  the default FindOpenGL module doesn't work with your
       system as an example).  If you want to use  a  more  convenient  module
       that  includes  everything,  use  the FindOpenSceneGraph instead of the
       Findosg*.cmake modules.

       Locate osgDB This module defines:

       OSGDB_FOUND
              Was osgDB found?

       OSGDB_INCLUDE_DIR
              Where to find the headers

       OSGDB_LIBRARIES
              The libraries to link against for the osgDB

       OSGDB_LIBRARY
              The osgDB library

       OSGDB_LIBRARY_DEBUG
              The osgDB debug library

       $OSGDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to:

          ./configure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.

   FindosgFX
       This is part of the Findosg* suite used to find  OpenSceneGraph  compo-
       nents.   Each component is separate and you must opt in to each module.
       You must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and Producer if  needed)
       as  these  modules  won't  do it for you.  This is to allow you control
       over your own system piece by piece in case you need to opt out of cer-
       tain  components  or  change  the Find behavior for a particular module
       (perhaps because the default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn't work  with
       your  system as an example).  If you want to use a more convenient mod-
       ule that includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake  instead
       of the Findosg*.cmake modules.

       Locate osgFX This module defines

       OSGFX_FOUND  -  Was  osgFX found? OSGFX_INCLUDE_DIR - Where to find the
       headers OSGFX_LIBRARIES - The libraries to link against for  the  osgFX
       (use this)

       OSGFX_LIBRARY - The osgFX library OSGFX_LIBRARY_DEBUG - The osgFX debug
       library

       $OSGDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to the  ./con-
       figure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.

       Created by Eric Wing.

   FindosgGA
       This  is  part of the Findosg* suite used to find OpenSceneGraph compo-
       nents.  Each component is separate and you must opt in to each  module.
       You  must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and Producer if needed)
       as these modules won't do it for you.  This is  to  allow  you  control
       over your own system piece by piece in case you need to opt out of cer-
       tain components or change the Find behavior  for  a  particular  module
       (perhaps  because the default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn't work with
       your system as an example).  If you want to use a more convenient  mod-
       ule  that includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake instead
       of the Findosg*.cmake modules.

       Locate osgGA This module defines

       OSGGA_FOUND - Was osgGA found? OSGGA_INCLUDE_DIR - Where  to  find  the
       headers  OSGGA_LIBRARIES  - The libraries to link against for the osgGA
       (use this)

       OSGGA_LIBRARY - The osgGA library OSGGA_LIBRARY_DEBUG - The osgGA debug
       library

       $OSGDIR  is an environment variable that would correspond to the ./con-
       figure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.

       Created by Eric Wing.

   FindosgIntrospection
       This is part of the Findosg* suite used to find  OpenSceneGraph  compo-
       nents.   Each component is separate and you must opt in to each module.
       You must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and Producer if  needed)
       as  these  modules  won't  do it for you.  This is to allow you control
       over your own system piece by piece in case you need to opt out of cer-
       tain  components  or  change  the Find behavior for a particular module
       (perhaps because the default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn't work  with
       your  system as an example).  If you want to use a more convenient mod-
       ule that includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake  instead
       of the Findosg*.cmake modules.

       Locate osgINTROSPECTION This module defines

       OSGINTROSPECTION_FOUND  -  Was  osgIntrospection  found?  OSGINTROSPEC-
       TION_INCLUDE_DIR - Where to find the headers OSGINTROSPECTION_LIBRARIES
       - The libraries to link for osgIntrospection (use this)

       OSGINTROSPECTION_LIBRARY  -  The osgIntrospection library OSGINTROSPEC-
       TION_LIBRARY_DEBUG - The osgIntrospection debug library

       $OSGDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to the  ./con-
       figure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.

       Created by Eric Wing.

   FindosgManipulator
       This  is  part of the Findosg* suite used to find OpenSceneGraph compo-
       nents.  Each component is separate and you must opt in to each  module.
       You  must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and Producer if needed)
       as these modules won't do it for you.  This is  to  allow  you  control
       over your own system piece by piece in case you need to opt out of cer-
       tain components or change the Find behavior  for  a  particular  module
       (perhaps  because the default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn't work with
       your system as an example).  If you want to use a more convenient  mod-
       ule  that includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake instead
       of the Findosg*.cmake modules.

       Locate osgManipulator This module defines

       OSGMANIPULATOR_FOUND - Was  osgManipulator  found?   OSGMANIPULATOR_IN-
       CLUDE_DIR  -  Where  to find the headers OSGMANIPULATOR_LIBRARIES - The
       libraries to link for osgManipulator (use this)

       OSGMANIPULATOR_LIBRARY - The osgManipulator library  OSGMANIPULATOR_LI-
       BRARY_DEBUG - The osgManipulator debug library

       $OSGDIR  is an environment variable that would correspond to the ./con-
       figure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.

       Created by Eric Wing.

   FindosgParticle
       This is part of the Findosg* suite used to find  OpenSceneGraph  compo-
       nents.   Each component is separate and you must opt in to each module.
       You must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and Producer if  needed)
       as  these  modules  won't  do it for you.  This is to allow you control
       over your own system piece by piece in case you need to opt out of cer-
       tain  components  or  change  the Find behavior for a particular module
       (perhaps because the default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn't work  with
       your  system as an example).  If you want to use a more convenient mod-
       ule that includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake  instead
       of the Findosg*.cmake modules.

       Locate osgParticle This module defines

       OSGPARTICLE_FOUND  -  Was  osgParticle found? OSGPARTICLE_INCLUDE_DIR -
       Where to find the headers OSGPARTICLE_LIBRARIES - The libraries to link
       for osgParticle (use this)

       OSGPARTICLE_LIBRARY - The osgParticle library OSGPARTICLE_LIBRARY_DEBUG
       - The osgParticle debug library

       $OSGDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to the  ./con-
       figure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.

       Created by Eric Wing.

   FindosgPresentation
       This  is  part of the Findosg* suite used to find OpenSceneGraph compo-
       nents.  Each component is separate and you must opt in to each  module.
       You  must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and Producer if needed)
       as these modules won't do it for you.  This is  to  allow  you  control
       over your own system piece by piece in case you need to opt out of cer-
       tain components or change the Find behavior  for  a  particular  module
       (perhaps  because the default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn't work with
       your system as an example).  If you want to use a more convenient  mod-
       ule  that includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake instead
       of the Findosg*.cmake modules.

       Locate osgPresentation This module defines

       OSGPRESENTATION_FOUND - Was osgPresentation found?  OSGPRESENTATION_IN-
       CLUDE_DIR  -  Where to find the headers OSGPRESENTATION_LIBRARIES - The
       libraries to link for osgPresentation (use this)

       OSGPRESENTATION_LIBRARY  -  The  osgPresentation  library  OSGPRESENTA-
       TION_LIBRARY_DEBUG - The osgPresentation debug library

       $OSGDIR  is an environment variable that would correspond to the ./con-
       figure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.

       Created by Eric Wing.  Modified to work with osgPresentation by  Robert
       Osfield, January 2012.

   FindosgProducer
       This  is  part of the Findosg* suite used to find OpenSceneGraph compo-
       nents.  Each component is separate and you must opt in to each  module.
       You  must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and Producer if needed)
       as these modules won't do it for you.  This is  to  allow  you  control
       over your own system piece by piece in case you need to opt out of cer-
       tain components or change the Find behavior  for  a  particular  module
       (perhaps  because the default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn't work with
       your system as an example).  If you want to use a more convenient  mod-
       ule  that includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake instead
       of the Findosg*.cmake modules.

       Locate osgProducer This module defines

       OSGPRODUCER_FOUND - Was osgProducer  found?  OSGPRODUCER_INCLUDE_DIR  -
       Where to find the headers OSGPRODUCER_LIBRARIES - The libraries to link
       for osgProducer (use this)

       OSGPRODUCER_LIBRARY - The osgProducer library OSGPRODUCER_LIBRARY_DEBUG
       - The osgProducer debug library

       $OSGDIR  is an environment variable that would correspond to the ./con-
       figure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.

       Created by Eric Wing.

   FindosgQt
       This is part of the Findosg* suite used to find  OpenSceneGraph  compo-
       nents.   Each component is separate and you must opt in to each module.
       You must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and Producer if  needed)
       as  these  modules  won't  do it for you.  This is to allow you control
       over your own system piece by piece in case you need to opt out of cer-
       tain  components  or  change  the Find behavior for a particular module
       (perhaps because the default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn't work  with
       your  system as an example).  If you want to use a more convenient mod-
       ule that includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake  instead
       of the Findosg*.cmake modules.

       Locate osgQt This module defines

       OSGQT_FOUND  -  Was  osgQt found? OSGQT_INCLUDE_DIR - Where to find the
       headers OSGQT_LIBRARIES - The libraries to link for osgQt (use this)

       OSGQT_LIBRARY - The osgQt library OSGQT_LIBRARY_DEBUG - The osgQt debug
       library

       $OSGDIR  is an environment variable that would correspond to the ./con-
       figure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.

       Created by Eric Wing.  Modified to work with osgQt by  Robert  Osfield,
       January 2012.

   FindosgShadow
       This  is  part of the Findosg* suite used to find OpenSceneGraph compo-
       nents.  Each component is separate and you must opt in to each  module.
       You  must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and Producer if needed)
       as these modules won't do it for you.  This is  to  allow  you  control
       over your own system piece by piece in case you need to opt out of cer-
       tain components or change the Find behavior  for  a  particular  module
       (perhaps  because the default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn't work with
       your system as an example).  If you want to use a more convenient  mod-
       ule  that includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake instead
       of the Findosg*.cmake modules.

       Locate osgShadow This module defines

       OSGSHADOW_FOUND - Was osgShadow found? OSGSHADOW_INCLUDE_DIR - Where to
       find  the  headers  OSGSHADOW_LIBRARIES - The libraries to link for os-
       gShadow (use this)

       OSGSHADOW_LIBRARY - The osgShadow library OSGSHADOW_LIBRARY_DEBUG - The
       osgShadow debug library

       $OSGDIR  is an environment variable that would correspond to the ./con-
       figure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.

       Created by Eric Wing.

   FindosgSim
       This is part of the Findosg* suite used to find  OpenSceneGraph  compo-
       nents.   Each component is separate and you must opt in to each module.
       You must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and Producer if  needed)
       as  these  modules  won't  do it for you.  This is to allow you control
       over your own system piece by piece in case you need to opt out of cer-
       tain  components  or  change  the Find behavior for a particular module
       (perhaps because the default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn't work  with
       your  system as an example).  If you want to use a more convenient mod-
       ule that includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake  instead
       of the Findosg*.cmake modules.

       Locate osgSim This module defines

       OSGSIM_FOUND - Was osgSim found? OSGSIM_INCLUDE_DIR - Where to find the
       headers OSGSIM_LIBRARIES - The libraries to link for osgSim (use this)

       OSGSIM_LIBRARY - The osgSim library OSGSIM_LIBRARY_DEBUG -  The  osgSim
       debug library

       $OSGDIR  is an environment variable that would correspond to the ./con-
       figure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.

       Created by Eric Wing.

   FindosgTerrain
       This is part of the Findosg* suite used to find  OpenSceneGraph  compo-
       nents.   Each component is separate and you must opt in to each module.
       You must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and Producer if  needed)
       as  these  modules  won't  do it for you.  This is to allow you control
       over your own system piece by piece in case you need to opt out of cer-
       tain  components  or  change  the Find behavior for a particular module
       (perhaps because the default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn't work  with
       your  system as an example).  If you want to use a more convenient mod-
       ule that includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake  instead
       of the Findosg*.cmake modules.

       Locate osgTerrain This module defines

       OSGTERRAIN_FOUND - Was osgTerrain found? OSGTERRAIN_INCLUDE_DIR - Where
       to find the headers OSGTERRAIN_LIBRARIES - The libraries  to  link  for
       osgTerrain (use this)

       OSGTERRAIN_LIBRARY  - The osgTerrain library OSGTERRAIN_LIBRARY_DEBUG -
       The osgTerrain debug library

       $OSGDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to the  ./con-
       figure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.

       Created by Eric Wing.

   FindosgText
       This  is  part of the Findosg* suite used to find OpenSceneGraph compo-
       nents.  Each component is separate and you must opt in to each  module.
       You  must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and Producer if needed)
       as these modules won't do it for you.  This is  to  allow  you  control
       over your own system piece by piece in case you need to opt out of cer-
       tain components or change the Find behavior  for  a  particular  module
       (perhaps  because the default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn't work with
       your system as an example).  If you want to use a more convenient  mod-
       ule  that includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake instead
       of the Findosg*.cmake modules.

       Locate osgText This module defines

       OSGTEXT_FOUND - Was osgText found? OSGTEXT_INCLUDE_DIR - Where to  find
       the  headers OSGTEXT_LIBRARIES - The libraries to link for osgText (use
       this)

       OSGTEXT_LIBRARY - The osgText library OSGTEXT_LIBRARY_DEBUG - The  osg-
       Text debug library

       $OSGDIR  is an environment variable that would correspond to the ./con-
       figure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.

       Created by Eric Wing.

   FindosgUtil
       This is part of the Findosg* suite used to find  OpenSceneGraph  compo-
       nents.   Each component is separate and you must opt in to each module.
       You must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and Producer if  needed)
       as  these  modules  won't  do it for you.  This is to allow you control
       over your own system piece by piece in case you need to opt out of cer-
       tain  components  or  change  the Find behavior for a particular module
       (perhaps because the default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn't work  with
       your  system as an example).  If you want to use a more convenient mod-
       ule that includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake  instead
       of the Findosg*.cmake modules.

       Locate osgUtil This module defines

       OSGUTIL_FOUND  - Was osgUtil found? OSGUTIL_INCLUDE_DIR - Where to find
       the headers OSGUTIL_LIBRARIES - The libraries to link for osgUtil  (use
       this)

       OSGUTIL_LIBRARY  -  The  osgUtil  library  OSGUTIL_LIBRARY_DEBUG  - The
       osgUtil debug library

       $OSGDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to the  ./con-
       figure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.

       Created by Eric Wing.

   FindosgViewer
       This  is  part of the Findosg* suite used to find OpenSceneGraph compo-
       nents.  Each component is separate and you must opt in to each  module.
       You  must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and Producer if needed)
       as these modules won't do it for you.  This is  to  allow  you  control
       over your own system piece by piece in case you need to opt out of cer-
       tain components or change the Find behavior  for  a  particular  module
       (perhaps  because the default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn't work with
       your system as an example).  If you want to use a more convenient  mod-
       ule  that includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake instead
       of the Findosg*.cmake modules.

       Locate osgViewer This module defines

       OSGVIEWER_FOUND - Was osgViewer found? OSGVIEWER_INCLUDE_DIR - Where to
       find  the  headers  OSGVIEWER_LIBRARIES - The libraries to link for os-
       gViewer (use this)

       OSGVIEWER_LIBRARY - The osgViewer library OSGVIEWER_LIBRARY_DEBUG - The
       osgViewer debug library

       $OSGDIR  is an environment variable that would correspond to the ./con-
       figure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.

       Created by Eric Wing.

   FindosgVolume
       This is part of the Findosg* suite used to find  OpenSceneGraph  compo-
       nents.   Each component is separate and you must opt in to each module.
       You must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and Producer if  needed)
       as  these  modules  won't  do it for you.  This is to allow you control
       over your own system piece by piece in case you need to opt out of cer-
       tain  components  or  change  the Find behavior for a particular module
       (perhaps because the default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn't work  with
       your  system as an example).  If you want to use a more convenient mod-
       ule that includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake  instead
       of the Findosg*.cmake modules.

       Locate osgVolume This module defines

       OSGVOLUME_FOUND - Was osgVolume found? OSGVOLUME_INCLUDE_DIR - Where to
       find the headers OSGVOLUME_LIBRARIES - The libraries to  link  for  os-
       gVolume (use this)

       OSGVOLUME_LIBRARY - The osgVolume library OSGVOLUME_LIBRARY_DEBUG - The
       osgVolume debug library

       $OSGDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to the  ./con-
       figure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.

       Created by Eric Wing.

   FindosgWidget
       This  is  part of the Findosg* suite used to find OpenSceneGraph compo-
       nents.  Each component is separate and you must opt in to each  module.
       You  must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and Producer if needed)
       as these modules won't do it for you.  This is  to  allow  you  control
       over your own system piece by piece in case you need to opt out of cer-
       tain components or change the Find behavior  for  a  particular  module
       (perhaps  because the default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn't work with
       your system as an example).  If you want to use a more convenient  mod-
       ule  that includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake instead
       of the Findosg*.cmake modules.

       Locate osgWidget This module defines

       OSGWIDGET_FOUND - Was osgWidget found? OSGWIDGET_INCLUDE_DIR - Where to
       find  the  headers OSGWIDGET_LIBRARIES - The libraries to link for osg-
       Widget (use this)

       OSGWIDGET_LIBRARY - The osgWidget library OSGWIDGET_LIBRARY_DEBUG - The
       osgWidget debug library

       $OSGDIR  is an environment variable that would correspond to the ./con-
       figure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.

       FindosgWidget.cmake tweaked from Findosg*  suite  as  created  by  Eric
       Wing.

   FindPatch
       New in version 3.10.

       The module defines the following variables:

       Patch_EXECUTABLE
              Path to patch command-line executable.

       Patch_FOUND
              True if the patch command-line executable was found.

       The following IMPORTED targets are also defined:

       Patch::patch
              The command-line executable.

       Example usage:

          find_package(Patch)
          if(Patch_FOUND)
            message("Patch found: ${Patch_EXECUTABLE}")
          endif()

   FindPerl
       Find perl

       this module looks for Perl

          PERL_EXECUTABLE     - the full path to perl
          PERL_FOUND          - If false, don't attempt to use perl.
          PERL_VERSION_STRING - version of perl found (since CMake 2.8.8)

   FindPerlLibs
       Find Perl libraries

       This module finds if PERL is installed and determines where the include
       files and libraries are.  It also determines what the name of  the  li-
       brary is.  This code sets the following variables:

          PERLLIBS_FOUND    = True if perl.h & libperl were found
          PERL_INCLUDE_PATH = path to where perl.h is found
          PERL_LIBRARY      = path to libperl
          PERL_EXECUTABLE   = full path to the perl binary

       The  minimum  required version of Perl can be specified using the stan-
       dard syntax, e.g.  find_package(PerlLibs 6.0)

          The following variables are also available if needed
          (introduced after CMake 2.6.4)

          PERL_SITESEARCH     = path to the sitesearch install dir (-V:installsitesearch)
          PERL_SITEARCH       = path to the sitelib install directory (-V:installsitearch)
          PERL_SITELIB        = path to the sitelib install directory (-V:installsitelib)
          PERL_VENDORARCH     = path to the vendor arch install directory (-V:installvendorarch)
          PERL_VENDORLIB      = path to the vendor lib install directory (-V:installvendorlib)
          PERL_ARCHLIB        = path to the core arch lib install directory (-V:archlib)
          PERL_PRIVLIB        = path to the core priv lib install directory (-V:privlib)
          PERL_UPDATE_ARCHLIB = path to the update arch lib install directory (-V:installarchlib)
          PERL_UPDATE_PRIVLIB = path to the update priv lib install directory (-V:installprivlib)
          PERL_EXTRA_C_FLAGS = Compilation flags used to build perl

   FindPHP4
       Find PHP4

       This module finds if PHP4 is installed and determines where the include
       files  and  libraries are.  It also determines what the name of the li-
       brary is.  This code sets the following variables:

          PHP4_INCLUDE_PATH       = path to where php.h can be found
          PHP4_EXECUTABLE         = full path to the php4 binary

   FindPhysFS
       Locate PhysFS library This module defines PHYSFS_LIBRARY, the  name  of
       the  library to link against PHYSFS_FOUND, if false, do not try to link
       to PHYSFS PHYSFS_INCLUDE_DIR, where to find physfs.h

       $PHYSFSDIR is an environment variable  that  would  correspond  to  the
       ./configure --prefix=$PHYSFSDIR used in building PHYSFS.

       Created by Eric Wing.

   FindPike
       Find Pike

       This module finds if PIKE is installed and determines where the include
       files and libraries are.  It also determines what the name of  the  li-
       brary is.  This code sets the following variables:

          PIKE_INCLUDE_PATH       = path to where program.h is found
          PIKE_EXECUTABLE         = full path to the pike binary

   FindPkgConfig
       A pkg-config module for CMake.

       Finds  the  pkg-config  executable  and  adds  the  pkg_get_variable(),
       pkg_check_modules() and  pkg_search_module()  commands.  The  following
       variables will also be set:

       PKG_CONFIG_FOUND
              True if a pkg-config executable was found.

       PKG_CONFIG_VERSION_STRING
              New in version 2.8.8.

              The version of pkg-config that was found.

       PKG_CONFIG_EXECUTABLE
              The pathname of the pkg-config program.

       PKG_CONFIG_ARGN
              New in version 3.22.

              A list of arguments to pass to pkg-config.

       Both  PKG_CONFIG_EXECUTABLE  and PKG_CONFIG_ARGN are initialized by the
       module, but may be overridden by the user.  See Variables Affecting Be-
       havior for how these variables are initialized.

       pkg_check_modules
              Checks  for  all  the given modules, setting a variety of result
              variables in the calling scope.

                 pkg_check_modules(<prefix>
                                   [REQUIRED] [QUIET]
                                   [NO_CMAKE_PATH]
                                   [NO_CMAKE_ENVIRONMENT_PATH]
                                   [IMPORTED_TARGET [GLOBAL]]
                                   <moduleSpec> [<moduleSpec>...])

              When the REQUIRED argument is given, the command will fail  with
              an error if module(s) could not be found.

              When  the  QUIET  argument  is given, no status messages will be
              printed.

              New in version 3.1: The CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH, CMAKE_FRAMEWORK_PATH,
              and CMAKE_APPBUNDLE_PATH cache and environment variables will be
              added to the pkg-config  search  path.   The  NO_CMAKE_PATH  and
              NO_CMAKE_ENVIRONMENT_PATH  arguments  disable  this behavior for
              the cache variables and environment variables respectively.  The
              PKG_CONFIG_USE_CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH  variable set to FALSE disables
              this behavior globally.

              New in version 3.6: The IMPORTED_TARGET argument will create  an
              imported target named PkgConfig::<prefix> that can be passed di-
              rectly as an argument to target_link_libraries().

              New in version 3.13: The GLOBAL argument will make the  imported
              target available in global scope.

              New  in  version  3.15:  Non-library  linker options reported by
              pkg-config are stored in the INTERFACE_LINK_OPTIONS target prop-
              erty.

              Changed  in  version  3.18:  Include  directories specified with
              -isystem are stored in the INTERFACE_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES  target
              property.    Previous   versions  of  CMake  left  them  in  the
              INTERFACE_COMPILE_OPTIONS property.

              Each <moduleSpec> can be either a bare module name or it can  be
              a  module  name with a version constraint (operators =, <, >, <=
              and >= are supported).  The following are examples for a  module
              named foo with various constraints:

              • foo matches any version.

              • foo<2 only matches versions before 2.

              • foo>=3.1 matches any version from 3.1 or later.

              • foo=1.2.3 requires that foo must be exactly version 1.2.3.

              The  following  variables  may  be set upon return.  Two sets of
              values exist: One for the common case (<XXX> = <prefix>) and an-
              other  for  the information pkg-config provides when called with
              the --static option (<XXX> = <prefix>_STATIC).

