halide 19.0.0__cp313-cp313-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl
This diff represents the content of publicly available package versions that have been released to one of the supported registries. The information contained in this diff is provided for informational purposes only and reflects changes between package versions as they appear in their respective public registries.
- halide/__init__.py +39 -0
- halide/_generator_helpers.py +835 -0
- halide/bin/adams2019_retrain_cost_model +0 -0
- halide/bin/adams2019_weightsdir_to_weightsfile +0 -0
- halide/bin/anderson2021_retrain_cost_model +0 -0
- halide/bin/anderson2021_weightsdir_to_weightsfile +0 -0
- halide/bin/featurization_to_sample +0 -0
- halide/bin/gengen +0 -0
- halide/bin/get_host_target +0 -0
- halide/halide_.cpython-313-darwin.so +0 -0
- halide/imageio.py +60 -0
- halide/include/Halide.h +35293 -0
- halide/include/HalideBuffer.h +2618 -0
- halide/include/HalidePyTorchCudaHelpers.h +64 -0
- halide/include/HalidePyTorchHelpers.h +120 -0
- halide/include/HalideRuntime.h +2221 -0
- halide/include/HalideRuntimeCuda.h +89 -0
- halide/include/HalideRuntimeD3D12Compute.h +91 -0
- halide/include/HalideRuntimeHexagonDma.h +104 -0
- halide/include/HalideRuntimeHexagonHost.h +157 -0
- halide/include/HalideRuntimeMetal.h +112 -0
- halide/include/HalideRuntimeOpenCL.h +119 -0
- halide/include/HalideRuntimeQurt.h +32 -0
- halide/include/HalideRuntimeVulkan.h +137 -0
- halide/include/HalideRuntimeWebGPU.h +44 -0
- halide/lib/cmake/Halide/FindHalide_LLVM.cmake +152 -0
- halide/lib/cmake/Halide/FindV8.cmake +33 -0
- halide/lib/cmake/Halide/Halide-shared-deps.cmake +0 -0
- halide/lib/cmake/Halide/Halide-shared-targets-release.cmake +29 -0
- halide/lib/cmake/Halide/Halide-shared-targets.cmake +154 -0
- halide/lib/cmake/Halide/HalideConfig.cmake +162 -0
- halide/lib/cmake/Halide/HalideConfigVersion.cmake +65 -0
- halide/lib/cmake/HalideHelpers/FindHalide_WebGPU.cmake +27 -0
- halide/lib/cmake/HalideHelpers/Halide-Interfaces-release.cmake +116 -0
- halide/lib/cmake/HalideHelpers/Halide-Interfaces.cmake +236 -0
- halide/lib/cmake/HalideHelpers/HalideGeneratorHelpers.cmake +1056 -0
- halide/lib/cmake/HalideHelpers/HalideHelpersConfig.cmake +28 -0
- halide/lib/cmake/HalideHelpers/HalideHelpersConfigVersion.cmake +54 -0
- halide/lib/cmake/HalideHelpers/HalideTargetHelpers.cmake +99 -0
- halide/lib/cmake/HalideHelpers/MutexCopy.ps1 +31 -0
- halide/lib/cmake/HalideHelpers/TargetExportScript.cmake +55 -0
- halide/lib/cmake/Halide_Python/Halide_Python-targets-release.cmake +30 -0
- halide/lib/cmake/Halide_Python/Halide_Python-targets.cmake +125 -0
- halide/lib/cmake/Halide_Python/Halide_PythonConfig.cmake +26 -0
- halide/lib/cmake/Halide_Python/Halide_PythonConfigVersion.cmake +65 -0
- halide/lib/libHalide.dylib +0 -0
- halide/lib/libHalidePyStubs.a +0 -0
- halide/lib/libHalide_GenGen.a +0 -0
- halide/lib/libautoschedule_adams2019.so +0 -0
- halide/lib/libautoschedule_anderson2021.so +0 -0
- halide/lib/libautoschedule_li2018.so +0 -0
- halide/lib/libautoschedule_mullapudi2016.so +0 -0
- halide/share/doc/Halide/LICENSE.txt +233 -0
- halide/share/doc/Halide/README.md +439 -0
- halide/share/doc/Halide/doc/BuildingHalideWithCMake.md +626 -0
- halide/share/doc/Halide/doc/CodeStyleCMake.md +393 -0
- halide/share/doc/Halide/doc/FuzzTesting.md +104 -0
- halide/share/doc/Halide/doc/HalideCMakePackage.md +812 -0
- halide/share/doc/Halide/doc/Hexagon.md +73 -0
- halide/share/doc/Halide/doc/Python.md +844 -0
- halide/share/doc/Halide/doc/RunGen.md +283 -0
- halide/share/doc/Halide/doc/Testing.md +125 -0
- halide/share/doc/Halide/doc/Vulkan.md +287 -0
- halide/share/doc/Halide/doc/WebAssembly.md +228 -0
- halide/share/doc/Halide/doc/WebGPU.md +128 -0
- halide/share/tools/RunGen.h +1470 -0
- halide/share/tools/RunGenMain.cpp +642 -0
- halide/share/tools/adams2019_autotune_loop.sh +227 -0
- halide/share/tools/anderson2021_autotune_loop.sh +591 -0
- halide/share/tools/halide_benchmark.h +240 -0
- halide/share/tools/halide_image.h +31 -0
- halide/share/tools/halide_image_info.h +318 -0
- halide/share/tools/halide_image_io.h +2794 -0
- halide/share/tools/halide_malloc_trace.h +102 -0
- halide/share/tools/halide_thread_pool.h +161 -0
- halide/share/tools/halide_trace_config.h +559 -0
- halide-19.0.0.data/data/share/cmake/Halide/HalideConfig.cmake +6 -0
- halide-19.0.0.data/data/share/cmake/Halide/HalideConfigVersion.cmake +65 -0
- halide-19.0.0.data/data/share/cmake/HalideHelpers/HalideHelpersConfig.cmake +6 -0
- halide-19.0.0.data/data/share/cmake/HalideHelpers/HalideHelpersConfigVersion.cmake +54 -0
- halide-19.0.0.dist-info/METADATA +301 -0
- halide-19.0.0.dist-info/RECORD +84 -0
- halide-19.0.0.dist-info/WHEEL +5 -0
- halide-19.0.0.dist-info/licenses/LICENSE.txt +233 -0
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# Using Halide from your CMake build
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This is a detailed guide to building your own Halide programs with the official
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CMake package. If you need directions for building Halide,
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see [BuildingHalideWithCMake.md]. If you are looking for Halide's CMake coding
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guidelines, see [CodeStyleCMake.md].
