This repository contains a collection of CMake scripts to help you embed Google's native WebRTC implementation inside your project as simple as this:
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.3)
project(sample)
find_package(LibWebRTC REQUIRED)
include(${LIBWEBRTC_USE_FILE})
set(SOURCE_FILES main.cpp)
add_executable(sample ${SOURCE_FILES})
target_link_libraries(sample ${LIBWEBRTC_LIBRARIES})
It also produces a pkg-config
file if you prefer the classic way:
$ g++ `pkg-config --cflags LibWebRTC` main.cpp -o main `pkg-config --libs LibWebRTC`
The following table displays the current state of this project, including supported platforms and architectures.
x86 | x64 | arm | arm64 | |
Linux | ✔ | ✔ | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
macOS | - | ✔ | - | - |
Windows | ✔ | ✔ |
- CMake 3.3 or later
- Python 2.7 (optional for Windows since it will use the interpreter located
inside the
depot_tools
installation)
- Required development packages:
# apt-get install build-essential libglib2.0-dev libgtk2.0-dev libxtst-dev \
libxss-dev libpci-dev libdbus-1-dev libgconf2-dev \
libgnome-keyring-dev libnss3-dev libasound2-dev libpulse-dev \
libudev-dev
- GCC & G++ 4.8 or later, for C++11 support
- OS X 10.11 or later
- Xcode 7.3.1 or later
-
Windows 7 x64 or later
-
Visual Studio 2015 with updates - Download the Installer
Make sure that you install the following components:
- Visual C++, which will select three sub-categories including MFC
- Universal Windows Apps Development Tools
- Tools (1.4.1) and Windows 10 SDK (10.0.14393)
-
Windows 10 SDK with Debugging Tools for Windows or Windows Driver Kit 10 installed in the same Windows 10 SDK installation directory.
Clone the repository, create an output directory, browse inside it, then run CMake.
$ git clone https://github.com/aisouard/libwebrtc.git
$ cd libwebrtc
$ mkdir out
$ cd out
$ cmake ..
Windows users must add the Win64 suffix to their Visual Studio generator
name if they want to build the library for 64-bit platforms, they'll omit it for
32-bit builds and define the TARGET_CPU
variable accordingly.
> cmake -G "Visual Studio 14 2015" -DTARGET_CPU=x86
> cmake -G "Visual Studio 14 2015 Win64"
Then they'll have to open the libwebrtc.sln
located inside the current output
directory and build the ALL_BUILD
project.
Unix users will just have to run the following make
commands.
$ make
# make install
The library will be located inside the lib
folder of the current output
directory. The include
folder will contain the header files. CMake scripts
will be placed inside the lib/cmake/LibWebRTC
directory.
If you are using XCode or Visual Studio, you can simply switch between the Debug and Release configuration from your IDE. The debugging flags will be appended to the generator's parameters.
Otherwise, you must define the CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE
variable to Debug
.
$ cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug ..
At the time of writing this README file, there's no proper way to detect any
installation of the WebRTC library and header files. In the meantime, this CMake
script generates and declares a LibWebRTC
package that will be very easy to
use for your projects.
All you have to do is include the package, then embed the "use file" that will automatically find the required libraries, define the proper compiling flags and include directories.
find_package(LibWebRTC REQUIRED)
include(${LIBWEBRTC_USE_FILE})
target_link_libraries(my-app ${LIBWEBRTC_LIBRARIES})
A pkg-config file is also provided, you can obtain the required compiler and
linker flags by specifying LibWebRTC
as the package name.
$ pkg-config --cflags --libs LibWebRTC
The latest working release will be fetched by default, unless you decide to retrieve a specific commit by setting it's hash into the WEBRTC_REVISION CMake variable, or another branch head ref into the WEBRTC_BRANCH_HEAD variable.
$ cmake -DWEBRTC_REVISION=be22d51 ..
$ cmake -DWEBRTC_BRANCH_HEAD=refs/branch-heads/57 ..
If both variables are set, it will focus on fetching the commit defined inside WEBRTC_REVISION.
CMake will retrieve the latest revision of the depot_tools
repository. It will
get the WebRTC repository's commit date, then check-out depot_tools
to the
commit having the closest date to WebRTC's, in order to ensure a high
compatibility with gclient
and other tools.
It is possible to prevent this behavior by specifying the location to your own
depot_tools
repository by defining the DEPOT_TOOLS_PATH variable.
$ cmake -DDEPOT_TOOLS_PATH=/opt/depot_tools ..
The library will be compiled and usable on the same host's platform and architecture. Here are some CMake flags which could be useful if you need to perform cross-compiling.
-
BUILD_DEB_PACKAGE
Generate Debian package, defaults to OFF, available under Linux only.
-
BUILD_RPM_PACKAGE
Generate Red Hat package, defaults to OFF, available under Linux only.
-
BUILD_TESTS
Build WebRTC unit tests and mocked classes such as
FakeAudioCaptureModule
. -
BUILD_SAMPLE
Build an executable located inside the
sample
folder. -
DEPOT_TOOLS_PATH
Set this variable to your own
depot_tools
directory. This will prevent CMake from fetching the one matching with the desired WebRTC revision. -
GN_EXTRA_ARGS
Add extra arguments to the
gn gen --args
parameter. -
NINJA_ARGS
Arguments to pass while executing the
ninja
command. -
TARGET_OS
Target operating system, the value will be used inside the
--target_os
argument of thegn gen
command. The value must be one of the following:android
chromeos
ios
linux
mac
nacl
win
-
TARGET_CPU
Target architecture, the value will be used inside the
--target_cpu
argument of thegn gen
command. The value must be one of the following:x86
x64
arm
arm64
mipsel
-
WEBRTC_BRANCH_HEAD
Set the branch head ref to retrieve, it is set to the latest working one. This variable is ignored if WEBRTC_REVISION is set.
-
WEBRTC_REVISION
Set a specific commit hash to check-out.
Feel free to open an issue if you wish a bug to be fixed, to discuss a new feature or to ask a question. I'm open to pull requests, as long as your modifications are working on the three major OS (Windows, macOS and Linux).
Don't forget to put your name and e-mail address inside the AUTHORS
file!
You can also reach me on Twitter for further discussion.
Many thanks to Dr. Alex Gouaillard for being an excellent mentor for this project.
Everything started from his « Automating libwebrtc build with CMake » blog article, which was a great source of inspiration for me to create the easiest way to link the WebRTC library in any native project.
Apache License 2.0 © Axel Isouard