              <XXX>_FOUND
                     set to 1 if module(s) exist

              <XXX>_LIBRARIES
                     only the libraries (without the '-l')

              <XXX>_LINK_LIBRARIES
                     the libraries and their absolute paths

              <XXX>_LIBRARY_DIRS
                     the paths of the libraries (without the '-L')

              <XXX>_LDFLAGS
                     all required linker flags

              <XXX>_LDFLAGS_OTHER
                     all other linker flags

              <XXX>_INCLUDE_DIRS
                     the '-I' preprocessor flags (without the '-I')

              <XXX>_CFLAGS
                     all required cflags

              <XXX>_CFLAGS_OTHER
                     the other compiler flags

              All but <XXX>_FOUND may be a ;-list if the  associated  variable
              returned from pkg-config has multiple values.

              Changed  in  version  3.18:  Include  directories specified with
              -isystem are stored in the <XXX>_INCLUDE_DIRS variable.   Previ-
              ous versions of CMake left them in <XXX>_CFLAGS_OTHER.

              There  are  some  special  variables whose prefix depends on the
              number of <moduleSpec> given.  When there is only  one  <module-
              Spec>,  <YYY>  will simply be <prefix>, but if two or more <mod-
              uleSpec> items are given, <YYY> will be <prefix>_<moduleName>.

              <YYY>_VERSION
                     version of the module

              <YYY>_PREFIX
                     prefix directory of the module

              <YYY>_INCLUDEDIR
                     include directory of the module

              <YYY>_LIBDIR
                     lib directory of the module

              Changed in version 3.8: For any given  <prefix>,  pkg_check_mod-
              ules()  can  be called multiple times with different parameters.
              Previous versions of CMake cached and returned  the  first  suc-
              cessful result.

              Changed  in  version  3.16:  If a full path to the found library
              can't be determined, but it's still visible to the linker,  pass
              it  through  as  -l<name>.  Previous versions of CMake failed in
              this case.

              Examples:

                 pkg_check_modules (GLIB2 glib-2.0)

              Looks for any version of glib2.  If found, the  output  variable
              GLIB2_VERSION will hold the actual version found.

                 pkg_check_modules (GLIB2 glib-2.0>=2.10)

              Looks  for at least version 2.10 of glib2.  If found, the output
              variable GLIB2_VERSION will hold the actual version found.

                 pkg_check_modules (FOO glib-2.0>=2.10 gtk+-2.0)

              Looks for both glib2-2.0 (at least version 2.10) and any version
              of  gtk2+-2.0.   Only  if  both are found will FOO be considered
              found.  The FOO_glib-2.0_VERSION and FOO_gtk+-2.0_VERSION  vari-
              ables will be set to their respective found module versions.

                 pkg_check_modules (XRENDER REQUIRED xrender)

              Requires  any  version of xrender.  Example output variables set
              by a successful call:

                 XRENDER_LIBRARIES=Xrender;X11
                 XRENDER_STATIC_LIBRARIES=Xrender;X11;pthread;Xau;Xdmcp

       pkg_search_module
              The behavior of this command is the same as pkg_check_modules(),
              except  that rather than checking for all the specified modules,
              it searches for just the first successful match.

                 pkg_search_module(<prefix>
                                   [REQUIRED] [QUIET]
                                   [NO_CMAKE_PATH]
                                   [NO_CMAKE_ENVIRONMENT_PATH]
                                   [IMPORTED_TARGET [GLOBAL]]
                                   <moduleSpec> [<moduleSpec>...])

              New in version 3.16: If a module  is  found,  the  <prefix>_MOD-
              ULE_NAME  variable will contain the name of the matching module.
              This variable can be used if you need to run pkg_get_variable().

              Example:

                 pkg_search_module (BAR libxml-2.0 libxml2 libxml>=2)

       pkg_get_variable
              New in version 3.4.

              Retrieves the value of a pkg-config variable varName and  stores
              it in the result variable resultVar in the calling scope.

                 pkg_get_variable(<resultVar> <moduleName> <varName>)

              If  pkg-config  returns  multiple values for the specified vari-
              able, resultVar will contain a ;-list.

              For example:

                 pkg_get_variable(GI_GIRDIR gobject-introspection-1.0 girdir)

   Variables Affecting Behavior
       PKG_CONFIG_EXECUTABLE
              This cache variable can be set to the path of the pkg-config ex-
              ecutable.   find_program()  is  called  internally by the module
              with this variable.

              New in version 3.1: The PKG_CONFIG environment variable  can  be
              used as a hint if PKG_CONFIG_EXECUTABLE has not yet been set.

              Changed  in version 3.22: If the PKG_CONFIG environment variable
              is set, only the first argument is taken from it when  using  it
              as a hint.

       PKG_CONFIG_ARGN
              New in version 3.22.

              This  cache  variable can be set to a list of arguments to addi-
              tionally pass to pkg-config if needed. If not provided, it  will
              be initialized from the PKG_CONFIG environment variable, if set.
              The first argument in that environment variable is assumed to be
              the pkg-config program, while all remaining arguments after that
              are used to initialize PKG_CONFIG_ARGN.  If no such  environment
              variable  is defined, PKG_CONFIG_ARGN is initialized to an empty
              string. The module does not update the variable once it has been
              set in the cache.

       PKG_CONFIG_USE_CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH
              New in version 3.1.

              Specifies  whether  pkg_check_modules()  and pkg_search_module()
              should    add    the    paths    in    the    CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH,
              CMAKE_FRAMEWORK_PATH and CMAKE_APPBUNDLE_PATH cache and environ-
              ment variables to the pkg-config search path.

              If this variable is not set, this behavior is enabled by default
              if CMAKE_MINIMUM_REQUIRED_VERSION is 3.1 or later, disabled oth-
              erwise.

   FindPNG
       Find libpng, the official reference library for the PNG image format.

   Imported targets
       New in version 3.5.

       This module defines the following IMPORTED target:

       PNG::PNG
              The libpng library, if found.

   Result variables
       This module will set the following variables in your project:

       PNG_INCLUDE_DIRS
              where to find png.h, etc.

       PNG_LIBRARIES
              the libraries to link against to use PNG.

       PNG_DEFINITIONS
              You should add_definitions(${PNG_DEFINITIONS}) before  compiling
              code that includes png library files.

       PNG_FOUND
              If false, do not try to use PNG.

       PNG_VERSION_STRING
              the version of the PNG library found (since CMake 2.8.8)

   Obsolete variables
       The following variables may also be set, for backwards compatibility:

       PNG_LIBRARY
              where to find the PNG library.

       PNG_INCLUDE_DIR
              where to find the PNG headers (same as PNG_INCLUDE_DIRS)

       Since  PNG  depends  on the ZLib compression library, none of the above
       will be defined unless ZLib can be found.

   FindPostgreSQL
       Find the PostgreSQL installation.

   IMPORTED Targets
       New in version 3.14.

       This module defines IMPORTED  target  PostgreSQL::PostgreSQL  if  Post-
       greSQL has been found.

   Result Variables
       This module will set the following variables in your project:

       PostgreSQL_FOUND
              True if PostgreSQL is found.

       PostgreSQL_LIBRARIES
              the PostgreSQL libraries needed for linking

       PostgreSQL_INCLUDE_DIRS
              the directories of the PostgreSQL headers

       PostgreSQL_LIBRARY_DIRS
              the link directories for PostgreSQL libraries

       PostgreSQL_VERSION_STRING
              the version of PostgreSQL found

       PostgreSQL_TYPE_INCLUDE_DIR
              the directories of the PostgreSQL server headers

   Components
       This  module contains additional Server component, that forcibly checks
       for the presence  of  server  headers.  Note  that  PostgreSQL_TYPE_IN-
       CLUDE_DIR  is set regardless of the presence of the Server component in
       find_package call.

   FindProducer
       Though Producer isn't directly part of OpenSceneGraph, its primary user
       is OSG so I consider this part of the Findosg* suite used to find Open-
       SceneGraph components.  You'll notice that I accept OSGDIR as an  envi-
       ronment path.

       Each  component  is  separate  and you must opt in to each module.  You
       must also opt into OpenGL (and OpenThreads?) as these modules won't  do
       it for you.  This is to allow you control over your own system piece by
       piece in case you need to opt out of certain components or  change  the
       Find  behavior  for  a  particular  module (perhaps because the default
       FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn't work with your system as  an  example).
       If  you  want to use a more convenient module that includes everything,
       use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake instead of the Findosg*.cmake modules.

       Locate Producer This module defines PRODUCER_LIBRARY PRODUCER_FOUND, if
       false,  do  not  try to link to Producer PRODUCER_INCLUDE_DIR, where to
       find the headers

       $PRODUCER_DIR is an environment variable that would correspond  to  the
       ./configure --prefix=$PRODUCER_DIR used in building osg.

       Created by Eric Wing.

   FindProtobuf
       Locate and configure the Google Protocol Buffers library.

       New in version 3.6: Support for find_package() version checks.

       Changed  in  version 3.6: All input and output variables use the Proto-
       buf_ prefix.  Variables with PROTOBUF_ prefix are still  supported  for
       compatibility.

       The following variables can be set and are optional:

       Protobuf_SRC_ROOT_FOLDER
              When compiling with MSVC, if this cache variable is set the pro-
              tobuf-default VS project build locations  (vsprojects/Debug  and
              vsprojects/Release    or    vsprojects/x64/Debug    and   vspro-
              jects/x64/Release) will be searched for libraries and binaries.

       Protobuf_IMPORT_DIRS
              List of additional  directories  to  be  searched  for  imported
              .proto files.

       Protobuf_DEBUG
              New in version 3.6.

              Show debug messages.

       Protobuf_USE_STATIC_LIBS
              New in version 3.9.

              Set  to ON to force the use of the static libraries.  Default is
              OFF.

       Defines the following variables:

       Protobuf_FOUND
              Found the Google Protocol Buffers library (libprotobuf &  header
              files)

       Protobuf_VERSION
              New in version 3.6.

              Version of package found.

       Protobuf_INCLUDE_DIRS
              Include directories for Google Protocol Buffers

       Protobuf_LIBRARIES
              The protobuf libraries

       Protobuf_PROTOC_LIBRARIES
              The protoc libraries

       Protobuf_LITE_LIBRARIES
              The protobuf-lite libraries

       New in version 3.9: The following IMPORTED targets are also defined:

       protobuf::libprotobuf
              The protobuf library.

       protobuf::libprotobuf-lite
              The protobuf lite library.

       protobuf::libprotoc
              The protoc library.

       protobuf::protoc
              New in version 3.10: The protoc compiler.

       The following cache variables are also available to set or use:

       Protobuf_LIBRARY
              The protobuf library

       Protobuf_PROTOC_LIBRARY
              The protoc library

       Protobuf_INCLUDE_DIR
              The include directory for protocol buffers

       Protobuf_PROTOC_EXECUTABLE
              The protoc compiler

       Protobuf_LIBRARY_DEBUG
              The protobuf library (debug)

       Protobuf_PROTOC_LIBRARY_DEBUG
              The protoc library (debug)

       Protobuf_LITE_LIBRARY
              The protobuf lite library

       Protobuf_LITE_LIBRARY_DEBUG
              The protobuf lite library (debug)

       Example:

          find_package(Protobuf REQUIRED)
          include_directories(${Protobuf_INCLUDE_DIRS})
          include_directories(${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR})
          protobuf_generate_cpp(PROTO_SRCS PROTO_HDRS foo.proto)
          protobuf_generate_cpp(PROTO_SRCS PROTO_HDRS EXPORT_MACRO DLL_EXPORT foo.proto)
          protobuf_generate_cpp(PROTO_SRCS PROTO_HDRS DESCRIPTORS PROTO_DESCS foo.proto)
          protobuf_generate_python(PROTO_PY foo.proto)
          add_executable(bar bar.cc ${PROTO_SRCS} ${PROTO_HDRS})
          target_link_libraries(bar ${Protobuf_LIBRARIES})

       NOTE:
          The protobuf_generate_cpp and protobuf_generate_python functions and
          add_executable() or add_library() calls only  work  properly  within
          the same directory.

       protobuf_generate_cpp
              Add custom commands to process .proto files to C++:

                 protobuf_generate_cpp (<SRCS> <HDRS>
                     [DESCRIPTORS <DESC>] [EXPORT_MACRO <MACRO>] [<ARGN>...])

              SRCS   Variable to define with autogenerated source files

              HDRS   Variable to define with autogenerated header files

              DESCRIPTORS
                     New  in  version 3.10: Variable to define with autogener-
                     ated descriptor files, if requested.

              EXPORT_MACRO
                     is a macro which should expand  to  __declspec(dllexport)
                     or  __declspec(dllimport) depending on what is being com-
                     piled.

              ARGN   .proto files

       protobuf_generate_python
              New in version 3.4.

              Add custom commands to process .proto files to Python:

                 protobuf_generate_python (<PY> [<ARGN>...])

              PY     Variable to define with autogenerated Python files

              ARGN   .proto files

   FindPython
       New in version 3.12.

       Find Python interpreter, compiler and development environment  (include
       directories and libraries).

       New  in  version 3.19: When a version is requested, it can be specified
       as a simple value or as a range. For a detailed description of  version
       range usage and capabilities, refer to the find_package() command.

       The following components are supported:

       • Interpreter: search for Python interpreter.

       • Compiler: search for Python compiler. Only offered by IronPython.

       • Development:  search  for  development artifacts (include directories
         and libraries).

         New in version 3.18: This component includes two sub-components which
         can be specified independently:

         • Development.Module: search for artifacts for Python module develop-
           ments.

         • Development.Embed: search for artifacts for Python embedding devel-
           opments.

       • NumPy: search for NumPy include directories.

       New in version 3.14: Added the NumPy component.

       If no COMPONENTS are specified, Interpreter is assumed.

       If component Development is specified, it implies sub-components Devel-
       opment.Module and Development.Embed.

       To ensure consistent versions between components Interpreter, Compiler,
       Development  (or one of its sub-components) and NumPy, specify all com-
       ponents at the same time:

          find_package (Python COMPONENTS Interpreter Development)

       This module looks preferably for version 3 of  Python.  If  not  found,
       version  2  is  searched.   To  manage  concurrent  versions 3 and 2 of
       Python, use FindPython3 and FindPython2 modules rather than this one.

       NOTE:
          If components Interpreter and Development (or one of its  sub-compo-
          nents)  are  both specified, this module search only for interpreter
          with same platform architecture as the one defined by CMake configu-
          ration. This constraint does not apply if only Interpreter component
          is specified.

   Imported Targets
       This module defines the following Imported Targets:

       Changed in  version  3.14:  Imported  Targets  are  only  created  when
       CMAKE_ROLE is PROJECT.

       Python::Interpreter
              Python  interpreter.  Target defined if component Interpreter is
              found.

       Python::Compiler
              Python compiler. Target defined if component Compiler is found.

       Python::Module
              New in version 3.15.

              Python library for Python module. Target  defined  if  component
              Development.Module is found.

       Python::Python
              Python library for Python embedding. Target defined if component
              Development.Embed is found.

       Python::NumPy
              New in version 3.14.

              NumPy Python library.  Target  defined  if  component  NumPy  is
              found.

   Result Variables
       This  module  will  set  the  following  variables in your project (see
       Standard Variable Names):

       Python_FOUND
              System has the Python requested components.

       Python_Interpreter_FOUND
              System has the Python interpreter.

       Python_EXECUTABLE
              Path to the Python interpreter.

       Python_INTERPRETER_ID

              A short string unique to the interpreter.  Possible  values  in-
              clude:

                     • Python

                     • ActivePython

                     • Anaconda

                     • Canopy

                     • IronPython

                     • PyPy

       Python_STDLIB
              Standard platform independent installation directory.

              Information         returned         by        distutils.syscon-
              fig.get_python_lib(plat_specific=False,standard_lib=True)     or
              else sysconfig.get_path('stdlib').

       Python_STDARCH
              Standard platform dependent installation directory.

              Information         returned         by        distutils.syscon-
              fig.get_python_lib(plat_specific=True,standard_lib=True) or else
              sysconfig.get_path('platstdlib').

       Python_SITELIB
              Third-party platform independent installation directory.

              Information         returned         by        distutils.syscon-
              fig.get_python_lib(plat_specific=False,standard_lib=False)    or
              else sysconfig.get_path('purelib').

       Python_SITEARCH
              Third-party platform dependent installation directory.

              Information         returned         by        distutils.syscon-
              fig.get_python_lib(plat_specific=True,standard_lib=False)     or
              else sysconfig.get_path('platlib').

       Python_SOABI
              New in version 3.17.

              Extension suffix for modules.

              Information     returned     by     distutils.sysconfig.get_con-
              fig_var('SOABI') or computed  from  distutils.sysconfig.get_con-
              fig_var('EXT_SUFFIX')  or  python-config  --extension-suffix. If
              package distutils.sysconfig is not available, sysconfig.get_con-
              fig_var('SOABI')  or  sysconfig.get_config_var('EXT_SUFFIX') are
              used.

       Python_Compiler_FOUND
              System has the Python compiler.

       Python_COMPILER
              Path to the Python compiler. Only offered by IronPython.

       Python_COMPILER_ID

              A short string unique to the compiler. Possible values include:

                     • IronPython

       Python_DOTNET_LAUNCHER
              New in version 3.18.

              The .Net interpreter. Only used by IronPython implementation.

       Python_Development_FOUND
              System has the Python development artifacts.

       Python_Development.Module_FOUND
              New in version 3.18.

              System has the Python development artifacts for Python module.

       Python_Development.Embed_FOUND
              New in version 3.18.

              System has the Python development artifacts  for  Python  embed-
              ding.

       Python_INCLUDE_DIRS
          The Python include directories.

       Python_LINK_OPTIONS
              New in version 3.19.

              The  Python  link  options. Some configurations require specific
              link options for a correct build and execution.

       Python_LIBRARIES
              The Python libraries.

       Python_LIBRARY_DIRS
              The Python library directories.

       Python_RUNTIME_LIBRARY_DIRS
              The Python runtime library directories.

       Python_VERSION
              Python version.

       Python_VERSION_MAJOR
              Python major version.

       Python_VERSION_MINOR
              Python minor version.

       Python_VERSION_PATCH
              Python patch version.

       Python_PyPy_VERSION
              New in version 3.18.

              Python PyPy version.

       Python_NumPy_FOUND
              New in version 3.14.

              System has the NumPy.

       Python_NumPy_INCLUDE_DIRS
              New in version 3.14.

              The NumPy include directories.

       Python_NumPy_VERSION
              New in version 3.14.

              The NumPy version.

   Hints
       Python_ROOT_DIR
              Define the root directory of a Python installation.

       Python_USE_STATIC_LIBS

              • If not defined, search for shared  libraries  and  static  li-
                braries in that order.

              • If set to TRUE, search only for static libraries.

              • If set to FALSE, search only for shared libraries.

              NOTE:
                 This hint will be ignored on Windows because static libraries
                 are not available on this platform.

       Python_FIND_ABI
              New in version 3.16.

              This variable defines which ABIs, as defined in PEP 3149, should
              be searched.

              NOTE:
                 This  hint will be honored only when searched for Python ver-
                 sion 3.

              NOTE:
                 If Python_FIND_ABI is not defined, any ABI will be searched.

              The Python_FIND_ABI variable is a 3-tuple  specifying,  in  that
              order,  pydebug  (d),  pymalloc (m) and unicode (u) flags.  Each
              element can be set to one of the following:

              • ON: Corresponding flag is selected.

              • OFF: Corresponding flag is not selected.

              • ANY: The two possibilities (ON and OFF) will be searched.

              From this 3-tuple, various ABIs will be searched  starting  from
              the  most  specialized to the most general. Moreover, debug ver-
              sions will be searched after non-debug ones.

              For example, if we have:

                 set (Python_FIND_ABI "ON" "ANY" "ANY")

              The following flags combinations will be appended, in  that  or-
              der, to the artifact names: dmu, dm, du, and d.

              And to search any possible ABIs:

                 set (Python_FIND_ABI "ANY" "ANY" "ANY")

              The  following combinations, in that order, will be used: mu, m,
              u, <empty>, dmu, dm, du and d.

              NOTE:
                 This hint is useful only on POSIX  systems.  So,  on  Windows
                 systems,  when  Python_FIND_ABI  is defined, Python distribu-
                 tions from python.org will be found only if  value  for  each
                 flag is OFF or ANY.

       Python_FIND_STRATEGY
              New in version 3.15.

              This   variable   defines   how   lookup   will  be  done.   The
              Python_FIND_STRATEGY variable can be set to one of  the  follow-
              ing:

              • VERSION:  Try to find the most recent version in all specified
                locations.  This is the default if policy CMP0094 is undefined
                or set to OLD.

              • LOCATION: Stops lookup as soon as a version satisfying version
                constraints is founded.  This is the default if policy CMP0094
                is set to NEW.

       Python_FIND_REGISTRY
              New in version 3.13.

              On Windows the Python_FIND_REGISTRY variable determine the order
              of preference between registry and environment  variables.   the
              Python_FIND_REGISTRY  variable  can be set to one of the follow-
              ing:

              • FIRST: Try to use registry before environment variables.  This
                is the default.

              • LAST: Try to use registry after environment variables.

              • NEVER: Never try to use registry.

       Python_FIND_FRAMEWORK
              New in version 3.15.

              On  macOS the Python_FIND_FRAMEWORK variable determine the order
              of preference between Apple-style and unix-style package  compo-
              nents.     This    variable    can    take    same   values   as
              CMAKE_FIND_FRAMEWORK variable.

              NOTE:
                 Value ONLY is not supported so FIRST will be used instead.

              If Python_FIND_FRAMEWORK is  not  defined,  CMAKE_FIND_FRAMEWORK
              variable will be used, if any.

       Python_FIND_VIRTUALENV
              New in version 3.15.

              This  variable defines the handling of virtual environments man-
              aged by virtualenv or conda. It is meaningful only when  a  vir-
              tual  environment  is  active (i.e. the activate script has been
              evaluated).   In   this   case,   it   takes   precedence   over
              Python_FIND_REGISTRY  and  CMAKE_FIND_FRAMEWORK  variables.  The
              Python_FIND_VIRTUALENV variable can be set to one of the follow-
              ing:

              • FIRST:  The virtual environment is used before any other stan-
                dard paths to look-up for the interpreter.  This  is  the  de-
                fault.

              • ONLY:  Only the virtual environment is used to look-up for the
                interpreter.

              • STANDARD: The virtual environment is not used to  look-up  for
                the  interpreter  but environment variable PATH is always con-
                sidered.  In this case,  variable  Python_FIND_REGISTRY  (Win-
                dows)  or  CMAKE_FIND_FRAMEWORK  (macOS) can be set with value
                LAST or NEVER to select preferably the  interpreter  from  the
                virtual environment.

              New in version 3.17: Added support for conda environments.

              NOTE:
                 If  the  component  Development  is requested, it is strongly
                 recommended to also include the component Interpreter to  get
                 expected result.

       Python_FIND_IMPLEMENTATIONS
              New in version 3.18.

              This  variable defines, in an ordered list, the different imple-
              mentations which will be searched.  The  Python_FIND_IMPLEMENTA-
              TIONS variable can hold the following values:

              • CPython:  this  is  the standard implementation. Various prod-
                ucts, like Anaconda or ActivePython, rely on this  implementa-
                tion.