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This document assumes some basic familiarity with CMake but tries to be explicit
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in all its examples. To learn more about CMake, consult the
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[documentation][cmake-docs] and engage with the community on
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the [CMake Discourse][cmake-discourse].
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<!-- TOC -->
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* [Using Halide from your CMake build](#using-halide-from-your-cmake-build)
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* [A basic CMake project](#a-basic-cmake-project)
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* [JIT mode](#jit-mode)
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* [AOT mode](#aot-mode)
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* [Autoschedulers](#autoschedulers)
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* [RunGenMain](#rungenmain)
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* [Halide package documentation](#halide-package-documentation)
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* [Components](#components)
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* [Variables](#variables)
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* [Imported targets](#imported-targets)
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* [Functions](#functions)
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* [`add_halide_generator`](#add_halide_generator)
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* [`add_halide_library`](#add_halide_library)
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* [`add_halide_python_extension_library`](#add_halide_python_extension_library)
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* [`add_halide_runtime`](#add_halide_runtime)
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* [Cross compiling](#cross-compiling)
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* [Use `add_halide_generator`](#use-add_halide_generator)
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* [Use a super-build](#use-a-super-build)
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* [Use `ExternalProject` directly](#use-externalproject-directly)
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* [Use an emulator or run on device](#use-an-emulator-or-run-on-device)
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* [Bypass CMake](#bypass-cmake)
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<!-- TOC -->
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# A basic CMake project
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There are two main ways to use Halide in your application: as a **JIT compiler**
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for dynamic pipelines or an **ahead-of-time (AOT) compiler** for static
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pipelines. CMake provides robust support for both use cases.
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No matter how you intend to use Halide, you will need some basic CMake
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boilerplate.
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```cmake
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cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.28)
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project(HalideExample)
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set(CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD 17) # or newer
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set(CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD_REQUIRED YES)
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set(CMAKE_CXX_EXTENSIONS NO)
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find_package(Halide REQUIRED)
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```
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The [`cmake_minimum_required`][cmake_minimum_required] command is required to be
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the first command executed in a CMake program. It disables all the deprecated
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behavior ("policies" in CMake lingo) from earlier versions. The
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[`project`][project] command sets the name of the project (and accepts arguments
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for versioning, language support, etc.) and is required by CMake to be called
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immediately after setting the minimum version.
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The next three variables set the project-wide C++ standard. The first,
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[`CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD`][cmake_cxx_standard], simply sets the standard version.
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Halide requires at least C++17. The second,
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[`CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD_REQUIRED`][cmake_cxx_standard_required], tells CMake to
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fail if the compiler cannot provide the requested standard version. Lastly,
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[`CMAKE_CXX_EXTENSIONS`][cmake_cxx_extensions] tells CMake to disable
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vendor-specific extensions to C++. This is not necessary to simply use Halide,
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but we do not allow such extensions in the Halide repo.
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Finally, we use [`find_package`][find_package] to locate Halide on your system.
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When using the pip package on Linux and macOS, CMake's `find_package`
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command should find Halide as long as you're in the same virtual environment you
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installed it in. On Windows, you will need to add the virtual environment root
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directory to [`CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH`][cmake_prefix_path]:
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```shell
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$ cmake -G Ninja -S . -B build -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=%VIRTUAL_ENV%
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```
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If `find_package` cannot find Halide, set `CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH` to the Halide
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installation directory.
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## JIT mode
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To use Halide in JIT mode (like the [tutorials][halide-tutorials] do, for
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example), you can simply link to `Halide::Halide`.
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```cmake
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# ... same project setup as before ...
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add_executable(my_halide_app main.cpp)
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target_link_libraries(my_halide_app PRIVATE Halide::Halide)
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```
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Then `Halide.h` will be available to your code and everything should just work.
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That's it!
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## AOT mode
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Using Halide in AOT mode is more complicated so we'll walk through it step by
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step. Note that this only applies to Halide generators, so it might be useful to
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re-read the [tutorial on generators][halide-generator-tutorial]. Assume (like in
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the tutorial) that you have a source file named `my_generators.cpp` and that in
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it, you have generator classes `MyFirstGenerator` and `MySecondGenerator` with
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registered names `my_first_generator` and `my_second_generator` respectively.
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Then the first step is to add a **generator executable** to your build:
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```cmake
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# ... same project setup as before ...
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add_halide_generator(my_generators SOURCES my_generators.cpp)
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```
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Using the generator executable, we can add a Halide library corresponding to
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`MyFirstGenerator`.
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```cmake
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# ... continuing from above
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add_halide_library(my_first_generator FROM my_generators)
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```
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This will create a static library target in CMake that corresponds to the output
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of running your generator. The second generator in the file requires generator
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parameters to be passed to it. These are also easy to handle:
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```cmake
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# ... continuing from above
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add_halide_library(my_second_generator FROM my_generators
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PARAMS parallel=false scale=3.0 rotation=ccw output.type=uint16)
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```
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Adding multiple configurations is easy, too:
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```cmake
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# ... continuing from above
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add_halide_library(my_second_generator_2 FROM my_generators
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GENERATOR my_second_generator
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PARAMS scale=9.0 rotation=ccw output.type=float32)
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add_halide_library(my_second_generator_3 FROM my_generators
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GENERATOR my_second_generator
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PARAMS parallel=false output.type=float64)
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```
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Here, we had to specify which generator to use (`my_second_generator`) since it
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uses the target name by default. The functions in these libraries will be named
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after the target names, `my_second_generator_2` and `my_second_generator_3`, by
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default, but it is possible to control this via the `FUNCTION_NAME` parameter.
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Each one of these targets, `<GEN>`, carries an associated `<GEN>.runtime`
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target, which is also a static library containing the Halide runtime. It is
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transitively linked through `<GEN>` to targets that link to `<GEN>`. On an
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operating system like Linux, where weak linking is available, this is not an
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issue. However, on Windows, this can fail due to symbol redefinitions. In these
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cases, you must declare that two Halide libraries share a runtime, like so:
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```cmake
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# ... updating above
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add_halide_library(my_second_generator_2 FROM my_generators
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GENERATOR my_second_generator
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USE_RUNTIME my_first_generator.runtime
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PARAMS scale=9.0 rotation=ccw output.type=float32)
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add_halide_library(my_second_generator_3 FROM my_generators
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GENERATOR my_second_generator
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USE_RUNTIME my_first_generator.runtime
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PARAMS parallel=false output.type=float64)
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```
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This will even work correctly when different combinations of targets are
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specified for each halide library. A "greatest common denominator" target will
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be chosen that is compatible with all of them (or the build will fail).
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### Autoschedulers
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When the autoschedulers are included in the release package, they are very
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simple to apply to your own generators. For example, we could update the
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definition of the `my_first_generator` library above to use the `Adams2019`
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autoscheduler:
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```cmake
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add_halide_library(my_second_generator FROM my_generators
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AUTOSCHEDULER Halide::Adams2019)
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```
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### RunGenMain
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Halide provides a generic driver for generators to be used during development
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for benchmarking and debugging. Suppose you have a generator executable called
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`my_gen` and a generator within called `my_filter`. Then you can pass a variable
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name to the `REGISTRATION` parameter of `add_halide_library` which will contain
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the name of a generated C++ source that should be linked to `Halide::RunGenMain`
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and `my_filter`.
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For example:
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```cmake
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add_halide_library(my_filter FROM my_gen
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REGISTRATION filter_reg_cpp)
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add_executable(runner ${filter_reg_cpp})
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target_link_libraries(runner PRIVATE my_filter Halide::RunGenMain)
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```
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Then you can run, debug, and benchmark your generator through the `runner`
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executable. Learn how to interact with these executables
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in [RunGen.md](./RunGen.md).
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# Halide package documentation
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Halide provides a CMake _package configuration_ module. The intended way to use
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the CMake build is to run `find_package(Halide ...)` in your `CMakeLists.txt`
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file. Closely read the [`find_package` documentation][find_package] before
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proceeding.
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## Components
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The Halide package script understands a handful of optional components when
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loading the package.
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First, if you plan to use the Halide Image IO library, you will want to include
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the `png` and `jpeg` components when loading Halide.
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Second, Halide releases can contain a variety of configurations: static, shared,
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debug, release, etc. CMake handles Debug/Release configurations automatically,
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but generally only allows one type of library to be loaded.
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The package understands two components, `static` and `shared`, that specify
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which type of library you would like to load. For example, if you want to make
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sure that you link against shared Halide, you can write:
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```cmake
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find_package(Halide REQUIRED COMPONENTS shared)
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```
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If the shared libraries are not available, this will result in a failure.
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If no component is specified, then the `Halide_SHARED_LIBS` variable is checked.
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If it is defined and set to true, then the shared libraries will be loaded or
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the package loading will fail. Similarly, if it is defined and set to false, the
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static libraries will be loaded.
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If no component is specified and `Halide_SHARED_LIBS` is _not_ defined, then the
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[`BUILD_SHARED_LIBS`][build_shared_libs] variable will be inspected. If it is
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**not defined** or **defined and set to true**, then it will attempt to load the
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shared libs and fall back to the static libs if they are not available.
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Similarly, if `BUILD_SHARED_LIBS` is **defined and set to false**, then it will
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try the static libs first then fall back to the shared libs.
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To ensure that the Python bindings are available, include the `Python`
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component.
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## Variables
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Variables that control package loading:
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| Variable | Description |
|
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|
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|-----------------------------|-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
|
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|
+
| `Halide_SHARED_LIBS` | override `BUILD_SHARED_LIBS` when loading the Halide package via `find_package`. Has no effect when using Halide via `add_subdirectory` as a Git or `FetchContent` submodule. |
|
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|
+
| `Halide_RUNTIME_NO_THREADS` | skip linking of Threads library to runtime. Should be set if your toolchain does not support it (e.g. baremetal). |
|
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+
| `Halide_RUNTIME_NO_DL_LIBS` | skip linking of DL library to runtime. Should be set if your toolchain does not support it (e.g. baremetal). |