              • IronPython:  This  implementation  use the CSharp language for
                .NET Framework on top of the Dynamic Language  Runtime  (DLR).
                See IronPython.

              • PyPy:  This  implementation  use  RPython language and RPython
                translation toolchain to produce the python interpreter.   See
                PyPy.

              The default value is:

              • Windows platform: CPython, IronPython

              • Other platforms: CPython

              NOTE:
                 This  hint  has the lowest priority of all hints, so even if,
                 for example, you specify IronPython first and CPython in sec-
                 ond,  a  python  product based on CPython can be selected be-
                 cause, for example with  Python_FIND_STRATEGY=LOCATION,  each
                 location  will  be search first for IronPython and second for
                 CPython.

              NOTE:
                 When IronPython is specified, on platforms  other  than  Win-
                 dows, the .Net interpreter (i.e. mono command) is expected to
                 be available through the PATH variable.

       Python_FIND_UNVERSIONED_NAMES
              New in version 3.20.

              This variable defines how the generic names  will  be  searched.
              Currently,  it  only  applies to the generic names of the inter-
              preter,  namely,   python3   or   python2   and   python.    The
              Python_FIND_UNVERSIONED_NAMES  variable can be set to one of the
              following values:

              • FIRST: The generic names are searched before the more special-
                ized ones (such as python2.5 for example).

              • LAST:  The  generic names are searched after the more special-
                ized ones.  This is the default.

              • NEVER: The generic name are not searched at all.

   Artifacts Specification
       New in version 3.16.

       To solve special cases, it is possible to specify  directly  the  arti-
       facts by setting the following variables:

       Python_EXECUTABLE
              The path to the interpreter.

       Python_COMPILER
              The path to the compiler.

       Python_DOTNET_LAUNCHER
              New in version 3.18.

              The .Net interpreter. Only used by IronPython implementation.

       Python_LIBRARY
              The  path  to  the library. It will be used to compute the vari-
              ables  Python_LIBRARIES,  Python_LIBRARY_DIRS  and   Python_RUN-
              TIME_LIBRARY_DIRS.

       Python_INCLUDE_DIR
              The path to the directory of the Python headers. It will be used
              to compute the variable Python_INCLUDE_DIRS.

       Python_NumPy_INCLUDE_DIR
              The path to the directory of the NumPy headers. It will be  used
              to compute the variable Python_NumPy_INCLUDE_DIRS.

       NOTE:
          All  paths  must be absolute. Any artifact specified with a relative
          path will be ignored.

       NOTE:
          When an artifact is specified, all HINTS  will  be  ignored  and  no
          search will be performed for this artifact.

          If  more  than one artifact is specified, it is the user's responsi-
          bility to ensure the consistency of the various artifacts.

       By default, this module supports multiple calls in  different  directo-
       ries  of  a project with different version/component requirements while
       providing correct and consistent results for each call. To support this
       behavior,  CMake  cache is not used in the traditional way which can be
       problematic for interactive specification. So, to enable also  interac-
       tive  specification, module behavior can be controlled with the follow-
       ing variable:

       Python_ARTIFACTS_INTERACTIVE
              New in version 3.18.

              Selects the behavior of the module. This is a boolean variable:

              • If set to TRUE: Create CMake cache entries for the above arti-
                fact  specification  variables so that users can edit them in-
                teractively.  This disables support for multiple  version/com-
                ponent requirements.

              • If  set  to FALSE or undefined: Enable multiple version/compo-
                nent requirements.

   Commands
       This module defines the command Python_add_library (when CMAKE_ROLE  is
       PROJECT),  which has the same semantics as add_library() and adds a de-
       pendency to target Python::Python or, when library type is  MODULE,  to
       target Python::Module and takes care of Python module naming rules:

          Python_add_library (<name> [STATIC | SHARED | MODULE [WITH_SOABI]]
                              <source1> [<source2> ...])

       If the library type is not specified, MODULE is assumed.

       New  in  version 3.17: For MODULE library type, if option WITH_SOABI is
       specified, the module suffix will include the  Python_SOABI  value,  if
       any.

   FindPython2
       New in version 3.12.

       Find  Python  2  interpreter, compiler and development environment (in-
       clude directories and libraries).

       New in version 3.19: When a version is requested, it can  be  specified
       as  a simple value or as a range. For a detailed description of version
       range usage and capabilities, refer to the find_package() command.

       The following components are supported:

       • Interpreter: search for Python 2 interpreter

       • Compiler: search for Python 2 compiler. Only offered by IronPython.

       • Development: search for development  artifacts  (include  directories
         and libraries).

         New in version 3.18: This component includes two sub-components which
         can be specified independently:

         • Development.Module: search for artifacts for Python 2 module devel-
           opments.

         • Development.Embed:  search for artifacts for Python 2 embedding de-
           velopments.

       • NumPy: search for NumPy include directories.

       New in version 3.14: Added the NumPy component.

       If no COMPONENTS are specified, Interpreter is assumed.

       If component Development is specified, it implies sub-components Devel-
       opment.Module and Development.Embed.

       To ensure consistent versions between components Interpreter, Compiler,
       Development (or one of its sub-components) and NumPy, specify all  com-
       ponents at the same time:

          find_package (Python2 COMPONENTS Interpreter Development)

       This module looks only for version 2 of Python. This module can be used
       concurrently with FindPython3 module to use both Python versions.

       The FindPython module can be used if Python version does not matter for
       you.

       NOTE:
          If  components Interpreter and Development (or one of its sub-compo-
          nents) are both specified, this module search only  for  interpreter
          with same platform architecture as the one defined by CMake configu-
          ration. This constraint does not apply if only Interpreter component
          is specified.

   Imported Targets
       This module defines the following Imported Targets:

       Changed  in  version  3.14:  Imported  Targets  are  only  created when
       CMAKE_ROLE is PROJECT.

       Python2::Interpreter
              Python 2 interpreter. Target defined if component Interpreter is
              found.

       Python2::Compiler
              Python  2  compiler.  Target  defined  if  component Compiler is
              found.

       Python2::Module
              New in version 3.15.

              Python 2 library for Python module. Target defined if  component
              Development.Module is found.

       Python2::Python
              Python  2 library for Python embedding. Target defined if compo-
              nent Development.Embed is found.

       Python2::NumPy
              New in version 3.14.

              NumPy library for Python 2. Target defined if component NumPy is
              found.

   Result Variables
       This  module  will  set  the  following  variables in your project (see
       Standard Variable Names):

       Python2_FOUND
              System has the Python 2 requested components.

       Python2_Interpreter_FOUND
              System has the Python 2 interpreter.

       Python2_EXECUTABLE
              Path to the Python 2 interpreter.

       Python2_INTERPRETER_ID

              A short string unique to the interpreter.  Possible  values  in-
              clude:

                     • Python

                     • ActivePython

                     • Anaconda

                     • Canopy

                     • IronPython

                     • PyPy

       Python2_STDLIB
              Standard platform independent installation directory.

              Information         returned         by        distutils.syscon-
              fig.get_python_lib(plat_specific=False,standard_lib=True)     or
              else sysconfig.get_path('stdlib').

       Python2_STDARCH
              Standard platform dependent installation directory.

              Information         returned         by        distutils.syscon-
              fig.get_python_lib(plat_specific=True,standard_lib=True) or else
              sysconfig.get_path('platstdlib').

       Python2_SITELIB
              Third-party platform independent installation directory.

              Information         returned         by        distutils.syscon-
              fig.get_python_lib(plat_specific=False,standard_lib=False)    or
              else sysconfig.get_path('purelib').

       Python2_SITEARCH
              Third-party platform dependent installation directory.

              Information         returned         by        distutils.syscon-
              fig.get_python_lib(plat_specific=True,standard_lib=False)     or
              else sysconfig.get_path('platlib').

       Python2_Compiler_FOUND
              System has the Python 2 compiler.

       Python2_COMPILER
              Path to the Python 2 compiler. Only offered by IronPython.

       Python2_COMPILER_ID

              A short string unique to the compiler. Possible values include:

                     • IronPython

       Python2_DOTNET_LAUNCHER
              New in version 3.18.

              The .Net interpreter. Only used by IronPython implementation.

       Python2_Development_FOUND
              System has the Python 2 development artifacts.

       Python2_Development.Module_FOUND
              New in version 3.18.

              System has the Python 2 development artifacts for Python module.

       Python2_Development.Embed_FOUND
              New in version 3.18.

              System  has the Python 2 development artifacts for Python embed-
              ding.

       Python2_INCLUDE_DIRS
              The Python 2 include directories.

       Python2_LINK_OPTIONS
              New in version 3.19.

              The Python 2 link options. Some configurations require  specific
              link options for a correct build and execution.

       Python2_LIBRARIES
              The Python 2 libraries.

       Python2_LIBRARY_DIRS
              The Python 2 library directories.

       Python2_RUNTIME_LIBRARY_DIRS
              The Python 2 runtime library directories.

       Python2_VERSION
              Python 2 version.

       Python2_VERSION_MAJOR
              Python 2 major version.

       Python2_VERSION_MINOR
              Python 2 minor version.

       Python2_VERSION_PATCH
              Python 2 patch version.

       Python2_PyPy_VERSION
              New in version 3.18.

              Python 2 PyPy version.

       Python2_NumPy_FOUND
              New in version 3.14.

              System has the NumPy.

       Python2_NumPy_INCLUDE_DIRS
              New in version 3.14.

              The NumPy include directories.

       Python2_NumPy_VERSION
              New in version 3.14.

              The NumPy version.

   Hints
       Python2_ROOT_DIR
              Define the root directory of a Python 2 installation.

       Python2_USE_STATIC_LIBS

              • If  not  defined,  search  for shared libraries and static li-
                braries in that order.

              • If set to TRUE, search only for static libraries.

              • If set to FALSE, search only for shared libraries.

              NOTE:
                 This hint will be ignored on Windows because static libraries
                 are not available on this platform.

       Python2_FIND_STRATEGY
              New in version 3.15.

              This   variable   defines   how   lookup   will  be  done.   The
              Python2_FIND_STRATEGY variable can be set to one of the  follow-
              ing:

              • VERSION:  Try to find the most recent version in all specified
                locations.  This is the default if policy CMP0094 is undefined
                or set to OLD.

              • LOCATION: Stops lookup as soon as a version satisfying version
                constraints is founded.  This is the default if policy CMP0094
                is set to NEW.

       Python2_FIND_REGISTRY
              New in version 3.13.

              On  Windows the Python2_FIND_REGISTRY variable determine the or-
              der of preference between registry  and  environment  variables.
              the Python2_FIND_REGISTRY variable can be set to one of the fol-
              lowing:

              • FIRST: Try to use registry before environment variables.  This
                is the default.

              • LAST: Try to use registry after environment variables.

              • NEVER: Never try to use registry.

       Python2_FIND_FRAMEWORK
              New in version 3.15.

              On macOS the Python2_FIND_FRAMEWORK variable determine the order
              of preference between Apple-style and unix-style package  compo-
              nents.     This    variable    can    take    same   values   as
              CMAKE_FIND_FRAMEWORK variable.

              NOTE:
                 Value ONLY is not supported so FIRST will be used instead.

              If Python2_FIND_FRAMEWORK is not  defined,  CMAKE_FIND_FRAMEWORK
              variable will be used, if any.

       Python2_FIND_VIRTUALENV
              New in version 3.15.

              This  variable defines the handling of virtual environments man-
              aged by virtualenv or conda. It is meaningful only when  a  vir-
              tual  environment  is  active (i.e. the activate script has been
              evaluated).   In   this   case,   it   takes   precedence   over
              Python2_FIND_REGISTRY  and  CMAKE_FIND_FRAMEWORK variables.  The
              Python2_FIND_VIRTUALENV variable can be set to one of  the  fol-
              lowing:

              • FIRST:  The virtual environment is used before any other stan-
                dard paths to look-up for the interpreter.  This  is  the  de-
                fault.

              • ONLY:  Only the virtual environment is used to look-up for the
                interpreter.

              • STANDARD: The virtual environment is not used to  look-up  for
                the  interpreter  but environment variable PATH is always con-
                sidered.  In this case, variable  Python2_FIND_REGISTRY  (Win-
                dows)  or  CMAKE_FIND_FRAMEWORK  (macOS) can be set with value
                LAST or NEVER to select preferably the  interpreter  from  the
                virtual environment.

              New in version 3.17: Added support for conda environments.

              NOTE:
                 If  the  component  Development  is requested, it is strongly
                 recommended to also include the component Interpreter to  get
                 expected result.

       Python2_FIND_IMPLEMENTATIONS
              New in version 3.18.

              This  variable defines, in an ordered list, the different imple-
              mentations which will be searched. The  Python2_FIND_IMPLEMENTA-
              TIONS variable can hold the following values:

              • CPython:  this  is  the standard implementation. Various prod-
                ucts, like Anaconda or ActivePython, rely on this  implementa-
                tion.

              • IronPython:  This  implementation  use the CSharp language for
                .NET Framework on top of the Dynamic Language  Runtime  (DLR).
                See IronPython.

              • PyPy:  This  implementation  use  RPython language and RPython
                translation toolchain to produce the python interpreter.   See
                PyPy.

              The default value is:

              • Windows platform: CPython, IronPython

              • Other platforms: CPython

              NOTE:
                 This  hint  has the lowest priority of all hints, so even if,
                 for example, you specify IronPython first and CPython in sec-
                 ond,  a  python  product based on CPython can be selected be-
                 cause, for example with Python2_FIND_STRATEGY=LOCATION,  each
                 location  will  be search first for IronPython and second for
                 CPython.

              NOTE:
                 When IronPython is specified, on platforms  other  than  Win-
                 dows, the .Net interpreter (i.e. mono command) is expected to
                 be available through the PATH variable.

       Python2_FIND_UNVERSIONED_NAMES
              New in version 3.20.

              This variable defines how the generic names  will  be  searched.
              Currently,  it  only  applies to the generic names of the inter-
              preter, namely, python2  and  python.   The  Python2_FIND_UNVER-
              SIONED_NAMES variable can be set to one of the following values:

              • FIRST: The generic names are searched before the more special-
                ized ones (such as python2.5 for example).

              • LAST: The generic names are searched after the  more  special-
                ized ones.  This is the default.

              • NEVER: The generic name are not searched at all.

   Artifacts Specification
       New in version 3.16.

       To  solve  special  cases, it is possible to specify directly the arti-
       facts by setting the following variables:

       Python2_EXECUTABLE
              The path to the interpreter.

       Python2_COMPILER
              The path to the compiler.

       Python2_DOTNET_LAUNCHER
              New in version 3.18.

              The .Net interpreter. Only used by IronPython implementation.

       Python2_LIBRARY
              The path to the library. It will be used to  compute  the  vari-
              ables  Python2_LIBRARIES,  Python2_LIBRARY_DIRS and Python2_RUN-
              TIME_LIBRARY_DIRS.

       Python2_INCLUDE_DIR
              The path to the directory of the Python headers. It will be used
              to compute the variable Python2_INCLUDE_DIRS.

       Python2_NumPy_INCLUDE_DIR
              The  path to the directory of the NumPy headers. It will be used
              to compute the variable Python2_NumPy_INCLUDE_DIRS.

       NOTE:
          All paths must be absolute. Any artifact specified with  a  relative
          path will be ignored.

       NOTE:
          When  an  artifact  is  specified,  all HINTS will be ignored and no
          search will be performed for this artifact.

          If more than one artifact is specified, it is the  user's  responsi-
          bility to ensure the consistency of the various artifacts.

       By  default,  this module supports multiple calls in different directo-
       ries of a project with different version/component  requirements  while
       providing correct and consistent results for each call. To support this
       behavior, CMake cache is not used in the traditional way which  can  be
       problematic  for interactive specification. So, to enable also interac-
       tive specification, module behavior can be controlled with the  follow-
       ing variable:

       Python2_ARTIFACTS_INTERACTIVE
              New in version 3.18.

              Selects the behavior of the module. This is a boolean variable:

              • If set to TRUE: Create CMake cache entries for the above arti-
                fact specification variables so that users can edit  them  in-
                teractively.   This disables support for multiple version/com-
                ponent requirements.

              • If set to FALSE or undefined: Enable  multiple  version/compo-
                nent requirements.

   Commands
       This module defines the command Python2_add_library (when CMAKE_ROLE is
       PROJECT), which has the same semantics as add_library() and adds a  de-
       pendency  to target Python2::Python or, when library type is MODULE, to
       target Python2::Module and takes care of Python module naming rules:

          Python2_add_library (<name> [STATIC | SHARED | MODULE]
                               <source1> [<source2> ...])

       If library type is not specified, MODULE is assumed.

   FindPython3
       New in version 3.12.

       Find Python 3 interpreter, compiler and  development  environment  (in-
       clude directories and libraries).

       New  in  version 3.19: When a version is requested, it can be specified
       as a simple value or as a range. For a detailed description of  version
       range usage and capabilities, refer to the find_package() command.

       The following components are supported:

       • Interpreter: search for Python 3 interpreter

       • Compiler: search for Python 3 compiler. Only offered by IronPython.

       • Development:  search  for  development artifacts (include directories
         and libraries).

         New in version 3.18: This component includes two sub-components which
         can be specified independently:

         • Development.Module: search for artifacts for Python 3 module devel-
           opments.

         • Development.Embed: search for artifacts for Python 3 embedding  de-
           velopments.

       • NumPy: search for NumPy include directories.

       New in version 3.14: Added the NumPy component.

       If no COMPONENTS are specified, Interpreter is assumed.

       If component Development is specified, it implies sub-components Devel-
       opment.Module and Development.Embed.

       To ensure consistent versions between components Interpreter, Compiler,
       Development  (or one of its sub-components) and NumPy, specify all com-
       ponents at the same time:

          find_package (Python3 COMPONENTS Interpreter Development)

       This module looks only for version 3 of Python. This module can be used
       concurrently with FindPython2 module to use both Python versions.

       The FindPython module can be used if Python version does not matter for
       you.

       NOTE:
          If components Interpreter and Development (or one of its  sub-compo-
          nents)  are  both specified, this module search only for interpreter
          with same platform architecture as the one defined by CMake configu-
          ration. This constraint does not apply if only Interpreter component
          is specified.

   Imported Targets
       This module defines the following Imported Targets:

       Changed in  version  3.14:  Imported  Targets  are  only  created  when
       CMAKE_ROLE is PROJECT.

       Python3::Interpreter
              Python 3 interpreter. Target defined if component Interpreter is
              found.

       Python3::Compiler
              Python 3 compiler.  Target  defined  if  component  Compiler  is
              found.

       Python3::Module
              New in version 3.15.

              Python  3 library for Python module. Target defined if component
              Development.Module is found.

       Python3::Python
              Python 3 library for Python embedding. Target defined if  compo-
              nent Development.Embed is found.

       Python3::NumPy
              New in version 3.14.

              NumPy library for Python 3. Target defined if component NumPy is
              found.

   Result Variables
       This module will set the  following  variables  in  your  project  (see
       Standard Variable Names):

       Python3_FOUND
              System has the Python 3 requested components.

       Python3_Interpreter_FOUND
              System has the Python 3 interpreter.

       Python3_EXECUTABLE
              Path to the Python 3 interpreter.

       Python3_INTERPRETER_ID

              A  short  string  unique to the interpreter. Possible values in-
              clude:

                     • Python

                     • ActivePython

                     • Anaconda

                     • Canopy

                     • IronPython

                     • PyPy

       Python3_STDLIB
              Standard platform independent installation directory.

              Information        returned         by         distutils.syscon-
              fig.get_python_lib(plat_specific=False,standard_lib=True)     or
              else sysconfig.get_path('stdlib').

       Python3_STDARCH
              Standard platform dependent installation directory.

              Information        returned         by         distutils.syscon-
              fig.get_python_lib(plat_specific=True,standard_lib=True) or else
              sysconfig.get_path('platstdlib').

       Python3_SITELIB
              Third-party platform independent installation directory.

              Information        returned         by         distutils.syscon-
              fig.get_python_lib(plat_specific=False,standard_lib=False)    or
              else sysconfig.get_path('purelib').

       Python3_SITEARCH
              Third-party platform dependent installation directory.

              Information        returned         by         distutils.syscon-
              fig.get_python_lib(plat_specific=True,standard_lib=False)     or
              else sysconfig.get_path('platlib').

       Python3_SOABI
              New in version 3.17.

              Extension suffix for modules.

              Information     returned     by     distutils.sysconfig.get_con-
              fig_var('SOABI')  or  computed from distutils.sysconfig.get_con-
              fig_var('EXT_SUFFIX') or python3-config  --extension-suffix.  If
              package distutils.sysconfig is not available, sysconfig.get_con-
              fig_var('SOABI') or  sysconfig.get_config_var('EXT_SUFFIX')  are
              used.

       Python3_Compiler_FOUND
              System has the Python 3 compiler.

       Python3_COMPILER
              Path to the Python 3 compiler. Only offered by IronPython.

       Python3_COMPILER_ID

              A short string unique to the compiler. Possible values include:

                     • IronPython

       Python3_DOTNET_LAUNCHER
              New in version 3.18.

              The .Net interpreter. Only used by IronPython implementation.

       Python3_Development_FOUND
          System has the Python 3 development artifacts.

       Python3_Development.Module_FOUND
              New in version 3.18.

              System has the Python 3 development artifacts for Python module.

       Python3_Development.Embed_FOUND
              New in version 3.18.

              System  has the Python 3 development artifacts for Python embed-
              ding.

       Python3_INCLUDE_DIRS
          The Python 3 include directories.

       Python3_LINK_OPTIONS
              New in version 3.19.

              The Python 3 link options. Some configurations require  specific
              link options for a correct build and execution.

       Python3_LIBRARIES
              The Python 3 libraries.

       Python3_LIBRARY_DIRS
              The Python 3 library directories.

       Python3_RUNTIME_LIBRARY_DIRS
              The Python 3 runtime library directories.

       Python3_VERSION
              Python 3 version.

       Python3_VERSION_MAJOR
              Python 3 major version.

       Python3_VERSION_MINOR
              Python 3 minor version.

       Python3_VERSION_PATCH
              Python 3 patch version.

       Python3_PyPy_VERSION
              New in version 3.18.

              Python 3 PyPy version.

       Python3_NumPy_FOUND
              New in version 3.14.

              System has the NumPy.

       Python3_NumPy_INCLUDE_DIRS
              New in version 3.14.

              The NumPy include directories.

       Python3_NumPy_VERSION
              New in version 3.14.

              The NumPy version.

   Hints
       Python3_ROOT_DIR
              Define the root directory of a Python 3 installation.

       Python3_USE_STATIC_LIBS

              • If  not  defined,  search  for shared libraries and static li-
                braries in that order.

              • If set to TRUE, search only for static libraries.

              • If set to FALSE, search only for shared libraries.

              NOTE:
                 This hint will be ignored on Windows because static libraries
                 are not available on this platform.

       Python3_FIND_ABI
              New in version 3.16.

              This variable defines which ABIs, as defined in PEP 3149, should
              be searched.

              NOTE:
                 If Python3_FIND_ABI is not defined, any ABI will be searched.

              The Python3_FIND_ABI variable is a 3-tuple specifying,  in  that
              order,  pydebug  (d),  pymalloc (m) and unicode (u) flags.  Each
              element can be set to one of the following:

              • ON: Corresponding flag is selected.

              • OFF: Corresponding flag is not selected.

              • ANY: The two possibilities (ON and OFF) will be searched.

              From this 3-tuple, various ABIs will be searched  starting  from
              the  most  specialized to the most general. Moreover, debug ver-
              sions will be searched after non-debug ones.

              For example, if we have:

                 set (Python3_FIND_ABI "ON" "ANY" "ANY")

              The following flags combinations will be appended, in  that  or-
              der, to the artifact names: dmu, dm, du, and d.

              And to search any possible ABIs:

                 set (Python3_FIND_ABI "ANY" "ANY" "ANY")

              The  following combinations, in that order, will be used: mu, m,
              u, <empty>, dmu, dm, du and d.

              NOTE:
                 This hint is useful only on POSIX  systems.  So,  on  Windows
                 systems,  when  Python3_FIND_ABI is defined, Python distribu-
                 tions from python.org will be found only if  value  for  each
                 flag is OFF or ANY.

       Python3_FIND_STRATEGY
              New in version 3.15.

              This   variable   defines   how   lookup   will  be  done.   The
              Python3_FIND_STRATEGY variable can be set to one of the  follow-
              ing:

              • VERSION:  Try to find the most recent version in all specified
                locations.  This is the default if policy CMP0094 is undefined
                or set to OLD.

              • LOCATION: Stops lookup as soon as a version satisfying version
                constraints is founded.  This is the default if policy CMP0094
                is set to NEW.

       Python3_FIND_REGISTRY
              New in version 3.13.

              On  Windows the Python3_FIND_REGISTRY variable determine the or-
              der of preference between registry  and  environment  variables.
              The Python3_FIND_REGISTRY variable can be set to one of the fol-
              lowing:

              • FIRST: Try to use registry before environment variables.  This
                is the default.

              • LAST: Try to use registry after environment variables.

              • NEVER: Never try to use registry.

       Python3_FIND_FRAMEWORK
              New in version 3.15.

              On macOS the Python3_FIND_FRAMEWORK variable determine the order
              of preference between Apple-style and unix-style package  compo-
              nents.     This    variable    can    take    same   values   as
              CMAKE_FIND_FRAMEWORK variable.

              NOTE:
                 Value ONLY is not supported so FIRST will be used instead.

              If Python3_FIND_FRAMEWORK is not  defined,  CMAKE_FIND_FRAMEWORK
              variable will be used, if any.

       Python3_FIND_VIRTUALENV
              New in version 3.15.

              This  variable defines the handling of virtual environments man-
              aged by virtualenv or conda. It is meaningful only when  a  vir-
              tual  environment  is  active (i.e. the activate script has been
              evaluated).   In   this   case,   it   takes   precedence   over
              Python3_FIND_REGISTRY  and  CMAKE_FIND_FRAMEWORK variables.  The
              Python3_FIND_VIRTUALENV variable can be set to one of  the  fol-
              lowing:

              • FIRST:  The virtual environment is used before any other stan-
                dard paths to look-up for the interpreter.  This  is  the  de-
                fault.

              • ONLY:  Only the virtual environment is used to look-up for the
                interpreter.

              • STANDARD: The virtual environment is not used to  look-up  for
                the  interpreter  but environment variable PATH is always con-
                sidered.  In this case, variable  Python3_FIND_REGISTRY  (Win-
                dows)  or  CMAKE_FIND_FRAMEWORK  (macOS) can be set with value
                LAST or NEVER to select preferably the  interpreter  from  the
                virtual environment.

              New in version 3.17: Added support for conda environments.

              NOTE:
                 If  the  component  Development  is requested, it is strongly
                 recommended to also include the component Interpreter to  get
                 expected result.

       Python3_FIND_IMPLEMENTATIONS
              New in version 3.18.

              This  variable defines, in an ordered list, the different imple-
              mentations which will be searched. The  Python3_FIND_IMPLEMENTA-
              TIONS variable can hold the following values:

              • CPython:  this  is  the standard implementation. Various prod-
                ucts, like Anaconda or ActivePython, rely on this  implementa-
                tion.

              • IronPython:  This  implementation  use the CSharp language for
                .NET Framework on top of the Dynamic Language  Runtime  (DLR).
                See IronPython.

              • PyPy:  This  implementation  use  RPython language and RPython
                translation toolchain to produce the python interpreter.   See
                PyPy.

              The default value is:

              • Windows platform: CPython, IronPython

              • Other platforms: CPython

              NOTE:
                 This  hint  has the lowest priority of all hints, so even if,
                 for example, you specify IronPython first and CPython in sec-
                 ond,  a  python  product based on CPython can be selected be-
                 cause, for example with Python3_FIND_STRATEGY=LOCATION,  each
                 location  will  be search first for IronPython and second for
                 CPython.

              NOTE:
                 When IronPython is specified, on platforms  other  than  Win-
                 dows, the .Net interpreter (i.e. mono command) is expected to
                 be available through the PATH variable.

       Python3_FIND_UNVERSIONED_NAMES
              New in version 3.20.

              This variable defines how the generic names  will  be  searched.
              Currently,  it  only  applies to the generic names of the inter-
              preter, namely, python3  and  python.   The  Python3_FIND_UNVER-
              SIONED_NAMES variable can be set to one of the following values:

              • FIRST: The generic names are searched before the more special-
                ized ones (such as python3.5 for example).

              • LAST: The generic names are searched after the  more  special-
                ized ones.  This is the default.

              • NEVER: The generic name are not searched at all.

   Artifacts Specification
       New in version 3.16.

       To  solve  special  cases, it is possible to specify directly the arti-
       facts by setting the following variables:

       Python3_EXECUTABLE
              The path to the interpreter.

       Python3_COMPILER
              The path to the compiler.

       Python3_DOTNET_LAUNCHER
              New in version 3.18.

              The .Net interpreter. Only used by IronPython implementation.

       Python3_LIBRARY
              The path to the library. It will be used to  compute  the  vari-
              ables  Python3_LIBRARIES,  Python3_LIBRARY_DIRS and Python3_RUN-
              TIME_LIBRARY_DIRS.

       Python3_INCLUDE_DIR
              The path to the directory of the Python headers. It will be used
              to compute the variable Python3_INCLUDE_DIRS.

       Python3_NumPy_INCLUDE_DIR
              The  path to the directory of the NumPy headers. It will be used
              to compute the variable Python3_NumPy_INCLUDE_DIRS.

       NOTE:
          All paths must be absolute. Any artifact specified with  a  relative
          path will be ignored.

       NOTE:
          When  an  artifact  is  specified,  all HINTS will be ignored and no
          search will be performed for this artifact.

          If more than one artifact is specified, it is the  user's  responsi-
          bility to ensure the consistency of the various artifacts.

       By  default,  this module supports multiple calls in different directo-
       ries of a project with different version/component  requirements  while
       providing correct and consistent results for each call. To support this
       behavior, CMake cache is not used in the traditional way which  can  be
       problematic  for interactive specification. So, to enable also interac-
       tive specification, module behavior can be controlled with the  follow-
       ing variable:

       Python3_ARTIFACTS_INTERACTIVE
              New in version 3.18.

              Selects the behavior of the module. This is a boolean variable:

              • If set to TRUE: Create CMake cache entries for the above arti-
                fact specification variables so that users can edit  them  in-
                teractively.   This disables support for multiple version/com-
                ponent requirements.

              • If set to FALSE or undefined: Enable  multiple  version/compo-
                nent requirements.

   Commands
       This module defines the command Python3_add_library (when CMAKE_ROLE is
       PROJECT), which has the same semantics as add_library() and adds a  de-
       pendency  to target Python3::Python or, when library type is MODULE, to
       target Python3::Module and takes care of Python module naming rules:

          Python3_add_library (<name> [STATIC | SHARED | MODULE [WITH_SOABI]]
                               <source1> [<source2> ...])

       If the library type is not specified, MODULE is assumed.

       New in version 3.17: For MODULE library type, if option  WITH_SOABI  is
       specified,  the  module suffix will include the Python3_SOABI value, if
       any.

   FindQt3
       Locate Qt include paths and libraries

       This module defines:

          QT_INCLUDE_DIR    - where to find qt.h, etc.
          QT_LIBRARIES      - the libraries to link against to use Qt.
          QT_DEFINITIONS    - definitions to use when
                              compiling code that uses Qt.
          QT_FOUND          - If false, don't try to use Qt.
          QT_VERSION_STRING - the version of Qt found

       If you need the multithreaded version of Qt, set QT_MT_REQUIRED to TRUE

       Also defined, but not for general use are:

          QT_MOC_EXECUTABLE, where to find the moc tool.
          QT_UIC_EXECUTABLE, where to find the uic tool.
          QT_QT_LIBRARY, where to find the Qt library.
          QT_QTMAIN_LIBRARY, where to find the qtmain
           library. This is only required by Qt3 on Windows.

   FindQt4
   Finding and Using Qt4
       This module can be used to find Qt4.  The most important issue is  that
       the  Qt4  qmake  is  available via the system path.  This qmake is then
       used to detect basically everything else.  This module defines a number
       of IMPORTED targets, macros and variables.

       Typical usage could be something like:

          set(CMAKE_AUTOMOC ON)
          set(CMAKE_INCLUDE_CURRENT_DIR ON)
          find_package(Qt4 4.4.3 REQUIRED QtGui QtXml)
          add_executable(myexe main.cpp)
          target_link_libraries(myexe Qt4::QtGui Qt4::QtXml)

       NOTE:
          When  using IMPORTED targets, the qtmain.lib static library is auto-
          matically linked on Windows for WIN32 executables. To  disable  that
          globally, set the QT4_NO_LINK_QTMAIN variable before finding Qt4. To
          disable that for a particular executable, set the QT4_NO_LINK_QTMAIN
          target property to TRUE on the executable.

   Qt Build Tools
       Qt  relies  on  some bundled tools for code generation, such as moc for
       meta-object code generation,``uic`` for widget layout  and  population,
       and  rcc for virtual filesystem content generation.  These tools may be
       automatically invoked by cmake(1) if  the  appropriate  conditions  are
       met.  See cmake-qt(7) for more.

   Qt Macros
       In  some  cases  it  can  be necessary or useful to invoke the Qt build
       tools in a more-manual way. Several macros are available to add targets
       for such uses.

          macro QT4_WRAP_CPP(outfiles inputfile ... [TARGET tgt] OPTIONS ...)
                create moc code from a list of files containing Qt class with
                the Q_OBJECT declaration.  Per-directory preprocessor definitions
                are also added.  If the <tgt> is specified, the
                INTERFACE_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES and INTERFACE_COMPILE_DEFINITIONS from
                the <tgt> are passed to moc.  Options may be given to moc, such as
                those found when executing "moc -help".

          macro QT4_WRAP_UI(outfiles inputfile ... OPTIONS ...)
                create code from a list of Qt designer ui files.
                Options may be given to uic, such as those found
                when executing "uic -help"

          macro QT4_ADD_RESOURCES(outfiles inputfile ... OPTIONS ...)
                create code from a list of Qt resource files.
                Options may be given to rcc, such as those found
                when executing "rcc -help"

          macro QT4_GENERATE_MOC(inputfile outputfile [TARGET tgt])
                creates a rule to run moc on infile and create outfile.
                Use this if for some reason QT4_WRAP_CPP() isn't appropriate, e.g.
                because you need a custom filename for the moc file or something
                similar.  If the <tgt> is specified, the
                INTERFACE_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES and INTERFACE_COMPILE_DEFINITIONS from
                the <tgt> are passed to moc.

          macro QT4_ADD_DBUS_INTERFACE(outfiles interface basename)
                Create the interface header and implementation files with the
                given basename from the given interface xml file and add it to
                the list of sources.

                You can pass additional parameters to the qdbusxml2cpp call by setting
                properties on the input file:

                INCLUDE the given file will be included in the generate interface header

                CLASSNAME the generated class is named accordingly

                NO_NAMESPACE the generated class is not wrapped in a namespace

          macro QT4_ADD_DBUS_INTERFACES(outfiles inputfile ... )
                Create the interface header and implementation files
                for all listed interface xml files.
                The basename will be automatically determined from the name
                of the xml file.

                The source file properties described for
                QT4_ADD_DBUS_INTERFACE also apply here.

          macro QT4_ADD_DBUS_ADAPTOR(outfiles xmlfile parentheader parentclassname
                                     [basename] [classname])
                create a dbus adaptor (header and implementation file) from the xml file
                describing the interface, and add it to the list of sources. The adaptor
                forwards the calls to a parent class, defined in parentheader and named
                parentclassname. The name of the generated files will be
                <basename>adaptor.{cpp,h} where basename defaults to the basename of the
                xml file.
                If <classname> is provided, then it will be used as the classname of the
                adaptor itself.

          macro QT4_GENERATE_DBUS_INTERFACE( header [interfacename] OPTIONS ...)
                generate the xml interface file from the given header.
                If the optional argument interfacename is omitted, the name of the
                interface file is constructed from the basename of the header with
                the suffix .xml appended.
                Options may be given to qdbuscpp2xml, such as those found when
                executing "qdbuscpp2xml --help"

          macro QT4_CREATE_TRANSLATION( qm_files directories ... sources ...
                                        ts_files ... OPTIONS ...)
                out: qm_files
                in:  directories sources ts_files
                options: flags to pass to lupdate, such as -extensions to specify
                extensions for a directory scan.
                generates commands to create .ts (via lupdate) and .qm
                (via lrelease) - files from directories and/or sources. The ts files are
                created and/or updated in the source tree (unless given with full paths).
                The qm files are generated in the build tree.
                Updating the translations can be done by adding the qm_files
                to the source list of your library/executable, so they are
                always updated, or by adding a custom target to control when
                they get updated/generated.

          macro QT4_ADD_TRANSLATION( qm_files ts_files ... )
                out: qm_files
                in:  ts_files
                generates commands to create .qm from .ts - files. The generated
                filenames can be found in qm_files. The ts_files
                must exist and are not updated in any way.

          macro QT4_AUTOMOC(sourcefile1 sourcefile2 ... [TARGET tgt])
                The qt4_automoc macro is obsolete.  Use the CMAKE_AUTOMOC feature instead.
                This macro is still experimental.
                It can be used to have moc automatically handled.
                So if you have the files foo.h and foo.cpp, and in foo.h a
                a class uses the Q_OBJECT macro, moc has to run on it. If you don't
                want to use QT4_WRAP_CPP() (which is reliable and mature), you can insert
                #include "foo.moc"
                in foo.cpp and then give foo.cpp as argument to QT4_AUTOMOC(). This will
                scan all listed files at cmake-time for such included moc files and if it
                finds them cause a rule to be generated to run moc at build time on the
                accompanying header file foo.h.
                If a source file has the SKIP_AUTOMOC property set it will be ignored by
                this macro.
                If the <tgt> is specified, the INTERFACE_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES and
                INTERFACE_COMPILE_DEFINITIONS from the <tgt> are passed to moc.

          function QT4_USE_MODULES( target [link_type] modules...)
                 This function is obsolete. Use target_link_libraries with IMPORTED targets
                 instead.
                 Make <target> use the <modules> from Qt. Using a Qt module means
                 to link to the library, add the relevant include directories for the
                 module, and add the relevant compiler defines for using the module.
                 Modules are roughly equivalent to components of Qt4, so usage would be
                 something like:
                  qt4_use_modules(myexe Core Gui Declarative)
                 to use QtCore, QtGui and QtDeclarative. The optional <link_type> argument
                 can be specified as either LINK_PUBLIC or LINK_PRIVATE to specify the
                 same argument to the target_link_libraries call.

   IMPORTED Targets
       A particular Qt library may be used by using the corresponding IMPORTED
       target with the target_link_libraries() command:

          target_link_libraries(myexe Qt4::QtGui Qt4::QtXml)

       Using a target in this way causes :cmake(1)` to use the appropriate in-
       clude directories and compile definitions for the target when compiling
       myexe.

       Targets are aware of their dependencies, so for example it is not  nec-
       essary  to  list Qt4::QtCore if another Qt library is listed, and it is
       not necessary to list Qt4::QtGui if Qt4::QtDeclarative is listed.  Tar-
       gets  may  be tested for existence in the usual way with the if(TARGET)
       command.

       The Qt toolkit may contain both debug and release libraries.   cmake(1)
       will choose the appropriate version based on the build configuration.

       Qt4::QtCore
              The QtCore target

       Qt4::QtGui
              The QtGui target

       Qt4::Qt3Support
              The Qt3Support target

       Qt4::QtAssistant
              The QtAssistant target

       Qt4::QtAssistantClient
              The QtAssistantClient target

       Qt4::QAxContainer
              The QAxContainer target (Windows only)

       Qt4::QAxServer
              The QAxServer target (Windows only)

       Qt4::QtDBus
              The QtDBus target

       Qt4::QtDeclarative
              The QtDeclarative target

       Qt4::QtDesigner
              The QtDesigner target

       Qt4::QtDesignerComponents
              The QtDesignerComponents target

       Qt4::QtHelp
              The QtHelp target

       Qt4::QtMotif
              The QtMotif target

       Qt4::QtMultimedia
              The QtMultimedia target

       Qt4::QtNetwork
              The QtNetwork target

       Qt4::QtNsPLugin
              The QtNsPLugin target

       Qt4::QtOpenGL
              The QtOpenGL target

       Qt4::QtScript
              The QtScript target

       Qt4::QtScriptTools
              The QtScriptTools target

       Qt4::QtSql
              The QtSql target

       Qt4::QtSvg
              The QtSvg target

       Qt4::QtTest
              The QtTest target

       Qt4::QtUiTools
              The QtUiTools target

       Qt4::QtWebKit
              The QtWebKit target

       Qt4::QtXml
              The QtXml target

       Qt4::QtXmlPatterns
              The QtXmlPatterns target

       Qt4::phonon
              The phonon target

   Result Variables
          Below is a detailed list of variables that FindQt4.cmake sets.

       Qt4_FOUND
              If false, don't try to use Qt 4.

       QT_FOUND
              If  false, don't try to use Qt. This variable is for compatibil-
              ity only.

       QT4_FOUND
              If false, don't try to use Qt 4. This variable is  for  compati-
              bility only.

       QT_VERSION_MAJOR
              The major version of Qt found.

       QT_VERSION_MINOR
              The minor version of Qt found.

       QT_VERSION_PATCH
              The patch version of Qt found.

   FindQuickTime
       Locate QuickTime This module defines QUICKTIME_LIBRARY QUICKTIME_FOUND,
       if false, do not try to link to gdal  QUICKTIME_INCLUDE_DIR,  where  to
       find the headers

       $QUICKTIME_DIR  is an environment variable that would correspond to the
       ./configure --prefix=$QUICKTIME_DIR

       Created by Eric Wing.

   FindRTI
       Try to find M&S HLA RTI libraries

       This module finds if any HLA RTI is installed and locates the  standard
       RTI include files and libraries.

       RTI  is  a simulation infrastructure standardized by IEEE and SISO.  It
       has a well defined C++ API that assures  that  simulation  applications
       are independent on a particular RTI implementation.

          http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Run-Time_Infrastructure_(simulation)

       This code sets the following variables:

          RTI_INCLUDE_DIR = the directory where RTI includes file are found
          RTI_LIBRARIES = The libraries to link against to use RTI
          RTI_DEFINITIONS = -DRTI_USES_STD_FSTREAM
          RTI_FOUND = Set to FALSE if any HLA RTI was not found

       Report problems to <certi-devel@nongnu.org>

   FindRuby
       Find Ruby

       This module finds if Ruby is installed and determines where the include
       files and libraries are.  Ruby 1.8 through 3.1 are supported.

       The minimum required version of Ruby can be specified using  the  stan-
       dard syntax, e.g.

          find_package(Ruby 2.5.1 EXACT REQUIRED)
          # OR
          find_package(Ruby 2.4)

       It also determines what the name of the library is.

       Virtual  environments  such  as RVM are handled as well, by passing the
       argument Ruby_FIND_VIRTUALENV

   Result Variables
       This module will set the following variables in your project:

       Ruby_FOUND
              set to true if ruby was found successfully

       Ruby_EXECUTABLE
              full path to the ruby binary

       Ruby_INCLUDE_DIRS
              include dirs to be used when using the ruby library

       Ruby_LIBRARIES
              New in version 3.18: libraries needed to use ruby from C.

       Ruby_VERSION
              the version of ruby which was found, e.g. "1.8.7"

       Ruby_VERSION_MAJOR
              Ruby major version.

       Ruby_VERSION_MINOR
              Ruby minor version.

       Ruby_VERSION_PATCH
              Ruby patch version.

       Changed in version 3.18: Previous versions of CMake used the RUBY_ pre-
       fix  for  all variables.  The following variables are provided for com-
       patibility reasons, don't use them in new code:

       RUBY_EXECUTABLE
              same as Ruby_EXECUTABLE.

       RUBY_INCLUDE_DIRS
              same as Ruby_INCLUDE_DIRS.

       RUBY_INCLUDE_PATH
              same as Ruby_INCLUDE_DIRS.

       RUBY_LIBRARY
              same as Ruby_LIBRARY.

       RUBY_VERSION
              same as Ruby_VERSION.

       RUBY_FOUND
              same as Ruby_FOUND.

   Hints
       New in version 3.18.

       Ruby_FIND_VIRTUALENV
              This variable defines the handling of virtual environments  man-
              aged by rvm. It is meaningful only when a virtual environment is
              active (i.e. the rvm script has been evaluated or at  least  the
              MY_RUBY_HOME  environment  variable is set).  The Ruby_FIND_VIR-
              TUALENV variable can be set to empty or one of the following:

              • FIRST: The virtual environment is used before any other  stan-
                dard  paths  to  look-up  for the interpreter. This is the de-
                fault.

              • ONLY: Only the virtual environment is used to look-up for  the
                interpreter.

              • STANDARD:  The  virtual environment is not used to look-up for
                the interpreter (assuming it isn't still in the PATH...)

   FindSDL
       Locate the SDL library

   Imported targets
       New in version 3.19.

       This module defines the following IMPORTED target:

       SDL::SDL
              The SDL library, if found

   Result variables
       This module will set the following variables in your project:

       SDL_INCLUDE_DIRS
              where to find SDL.h

       SDL_LIBRARIES
              the name of the library to link against

       SDL_FOUND
              if false, do not try to link to SDL

       SDL_VERSION
              the human-readable string containing the version of SDL if found

       SDL_VERSION_MAJOR
              SDL major version

       SDL_VERSION_MINOR
              SDL minor version

       SDL_VERSION_PATCH
              SDL patch version

       New in version 3.19:  Added  the  SDL_INCLUDE_DIRS,  SDL_LIBRARIES  and
       SDL_VERSION[_<PART>] variables.

   Cache variables
       These variables may optionally be set to help this module find the cor-
       rect files:

       SDL_INCLUDE_DIR
              where to find SDL.h

       SDL_LIBRARY
              the name of the library to link against

   Variables for locating SDL
       This module responds to the flag:

       SDL_BUILDING_LIBRARY
              If this is defined, then no SDL_main will be linked  in  because
              only applications need main().  Otherwise, it is assumed you are
              building an application and this module will attempt  to  locate
              and  set  the  proper link flags as part of the returned SDL_LI-
              BRARY variable.

   Obsolete variables
       Deprecated since version 3.19.

       These variables are obsolete and provided for backwards compatibility:

       SDL_VERSION_STRING
              the human-readable string  containing  the  version  of  SDL  if
              found.  Identical to SDL_VERSION

       Don't forget to include SDLmain.h and SDLmain.m your project for the OS
       X framework based version.  (Other versions  link  to  -lSDLmain  which
       this  module will try to find on your behalf.) Also for OS X, this mod-
       ule will automatically add the -framework Cocoa on your behalf.