|
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+
|
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+
Variables set by the package:
|
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+
|
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+
| Variable | Description |
|
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+
|----------------------------|--------------------------------------------------------------------|
|
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|
+
| `Halide_VERSION` | The full version string of the loaded Halide package |
|
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+
| `Halide_VERSION_MAJOR` | The major version of the loaded Halide package |
|
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|
+
| `Halide_VERSION_MINOR` | The minor version of the loaded Halide package |
|
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|
+
| `Halide_VERSION_PATCH` | The patch version of the loaded Halide package |
|
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|
+
| `Halide_VERSION_TWEAK` | The tweak version of the loaded Halide package |
|
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|
+
| `Halide_HOST_TARGET` | The Halide target triple corresponding to "host" for this build. |
|
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|
+
| `Halide_CMAKE_TARGET` | The Halide target triple corresponding to the active CMake target. |
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+
| `Halide_ENABLE_EXCEPTIONS` | Whether Halide was compiled with exception support |
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|
+
| `Halide_ENABLE_RTTI` | Whether Halide was compiled with RTTI |
|
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|
+
| `WITH_AUTOSCHEDULERS` | Whether the autoschedulers are available |
|
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|
+
|
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+
Variables that control package behavior:
|
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+
|
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+
| Variable | Description |
|
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|
+
|---------------------------|-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
|
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|
+
| `Halide_PYTHON_LAUNCHER` | Semicolon separated list containing a command to launch the Python interpreter. Can be used to set environment variables for Python generators. |
|
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| `Halide_NO_DEFAULT_FLAGS` | Off by default. When enabled, suppresses recommended compiler flags that would be added by `add_halide_generator` |
|
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+
|
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+
## Imported targets
|
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+
|
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|
+
Halide defines the following targets that are available to users:
|
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+
|
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| Imported target | Description |
|
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|
+
|----------------------|------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
|
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|
+
| `Halide::Halide` | this is the JIT-mode library to use when using Halide from C++. |
|
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|
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| `Halide::Generator` | this is the target to use when manually defining a generator executable. It supplies a `main()` function. |
|
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|
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| `Halide::Runtime` | adds include paths to the Halide runtime headers |
|
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|
+
| `Halide::Tools` | adds include paths to the Halide tools, including the benchmarking utility. |
|
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|
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| `Halide::ImageIO` | adds include paths to the Halide image IO utility. Depends on `PNG::PNG` and `JPEG::JPEG` if they exist or were loaded through the corresponding package components. |
|
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|
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| `Halide::ThreadPool` | adds include paths to the Halide _simple_ thread pool utility library. This is not the same as the runtime's thread pool and is intended only for use by tests. Depends on `Threads::Threads`. |
|
298
|
+
| `Halide::RunGenMain` | used with the `REGISTRATION` parameter of `add_halide_library` to create simple runners and benchmarking tools for Halide libraries. |
|
299
|
+
|
300
|
+
The following targets only guaranteed when requesting the `Python` component
|
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|
+
(`Halide_Python_FOUND` will be true):
|
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|
+
|
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|
+
| Imported target | Description |
|
304
|
+
|------------------|-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
|
305
|
+
| `Halide::Python` | this is a Python 3 package that can be referenced as `$<TARGET_FILE_DIR:Halide::Python>/..` when setting up `PYTHONPATH` for Python tests or the like from CMake. |
|
306
|
+
|
307
|
+
The following targets only guaranteed when `WITH_AUTOSCHEDULERS` is true:
|
308
|
+
|
309
|
+
| Imported target | Description |
|
310
|
+
|-------------------------|-----------------------------------------------------------------|
|
311
|
+
| `Halide::Adams2019` | the Adams et.al. 2019 autoscheduler (no GPU support) |
|
312
|
+
| `Halide::Anderson2021` | the Anderson, et.al. 2021 autoscheduler (full GPU support) |
|
313
|
+
| `Halide::Li2018` | the Li et.al. 2018 gradient autoscheduler (limited GPU support) |
|
314
|
+
| `Halide::Mullapudi2016` | the Mullapudi et.al. 2016 autoscheduler (no GPU support) |
|
315
|
+
|
316
|
+
## Functions
|
317
|
+
|
318
|
+
The Halide package provides several useful functions for dealing with AOT
|
319
|
+
compilation steps.
|
320
|
+
|
321
|
+
### `add_halide_generator`
|
322
|
+
|
323
|
+
This function aids in creating cross-compilable builds that use Halide
|
324
|
+
generators.
|
325
|
+
|
326
|
+
```
|
327
|
+
add_halide_generator(
|
328
|
+
target
|
329
|
+
[PACKAGE_NAME package-name]
|
330
|
+
[PACKAGE_NAMESPACE namespace]
|
331
|
+
[EXPORT_FILE export-file]
|
332
|
+
[PYSTUB generator-name]
|
333
|
+
[LINK_LIBRARIES lib1 ...]
|
334
|
+
[[SOURCES] source1 ...]
|
335
|
+
)
|
336
|
+
```
|
337
|
+
|
338
|
+
Every named argument is optional, and the function uses the following default
|
339
|
+
arguments:
|
340
|
+
|
341
|
+
- If `PACKAGE_NAME` is not provided, it defaults to
|
342
|
+
`${PROJECT_NAME}-halide_generators`.
|
343
|
+
- If `PACKAGE_NAMESPACE` is not provided, it defaults to
|
344
|
+
`${PROJECT_NAME}::halide_generators::`.
|
345
|
+
- If `EXPORT_FILE` is not provided, it defaults to
|
346
|
+
`${PROJECT_BINARY_DIR}/cmake/${ARG_PACKAGE_NAME}-config.cmake`
|
347
|
+
|
348
|
+
This function guarantees that a Halide generator target named
|
349
|
+
`<namespace><target>` is available. It will first search for a package named
|
350
|
+
`<package-name>` using `find_package`; if it is found, it is assumed that it
|
351
|
+
provides the target. Otherwise, it will create an executable target named
|
352
|
+
`target` and an `ALIAS` target `<namespace><target>`. This function also creates
|
353
|
+
a custom target named `<package-name>` if it does not exist and
|
354
|
+
`<target>` would exist. In this case, `<package-name>` will depend on
|
355
|
+
`<target>`, this enables easy building of _just_ the Halide generators managed
|
356
|
+
by this function.
|
357
|
+
|
358
|
+
After the call, `<PACKAGE_NAME>_FOUND` will be set to true if the host
|
359
|
+
generators were imported (and hence won't be built). Otherwise, it will be set
|
360
|
+
to false. This variable may be used to conditionally set properties on
|
361
|
+
`<target>`.
|
362
|
+
|
363
|
+
Please
|
364
|
+
see [test/integration/xc](https://github.com/halide/Halide/tree/main/test/integration/xc)
|
365
|
+
for a simple example
|
366
|
+
and [apps/hannk](https://github.com/halide/Halide/tree/main/apps/hannk) for a
|
367
|
+
complete app that uses it extensively.
|
368
|
+
|
369
|
+
The `SOURCES` keyword marks the beginning of sources to be used to build
|
370
|
+
`<target>`, if it is not loaded. All unparsed arguments will be interpreted as
|
371
|
+
sources.
|
372
|
+
|
373
|
+
The `LINK_LIBRARIES` argument lists libraries that should be linked to
|
374
|
+
`<target>` when it is being built in the present build system.
|
375
|
+
|
376
|
+
If `PYSTUB` is specified, then a Python Extension will be built that wraps the
|
377
|
+
Generator with CPython glue to allow use of the Generator Python 3. The result
|
378
|
+
will be a shared library of the form
|
379
|
+
`<target>_pystub.<soabi>.so`, where `<soabi>` describes the specific Python
|
380
|
+
version and platform (e.g., `cpython-310-darwin` for Python 3.10 on macOS). See
|
381
|
+
[Python.md](Python.md) for examples of use.
|
382
|
+
|
383
|
+
### `add_halide_library`
|
384
|
+
|
385
|
+
This is the main function for managing generators in AOT compilation. The full
|
386
|
+
signature follows:
|
387
|
+
|
388
|
+
```
|
389
|
+
add_halide_library(<target> FROM <generator-target>
|
390
|
+
[GENERATOR generator-name]
|
391
|
+
[FUNCTION_NAME function-name]
|
392
|
+
[NAMESPACE cpp-namespace]
|
393
|
+
[USE_RUNTIME hl-target]
|
394
|
+
[PARAMS param1 [param2 ...]]
|
395
|
+
[TARGETS target1 [target2 ...]]
|
396
|
+
[FEATURES feature1 [feature2 ...]]
|
397
|
+
[FEATURES[<triple>] feature1 [feature2 ...]]
|
398
|
+
[PLUGINS plugin1 [plugin2 ...]]
|
399
|
+
[AUTOSCHEDULER scheduler-name]
|
400
|
+
[FUNCTION_INFO_HEADER OUTVAR]
|
401
|
+
[HEADER OUTVAR]
|
402
|
+
[REGISTRATION OUTVAR]
|
403
|
+
[<extra-output> OUTVAR]
|
404
|
+
[GRADIENT_DESCENT]
|
405
|
+
[C_BACKEND]
|
406
|
+
[NO_THREADS]
|
407
|
+
[NO_DL_LIBS])
|
408
|
+
|
409
|
+
triple = <arch>-<bits>-<os>
|
410
|
+
arch = x86 | arm | powerpc | hexagon | wasm | riscv
|
411
|
+
bits = 32 | 64
|
412
|
+
os = linux | windows | osx | android | ios | qurt | noos | fuchsia | wasmrt
|
413
|
+
|
414
|
+
extra-output = ASSEMBLY | BITCODE | COMPILER_LOG | C_SOURCE | FEATURIZATION
|
415
|
+
| HLPIPE | LLVM_ASSEMBLY | PYTHON_EXTENSION | PYTORCH_WRAPPER
|
416
|
+
| SCHEDULE | STMT | STMT_HTML
|
417
|
+
```
|
418
|
+
|
419
|
+
This function creates a called `<target>` corresponding to running the
|
420
|
+
`<generator-target>` (an executable target which links to `Halide::Generator`)
|
421
|
+
one time, using command line arguments derived from the other parameters.
|
422
|
+
|
423
|
+
The arguments `GENERATOR` and `FUNCTION_NAME` default to `<target>`. They
|
424
|
+
correspond to the `-g` and `-f` command line flags, respectively.
|
425
|
+
|
426
|
+
`NAMESPACE` is syntactic sugar to specify the C++ namespace (if any) of the
|
427
|
+
generated function; you can also specify the C++ namespace (if any) directly in
|
428
|
+
the `FUNCTION_NAME` argument, but for repeated declarations or very long
|
429
|
+
namespaces, specifying this separately can provide more readable build files.
|
430
|
+
|
431
|
+
If `USE_RUNTIME` is not specified, this function will create another target
|
432
|
+
called `<target>.runtime` which corresponds to running the generator with `-r`
|
433
|
+
and a compatible list of targets. This runtime target is an `INTERFACE`
|
434
|
+
dependency of `<target>`. If multiple runtime targets need to be linked
|
435
|
+
together, setting `USE_RUNTIME` to another Halide runtime library, `<target2>`
|
436
|
+
will prevent the generation of `<target>.runtime` and instead use
|
437
|
+
`<target2>.runtime`. This argument is most commonly used in conjunction with [
|
438
|
+
`add_halide_runtime`](#add_halide_runtime).
|
439
|
+
|
440
|
+
Parameters can be passed to a generator via the `PARAMS` argument. Parameters
|
441
|
+
should be space-separated. Similarly, `TARGETS` is a space-separated list of
|
442
|
+
targets for which to generate code in a single function. They must all share the
|
443
|
+
same platform/bits/os triple (e.g. `arm-32-linux`). Features that are in common
|
444
|
+
among all targets, including device libraries (like `cuda`) should go in
|
445
|
+
`FEATURES`. If `TARGETS` is not specified, the value of `Halide_TARGET`
|
446
|
+
specified at configure time will be used.
|
447
|
+
|
448
|
+
Every element of `TARGETS` must begin with the same `arch-bits-os` triple. This
|
449
|
+
function understands two _meta-triples_, `host` and `cmake`. The meta-triple
|
450
|
+
`host` is equal to the `arch-bits-os` triple used to compile Halide along with
|
451
|
+
all the supported instruction set extensions. On platforms that support running
|
452
|
+
both 32 and 64-bit programs, this will not necessarily equal the platform the
|
453
|
+
compiler is running on or that CMake is targeting.
|
454
|
+
|
455
|
+
The meta-triple `cmake` is equal to the `arch-bits-os` of the current CMake
|
456
|
+
target. This is useful if you want to make sure you are not unintentionally
|
457
|
+
cross-compiling, which would result in an [`IMPORTED` target][imported-target]
|
458
|
+
being created. When `TARGETS` is empty and the `host` target would not
|
459
|
+
cross-compile, then `host` will be used. Otherwise, `cmake` will be used and an
|
460
|
+
author warning will be issued.
|
461
|
+
|
462
|
+
When `CMAKE_OSX_ARCHITECTURES` is set and the `TARGETS` argument resolves to
|
463
|
+
`cmake`, the generator will be run once for each architecture and the results
|
464
|
+
will be fused together using `lipo`. This behavior extends to runtime targets.
|
465
|
+
|
466
|
+
To use an autoscheduler, set the `AUTOSCHEDULER` argument to a target named like
|
467
|
+
`Namespace::Scheduler`, for example `Halide::Adams2019`. This will set the
|
468
|
+
`autoscheduler` GeneratorParam on the generator command line to `Scheduler`
|
469
|
+
and add the target to the list of plugins. Additional plugins can be loaded by
|
470
|
+
setting the `PLUGINS` argument. If the argument to `AUTOSCHEDULER` does not
|
471
|
+
contain `::` or it does not name a target, it will be passed to the `-s` flag
|
472
|
+
verbatim.