       Additional Note: If you see an empty SDL_LIBRARY_TEMP in your  configu-
       ration and no SDL_LIBRARY, it means CMake did not find your SDL library
       (SDL.dll, libsdl.so,  SDL.framework,  etc).   Set  SDL_LIBRARY_TEMP  to
       point  to your SDL library, and configure again.  Similarly, if you see
       an empty SDLMAIN_LIBRARY, you should set  this  value  as  appropriate.
       These  values  are used to generate the final SDL_LIBRARY variable, but
       when these values are unset, SDL_LIBRARY does not get created.

       $SDLDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to the  ./con-
       figure --prefix=$SDLDIR used in building SDL.  l.e.galup 9-20-02

       On  OSX, this will prefer the Framework version (if found) over others.
       People will have to manually change the cache values of SDL_LIBRARY  to
       override this selection or set the CMake environment CMAKE_INCLUDE_PATH
       to modify the search paths.

       Note that the header path has changed from SDL/SDL.h to just SDL.h This
       needed  to  change because "proper" SDL convention is #include "SDL.h",
       not <SDL/SDL.h>.  This is done for portability reasons because not  all
       systems place things in SDL/ (see FreeBSD).

   FindSDL_image
       Locate SDL_image library

       This module defines:

          SDL_IMAGE_LIBRARIES, the name of the library to link against
          SDL_IMAGE_INCLUDE_DIRS, where to find the headers
          SDL_IMAGE_FOUND, if false, do not try to link against
          SDL_IMAGE_VERSION_STRING - human-readable string containing the
                                     version of SDL_image

       For backward compatibility the following variables are also set:

          SDLIMAGE_LIBRARY (same value as SDL_IMAGE_LIBRARIES)
          SDLIMAGE_INCLUDE_DIR (same value as SDL_IMAGE_INCLUDE_DIRS)
          SDLIMAGE_FOUND (same value as SDL_IMAGE_FOUND)

       $SDLDIR  is an environment variable that would correspond to the ./con-
       figure --prefix=$SDLDIR used in building SDL.

   FindSDL_gfx
       New in version 3.25.

       Locate SDL_gfx library

       This module defines:

          SDL::SDL_gfx, the name of the target to use with target_*() commands
          SDL_GFX_LIBRARIES, the name of the library to link against
          SDL_GFX_INCLUDE_DIRS, where to find the headers
          SDL_GFX_FOUND, if false, do not try to link against
          SDL_GFX_VERSION_STRING - human-readable string containing the
                                     version of SDL_gfx

       $SDLDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to the  ./con-
       figure --prefix=$SDLDIR used in building SDL.

   FindSDL_mixer
       Locate SDL_mixer library

       This module defines:

          SDL_MIXER_LIBRARIES, the name of the library to link against
          SDL_MIXER_INCLUDE_DIRS, where to find the headers
          SDL_MIXER_FOUND, if false, do not try to link against
          SDL_MIXER_VERSION_STRING - human-readable string containing the
                                     version of SDL_mixer

       For backward compatibility the following variables are also set:

          SDLMIXER_LIBRARY (same value as SDL_MIXER_LIBRARIES)
          SDLMIXER_INCLUDE_DIR (same value as SDL_MIXER_INCLUDE_DIRS)
          SDLMIXER_FOUND (same value as SDL_MIXER_FOUND)

       $SDLDIR  is an environment variable that would correspond to the ./con-
       figure --prefix=$SDLDIR used in building SDL.

   FindSDL_net
       Locate SDL_net library

       This module defines:

          SDL_NET_LIBRARIES, the name of the library to link against
          SDL_NET_INCLUDE_DIRS, where to find the headers
          SDL_NET_FOUND, if false, do not try to link against
          SDL_NET_VERSION_STRING - human-readable string containing the version of SDL_net

       For backward compatibility the following variables are also set:

          SDLNET_LIBRARY (same value as SDL_NET_LIBRARIES)
          SDLNET_INCLUDE_DIR (same value as SDL_NET_INCLUDE_DIRS)
          SDLNET_FOUND (same value as SDL_NET_FOUND)

       $SDLDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to the  ./con-
       figure --prefix=$SDLDIR used in building SDL.

   FindSDL_sound
       Locates the SDL_sound library

       This  module  depends on SDL being found and must be called AFTER Find-
       SDL.cmake is called.

       This module defines

          SDL_SOUND_INCLUDE_DIR, where to find SDL_sound.h
          SDL_SOUND_FOUND, if false, do not try to link to SDL_sound
          SDL_SOUND_LIBRARIES, this contains the list of libraries that you need
            to link against.
          SDL_SOUND_EXTRAS, this is an optional variable for you to add your own
            flags to SDL_SOUND_LIBRARIES. This is prepended to SDL_SOUND_LIBRARIES.
            This is available mostly for cases this module failed to anticipate for
            and you must add additional flags. This is marked as ADVANCED.
          SDL_SOUND_VERSION_STRING, human-readable string containing the
            version of SDL_sound

       This module also defines (but you shouldn't need to use directly)

          SDL_SOUND_LIBRARY, the name of just the SDL_sound library you would link
          against. Use SDL_SOUND_LIBRARIES for you link instructions and not this one.

       And might define the following as needed

          MIKMOD_LIBRARY
          MODPLUG_LIBRARY
          OGG_LIBRARY
          VORBIS_LIBRARY
          SMPEG_LIBRARY
          FLAC_LIBRARY
          SPEEX_LIBRARY

       Typically, you should not use these variables directly, and you  should
       use  SDL_SOUND_LIBRARIES which contains SDL_SOUND_LIBRARY and the other
       audio libraries (if needed) to successfully compile on your system.

       Responds to the $SDLDIR and $SDLSOUNDDIR  environmental  variable  that
       would  correspond  to the ./configure --prefix=$SDLDIR used in building
       SDL.

       On OSX, this will prefer the Framework version (if found) over  others.
       People  will have to manually change the cache values of SDL_LIBRARY to
       override this selectionor set the CMake environment  CMAKE_INCLUDE_PATH
       to modify the search paths.

   FindSDL_ttf
       Locate SDL_ttf library

       This module defines:

          SDL_TTF_LIBRARIES, the name of the library to link against
          SDL_TTF_INCLUDE_DIRS, where to find the headers
          SDL_TTF_FOUND, if false, do not try to link against
          SDL_TTF_VERSION_STRING - human-readable string containing the version of SDL_ttf

       For backward compatibility the following variables are also set:

          SDLTTF_LIBRARY (same value as SDL_TTF_LIBRARIES)
          SDLTTF_INCLUDE_DIR (same value as SDL_TTF_INCLUDE_DIRS)
          SDLTTF_FOUND (same value as SDL_TTF_FOUND)

       $SDLDIR  is an environment variable that would correspond to the ./con-
       figure --prefix=$SDLDIR used in building SDL.

   FindSelfPackers
       Find upx

       This module looks for some executable packers (i.e.  software that com-
       press  executables  or shared libs into on-the-fly self-extracting exe-
       cutables or shared libs.  Examples:

          UPX: http://wildsau.idv.uni-linz.ac.at/mfx/upx.html

   FindSquish
       -- Typical Use

       This module can be used to find Squish.

          SQUISH_FOUND                    If false, don't try to use Squish
          SQUISH_VERSION                  The full version of Squish found
          SQUISH_VERSION_MAJOR            The major version of Squish found
          SQUISH_VERSION_MINOR            The minor version of Squish found
          SQUISH_VERSION_PATCH            The patch version of Squish found

          SQUISH_INSTALL_DIR              The Squish installation directory
                                          (containing bin, lib, etc)
          SQUISH_SERVER_EXECUTABLE        The squishserver executable
          SQUISH_CLIENT_EXECUTABLE        The squishrunner executable

          SQUISH_INSTALL_DIR_FOUND        Was the install directory found?
          SQUISH_SERVER_EXECUTABLE_FOUND  Was the server executable found?
          SQUISH_CLIENT_EXECUTABLE_FOUND  Was the client executable found?

       It provides the function squish_add_test() for adding a squish test  to
       cmake using Squish >= 4.x:

          squish_add_test(cmakeTestName
            AUT targetName SUITE suiteName TEST squishTestName
            [SETTINGSGROUP group] [PRE_COMMAND command] [POST_COMMAND command] )

       Changed  in version 3.18: In previous CMake versions, this function was
       named squish_v4_add_test.

       The arguments have the following meaning:

       cmakeTestName
              this will be used as the first argument for add_test()

       AUT targetName
              the name of the cmake target which will be used as AUT, i.e. the
              executable which will be tested.

       SUITE suiteName
              this  is  either  the full path to the squish suite, or just the
              last directory of the suite, i.e. the suite name. In  this  case
              the CMakeLists.txt which calls squish_add_test() must be located
              in the parent directory of the suite directory.

       TEST squishTestName
              the name of the squish test, i.e. the name of  the  subdirectory
              of the test inside the suite directory.

       SETTINGSGROUP group
              deprecated, this argument will be ignored.

       PRE_COMMAND command
              if specified, the given command will be executed before starting
              the squish test.

       POST_COMMAND command
              same as PRE_COMMAND, but after the squish  test  has  been  exe-
              cuted.

          enable_testing()
          find_package(Squish 6.5)
          if (SQUISH_FOUND)
             squish_add_test(myTestName
               AUT myApp
               SUITE ${CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR}/tests/mySuite
               TEST someSquishTest
               )
          endif ()

       For  users of Squish version 3.x the macro squish_v3_add_test() is pro-
       vided:

          squish_v3_add_test(testName applicationUnderTest testCase envVars testWrapper)
          Use this macro to add a test using Squish 3.x.

          enable_testing()
          find_package(Squish 3.0)
          if (SQUISH_FOUND)
            squish_v3_add_test(myTestName myApplication testCase envVars testWrapper)
          endif ()

   FindSQLite3
       New in version 3.14.

       Find the SQLite libraries, v3

   IMPORTED targets
       This module defines the following IMPORTED target:

       SQLite::SQLite3

   Result variables
       This module will set the following variables if found:

       SQLite3_INCLUDE_DIRS
              where to find sqlite3.h, etc.

       SQLite3_LIBRARIES
              the libraries to link against to use SQLite3.

       SQLite3_VERSION
              version of the SQLite3 library found

       SQLite3_FOUND
              TRUE if found

   FindSubversion
       Extract information from a subversion working copy

       The module defines the following variables:

          Subversion_SVN_EXECUTABLE - path to svn command line client
          Subversion_VERSION_SVN - version of svn command line client
          Subversion_FOUND - true if the command line client was found
          SUBVERSION_FOUND - same as Subversion_FOUND, set for compatibility reasons

       The minimum required version of Subversion can be specified  using  the
       standard syntax, e.g. find_package(Subversion 1.4).

       If the command line client executable is found two macros are defined:

          Subversion_WC_INFO(<dir> <var-prefix> [IGNORE_SVN_FAILURE])
          Subversion_WC_LOG(<dir> <var-prefix>)

       Subversion_WC_INFO extracts information of a subversion working copy at
       a given location.  This macro defines the following variables  if  run-
       ning  Subversion's info command on <dir> succeeds; otherwise a SEND_ER-
       ROR message is generated.

       New in version 3.13: The error can be  ignored  by  providing  the  IG-
       NORE_SVN_FAILURE  option,  which causes these variables to remain unde-
       fined.

          <var-prefix>_WC_URL - url of the repository (at <dir>)
          <var-prefix>_WC_ROOT - root url of the repository
          <var-prefix>_WC_REVISION - current revision
          <var-prefix>_WC_LAST_CHANGED_AUTHOR - author of last commit
          <var-prefix>_WC_LAST_CHANGED_DATE - date of last commit
          <var-prefix>_WC_LAST_CHANGED_REV - revision of last commit
          <var-prefix>_WC_INFO - output of command `svn info <dir>'

       Subversion_WC_LOG retrieves the log message of the base revision  of  a
       subversion  working  copy  at a given location.  This macro defines the
       variable:

          <var-prefix>_LAST_CHANGED_LOG - last log of base revision

       Example usage:

          find_package(Subversion)
          if(SUBVERSION_FOUND)
            Subversion_WC_INFO(${PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR} Project)
            message("Current revision is ${Project_WC_REVISION}")
            Subversion_WC_LOG(${PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR} Project)
            message("Last changed log is ${Project_LAST_CHANGED_LOG}")
          endif()

   FindSWIG
       Find the Simplified Wrapper and Interface Generator (SWIG) executable.

       This module finds an installed SWIG and determines its version.

       New in version 3.18: If a COMPONENTS or OPTIONAL_COMPONENTS argument is
       given  to  the find_package() command, it will also determine supported
       target languages.

       New in version 3.19: When a version is requested, it can  be  specified
       as  a simple value or as a range. For a detailed description of version
       range usage and capabilities, refer to the find_package() command.

       The module defines the following variables:

       SWIG_FOUND
              Whether SWIG and any required components were found on the  sys-
              tem.

       SWIG_EXECUTABLE
              Path to the SWIG executable.

       SWIG_DIR
              Path  to  the  installed  SWIG  Lib  directory  (result  of swig
              -swiglib).

       SWIG_VERSION
              SWIG executable version (result of swig -version).

       SWIG_<lang>_FOUND
              If COMPONENTS or OPTIONAL_COMPONENTS are requested, each  avail-
              able target language <lang> (lowercase) will be set to TRUE.

       Any  COMPONENTS  given to find_package should be the names of supported
       target languages as provided to the LANGUAGE argument  of  swig_add_li-
       brary, such as python or perl5. Language names must be lowercase.

       All  information  is collected from the SWIG_EXECUTABLE, so the version
       to be found can be changed from the command line by  means  of  setting
       SWIG_EXECUTABLE.

       Example usage requiring SWIG 4.0 or higher and Python language support,
       with optional Fortran support:

          find_package(SWIG 4.0 COMPONENTS python OPTIONAL_COMPONENTS fortran)
          if(SWIG_FOUND)
            message("SWIG found: ${SWIG_EXECUTABLE}")
            if(NOT SWIG_fortran_FOUND)
              message(WARNING "SWIG Fortran bindings cannot be generated")
            endif()
          endif()

   FindTCL
       TK_INTERNAL_PATH was removed.

       This module finds if Tcl is installed and determines where the  include
       files  and  libraries are.  It also determines what the name of the li-
       brary is.  This code sets the following variables:

          TCL_FOUND              = Tcl was found
          TK_FOUND               = Tk was found
          TCLTK_FOUND            = Tcl and Tk were found
          TCL_LIBRARY            = path to Tcl library (tcl tcl80)
          TCL_INCLUDE_PATH       = path to where tcl.h can be found
          TCL_TCLSH              = path to tclsh binary (tcl tcl80)
          TK_LIBRARY             = path to Tk library (tk tk80 etc)
          TK_INCLUDE_PATH        = path to where tk.h can be found
          TK_WISH                = full path to the wish executable

       In an effort to remove some clutter and clear up some issues for people
       who  are  not  necessarily Tcl/Tk gurus/developers, some variables were
       moved or removed.  Changes compared to CMake 2.4 are:

          => they were only useful for people writing Tcl/Tk extensions.
          => these libs are not packaged by default with Tcl/Tk distributions.
             Even when Tcl/Tk is built from source, several flavors of debug libs
             are created and there is no real reason to pick a single one
             specifically (say, amongst tcl84g, tcl84gs, or tcl84sgx).
             Let's leave that choice to the user by allowing him to assign
             TCL_LIBRARY to any Tcl library, debug or not.
          => this ended up being only a Win32 variable, and there is a lot of
             confusion regarding the location of this file in an installed Tcl/Tk
             tree anyway (see 8.5 for example). If you need the internal path at
             this point it is safer you ask directly where the *source* tree is
             and dig from there.

   FindTclsh
       Find tclsh

       This module finds if TCL is installed and determines where the  include
       files  and  libraries are.  It also determines what the name of the li-
       brary is.  This code sets the following variables:

          TCLSH_FOUND = TRUE if tclsh has been found
          TCL_TCLSH = the path to the tclsh executable

   FindTclStub
       TCL_STUB_LIBRARY_DEBUG and TK_STUB_LIBRARY_DEBUG were removed.

       This module finds Tcl stub libraries.  It first finds Tcl include files
       and  libraries  by calling FindTCL.cmake.  How to Use the Tcl Stubs Li-
       brary:

          http://tcl.activestate.com/doc/howto/stubs.html

       Using Stub Libraries:

          http://safari.oreilly.com/0130385603/ch48lev1sec3

       This code sets the following variables:

          TCL_STUB_LIBRARY       = path to Tcl stub library
          TK_STUB_LIBRARY        = path to Tk stub library
          TTK_STUB_LIBRARY       = path to ttk stub library

       In an effort to remove some clutter and clear up some issues for people
       who  are  not  necessarily Tcl/Tk gurus/developers, some variables were
       moved or removed.  Changes compared to CMake 2.4 are:

          => these libs are not packaged by default with Tcl/Tk distributions.
             Even when Tcl/Tk is built from source, several flavors of debug libs
             are created and there is no real reason to pick a single one
             specifically (say, amongst tclstub84g, tclstub84gs, or tclstub84sgx).
             Let's leave that choice to the user by allowing him to assign
             TCL_STUB_LIBRARY to any Tcl library, debug or not.

   FindThreads
       This module determines the thread library of the system.

   Imported Targets
       New in version 3.1.

       This module defines the following IMPORTED target:

       Threads::Threads
              The thread library, if found.

   Result Variables
       The following variables are set:

       Threads_FOUND
              If a supported thread library was found.

       CMAKE_THREAD_LIBS_INIT
              The thread library to use. This may be empty if the thread func-
              tions  are provided by the system libraries and no special flags
              are needed to use them.

       CMAKE_USE_WIN32_THREADS_INIT
              If the found thread library is the win32 one.

       CMAKE_USE_PTHREADS_INIT
              If the found thread library is pthread compatible.

       CMAKE_HP_PTHREADS_INIT
              If the found thread library is the HP thread library.

   Variables Affecting Behavior
       THREADS_PREFER_PTHREAD_FLAG
              New in version 3.1.

              If the use of the -pthread compiler and linker flag is preferred
              then the caller can set this variable to TRUE. The compiler flag
              can only be used with the imported target. Use of both  the  im-
              ported  target  as well as this switch is highly recommended for
              new code.

              This variable has no effect if the system libraries provide  the
              thread  functions,  i.e.  when  CMAKE_THREAD_LIBS_INIT  will  be
              empty.

   FindTIFF
       Find the TIFF library (libtiff, https://libtiff.gitlab.io/libtiff/).

   Optional COMPONENTS
       This module supports the optional component CXX, for use with the  COM-
       PONENTS  argument  of the find_package() command. This component has an
       associated imported target, as described below.

   Imported targets
       New in version 3.5.

       This module defines the following IMPORTED targets:

       TIFF::TIFF
              The TIFF library, if found.

       TIFF::CXX
              New in version 3.19.

              The C++ wrapper libtiffxx, if requested by  the  COMPONENTS  CXX
              option,  if  the  compiler  is  not MSVC (which includes the C++
              wrapper in libtiff), and if found.

   Result variables
       This module will set the following variables in your project:

       TIFF_FOUND
              true if the TIFF headers and libraries were found

       TIFF_INCLUDE_DIR
              the directory containing the TIFF headers

       TIFF_INCLUDE_DIRS
              the directory containing the TIFF headers

       TIFF_LIBRARIES
              TIFF libraries to be linked

   Cache variables
       The following cache variables may also be set:

       TIFF_INCLUDE_DIR
              the directory containing the TIFF headers

       TIFF_LIBRARY_RELEASE
              the path to the TIFF library for release configurations

       TIFF_LIBRARY_DEBUG
              the path to the TIFF library for debug configurations

       TIFFXX_LIBRARY_RELEASE
              the path to the TIFFXX library for release configurations

       TIFFXX_LIBRARY_DEBUG
              the path to the TIFFXX library for debug configurations

       New in version 3.4: Debug and Release variants are found separately.

   FindUnixCommands
       Find Unix commands, including the ones from Cygwin

       This module looks for the Unix commands bash, cp, gzip, mv, rm, and tar
       and stores the result in the variables BASH, CP, GZIP, MV, RM, and TAR.

   FindVTK
       This module no longer exists.

       This  module existed in versions of CMake prior to 3.1, but became only
       a thin wrapper around find_package(VTK NO_MODULE) to  provide  compati-
       bility  for  projects  using long-outdated conventions.  Now find_pack-
       age(VTK) will search for VTKConfig.cmake directly.

   FindVulkan
       New in version 3.7.

       Find Vulkan, which is a low-overhead, cross-platform  3D  graphics  and
       computing API.

   Optional COMPONENTS
       New in version 3.24.

       This  module  respects  several  optional COMPONENTS.  There are corre-
       sponding imported targets for each of these.

       glslc  The SPIR-V compiler.

       glslangValidator
              The glslangValidator tool.

       glslang
              The SPIR-V generator library.

       shaderc_combined
              The static library for Vulkan shader compilation.

       SPIRV-Tools
              Tools to process SPIR-V modules.

       MoltenVK
              On macOS, an additional component MoltenVK is available.

       dxc    New in version 3.25.

              The DirectX Shader Compiler.

       The glslc and glslangValidator components are provided even if not  ex-
       plicitly requested (for backward compatibility).

   IMPORTED Targets
       This module defines IMPORTED targets if Vulkan has been found:

       Vulkan::Vulkan
              The main Vulkan library.

       Vulkan::glslc
              New in version 3.19.

              The GLSLC SPIR-V compiler, if it has been found.

       Vulkan::Headers
              New in version 3.21.

              Provides  just  Vulkan  headers include paths, if found.  No li-
              brary is included in this target.  This can be useful for appli-
              cations that load Vulkan library dynamically.

       Vulkan::glslangValidator
              New in version 3.21.

              The glslangValidator tool, if found.  It is used to compile GLSL
              and HLSL shaders into SPIR-V.

       Vulkan::glslang
              New in version 3.24.

              Defined if SDK has the Khronos-reference front-end shader parser
              and SPIR-V generator library (glslang).

       Vulkan::shaderc_combined
              New in version 3.24.

              Defined  if  SDK has the Google static library for Vulkan shader
              compilation (shaderc_combined).

       Vulkan::SPIRV-Tools
              New in version 3.24.

              Defined if SDK has the Khronos library to process SPIR-V modules
              (SPIRV-Tools).

       Vulkan::MoltenVK
              New in version 3.24.

              Defined  if SDK has the Khronos library which implement a subset
              of Vulkan API over Apple Metal graphics framework. (MoltenVK).

       Vulkan::volk
              New in version 3.25.

              Defined if SDK has the Vulkan meta-loader (volk).

       Vulkan::dxc_lib
              New in version 3.25.

              Defined if SDK has the DirectX shader compiler library.

       Vulkan::dxc_exe
              New in version 3.25.

              Defined if SDK has the DirectX shader compiler CLI tool.

   Result Variables
       This module defines the following variables:

       Vulkan_FOUND
              set to true if Vulkan was found

       Vulkan_INCLUDE_DIRS
              include directories for Vulkan

       Vulkan_LIBRARIES
              link against this library to use Vulkan

       Vulkan_VERSION
              New in version 3.23.

              value from vulkan/vulkan_core.h

       Vulkan_glslc_FOUND
              New in version 3.24.