|
473
|
+
|
474
|
+
If `GRADIENT_DESCENT` is set, then the module will be built suitably for
|
475
|
+
gradient descent calculation in TensorFlow or PyTorch. See
|
476
|
+
`Generator::build_gradient_module()` for more documentation. This corresponds to
|
477
|
+
passing `-d 1` at the generator command line.
|
478
|
+
|
479
|
+
If the `C_BACKEND` option is set, this command will invoke the configured C++
|
480
|
+
compiler on a generated source. Note that a `<target>.runtime` target is _not_
|
481
|
+
created in this case, and the `USE_RUNTIME` option is ignored. Other options
|
482
|
+
work as expected.
|
483
|
+
|
484
|
+
If `REGISTRATION` is set, the path (relative to `CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR`)
|
485
|
+
to the generated `.registration.cpp` file will be set in `OUTVAR`. This can be
|
486
|
+
used to generate a runner for a Halide library that is useful for benchmarking
|
487
|
+
and testing, as documented above. This is equivalent to setting
|
488
|
+
`-e registration` at the generator command line.
|
489
|
+
|
490
|
+
If `HEADER` is set, the path (relative to `CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR`) to the
|
491
|
+
generated `.h` header file will be set in `OUTVAR`. This can be used with
|
492
|
+
`install(FILES)` to conveniently deploy the generated header along with your
|
493
|
+
library.
|
494
|
+
|
495
|
+
If `FUNCTION_INFO_HEADER` is set, the path (relative to
|
496
|
+
`CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR`) to the generated `.function_info.h` header file will
|
497
|
+
be set in `OUTVAR`. This produces a file that contains `constexpr`
|
498
|
+
descriptions of information about the generated functions (e.g., argument type
|
499
|
+
and information). It is generated separately from the normal `HEADER`
|
500
|
+
file because `HEADER` is intended to work with basic `extern "C"` linkage, while
|
501
|
+
`FUNCTION_INFO_HEADER` requires C++17 or later to use effectively.
|
502
|
+
(This can be quite useful for advanced usages, such as producing automatic call
|
503
|
+
wrappers, etc.) Examples of usage can be found in the generated file.
|
504
|
+
|
505
|
+
Each of the `extra-output` arguments directly correspond to an extra output (via
|
506
|
+
`-e`) from the generator. The value `OUTVAR` names a variable into which a
|
507
|
+
path (relative to
|
508
|
+
[`CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR`][cmake_current_binary_dir]) to the extra file will
|
509
|
+
be written.
|
510
|
+
|
511
|
+
When `NO_THREADS` is passed, the library targets will not depend on
|
512
|
+
`Threads::Threads`. It is your responsibility to link to an equivalent target.
|
513
|
+
|
514
|
+
When `NO_DL_LIBS` is passed, the library targets will not depend on
|
515
|
+
`${CMAKE_DL_LIBS}`. It is your responsibility to link to an equivalent library.
|
516
|
+
|
517
|
+
### `add_halide_python_extension_library`
|
518
|
+
|
519
|
+
This function wraps the outputs of one or more `add_halide_library` targets with
|
520
|
+
glue code to produce a Python Extension library.
|
521
|
+
|
522
|
+
```
|
523
|
+
add_halide_python_extension_library(
|
524
|
+
target
|
525
|
+
[MODULE_NAME module-name]
|
526
|
+
HALIDE_LIBRARIES library1 ...
|
527
|
+
)
|
528
|
+
```
|
529
|
+
|
530
|
+
`HALIDE_LIBRARIES` is a list of one of more `add_halide_library` targets. Each
|
531
|
+
will be added to the extension as a callable method of the module. Note that
|
532
|
+
every library specified must be built with the `PYTHON_EXTENSION` keyword
|
533
|
+
specified, and all libraries must use the same Halide runtime.
|
534
|
+
|
535
|
+
The result will be a shared library of the form `<target>.<soabi>.so`, where
|
536
|
+
`<soabi>` describes the specific Python version and platform (e.g.,
|
537
|
+
`cpython-310-darwin` for Python 3.10 on macOS.)
|
538
|
+
|
539
|
+
### `add_halide_runtime`
|
540
|
+
|
541
|
+
This function generates a library containing a Halide runtime. Most user code
|
542
|
+
will never need to use this, as `add_halide_library()` will call it for you if
|
543
|
+
necessary. The most common use case is usually in conjunction with
|
544
|
+
`add_halide_python_extension_library()`, as a way to ensure that all the halide
|
545
|
+
libraries share an identical runtime.
|
546
|
+
|
547
|
+
```
|
548
|
+
add_halide_runtime(
|
549
|
+
target
|
550
|
+
[TARGETS target1 [target2 ...]]
|
551
|
+
[NO_THREADS]
|
552
|
+
[NO_DL_LIBS]
|
553
|
+
)
|
554
|
+
```
|
555
|
+
|
556
|
+
The `TARGETS`, `NO_THREADS`, and `NO_DL_LIBS` arguments have identical semantics
|
557
|
+
to the argument of the same name for [
|
558
|
+
`add_halide_library`](#add_halide_library).
|
559
|
+
|
560
|
+
# Cross compiling
|
561
|
+
|
562
|
+
Cross-compiling in CMake can be tricky, since CMake doesn't easily support
|
563
|
+
compiling for both the host platform and the cross platform within the same
|
564
|
+
build. Unfortunately, Halide generator executables are just about always
|
565
|
+
designed to run on the host platform. Each project will be set up differently
|
566
|
+
and have different requirements, but here are some suggestions for effective use
|
567
|
+
of CMake in these scenarios.
|
568
|
+
|
569
|
+
## Use `add_halide_generator`
|
570
|
+
|
571
|
+
If you are writing new programs that use Halide, you might wish to use
|
572
|
+
`add_halide_generator`. When using this helper, you are expected to build your
|
573
|
+
project twice: once for your build host and again for your intended target.
|
574
|
+
|
575
|
+
When building the host build, you can use the `<package-name>` (see the
|
576
|
+
documentation above) target to build _just_ the generators. Then, in the target
|
577
|
+
build, set `<package-name>_ROOT` to the host build directory.
|
578
|
+
|
579
|
+
For example:
|
580
|
+
|
581
|
+
```
|
582
|
+
$ cmake -G Ninja -S . -B build-host -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
|
583
|
+
$ cmake --build build-host --target <package-name>
|
584
|
+
$ cmake -G Ninja -S . -B build-target --toolchain /path/to/target-tc.cmake \
|
585
|
+
-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release \
|
586
|
+
-D<package-name>_ROOT:FILEPATH=$PWD/build-host
|
587
|
+
$ cmake --build build-target
|
588
|
+
```
|
589
|
+
|
590
|
+
## Use a super-build
|
591
|
+
|
592
|
+
A CMake super-build consists of breaking down a project into subprojects that
|
593
|
+
are isolated by [toolchain][cmake-toolchains]. The basic structure is to have an
|
594
|
+
outermost project that only coordinates the sub-builds via the
|
595
|
+
[`ExternalProject`][ExternalProject] module.
|
596
|
+
|
597
|
+
One would then use Halide to build a generator executable in one self-contained
|
598
|
+
project, then export that target to be used in a separate project. The second
|
599
|
+
project would be configured with the target [toolchain][cmake-toolchains] and
|
600
|
+
would call `add_halide_library` with no `TARGETS` option and set `FROM` equal to
|
601
|
+
the name of the imported generator executable. Obviously, this is a significant
|
602
|
+
increase in complexity over a typical CMake project.
|
603
|
+
|
604
|
+
This is very compatible with the `add_halide_generator` strategy above.
|
605
|
+
|
606
|
+
## Use `ExternalProject` directly
|
607
|
+
|
608
|
+
A lighter weight alternative to the above is to use
|
609
|
+
[`ExternalProject`][ExternalProject] directly in your parent build. Configure
|
610
|
+
the parent build with the target [toolchain][cmake-toolchains], and configure
|
611
|
+
the inner project to use the host toolchain. Then, manually create an
|
612
|
+
[`IMPORTED` target][imported-executable] for your generator executable and call
|
613
|
+
`add_halide_library` as described above.
|
614
|
+
|
615
|
+
The main drawback of this approach is that creating accurate `IMPORTED` targets
|
616
|
+
is difficult since predicting the names and locations of your binaries across
|
617
|
+
all possible platform and CMake project generators is difficult. In particular,
|
618
|
+
it is hard to predict executable extensions in cross-OS builds.
|
619
|
+
|
620
|
+
## Use an emulator or run on device
|
621
|
+
|
622
|
+
The [`CMAKE_CROSSCOMPILING_EMULATOR`][cmake_crosscompiling_emulator] variable
|
623
|
+
allows one to specify a command _prefix_ to run a target-system binary on the
|
624
|
+
host machine. One could set this to a custom shell script that uploads the
|
625
|
+
generator executable, runs it on the device and copies back the results.
|
626
|
+
|
627
|
+
Another option is to install `qemu-user-static` to transparently emulate the
|
628
|
+
cross-built generator.
|
629
|
+
|
630
|
+
## Bypass CMake
|
631
|
+
|
632
|
+
The previous two options ensure that the targets generated by
|
633
|
+
`add_halide_library` will be _normal_ static libraries. This approach does not
|
634
|
+
use [`ExternalProject`][ExternalProject], but instead produces `IMPORTED`
|
635
|
+
targets. The main drawback of `IMPORTED` targets is that they are considered
|
636
|
+
second-class in CMake. In particular, they cannot be installed with the typical
|
637
|
+
[`install(TARGETS)` command][install-targets]. Instead, they must be installed
|
638
|
+
using [`install(FILES)`][install-files] and the
|
639
|
+
[`$<TARGET_FILE:tgt>`][target-file] generator expression.
|
640
|
+
|
641
|
+
|
642
|
+
[BuildingHalideWithCMake.md]: ./BuildingHalideWithCMake.md
|
643
|
+
|
644
|
+
[CodeStyleCMake.md]: ./CodeStyleCMake.md
|
645
|
+
|
646
|
+
[ExternalProject]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/module/ExternalProject.html
|
647
|
+
|
648
|
+
[HalideCMakePackage.md]: ./HalideCMakePackage.md
|
649
|
+
|
650
|
+
[add_custom_command]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/command/add_custom_command.html
|
651
|
+
|
652
|
+
[add_library]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/command/add_library.html
|
653
|
+
|
654
|
+
[add_subdirectory]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/command/add_subdirectory.html
|
655
|
+
|
656
|
+
[atlas]: http://math-atlas.sourceforge.net/
|
657
|
+
|
658
|
+
[brew-cmake]: https://formulae.brew.sh/cask/cmake#default
|
659
|
+
|
660
|
+
[build_shared_libs]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/variable/BUILD_SHARED_LIBS.html
|
661
|
+
|
662
|
+
[cmake-apt]: https://apt.kitware.com/
|
663
|
+
|
664
|
+
[cmake-discourse]: https://discourse.cmake.org/
|
665
|
+
|
666
|
+
[cmake-docs]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/
|
667
|
+
|
668
|
+
[cmake-download]: https://cmake.org/download/
|
669
|
+
|
670
|
+
[cmake-from-source]: https://cmake.org/install/
|
671
|
+
|
672
|
+
[cmake-genex]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/manual/cmake-generator-expressions.7.html
|
673
|
+
|
674
|
+
[cmake-install]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/manual/cmake.1.html#install-a-project
|
675
|
+
|
676
|
+
[cmake-propagation]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/manual/cmake-buildsystem.7.html#transitive-usage-requirements
|
677
|
+
|
678
|
+
[cmake-toolchains]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/manual/cmake-toolchains.7.html
|
679
|
+
|
680
|
+
[cmake-user-interaction]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/guide/user-interaction/index.html#setting-build-variables
|
681
|
+
|
682
|
+
[cmake_binary_dir]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/variable/CMAKE_BINARY_DIR.html
|
683
|
+
|
684
|
+
[cmake_build_type]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/variable/CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE.html
|
685
|
+
|
686
|
+
[cmake_crosscompiling]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/variable/CMAKE_CROSSCOMPILING.html
|
687
|
+
|
688
|
+
[cmake_crosscompiling_emulator]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/variable/CMAKE_CROSSCOMPILING_EMULATOR.html
|
689
|
+
|
690
|
+
[cmake_ctest_command]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/variable/CMAKE_CTEST_COMMAND.html
|
691
|
+
|
692
|
+
[cmake_current_binary_dir]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/variable/CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR.html
|
693
|
+
|
694
|
+
[cmake_cxx_extensions]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/variable/CMAKE_CXX_EXTENSIONS.html
|
695
|
+
|
696
|
+