              True, if the SDK has the glslc executable.

       Vulkan_glslangValidator_FOUND
              New in version 3.24.

              True, if the SDK has the glslangValidator executable.

       Vulkan_glslang_FOUND
              New in version 3.24.

              True, if the SDK has the glslang library.

       Vulkan_shaderc_combined_FOUND
              New in version 3.24.

              True, if the SDK has the shaderc_combined library.

       Vulkan_SPIRV-Tools_FOUND
              New in version 3.24.

              True, if the SDK has the SPIRV-Tools library.

       Vulkan_MoltenVK_FOUND
              New in version 3.24.

              True, if the SDK has the MoltenVK library.

       Vulkan_volk_FOUND
              New in version 3.25.

              True, if the SDK has the volk library.

       Vulkan_dxc_lib_FOUND
              New in version 3.25.

              True, if the SDK has the DirectX shader compiler library.

       Vulkan_dxc_exe_FOUND
              New in version 3.25.

              True, if the SDK has the DirectX shader compiler CLI tool.

       The module will also defines these cache variables:

       Vulkan_INCLUDE_DIR
              the Vulkan include directory

       Vulkan_LIBRARY
              the path to the Vulkan library

       Vulkan_GLSLC_EXECUTABLE
              the path to the GLSL SPIR-V compiler

       Vulkan_GLSLANG_VALIDATOR_EXECUTABLE
              the path to the glslangValidator tool

       Vulkan_glslang_LIBRARY
              New in version 3.24.

              Path to the glslang library.

       Vulkan_shaderc_combined_LIBRARY
              New in version 3.24.

              Path to the shaderc_combined library.

       Vulkan_SPIRV-Tools_LIBRARY
              New in version 3.24.

              Path to the SPIRV-Tools library.

       Vulkan_MoltenVK_LIBRARY
              New in version 3.24.

              Path to the MoltenVK library.

       Vulkan_volk_LIBRARY
              New in version 3.25.

              Path to the volk library.

       Vulkan_dxc_LIBRARY
              New in version 3.25.

              Path to the DirectX shader compiler library.

       Vulkan_dxc_EXECUTABLE
              New in version 3.25.

              Path to the DirectX shader compiler CLI tool.

   Hints
       New in version 3.18.

       The VULKAN_SDK environment variable optionally specifies  the  location
       of the Vulkan SDK root directory for the given architecture. It is typ-
       ically set by sourcing the toplevel setup-env.sh script of  the  Vulkan
       SDK directory into the shell environment.

   FindWget
       Find wget

       This module looks for wget.  This module defines the following values:

          WGET_EXECUTABLE: the full path to the wget tool.
          WGET_FOUND: True if wget has been found.

   FindWish
       Find wish installation

       This  module finds if TCL is installed and determines where the include
       files and libraries are.  It also determines what the name of  the  li-
       brary is.  This code sets the following variables:

          TK_WISH = the path to the wish executable

       if UNIX is defined, then it will look for the cygwin version first

   FindwxWidgets
       Find a wxWidgets (a.k.a., wxWindows) installation.

       This  module finds if wxWidgets is installed and selects a default con-
       figuration to use.  wxWidgets is a modular  library.   To  specify  the
       modules  that  you will use, you need to name them as components to the
       package:

       find_package(wxWidgets COMPONENTS core base ... OPTIONAL_COMPONENTS net
       ...)

       New  in  version 3.4: Support for find_package() version argument; web-
       view component.

       New in version 3.14: OPTIONAL_COMPONENTS support.

       There are two search branches: a windows style and a unix  style.   For
       windows,  the  following variables are searched for and set to defaults
       in case of multiple choices.  Change them if the defaults are  not  de-
       sired (i.e., these are the only variables you should change to select a
       configuration):

          wxWidgets_ROOT_DIR      - Base wxWidgets directory
                                    (e.g., C:/wxWidgets-3.2.0).
          wxWidgets_LIB_DIR       - Path to wxWidgets libraries
                                    (e.g., C:/wxWidgets-3.2.0/lib/vc_x64_lib).
          wxWidgets_CONFIGURATION - Configuration to use
                                    (e.g., msw, mswd, mswu, mswunivud, etc.)
          wxWidgets_EXCLUDE_COMMON_LIBRARIES
                                  - Set to TRUE to exclude linking of
                                    commonly required libs (e.g., png tiff
                                    jpeg zlib regex expat).

       For unix style it uses the wx-config utility.  You can  select  between
       debug/release, unicode/ansi, universal/non-universal, and static/shared
       in the QtDialog or ccmake interfaces by turning  ON/OFF  the  following
       variables:

          wxWidgets_USE_DEBUG
          wxWidgets_USE_UNICODE
          wxWidgets_USE_UNIVERSAL
          wxWidgets_USE_STATIC

       There is also a wxWidgets_CONFIG_OPTIONS variable for all other options
       that need to be passed to the wx-config utility.  For example,  to  use
       the base toolkit found in the /usr/local path, set the variable (before
       calling the FIND_PACKAGE command) as such:

          set(wxWidgets_CONFIG_OPTIONS --toolkit=base --prefix=/usr)

       The following are set after the configuration is done for both  windows
       and unix style:

          wxWidgets_FOUND            - Set to TRUE if wxWidgets was found.
          wxWidgets_INCLUDE_DIRS     - Include directories for WIN32
                                       i.e., where to find "wx/wx.h" and
                                       "wx/setup.h"; possibly empty for unices.
          wxWidgets_LIBRARIES        - Path to the wxWidgets libraries.
          wxWidgets_LIBRARY_DIRS     - compile time link dirs, useful for
                                       rpath on UNIX. Typically an empty string
                                       in WIN32 environment.
          wxWidgets_DEFINITIONS      - Contains defines required to compile/link
                                       against WX, e.g. WXUSINGDLL
          wxWidgets_DEFINITIONS_DEBUG- Contains defines required to compile/link
                                       against WX debug builds, e.g. __WXDEBUG__
          wxWidgets_CXX_FLAGS        - Include dirs and compiler flags for
                                       unices, empty on WIN32. Essentially
                                       "`wx-config --cxxflags`".
          wxWidgets_USE_FILE         - Convenience include file.

       New in version 3.11: The following environment variables can be used as
       hints: WX_CONFIG, WXRC_CMD.

       Sample usage:

          # Note that for MinGW users the order of libs is important!
          find_package(wxWidgets COMPONENTS gl core base OPTIONAL_COMPONENTS net)
          if(wxWidgets_FOUND)
            include(${wxWidgets_USE_FILE})
            # and for each of your dependent executable/library targets:
            target_link_libraries(<YourTarget> ${wxWidgets_LIBRARIES})
          endif()

       If wxWidgets is required (i.e., not an optional part):

          find_package(wxWidgets REQUIRED gl core base OPTIONAL_COMPONENTS net)
          include(${wxWidgets_USE_FILE})
          # and for each of your dependent executable/library targets:
          target_link_libraries(<YourTarget> ${wxWidgets_LIBRARIES})

   FindX11
       Find X11 installation

       Try to find X11 on UNIX systems. The following values are defined

          X11_FOUND        - True if X11 is available
          X11_INCLUDE_DIR  - include directories to use X11
          X11_LIBRARIES    - link against these to use X11

       and also the following more fine grained variables and targets:

       New in version 3.14: Imported targets.

          X11_ICE_INCLUDE_PATH,          X11_ICE_LIB,        X11_ICE_FOUND,        X11::ICE
          X11_SM_INCLUDE_PATH,           X11_SM_LIB,         X11_SM_FOUND,         X11::SM
          X11_X11_INCLUDE_PATH,          X11_X11_LIB,                              X11::X11
          X11_Xaccessrules_INCLUDE_PATH,
          X11_Xaccessstr_INCLUDE_PATH,                       X11_Xaccess_FOUND
          X11_Xau_INCLUDE_PATH,          X11_Xau_LIB,        X11_Xau_FOUND,        X11::Xau
          X11_xcb_INCLUDE_PATH,          X11_xcb_LIB,        X11_xcb_FOUND,        X11::xcb
          X11_X11_xcb_INCLUDE_PATH,      X11_X11_xcb_LIB,    X11_X11_xcb_FOUND,    X11::X11_xcb
          X11_xcb_icccm_INCLUDE_PATH,    X11_xcb_icccm_LIB,  X11_xcb_icccm_FOUND,  X11::xcb_icccm
          X11_xcb_randr_INCLUDE_PATH,    X11_xcb_randr_LIB,  X11_xcb_randr_FOUND,  X11::xcb_randr
          X11_xcb_util_INCLUDE_PATH,     X11_xcb_util_LIB,   X11_xcb_util_FOUND,   X11::xcb_util
          X11_xcb_xfixes_INCLUDE_PATH,   X11_xcb_xfixes_LIB, X11_xcb_xfixes_FOUND, X11::xcb_xfixes
          X11_xcb_xtest_INCLUDE_PATH,    X11_xcb_xtest_LIB,  X11_xcb_xtest_FOUND,  X11::xcb_xtest
          X11_xcb_keysyms_INCLUDE_PATH,  X11_xcb_keysyms_LIB,X11_xcb_keysyms_FOUND,X11::xcb_keysyms
          X11_xcb_xkb_INCLUDE_PATH,      X11_xcb_xkb_LIB,    X11_xcb_xkb_FOUND,    X11::xcb_xkb
          X11_Xcomposite_INCLUDE_PATH,   X11_Xcomposite_LIB, X11_Xcomposite_FOUND, X11::Xcomposite
          X11_Xcursor_INCLUDE_PATH,      X11_Xcursor_LIB,    X11_Xcursor_FOUND,    X11::Xcursor
          X11_Xdamage_INCLUDE_PATH,      X11_Xdamage_LIB,    X11_Xdamage_FOUND,    X11::Xdamage
          X11_Xdmcp_INCLUDE_PATH,        X11_Xdmcp_LIB,      X11_Xdmcp_FOUND,      X11::Xdmcp
          X11_Xext_INCLUDE_PATH,         X11_Xext_LIB,       X11_Xext_FOUND,       X11::Xext
          X11_Xxf86misc_INCLUDE_PATH,    X11_Xxf86misc_LIB,  X11_Xxf86misc_FOUND,  X11::Xxf86misc
          X11_Xxf86vm_INCLUDE_PATH,      X11_Xxf86vm_LIB     X11_Xxf86vm_FOUND,    X11::Xxf86vm
          X11_Xfixes_INCLUDE_PATH,       X11_Xfixes_LIB,     X11_Xfixes_FOUND,     X11::Xfixes
          X11_Xft_INCLUDE_PATH,          X11_Xft_LIB,        X11_Xft_FOUND,        X11::Xft
          X11_Xi_INCLUDE_PATH,           X11_Xi_LIB,         X11_Xi_FOUND,         X11::Xi
          X11_Xinerama_INCLUDE_PATH,     X11_Xinerama_LIB,   X11_Xinerama_FOUND,   X11::Xinerama
          X11_Xkb_INCLUDE_PATH,
          X11_Xkblib_INCLUDE_PATH,                           X11_Xkb_FOUND,        X11::Xkb
          X11_xkbcommon_INCLUDE_PATH,    X11_xkbcommon_LIB,  X11_xkbcommon_FOUND,  X11::xkbcommon
          X11_xkbcommon_X11_INCLUDE_PATH,X11_xkbcommon_X11_LIB,X11_xkbcommon_X11_FOUND,X11::xkbcommon_X11
          X11_xkbfile_INCLUDE_PATH,      X11_xkbfile_LIB,    X11_xkbfile_FOUND,    X11::xkbfile
          X11_Xmu_INCLUDE_PATH,          X11_Xmu_LIB,        X11_Xmu_FOUND,        X11::Xmu
          X11_Xpm_INCLUDE_PATH,          X11_Xpm_LIB,        X11_Xpm_FOUND,        X11::Xpm
          X11_Xtst_INCLUDE_PATH,         X11_Xtst_LIB,       X11_Xtst_FOUND,       X11::Xtst
          X11_Xrandr_INCLUDE_PATH,       X11_Xrandr_LIB,     X11_Xrandr_FOUND,     X11::Xrandr
          X11_Xrender_INCLUDE_PATH,      X11_Xrender_LIB,    X11_Xrender_FOUND,    X11::Xrender
          X11_XRes_INCLUDE_PATH,         X11_XRes_LIB,       X11_XRes_FOUND,       X11::XRes
          X11_Xss_INCLUDE_PATH,          X11_Xss_LIB,        X11_Xss_FOUND,        X11::Xss
          X11_Xt_INCLUDE_PATH,           X11_Xt_LIB,         X11_Xt_FOUND,         X11::Xt
          X11_Xutil_INCLUDE_PATH,                            X11_Xutil_FOUND,      X11::Xutil
          X11_Xv_INCLUDE_PATH,           X11_Xv_LIB,         X11_Xv_FOUND,         X11::Xv
          X11_dpms_INCLUDE_PATH,         (in X11_Xext_LIB),  X11_dpms_FOUND
          X11_XShm_INCLUDE_PATH,         (in X11_Xext_LIB),  X11_XShm_FOUND
          X11_Xshape_INCLUDE_PATH,       (in X11_Xext_LIB),  X11_Xshape_FOUND
          X11_XSync_INCLUDE_PATH,        (in X11_Xext_LIB),  X11_XSync_FOUND
          X11_Xaw_INCLUDE_PATH,          X11_Xaw_LIB         X11_Xaw_FOUND         X11::Xaw

       New in version 3.14:  Renamed  Xxf86misc,  X11_Xxf86misc,  X11_Xxf86vm,
       X11_xkbfile, X11_Xtst, and X11_Xss libraries to match their file names.
       Deprecated the X11_Xinput library.  Old names are still  available  for
       compatibility.

       New in version 3.14: Added the X11_Xext_INCLUDE_PATH variable.

       New  in  version 3.18: Added the xcb, X11-xcb, xcb-icccm, xcb-xkb, xkb-
       common, and xkbcommon-X11 libraries.

       New in version 3.19: Added the Xaw, xcb_util, and xcb_xfixes libraries.

       New in version 3.24: Added the xcb_randr,  xcb_xtext,  and  xcb_keysyms
       libraries.

   FindXalanC
       New in version 3.5.

       Find  the  Apache  Xalan-C++  XSL  transform  processor headers and li-
       braries.

   Imported targets
       This module defines the following IMPORTED targets:

       XalanC::XalanC
              The Xalan-C++ xalan-c library, if found.

   Result variables
       This module will set the following variables in your project:

       XalanC_FOUND
              true if the Xalan headers and libraries were found

       XalanC_VERSION
              Xalan release version

       XalanC_INCLUDE_DIRS
              the directory containing the  Xalan  headers;  note  XercesC_IN-
              CLUDE_DIRS is also required

       XalanC_LIBRARIES
              Xalan libraries to be linked; note XercesC_LIBRARIES is also re-
              quired

   Cache variables
       The following cache variables may also be set:

       XalanC_INCLUDE_DIR
              the directory containing the Xalan headers

       XalanC_LIBRARY
              the Xalan library

   FindXCTest
       New in version 3.3.

       Functions to help creating and executing XCTest bundles.

       An XCTest bundle is a CFBundle with a special product-type  and  bundle
       extension.  The  Mac Developer Library provides more information in the
       Testing with Xcode document.

   Module Functions
       xctest_add_bundle
              The xctest_add_bundle function creates  a  XCTest  bundle  named
              <target>  which  will test the target <testee>. Supported target
              types for testee are Frameworks and App Bundles:

                 xctest_add_bundle(
                   <target>  # Name of the XCTest bundle
                   <testee>  # Target name of the testee
                   )

       xctest_add_test
              The xctest_add_test  function  adds  an  XCTest  bundle  to  the
              project to be run by ctest(1). The test will be named <name> and
              tests <bundle>:

                 xctest_add_test(
                   <name>    # Test name
                   <bundle>  # Target name of XCTest bundle
                   )

   Module Variables
       The following variables are set by including this module:

       XCTest_FOUND
              True if the XCTest Framework and executable were found.

       XCTest_EXECUTABLE
              The path to the xctest command line tool used to execute  XCTest
              bundles.

       XCTest_INCLUDE_DIRS
              The directory containing the XCTest Framework headers.

       XCTest_LIBRARIES
              The location of the XCTest Framework.

   FindXercesC
       New in version 3.1.

       Find the Apache Xerces-C++ validating XML parser headers and libraries.

   Imported targets
       New in version 3.5.

       This module defines the following IMPORTED targets:

       XercesC::XercesC
              The Xerces-C++ xerces-c library, if found.

   Result variables
       This module will set the following variables in your project:

       XercesC_FOUND
              true if the Xerces headers and libraries were found

       XercesC_VERSION
              Xerces release version

       XercesC_INCLUDE_DIRS
              the directory containing the Xerces headers

       XercesC_LIBRARIES
              Xerces libraries to be linked

   Cache variables
       The following cache variables may also be set:

       XercesC_INCLUDE_DIR
              the directory containing the Xerces headers

       XercesC_LIBRARY
              the Xerces library

       New in version 3.4: Debug and Release variants are found separately.

   FindXMLRPC
       Find xmlrpc

       Find the native XMLRPC headers and libraries.

          XMLRPC_INCLUDE_DIRS      - where to find xmlrpc.h, etc.
          XMLRPC_LIBRARIES         - List of libraries when using xmlrpc.
          XMLRPC_FOUND             - True if xmlrpc found.

       XMLRPC  modules  may  be  specified as components for this find module.
       Modules may be listed by running "xmlrpc-c-config".  Modules include:

          c++            C++ wrapper code
          libwww-client  libwww-based client
          cgi-server     CGI-based server
          abyss-server   ABYSS-based server

       Typical usage:

          find_package(XMLRPC REQUIRED libwww-client)

   FindZLIB
       Find the native ZLIB includes and library.

   IMPORTED Targets
       New in version 3.1.

       This module defines IMPORTED target ZLIB::ZLIB, if ZLIB has been found.

   Result Variables
       This module defines the following variables:

          ZLIB_INCLUDE_DIRS   - where to find zlib.h, etc.
          ZLIB_LIBRARIES      - List of libraries when using zlib.
          ZLIB_FOUND          - True if zlib found.

          ZLIB_VERSION_STRING - The version of zlib found (x.y.z)
          ZLIB_VERSION_MAJOR  - The major version of zlib
          ZLIB_VERSION_MINOR  - The minor version of zlib
          ZLIB_VERSION_PATCH  - The patch version of zlib
          ZLIB_VERSION_TWEAK  - The tweak version of zlib

       New in version 3.4: Debug and Release variants are found separately.

   Backward Compatibility
       The following variable are provided for backward compatibility

          ZLIB_MAJOR_VERSION  - The major version of zlib
          ZLIB_MINOR_VERSION  - The minor version of zlib
          ZLIB_PATCH_VERSION  - The patch version of zlib

   Hints
       A user may set ZLIB_ROOT to a zlib installation root to tell this  mod-
       ule where to look.

       New  in version 3.24: Set ZLIB_USE_STATIC_LIBS to ON to look for static
       libraries.  Default is OFF.

DEPRECATED MODULES
   Deprecated Utility Modules
   AddFileDependencies
       Deprecated since version 3.20.

       Add dependencies to a source file.

          add_file_dependencies(<source> <files>...)

       Adds the given <files> to the dependencies of file <source>.

       Do not use this command in new code.  It is just a wrapper around:

          set_property(SOURCE <source> APPEND PROPERTY OBJECT_DEPENDS <files>...)

       Instead use the set_property() command to append to the  OBJECT_DEPENDS
       source file property directly.

   CMakeDetermineVSServicePack
       Deprecated since version 3.0: Do not use.

       The   functionality   of   this  module  has  been  superseded  by  the
       CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER_VERSION variable that contains the compiler  ver-
       sion number.

       Determine the Visual Studio service pack of the 'cl' in use.

       Usage:

          if(MSVC)
            include(CMakeDetermineVSServicePack)
            DetermineVSServicePack( my_service_pack )
            if( my_service_pack )
              message(STATUS "Detected: ${my_service_pack}")
            endif()
          endif()

       Function  DetermineVSServicePack  sets the given variable to one of the
       following values or an empty string if unknown:

          vc80, vc80sp1
          vc90, vc90sp1
          vc100, vc100sp1
          vc110, vc110sp1, vc110sp2, vc110sp3, vc110sp4

   CMakeExpandImportedTargets
       Deprecated since version 3.4: Do not use.

       This module was once needed to expand imported targets to the  underly-
       ing libraries they reference on disk for use with the try_compile() and
       try_run() commands.  These commands now support imported  libraries  in
       their  LINK_LIBRARIES options (since CMake 2.8.11 for try_compile() and
       since CMake 3.2 for try_run()).

       This module does not support the policy CMP0022 NEW behavior or use  of
       the  INTERFACE_LINK_LIBRARIES  property  because  generator expressions
       cannot be evaluated during configuration.

          CMAKE_EXPAND_IMPORTED_TARGETS(<var> LIBRARIES lib1 lib2...libN
                                        [CONFIGURATION <config>])

       CMAKE_EXPAND_IMPORTED_TARGETS() takes a list of libraries and  replaces
       all  imported  targets  contained  in  this list with their actual file
       paths of the referenced libraries on disk, including the libraries from
       their  link  interfaces.   If a CONFIGURATION is given, it uses the re-
       spective configuration of the imported targets if  it  exists.   If  no
       CONFIGURATION   is   given,   it  uses  the  first  configuration  from
       ${CMAKE_CONFIGURATION_TYPES} if set, otherwise ${CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE}.

          cmake_expand_imported_targets(expandedLibs
            LIBRARIES ${CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES}
            CONFIGURATION "${CMAKE_TRY_COMPILE_CONFIGURATION}" )

   CMakeForceCompiler
       Deprecated since version 3.6: Do not use.

       The macros provided by this  module  were  once  intended  for  use  by
       cross-compiling  toolchain  files  when CMake was not able to automati-
       cally detect the compiler identification.  Since  the  introduction  of
       this module, CMake's compiler identification capabilities have improved
       and can now be taught to  recognize  any  compiler.   Furthermore,  the
       suite of information CMake detects from a compiler is now too extensive
       to be provided by toolchain files using these macros.

       One common use case for this module was to skip CMake's  checks  for  a
       working  compiler when using a cross-compiler that cannot link binaries
       without special flags or custom linker scripts.  This case is now  sup-
       ported  by  setting  the  CMAKE_TRY_COMPILE_TARGET_TYPE variable in the
       toolchain file instead.

                                        ----

       Macro CMAKE_FORCE_C_COMPILER has the following signature:

          CMAKE_FORCE_C_COMPILER(<compiler> <compiler-id>)

       It sets CMAKE_C_COMPILER to the given compiler and the  cmake  internal
       variable  CMAKE_C_COMPILER_ID  to  the  given compiler-id.  It also by-
       passes the check for working compiler and  basic  compiler  information
       tests.

       Macro CMAKE_FORCE_CXX_COMPILER has the following signature:

          CMAKE_FORCE_CXX_COMPILER(<compiler> <compiler-id>)

       It sets CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER to the given compiler and the cmake internal
       variable CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER_ID to the given compiler-id.  It  also  by-
       passes  the  check  for working compiler and basic compiler information
       tests.

       Macro CMAKE_FORCE_Fortran_COMPILER has the following signature:

          CMAKE_FORCE_Fortran_COMPILER(<compiler> <compiler-id>)

       It sets CMAKE_Fortran_COMPILER to the given compiler and the cmake  in-
       ternal variable CMAKE_Fortran_COMPILER_ID to the given compiler-id.  It
       also bypasses the check for working compiler and basic compiler  infor-
       mation tests.

       So a simple toolchain file could look like this:

          include (CMakeForceCompiler)
          set(CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME Generic)
          CMAKE_FORCE_C_COMPILER   (chc12 MetrowerksHicross)
          CMAKE_FORCE_CXX_COMPILER (chc12 MetrowerksHicross)

   CMakeParseArguments
       This  module  once implemented the cmake_parse_arguments() command that
       is now implemented natively by CMake.  It is now an  empty  placeholder
       for compatibility with projects that include it to get the command from
       CMake 3.4 and lower.

   Documentation
       Deprecated since version 3.18: This module does nothing, unless  policy
       CMP0106 is set to OLD.

       This  module  provides support for the VTK documentation framework.  It
       relies on several tools (Doxygen, Perl, etc).

   MacroAddFileDependencies
       Deprecated since version 3.14.

          MACRO_ADD_FILE_DEPENDENCIES(<source> <files>...)

       Do not use this command in new code.  It is just a wrapper around:

          set_property(SOURCE <source> APPEND PROPERTY OBJECT_DEPENDS <files>...)

       Instead use the set_property() command to append to the  OBJECT_DEPENDS
       source file property directly.

   TestCXXAcceptsFlag
       Deprecated since version 3.0: See CheckCXXCompilerFlag.

       Check if the CXX compiler accepts a flag.

          CHECK_CXX_ACCEPTS_FLAG(<flags> <variable>)

       <flags>
              the flags to try

       <variable>
              variable to store the result

   UseJavaClassFilelist
       Changed  in version 3.20: This module was previously documented by mis-
       take and was never meant for direct inclusion by project code.  See the
       UseJava module.

   UseJavaSymlinks
       Changed  in version 3.20: This module was previously documented by mis-
       take and was never meant for direct inclusion by project code.  See the
       UseJava module.

   UsePkgConfig
       Obsolete pkg-config module for CMake, use FindPkgConfig instead.

       This module defines the following macro:

       PKGCONFIG(package includedir libdir linkflags cflags)

       Calling  PKGCONFIG  will  fill the desired information into the 4 given
       arguments,      e.g.       PKGCONFIG(libart-2.0      LIBART_INCLUDE_DIR
       LIBART_LINK_DIR  LIBART_LINK_FLAGS LIBART_CFLAGS) if pkg-config was NOT
       found or the specified software package  doesn't  exist,  the  variable
       will  be  empty  when the function returns, otherwise they will contain
       the respective information

   Use_wxWindows
       Deprecated since version 2.8.10: Use  find_package(wxWidgets)  and  in-
       clude(${wxWidgets_USE_FILE}) instead.

       This  convenience  include  finds if wxWindows is installed and set the
       appropriate libs, incdirs, flags etc.   author  Jan  Woetzel  <jw  -at-
       mip.informatik.uni-kiel.de> (07/2003)

       USAGE:

          just include Use_wxWindows.cmake
          in your projects CMakeLists.txt

       include( ${CMAKE_MODULE_PATH}/Use_wxWindows.cmake)

          if you are sure you need GL then

       set(WXWINDOWS_USE_GL 1)

          *before* you include this file.

   WriteBasicConfigVersionFile
       Deprecated    since    version   3.0:   Use   the   identical   command
       write_basic_package_version_file()             from              module
       CMakePackageConfigHelpers.

          WRITE_BASIC_CONFIG_VERSION_FILE( filename
            [VERSION major.minor.patch]
            COMPATIBILITY (AnyNewerVersion|SameMajorVersion|SameMinorVersion|ExactVersion)
            [ARCH_INDEPENDENT]
            )

   WriteCompilerDetectionHeader
       Deprecated  since version 3.20: This module is available only if policy
       CMP0120 is not set to NEW.  Do not use it in new code.

       New in version 3.1.

       This module provides the function write_compiler_detection_header().

       This function can be used to generate a file suitable for  preprocessor
       inclusion which contains macros to be used in source code:

          write_compiler_detection_header(
                    FILE <file>
                    PREFIX <prefix>
                    [OUTPUT_FILES_VAR <output_files_var> OUTPUT_DIR <output_dir>]
                    COMPILERS <compiler> [...]
                    FEATURES <feature> [...]
                    [BARE_FEATURES <feature> [...]]
                    [VERSION <version>]
                    [PROLOG <prolog>]
                    [EPILOG <epilog>]
                    [ALLOW_UNKNOWN_COMPILERS]
                    [ALLOW_UNKNOWN_COMPILER_VERSIONS]
          )

       This  generates  the  file <file> with macros which all have the prefix
       <prefix>.

       By default, all content is written directly to the  <file>.   The  OUT-
       PUT_FILES_VAR  may  be specified to cause the compiler-specific content
       to be written to separate files.  The separate files are then available
       in the <output_files_var> and may be consumed by the caller for instal-
       lation for example.  The OUTPUT_DIR specifies a relative path from  the
       main <file> to the compiler-specific files. For example:

          write_compiler_detection_header(
            FILE climbingstats_compiler_detection.h
            PREFIX ClimbingStats
            OUTPUT_FILES_VAR support_files
            OUTPUT_DIR compilers
            COMPILERS GNU Clang MSVC Intel
            FEATURES cxx_variadic_templates
          )
          install(FILES
            ${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/climbingstats_compiler_detection.h
            DESTINATION include
          )
          install(FILES
            ${support_files}
            DESTINATION include/compilers
          )

       VERSION may be used to specify the API version to be generated.  Future
       versions of CMake may introduce alternative APIs.  A given API  is  se-
       lected  by  any <version> value greater than or equal to the version of
       CMake that introduced the given API and less than the version of  CMake
       that    introduced    its   succeeding   API.    The   value   of   the
       CMAKE_MINIMUM_REQUIRED_VERSION variable is used if no explicit  version
       is  specified.   (As of CMake version 3.25.1 there is only one API ver-
       sion.)

       PROLOG may be specified as text content to write at the  start  of  the
       header.  EPILOG may be specified as text content to write at the end of
       the header

       At least one <compiler> and one <feature> must  be  listed.   Compilers
       which  are  known  to  CMake, but not specified are detected and a pre-
       processor #error is generated for them.  A preprocessor macro  matching
       <PREFIX>_COMPILER_IS_<compiler> is generated for each compiler known to
       CMake to contain the value 0 or 1.

       Possible    compiler    identifiers    are    documented    with    the
       CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER_ID  variable.  Available features in this version
       of   CMake   are   listed    in    the    CMAKE_C_KNOWN_FEATURES    and
       CMAKE_CXX_KNOWN_FEATURES      global      properties.       See     the
       cmake-compile-features(7) manual for information on compile features.

       New in version 3.2: Added MSVC and AppleClang compiler support.

       New in version 3.6: Added Intel compiler support.

       Changed in version 3.8: The {c,cxx}_std_* meta-features are ignored  if
       requested.

       New  in  version  3.8:  ALLOW_UNKNOWN_COMPILERS  and ALLOW_UNKNOWN_COM-
       PILER_VERSIONS cause the module to generate conditions that  treat  un-
       known  compilers as simply lacking all features.  Without these options
       the default behavior is to generate a #error for unknown compilers  and
       versions.

       New in version 3.12: BARE_FEATURES will define the compatibility macros
       with the name used in newer versions of the language standard,  so  the
       code can use the new feature name unconditionally.

   Feature Test Macros
       For  each  compiler,  a  preprocessor macro is generated matching <PRE-
       FIX>_COMPILER_IS_<compiler> which has the content either 0  or  1,  de-
       pending  on  the compiler in use. Preprocessor macros for compiler ver-
       sion components are generated matching  <PREFIX>_COMPILER_VERSION_MAJOR
       <PREFIX>_COMPILER_VERSION_MINOR   and   <PREFIX>_COMPILER_VERSION_PATCH
       containing decimal values for the corresponding compiler version compo-
       nents, if defined.

       A preprocessor test is generated based on the compiler version denoting
       whether each feature is enabled.  A preprocessor macro  matching  <PRE-
       FIX>_COMPILER_<FEATURE>,  where  <FEATURE>  is the upper-case <feature>
       name, is generated to contain the value 0 or 1 depending on whether the
       compiler in use supports the feature:

          write_compiler_detection_header(
            FILE climbingstats_compiler_detection.h
            PREFIX ClimbingStats
            COMPILERS GNU Clang AppleClang MSVC Intel
            FEATURES cxx_variadic_templates
          )

          #if ClimbingStats_COMPILER_CXX_VARIADIC_TEMPLATES
          template<typename... T>
          void someInterface(T t...) { /* ... */ }
          #else
          // Compatibility versions
          template<typename T1>
          void someInterface(T1 t1) { /* ... */ }
          template<typename T1, typename T2>
          void someInterface(T1 t1, T2 t2) { /* ... */ }
          template<typename T1, typename T2, typename T3>
          void someInterface(T1 t1, T2 t2, T3 t3) { /* ... */ }
          #endif

   Symbol Macros
       Some  additional symbol-defines are created for particular features for
       use as symbols which may be conditionally defined empty:

          class MyClass ClimbingStats_FINAL
          {
              ClimbingStats_CONSTEXPR int someInterface() { return 42; }
          };

       The ClimbingStats_FINAL macro will expand to final if the compiler (and
       its  flags) support the cxx_final feature, and the ClimbingStats_CONST-
       EXPR macro will expand to constexpr if cxx_constexpr is supported.

       If BARE_FEATURES cxx_final was given as argument the final keyword will
       be defined for old compilers, too.

       The  following  features  generate  corresponding symbol defines and if
       they are available as BARE_FEATURES:

            ┌──────────────────┬────────────────────┬─────────────┬──────┐
            │Feature           │ Define             │ Symbol      │ bare │
            ├──────────────────┼────────────────────┼─────────────┼──────┤
            │c_restrict<PREFIX>_RE-restrict    │ yes  │
            │                  │ STRICT             │             │      │
            ├──────────────────┼────────────────────┼─────────────┼──────┤
            │cxx_constexpr<PREFIX>_CONST-constexpr   │ yes  │
            │                  │ EXPR               │             │      │
            ├──────────────────┼────────────────────┼─────────────┼──────┤
            │cxx_deleted_func-<PRE-= delete    │      │
            │tionsFIX>_DELETED_FUNC- │             │      │
            │                  │ TION               │             │      │
            ├──────────────────┼────────────────────┼─────────────┼──────┤
            │cxx_extern_tem-<PREFIX>_EX-extern      │      │
            │platesTERN_TEMPLATE      │             │      │
            ├──────────────────┼────────────────────┼─────────────┼──────┤
            │cxx_final<PREFIX>_FINALfinal       │ yes  │
            ├──────────────────┼────────────────────┼─────────────┼──────┤
            │cxx_noexcept<PREFIX>_NOEXCEPTnoexcept    │ yes  │
            ├──────────────────┼────────────────────┼─────────────┼──────┤
            │cxx_noexcept<PREFIX>_NOEX-noexcept(X) │      │
            │                  │ CEPT_EXPR(X)       │             │      │
            ├──────────────────┼────────────────────┼─────────────┼──────┤
            │cxx_override<PREFIX>_OVERRIDEoverride    │ yes  │
            └──────────────────┴────────────────────┴─────────────┴──────┘

   Compatibility Implementation Macros
       Some features are suitable for wrapping in a macro with a backward com-
       patibility implementation if the compiler does not support the feature.

       When  the  cxx_static_assert feature is not provided by the compiler, a
       compatibility implementation is available via  the  <PREFIX>_STATIC_AS-
       SERT(COND)   and  <PREFIX>_STATIC_ASSERT_MSG(COND,  MSG)  function-like
       macros. The macros expand to static_assert where that compiler  feature
       is  available,  and to a compatibility implementation otherwise. In the
       first form, the condition  is  stringified  in  the  message  field  of
       static_assert.   In  the  second form, the message MSG is passed to the
       message field of static_assert, or ignored if using the  backward  com-
       patibility implementation.

       The  cxx_attribute_deprecated feature provides a macro definition <PRE-
       FIX>_DEPRECATED, which expands to either  the  standard  [[deprecated]]
       attribute   or   a   compiler-specific   decorator   such  as  __attri-
       bute__((__deprecated__)) used by GNU compilers.

       The cxx_alignas feature provides a  macro  definition  <PREFIX>_ALIGNAS
       which  expands  to  either  the  standard  alignas  decorator or a com-
       piler-specific decorator such as __attribute__ ((__aligned__)) used  by
       GNU compilers.

       The  cxx_alignof  feature  provides a macro definition <PREFIX>_ALIGNOF
       which expands to either  the  standard  alignof  decorator  or  a  com-
       piler-specific decorator such as __alignof__ used by GNU compilers.

            ┌─────────────────┬──────────────────┬────────────────┬──────┐
            │Feature          │ Define           │ Symbol         │ bare │
            └─────────────────┴──────────────────┴────────────────┴──────┘

            │cxx_alignas<PREFIX>_ALIGNASalignas        │      │
            ├─────────────────┼──────────────────┼────────────────┼──────┤
            │cxx_alignof<PREFIX>_ALIGNOFalignof        │      │
            ├─────────────────┼──────────────────┼────────────────┼──────┤
            │cxx_nullptr<PREFIX>_NULLPTRnullptr        │ yes  │
            ├─────────────────┼──────────────────┼────────────────┼──────┤
            │cxx_static_as-<PRE-static_assert  │      │
            │sertFIX>_STATIC_AS-  │                │      │
            │                 │ SERT             │                │      │
            ├─────────────────┼──────────────────┼────────────────┼──────┤
            │cxx_static_as-<PRE-static_assert  │      │
            │sertFIX>_STATIC_AS-  │                │      │
            │                 │ SERT_MSG         │                │      │
            ├─────────────────┼──────────────────┼────────────────┼──────┤
            │cxx_attri-<PREFIX>_DEPRE-[[deprecated]] │      │
            │bute_deprecatedCATED            │                │      │
            ├─────────────────┼──────────────────┼────────────────┼──────┤
            │cxx_attri-<PREFIX>_DEPRE-[[deprecated]] │      │
            │bute_deprecatedCATED_MSG        │                │      │
            ├─────────────────┼──────────────────┼────────────────┼──────┤
            │cxx_thread_local<PRE-thread_local   │      │
            │                 │ FIX>_THREAD_LO-  │                │      │
            │                 │ CAL              │                │      │
            └─────────────────┴──────────────────┴────────────────┴──────┘

       A use-case which arises with such deprecation macros is the deprecation
       of an entire library.  In that case, all public API in the library  may
       be  decorated with the <PREFIX>_DEPRECATED macro.  This results in very
       noisy build output when building the library itself, so the  macro  may
       be  may  be  defined to empty in that case when building the deprecated
       library:

          add_library(compat_support ${srcs})
          target_compile_definitions(compat_support
            PRIVATE
              CompatSupport_DEPRECATED=
          )

   Example Usage
       NOTE:
          This section was migrated from the cmake-compile-features(7)  manual
          since  it relies on the WriteCompilerDetectionHeader module which is
          removed by policy CMP0120.

       Compile features may be preferred if available, without creating a hard
       requirement.   For example, a library may provide alternative implemen-
       tations depending on  whether  the  cxx_variadic_templates  feature  is
       available:

          #if Foo_COMPILER_CXX_VARIADIC_TEMPLATES
          template<int I, int... Is>
          struct Interface;

          template<int I>
          struct Interface<I>
          {
            static int accumulate()
            {
              return I;
            }
          };

          template<int I, int... Is>
          struct Interface
          {
            static int accumulate()
            {
              return I + Interface<Is...>::accumulate();
            }
          };
          #else
          template<int I1, int I2 = 0, int I3 = 0, int I4 = 0>
          struct Interface
          {
            static int accumulate() { return I1 + I2 + I3 + I4; }
          };
          #endif

       Such an interface depends on using the correct preprocessor defines for
       the compiler features.  CMake can generate  a  header  file  containing
       such defines using the WriteCompilerDetectionHeader module.  The module
       contains the write_compiler_detection_header function which accepts pa-
       rameters to control the content of the generated header file:

          write_compiler_detection_header(
            FILE "${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/foo_compiler_detection.h"
            PREFIX Foo
            COMPILERS GNU
            FEATURES
              cxx_variadic_templates
          )

       Such  a  header  file  may  be  used internally in the source code of a
       project, and it may be installed and used in the interface  of  library
       code.

       For  each feature listed in FEATURES, a preprocessor definition is cre-
       ated in the header file, and defined to either 1 or 0.

       Additionally, some features call for additional defines,  such  as  the
       cxx_final  and  cxx_override features. Rather than being used in #ifdef
       code, the final keyword is abstracted by a symbol which is  defined  to
       either  final,  a compiler-specific equivalent, or to empty.  That way,
       C++ code can be written to unconditionally use the symbol, and compiler
       support determines what it is expanded to:

          struct Interface {
            virtual void Execute() = 0;
          };

          struct Concrete Foo_FINAL {
            void Execute() Foo_OVERRIDE;
          };

       In  this  case, Foo_FINAL will expand to final if the compiler supports
       the keyword, or to empty otherwise.

       In this use-case, the project code may wish to enable a particular lan-
       guage  standard if available from the compiler. The CXX_STANDARD target
       property may be set to the desired language standard for  a  particular
       target, and the CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD variable may be set to influence all
       following targets:

          write_compiler_detection_header(
            FILE "${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/foo_compiler_detection.h"
            PREFIX Foo
            COMPILERS GNU
            FEATURES
              cxx_final cxx_override
          )

          # Includes foo_compiler_detection.h and uses the Foo_FINAL symbol
          # which will expand to 'final' if the compiler supports the requested
          # CXX_STANDARD.
          add_library(foo foo.cpp)
          set_property(TARGET foo PROPERTY CXX_STANDARD 11)

          # Includes foo_compiler_detection.h and uses the Foo_FINAL symbol
          # which will expand to 'final' if the compiler supports the feature,
          # even though CXX_STANDARD is not set explicitly.  The requirement of
          # cxx_constexpr causes CMake to set CXX_STANDARD internally, which
          # affects the compile flags.
          add_library(foo_impl foo_impl.cpp)
          target_compile_features(foo_impl PRIVATE cxx_constexpr)

       The write_compiler_detection_header function also creates compatibility
       code  for other features which have standard equivalents.  For example,
       the cxx_static_assert feature is  emulated  with  a  template  and  ab-
       stracted  via the <PREFIX>_STATIC_ASSERT and <PREFIX>_STATIC_ASSERT_MSG
       function-macros.

   Deprecated Find Modules
   FindCUDA
       WARNING:
          Deprecated since version 3.10.

       It is no longer necessary to use this module or call find_package(CUDA)
       for  compiling  CUDA code. Instead, list CUDA among the languages named
       in  the  top-level  call  to  the  project()  command,  or   call   the
       enable_language()  command  with  CUDA.   Then  one  can add CUDA (.cu)
       sources directly to targets similar to other languages.

       New in version 3.17: To find and use the CUDA toolkit  libraries  manu-
       ally,  use  the FindCUDAToolkit module instead.  It works regardless of
       the CUDA language being enabled.

   Documentation of Deprecated Usage
       Tools for building CUDA C files: libraries and build dependencies.

       This script locates the NVIDIA CUDA C tools.  It should work on  Linux,
       Windows,  and macOS and should be reasonably up to date with CUDA C re-
       leases.

       New in version 3.19: QNX support.

       This script makes use of the standard find_package() arguments of <VER-
       SION>,  REQUIRED  and  QUIET.   CUDA_FOUND will report if an acceptable
       version of CUDA was found.

       The script will prompt the user to specify CUDA_TOOLKIT_ROOT_DIR if the
       prefix  cannot be determined by the location of nvcc in the system path
       and REQUIRED is specified to find_package().  To use  a  different  in-
       stalled   version   of   the   toolkit  set  the  environment  variable
       CUDA_BIN_PATH  before  running  cmake   (e.g.    CUDA_BIN_PATH=/usr/lo-
       cal/cuda1.0  instead  of the default /usr/local/cuda) or set CUDA_TOOL-
       KIT_ROOT_DIR after configuring.  If you change the value of  CUDA_TOOL-
       KIT_ROOT_DIR,  various components that depend on the path will be relo-
       cated.

       It might be necessary to set CUDA_TOOLKIT_ROOT_DIR manually on  certain
       platforms,  or to use a CUDA runtime not installed in the default loca-
       tion.  In newer versions of the toolkit the CUDA  library  is  included
       with  the  graphics  driver  -- be sure that the driver version matches
       what is needed by the CUDA runtime version.

   Input Variables
       The following variables affect the behavior of the macros in the script
       (in  alphabetical  order).  Note that any of these flags can be changed
       multiple times in  the  same  directory  before  calling  cuda_add_exe-
       cutable(),   cuda_add_library(),   cuda_compile(),  cuda_compile_ptx(),
       cuda_compile_fatbin(), cuda_compile_cubin() or cuda_wrap_srcs():

       CUDA_64_BIT_DEVICE_CODE (Default: host bit size)
              Set to ON to compile for 64 bit device code, OFF for 32 bit  de-
              vice  code.   Note that making this different from the host code
              when generating object or C files  from  CUDA  code  just  won't
              work,  because  size_t  gets  defined  by  nvcc in the generated
              source.  If you compile to PTX and then load the file  yourself,
              you can mix bit sizes between device and host.

       CUDA_ATTACH_VS_BUILD_RULE_TO_CUDA_FILE (Default: ON)
              Set  to  ON  if you want the custom build rule to be attached to
              the source file in Visual Studio.  Turn OFF if you add the  same
              cuda file to multiple targets.

              This  allows  the  user  to build the target from the CUDA file;
              however, bad things can happen if the CUDA source file is  added
              to multiple targets.  When performing parallel builds it is pos-
              sible for the custom build command to be run more than once  and
              in parallel causing cryptic build errors.  VS runs the rules for
              every source file in the target, and a source can have only  one
              rule  no matter how many projects it is added to.  When the rule
              is run from multiple targets race conditions can  occur  on  the
              generated  file.   Eventually  everything will get built, but if
              the user is unaware of this behavior, there  may  be  confusion.
              It would be nice if this script could detect the reuse of source
              files across multiple targets and turn the option  off  for  the
              user, but no good solution could be found.

       CUDA_BUILD_CUBIN (Default: OFF)
              Set  to  ON to enable and extra compilation pass with the -cubin
              option in Device mode. The output is parsed and register, shared
              memory usage is printed during build.

       CUDA_BUILD_EMULATION (Default: OFF for device mode)
              Set to ON for Emulation mode. -D_DEVICEEMU is defined for CUDA C
              files when CUDA_BUILD_EMULATION is TRUE.

       CUDA_LINK_LIBRARIES_KEYWORD (Default: "")
              New in version 3.9.

              The  <PRIVATE|PUBLIC|INTERFACE>  keyword  to  use  for  internal
              target_link_libraries()  calls. The default is to use no keyword
              which uses the old "plain" form of target_link_libraries(). Note
              that  is  matters  because  whatever is used inside the FindCUDA
              module  must  also  be  used  outside  -  the   two   forms   of
              target_link_libraries() cannot be mixed.