[cmake_cxx_standard]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/variable/CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD.html
|
697
|
+
|
698
|
+
[cmake_cxx_standard_required]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/variable/CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD_REQUIRED.html
|
699
|
+
|
700
|
+
[cmake_foreach]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/command/foreach.html
|
701
|
+
|
702
|
+
[cmake_if]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/command/if.html
|
703
|
+
|
704
|
+
[cmake_lang_compiler_id]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/variable/CMAKE_LANG_COMPILER_ID.html
|
705
|
+
|
706
|
+
[cmake_make_program]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/variable/CMAKE_MAKE_PROGRAM.html
|
707
|
+
|
708
|
+
[cmake_minimum_required]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/command/cmake_minimum_required.html
|
709
|
+
|
710
|
+
[cmake_prefix_path]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/variable/CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH.html
|
711
|
+
|
712
|
+
[cmake_presets]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/manual/cmake-presets.7.html
|
713
|
+
|
714
|
+
[cmake_sizeof_void_p]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/variable/CMAKE_SIZEOF_VOID_P.html
|
715
|
+
|
716
|
+
[cmake_source_dir]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/variable/CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR.html
|
717
|
+
|
718
|
+
[cmake_system_name]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/variable/CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME.html
|
719
|
+
|
720
|
+
[doxygen-download]: https://www.doxygen.nl/download.html
|
721
|
+
|
722
|
+
[doxygen]: https://www.doxygen.nl/index.html
|
723
|
+
|
724
|
+
[eigen]: http://eigen.tuxfamily.org/index.php?title=Main_Page
|
725
|
+
|
726
|
+
[enable_testing]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/command/enable_testing.html
|
727
|
+
|
728
|
+
[fetchcontent]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/module/FetchContent.html
|
729
|
+
|
730
|
+
[find_package]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/command/find_package.html
|
731
|
+
|
732
|
+
[findcuda]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/module/FindCUDA.html
|
733
|
+
|
734
|
+
[findcudatoolkit]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/module/FindCUDAToolkit.html
|
735
|
+
|
736
|
+
[finddoxygen]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/module/FindDoxygen.html
|
737
|
+
|
738
|
+
[findjpeg]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/module/FindJPEG.html
|
739
|
+
|
740
|
+
[findopencl]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/module/FindOpenCL.html
|
741
|
+
|
742
|
+
[findpng]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/module/FindPNG.html
|
743
|
+
|
744
|
+
[findpython3]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/module/FindPython3.html
|
745
|
+
|
746
|
+
[findx11]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/module/FindX11.html
|
747
|
+
|
748
|
+
[halide-generator-tutorial]: https://halide-lang.org/tutorials/tutorial_lesson_15_generators.html
|
749
|
+
|
750
|
+
[halide-tutorials]: https://halide-lang.org/tutorials/tutorial_introduction.html
|
751
|
+
|
752
|
+
[homebrew]: https://brew.sh
|
753
|
+
|
754
|
+
[imported-executable]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/command/add_executable.html#imported-executables
|
755
|
+
|
756
|
+
[imported-target]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/manual/cmake-buildsystem.7.html#imported-targets
|
757
|
+
|
758
|
+
[include]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/command/include.html
|
759
|
+
|
760
|
+
[install-files]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/command/install.html#files
|
761
|
+
|
762
|
+
[install-targets]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/command/install.html#targets
|
763
|
+
|
764
|
+
[libjpeg]: https://www.libjpeg-turbo.org/
|
765
|
+
|
766
|
+
[libpng]: http://www.libpng.org/pub/png/libpng.html
|
767
|
+
|
768
|
+
[lld]: https://lld.llvm.org/
|
769
|
+
|
770
|
+
[msvc-cmd]: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/build/building-on-the-command-line
|
771
|
+
|
772
|
+
[msvc]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/variable/MSVC.html
|
773
|
+
|
774
|
+
[ninja-download]: https://github.com/ninja-build/ninja/releases
|
775
|
+
|
776
|
+
[ninja]: https://ninja-build.org/
|
777
|
+
|
778
|
+
[openblas]: https://www.openblas.net/
|
779
|
+
|
780
|
+
[project-name_binary_dir]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/variable/PROJECT-NAME_BINARY_DIR.html
|
781
|
+
|
782
|
+
[project-name_source_dir]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/variable/PROJECT-NAME_SOURCE_DIR.html
|
783
|
+
|
784
|
+
[project]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/command/project.html
|
785
|
+
|
786
|
+
[project_binary_dir]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/variable/PROJECT_BINARY_DIR.html
|
787
|
+
|
788
|
+
[project_source_dir]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/variable/PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR.html
|
789
|
+
|
790
|
+
[pypi-cmake]: https://pypi.org/project/cmake/
|
791
|
+
|
792
|
+
[python]: https://www.python.org/downloads/
|
793
|
+
|
794
|
+
[target-file]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/manual/cmake-generator-expressions.7.html#target-dependent-queries
|
795
|
+
|
796
|
+
[target_compile_definitions]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/command/target_compile_definitions.html
|
797
|
+
|
798
|
+
[target_compile_options]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/command/target_compile_options.html
|
799
|
+
|
800
|
+
[target_include_directories]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/command/target_include_directories.html
|
801
|
+
|
802
|
+
[target_link_libraries]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/command/target_link_libraries.html
|
803
|
+
|
804
|
+
[target_link_options]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/command/target_link_options.html
|
805
|
+
|
806
|
+
[vcpkg]: https://github.com/Microsoft/vcpkg
|
807
|
+
|
808
|
+
[vcvarsall]: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/build/building-on-the-command-line#vcvarsall-syntax
|
809
|
+
|
810
|
+
[venv]: https://docs.python.org/3/tutorial/venv.html
|
811
|
+
|
812
|
+
[win32]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/variable/WIN32.html
|