       CUDA_GENERATED_OUTPUT_DIR (Default: CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR)
              Set to the path you wish to have the generated files placed.  If
              it   is   blank    output    files    will    be    placed    in
              CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR.   Intermediate  files  will  always be
              placed in CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR/CMakeFiles.

       CUDA_HOST_COMPILATION_CPP (Default: ON)
              Set to OFF for C compilation of host code.

       CUDA_HOST_COMPILER (Default: CMAKE_C_COMPILER)
              Set the host compiler to be used by nvcc.  Ignored if -ccbin  or
              --compiler-bindir  is  already present in the CUDA_NVCC_FLAGS or
              CUDA_NVCC_FLAGS_<CONFIG> variables.  For Visual Studio  targets,
              the  host compiler is constructed with one or more visual studio
              macros such as $(VCInstallDir), that expands  out  to  the  path
              when the command is run from within VS.

              New  in version 3.13: If the CUDAHOSTCXX environment variable is
              set it will be used as the default.

       CUDA_NVCC_FLAGS, CUDA_NVCC_FLAGS_<CONFIG>
              Additional NVCC command line arguments.   NOTE:  multiple  argu-
              ments   must   be   semi-colon  delimited  (e.g.  --compiler-op-
              tions;-Wall)

              New  in  version  3.6:  Contents  of  these  variables  may  use
              generator expressions.

       CUDA_PROPAGATE_HOST_FLAGS (Default: ON)
              Set  to ON to propagate CMAKE_{C,CXX}_FLAGS and their configura-
              tion dependent counterparts (e.g. CMAKE_C_FLAGS_DEBUG) automati-
              cally to the host compiler through nvcc's -Xcompiler flag.  This
              helps make the generated host code match the rest of the  system
              better.   Sometimes  certain  flags give nvcc problems, and this
              will help you turn the flag propagation off.  This does not  af-
              fect  the flags supplied directly to nvcc via CUDA_NVCC_FLAGS or
              through the OPTION flags specified  through  cuda_add_library(),
              cuda_add_executable(),  or  cuda_wrap_srcs().   Flags  used  for
              shared library compilation are not affected by this flag.

       CUDA_SEPARABLE_COMPILATION (Default: OFF)
              If set this will enable separable compilation for all CUDA  run-
              time object files.  If used outside of cuda_add_executable() and
              cuda_add_library()  (e.g.  calling  cuda_wrap_srcs()  directly),
              cuda_compute_separable_compilation_object_file_name()        and
              cuda_link_separable_compilation_objects() should be called.

       CUDA_SOURCE_PROPERTY_FORMAT
              New in version 3.3.

              If this source file property is set, it can override the  format
              specified  to cuda_wrap_srcs() (OBJ, PTX, CUBIN, or FATBIN).  If
              an input source file is not a .cu file, setting this  file  will
              cause  it  to  be  treated  as a .cu file. See documentation for
              set_source_files_properties on how to set this property.

       CUDA_USE_STATIC_CUDA_RUNTIME (Default: ON)
              New in version 3.3.

              When enabled the static version of the CUDA runtime library will
              be  used  in  CUDA_LIBRARIES.  If the version of CUDA configured
              doesn't support this option, then it will be silently disabled.

       CUDA_VERBOSE_BUILD (Default: OFF)
              Set to ON to see all the commands used when  building  the  CUDA
              file.   When  using  a  Makefile generator the value defaults to
              VERBOSE (run make VERBOSE=1 to  see  output),  although  setting
              CUDA_VERBOSE_BUILD to ON will always print the output.

   Commands
       The  script creates the following functions and macros (in alphabetical
       order):

          cuda_add_cufft_to_target(<cuda_target>)

       Adds the cufft library to the target  (can  be  any  target).   Handles
       whether you are in emulation mode or not.

          cuda_add_cublas_to_target(<cuda_target>)

       Adds  the  cublas  library  to the target (can be any target).  Handles
       whether you are in emulation mode or not.

          cuda_add_executable(<cuda_target> <file>...
                              [WIN32] [MACOSX_BUNDLE] [EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL] [OPTIONS ...])

       Creates an executable <cuda_target> which is made up of the files spec-
       ified.   All  of  the  non CUDA C files are compiled using the standard
       build rules specified by CMake and the CUDA files are compiled  to  ob-
       ject  files  using  nvcc  and  the host compiler.  In addition CUDA_IN-
       CLUDE_DIRS is added automatically to include_directories().  Some stan-
       dard  CMake  target  calls can be used on the target after calling this
       macro (e.g. set_target_properties() and  target_link_libraries()),  but
       setting  properties  that adjust compilation flags will not affect code
       compiled by  nvcc.   Such  flags  should  be  modified  before  calling
       cuda_add_executable(), cuda_add_library() or cuda_wrap_srcs().

          cuda_add_library(<cuda_target> <file>...
                           [STATIC | SHARED | MODULE] [EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL] [OPTIONS ...])

       Same as cuda_add_executable() except that a library is created.

          cuda_build_clean_target()

       Creates a convenience target that deletes all the dependency files gen-
       erated.  You should make clean after running this target to ensure  the
       dependency files get regenerated.

          cuda_compile(<generated_files> <file>... [STATIC | SHARED | MODULE]
                       [OPTIONS ...])

       Returns  a  list  of  generated files from the input source files to be
       used with add_library() or add_executable().

          cuda_compile_ptx(<generated_files> <file>... [OPTIONS ...])

       Returns a list of PTX files generated from the input source files.

          cuda_compile_fatbin(<generated_files> <file>... [OPTIONS ...])

       New in version 3.1.

       Returns a list of FATBIN files generated from the input source files.

          cuda_compile_cubin(<generated_files> <file>... [OPTIONS ...])

       New in version 3.1.

       Returns a list of CUBIN files generated from the input source files.

          cuda_compute_separable_compilation_object_file_name(<output_file_var>
                                                              <cuda_target>
                                                              <object_files>)

       Compute the name of the intermediate link file used for separable  com-
       pilation.   This  file  name is typically passed into CUDA_LINK_SEPARA-
       BLE_COMPILATION_OBJECTS.   output_file_var   is   produced   based   on
       cuda_target  the  list of objects files that need separable compilation
       as specified by <object_files>.  If the <object_files> list  is  empty,
       then <output_file_var> will be empty.  This function is called automat-
       ically for cuda_add_library()  and  cuda_add_executable().   Note  that
       this is a function and not a macro.

          cuda_include_directories(path0 path1 ...)

       Sets  the  directories that should be passed to nvcc (e.g. nvcc -Ipath0
       -Ipath1 ...). These paths usually contain other .cu files.

          cuda_link_separable_compilation_objects(<output_file_var> <cuda_target>
                                                  <nvcc_flags> <object_files>)

       Generates the link object required by separable  compilation  from  the
       given  object  files.   This  is called automatically for cuda_add_exe-
       cutable() and cuda_add_library(), but can be called manually when using
       cuda_wrap_srcs()  directly.   When  called  from  cuda_add_library() or
       cuda_add_executable() the <nvcc_flags> passed in are the  same  as  the
       flags passed in via the OPTIONS argument.  The only nvcc flag added au-
       tomatically  is  the  bitness  flag  as  specified  by  CUDA_64_BIT_DE-
       VICE_CODE.  Note that this is a function instead of a macro.

          cuda_select_nvcc_arch_flags(<out_variable> [<target_CUDA_architecture> ...])

       Selects GPU arch flags for nvcc based on target_CUDA_architecture.

       Values for target_CUDA_architecture:

       • Auto: detects local machine GPU compute arch at runtime.

       • Common and All: cover common and entire subsets of architectures.

       • <name>:  one  of  Fermi, Kepler, Maxwell, Kepler+Tegra, Kepler+Tesla,
         Maxwell+Tegra, Pascal.

       • <ver>, <ver>(<ver>), <ver>+PTX, where <ver> is one of 2.0, 2.1,  3.0,
         3.2, 3.5, 3.7, 5.0, 5.2, 5.3, 6.0, 6.2.

       Returns list of flags to be added to CUDA_NVCC_FLAGS in <out_variable>.
       Additionally, sets <out_variable>_readable  to  the  resulting  numeric
       list.

       Example:

          cuda_select_nvcc_arch_flags(ARCH_FLAGS 3.0 3.5+PTX 5.2(5.0) Maxwell)
          list(APPEND CUDA_NVCC_FLAGS ${ARCH_FLAGS})

       More  info  on  CUDA architectures: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CUDA.
       Note that this is a function instead of a macro.

          cuda_wrap_srcs(<cuda_target> <format> <generated_files> <file>...
                         [STATIC | SHARED | MODULE] [OPTIONS ...])

       This  is  where  all   the   magic   happens.    cuda_add_executable(),
       cuda_add_library(),  cuda_compile(),  and  cuda_compile_ptx()  all call
       this function under the hood.

       Given the list of files <file>... this macro generates custom  commands
       that  generate  either  PTX or linkable objects (use PTX or OBJ for the
       <format> argument to switch).  Files that don't end with  .cu  or  have
       the HEADER_FILE_ONLY property are ignored.

       The arguments passed in after OPTIONS are extra command line options to
       give to nvcc.  You can also specify per configuration options by speci-
       fying  the  name of the configuration followed by the options.  General
       options must precede configuration specific options.  Not all  configu-
       rations need to be specified, only the ones provided will be used.  For
       example:

          cuda_add_executable(...
            OPTIONS -DFLAG=2 "-DFLAG_OTHER=space in flag"
            DEBUG -g
            RELEASE --use_fast_math
            RELWITHDEBINFO --use_fast_math;-g
            MINSIZEREL --use_fast_math)

       For certain configurations (namely  VS  generating  object  files  with
       CUDA_ATTACH_VS_BUILD_RULE_TO_CUDA_FILE  set  to  ON), no generated file
       will be produced for the given cuda file.  This is because when you add
       the  cuda file to Visual Studio it knows that this file produces an ob-
       ject file and will link in the resulting object file automatically.

       This script will also generate a separate cmake script that is used  at
       build time to invoke nvcc.  This is for several reasons:

       • nvcc can return negative numbers as return values which confuses Vis-
         ual Studio into thinking that the command succeeded.  The script  now
         checks the error codes and produces errors when there was a problem.

       • nvcc  has been known to not delete incomplete results when it encoun-
         ters problems.  This confuses build systems into thinking the  target
         was  generated  when in fact an unusable file exists.  The script now
         deletes the output files if there was an error.

       • By putting all the options that affect the build into a file and then
         make  the  build rule dependent on the file, the output files will be
         regenerated when the options change.

       This script also looks at optional arguments STATIC, SHARED, or  MODULE
       to  determine  when  to  target the object compilation for a shared li-
       brary.  BUILD_SHARED_LIBS is ignored in cuda_wrap_srcs(), but it is re-
       spected in cuda_add_library().  On some systems special flags are added
       for building objects intended for  shared  libraries.   A  preprocessor
       macro,  <target_name>_EXPORTS is defined when a shared library compila-
       tion is detected.

       Flags passed into add_definitions with -D or /D  are  passed  along  to
       nvcc.

   Result Variables
       The script defines the following variables:

       CUDA_VERSION_MAJOR
              The major version of cuda as reported by nvcc.

       CUDA_VERSION_MINOR
              The minor version.

       CUDA_VERSION, CUDA_VERSION_STRING
              Full version in the X.Y format.

       CUDA_HAS_FP16
              New  in  version  3.6:  Whether a short float (float16, fp16) is
              supported.

       CUDA_TOOLKIT_ROOT_DIR
              Path to the CUDA Toolkit (defined if not set).

       CUDA_SDK_ROOT_DIR
              Path to the CUDA SDK.  Use this to find files in the SDK.   This
              script  will  not directly support finding specific libraries or
              headers, as that isn't supported by  NVIDIA.   If  you  want  to
              change  libraries  when  the path changes see the FindCUDA.cmake
              script for an example of how to clear  these  variables.   There
              are  also examples of how to use the CUDA_SDK_ROOT_DIR to locate
              headers or libraries, if you so choose (at your own risk).

       CUDA_INCLUDE_DIRS
              Include directory for cuda  headers.   Added  automatically  for
              cuda_add_executable() and cuda_add_library().

       CUDA_LIBRARIES
              Cuda RT library.

       CUDA_CUFFT_LIBRARIES
              Device or emulation library for the Cuda FFT implementation (al-
              ternative to cuda_add_cufft_to_target() macro)

       CUDA_CUBLAS_LIBRARIES
              Device or emulation library for  the  Cuda  BLAS  implementation
              (alternative to cuda_add_cublas_to_target() macro).

       CUDA_cudart_static_LIBRARY
              Statically  linkable  cuda  runtime library.  Only available for
              CUDA version 5.5+.

       CUDA_cudadevrt_LIBRARY
              New in version 3.7: Device runtime library.  Required for  sepa-
              rable compilation.

       CUDA_cupti_LIBRARY
              CUDA Profiling Tools Interface library.  Only available for CUDA
              version 4.0+.

       CUDA_curand_LIBRARY
              CUDA Random Number Generation library.  Only available for  CUDA
              version 3.2+.

       CUDA_cusolver_LIBRARY
              New  in version 3.2: CUDA Direct Solver library.  Only available
              for CUDA version 7.0+.

       CUDA_cusparse_LIBRARY
              CUDA Sparse Matrix library.  Only  available  for  CUDA  version
              3.2+.

       CUDA_npp_LIBRARY
              NVIDIA Performance Primitives lib.  Only available for CUDA ver-
              sion 4.0+.

       CUDA_nppc_LIBRARY
              NVIDIA Performance Primitives lib (core).   Only  available  for
              CUDA version 5.5+.

       CUDA_nppi_LIBRARY
              NVIDIA  Performance  Primitives  lib  (image  processing).  Only
              available for CUDA version 5.5 - 8.0.

       CUDA_nppial_LIBRARY
              NVIDIA Performance  Primitives  lib  (image  processing).   Only
              available for CUDA version 9.0.

       CUDA_nppicc_LIBRARY
              NVIDIA  Performance  Primitives  lib  (image  processing).  Only
              available for CUDA version 9.0.

       CUDA_nppicom_LIBRARY
              NVIDIA Performance  Primitives  lib  (image  processing).   Only
              available for CUDA version 9.0 - 10.2.  Replaced by nvjpeg.

       CUDA_nppidei_LIBRARY
              NVIDIA  Performance  Primitives  lib  (image  processing).  Only
              available for CUDA version 9.0.

       CUDA_nppif_LIBRARY
              NVIDIA Performance  Primitives  lib  (image  processing).   Only
              available for CUDA version 9.0.

       CUDA_nppig_LIBRARY
              NVIDIA  Performance  Primitives  lib  (image  processing).  Only
              available for CUDA version 9.0.

       CUDA_nppim_LIBRARY
              NVIDIA Performance  Primitives  lib  (image  processing).   Only
              available for CUDA version 9.0.

       CUDA_nppist_LIBRARY
              NVIDIA  Performance  Primitives  lib  (image  processing).  Only
              available for CUDA version 9.0.

       CUDA_nppisu_LIBRARY
              NVIDIA Performance  Primitives  lib  (image  processing).   Only
              available for CUDA version 9.0.

       CUDA_nppitc_LIBRARY
              NVIDIA  Performance  Primitives  lib  (image  processing).  Only
              available for CUDA version 9.0.

       CUDA_npps_LIBRARY
              NVIDIA Performance Primitives  lib  (signal  processing).   Only
              available for CUDA version 5.5+.

       CUDA_nvcuvenc_LIBRARY
              CUDA  Video  Encoder  library.   Only available for CUDA version
              3.2+.  Windows only.

       CUDA_nvcuvid_LIBRARY
              CUDA Video Decoder library.  Only  available  for  CUDA  version
              3.2+.  Windows only.

       CUDA_nvToolsExt_LIBRARY
              New in version 3.16: NVIDA CUDA Tools Extension library.  Avail-
              able for CUDA version 5+.

       CUDA_OpenCL_LIBRARY
              New in version 3.16: NVIDA CUDA OpenCL library.   Available  for
              CUDA version 5+.

   FindPythonInterp
       Deprecated   since   version  3.12:  Use  FindPython3,  FindPython2  or
       FindPython instead.

       Find python interpreter

       This module finds if Python interpreter  is  installed  and  determines
       where the executables are.  This code sets the following variables:

          PYTHONINTERP_FOUND         - Was the Python executable found
          PYTHON_EXECUTABLE          - path to the Python interpreter

          PYTHON_VERSION_STRING      - Python version found e.g. 2.5.2
          PYTHON_VERSION_MAJOR       - Python major version found e.g. 2
          PYTHON_VERSION_MINOR       - Python minor version found e.g. 5
          PYTHON_VERSION_PATCH       - Python patch version found e.g. 2

       The  Python_ADDITIONAL_VERSIONS  variable can be used to specify a list
       of version numbers that should be taken into account when searching for
       Python.   You  need  to  set  this  variable  before calling find_pack-
       age(PythonInterp).

       If calling  both  find_package(PythonInterp)  and  find_package(Python-
       Libs),  call  find_package(PythonInterp) first to get the currently ac-
       tive Python version by default with a consistent version of  PYTHON_LI-
       BRARIES.

       NOTE:
          A  call  to find_package(PythonInterp ${V}) for python version V may
          find a python executable with no version suffix.  In  this  case  no
          attempt  is  made  to  avoid python executables from other versions.
          Use FindPython3, FindPython2 or FindPython instead.

   FindPythonLibs
       Deprecated  since  version  3.12:  Use  FindPython3,   FindPython2   or
       FindPython instead.

       Find python libraries

       This  module  finds if Python is installed and determines where the in-
       clude files and libraries are.  It also determines what the name of the
       library is.  This code sets the following variables:

          PYTHONLIBS_FOUND           - have the Python libs been found
          PYTHON_LIBRARIES           - path to the python library
          PYTHON_INCLUDE_PATH        - path to where Python.h is found (deprecated)
          PYTHON_INCLUDE_DIRS        - path to where Python.h is found
          PYTHON_DEBUG_LIBRARIES     - path to the debug library (deprecated)
          PYTHONLIBS_VERSION_STRING  - version of the Python libs found (since CMake 2.8.8)

       The  Python_ADDITIONAL_VERSIONS  variable can be used to specify a list
       of version numbers that should be taken into account when searching for
       Python.   You  need  to  set  this  variable  before calling find_pack-
       age(PythonLibs).

       If you'd like to specify the installation of Python to use, you  should
       modify the following cache variables:

          PYTHON_LIBRARY             - path to the python library
          PYTHON_INCLUDE_DIR         - path to where Python.h is found

       If  calling  both  find_package(PythonInterp)  and find_package(Python-
       Libs), call find_package(PythonInterp) first to get the  currently  ac-
       tive  Python version by default with a consistent version of PYTHON_LI-
       BRARIES.

   FindQt
       Deprecated since version 3.14: This module is available only if  policy
       CMP0084 is not set to NEW.

       Searches for all installed versions of Qt3 or Qt4.

       This  module  cannot  handle Qt5 or any later versions.  For those, see
       cmake-qt(7).

       This module should only be used if your project can work with  multiple
       versions  of  Qt.   If  not,  you  should  just directly use FindQt4 or
       FindQt3.  If multiple versions of Qt are found on the machine, then The
       user must set the option DESIRED_QT_VERSION to the version they want to
       use.  If only one version of qt is found on the machine, then  the  DE-
       SIRED_QT_VERSION  is  set  to  that version and the matching FindQt3 or
       FindQt4 module is included.  Once  the  user  sets  DESIRED_QT_VERSION,
       then the FindQt3 or FindQt4 module is included.

          QT_REQUIRED if this is set to TRUE then if CMake can
                      not find Qt4 or Qt3 an error is raised
                      and a message is sent to the user.

          DESIRED_QT_VERSION OPTION is created
          QT4_INSTALLED is set to TRUE if qt4 is found.
          QT3_INSTALLED is set to TRUE if qt3 is found.

   FindwxWindows
       Deprecated since version 3.0: Replaced by FindwxWidgets.

       Find wxWindows (wxWidgets) installation

       This  module  finds  if wxWindows/wxWidgets is installed and determines
       where the include files and libraries are.  It also determines what the
       name of the library is.  This code sets the following variables:

          WXWINDOWS_FOUND     = system has WxWindows
          WXWINDOWS_LIBRARIES = path to the wxWindows libraries
                                on Unix/Linux with additional
                                linker flags from
                                "wx-config --libs"
          CMAKE_WXWINDOWS_CXX_FLAGS  = Compiler flags for wxWindows,
                                       essentially "`wx-config --cxxflags`"
                                       on Linux
          WXWINDOWS_INCLUDE_DIR      = where to find "wx/wx.h" and "wx/setup.h"
          WXWINDOWS_LINK_DIRECTORIES = link directories, useful for rpath on
                                        Unix
          WXWINDOWS_DEFINITIONS      = extra defines

       OPTIONS If you need OpenGL support please

          set(WXWINDOWS_USE_GL 1)

       in your CMakeLists.txt before you include this file.

          HAVE_ISYSTEM      - true required to replace -I by -isystem on g++

       For  convenience  include  Use_wxWindows.cmake in your project's CMake-
       Lists.txt using include(${CMAKE_CURRENT_LIST_DIR}/Use_wxWindows.cmake).

       USAGE

          set(WXWINDOWS_USE_GL 1)
          find_package(wxWindows)

       NOTES wxWidgets 2.6.x is supported for monolithic builds e.g.  compiled
       in wx/build/msw dir as:

          nmake -f makefile.vc BUILD=debug SHARED=0 USE_OPENGL=1 MONOLITHIC=1

       DEPRECATED

          CMAKE_WX_CAN_COMPILE
          WXWINDOWS_LIBRARY
          CMAKE_WX_CXX_FLAGS
          WXWINDOWS_INCLUDE_PATH

       AUTHOR Jan Woetzel (07/2003-01/2006)

   Legacy CPack Modules
       These  modules used to be mistakenly exposed to the user, and have been
       moved out of user visibility. They are  for  CPack  internal  use,  and
       should never be used directly.

   CPackArchive
       New in version 3.9.

       The documentation for the CPack Archive generator has moved here: CPack
       Archive Generator

   CPackBundle
       The documentation for the CPack Bundle generator has moved here:  CPack
       Bundle Generator

   CPackCygwin
       The  documentation for the CPack Cygwin generator has moved here: CPack
       Cygwin Generator

   CPackDeb
       The documentation for the CPack DEB generator has moved here: CPack DEB
       Generator

   CPackDMG
       The  documentation  for  the  CPack DragNDrop generator has moved here:
       CPack DragNDrop Generator

   CPackFreeBSD
       New in version 3.10.

       The documentation for the CPack FreeBSD generator has moved here: CPack
       FreeBSD Generator

   CPackNSIS
       The  documentation  for  the CPack NSIS generator has moved here: CPack
       NSIS Generator

   CPackNuGet
       New in version 3.12.

       The documentation for the CPack NuGet generator has moved  here:  CPack
       NuGet Generator

   CPackProductBuild
       New in version 3.7.

       The  documentation for the CPack productbuild generator has moved here:
       CPack productbuild Generator

   CPackRPM
       The documentation for the CPack RPM generator has moved here: CPack RPM
       Generator

   CPackWIX
       The documentation for the CPack WIX generator has moved here: CPack WIX
       Generator

COPYRIGHT
       2000-2022 Kitware, Inc. and Contributors

3.25.1                         November 30, 2022              CMAKE-MODULES(7)

Generated by dwww version 1.15 on Tue Jun 25 20:38:28 CEST 2024.