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find_file
A short-hand signature is:
find_file (<VAR> name1 [path1 path2 ...])
  The general signature is:
find_file (
          <VAR>
          name | NAMES name1 [name2 ...]
          [HINTS path1 [path2 ... ENV var]]
          [PATHS path1 [path2 ... ENV var]]
          [PATH_SUFFIXES suffix1 [suffix2 ...]]
          [DOC "cache documentation string"]
          [NO_DEFAULT_PATH]
          [NO_CMAKE_ENVIRONMENT_PATH]
          [NO_CMAKE_PATH]
          [NO_SYSTEM_ENVIRONMENT_PATH]
          [NO_CMAKE_SYSTEM_PATH]
          [CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH_BOTH |
           ONLY_CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH |
           NO_CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH]
         )
  This command is used to find a full path to named file. A cache entry named by <VAR> is created to store the result of this command. If the full path to a file is found the result is stored in the variable and the search will not be repeated unless the variable is cleared. If nothing is found, the result will be <VAR>-NOTFOUND, and the search will be attempted again the next time find_file is invoked with the same variable.
Options include:
NAMES- 
    
Specify one or more possible names for the full path to a file.
When using this to specify names with and without a version suffix, we recommend specifying the unversioned name first so that locally-built packages can be found before those provided by distributions.
 HINTS, PATHS- 
    Specify directories to search in addition to the default locations. The 
ENV varsub-option reads paths from a system environment variable. PATH_SUFFIXES- Specify additional subdirectories to check below each directory location otherwise considered.
 DOC- 
    Specify the documentation string for the 
<VAR>cache entry. 
If NO_DEFAULT_PATH is specified, then no additional paths are added to the search. If NO_DEFAULT_PATH is not specified, the search process is as follows:
- Search paths specified in cmake-specific cache variables. These are intended to be used on the command line with a 
-DVAR=value. This can be skipped ifNO_CMAKE_PATHis passed.<prefix>/include/<arch>ifCMAKE_LIBRARY_ARCHITECTUREis set, and<prefix>/includefor each<prefix>inCMAKE_PREFIX_PATHCMAKE_INCLUDE_PATHCMAKE_FRAMEWORK_PATH
 - Search paths specified in cmake-specific environment variables. These are intended to be set in the user’s shell configuration. This can be skipped if 
NO_CMAKE_ENVIRONMENT_PATHis passed.<prefix>/include/<arch>ifCMAKE_LIBRARY_ARCHITECTUREis set, and<prefix>/includefor each<prefix>inCMAKE_PREFIX_PATHCMAKE_INCLUDE_PATHCMAKE_FRAMEWORK_PATH
 - Search the paths specified by the 
HINTSoption. These should be paths computed by system introspection, such as a hint provided by the location of another item already found. Hard-coded guesses should be specified with thePATHSoption. - Search the standard system environment variables. This can be skipped if 
NO_SYSTEM_ENVIRONMENT_PATHis an argument.- Directories in 
INCLUDE. On Windows hosts:<prefix>/include/<arch>ifCMAKE_LIBRARY_ARCHITECTUREis set, and<prefix>/includefor each<prefix>/[s]bininPATH, and<entry>/includefor other entries inPATH, and the directories inPATHitself. 
 - Directories in 
 - Search cmake variables defined in the Platform files for the current system. This can be skipped if 
NO_CMAKE_SYSTEM_PATHis passed.<prefix>/include/<arch>ifCMAKE_LIBRARY_ARCHITECTUREis set, and<prefix>/includefor each<prefix>inCMAKE_SYSTEM_PREFIX_PATHCMAKE_SYSTEM_INCLUDE_PATHCMAKE_SYSTEM_FRAMEWORK_PATH
 - Search the paths specified by the PATHS option or in the short-hand version of the command. These are typically hard-coded guesses.
 
On OS X the CMAKE_FIND_FRAMEWORK and CMAKE_FIND_APPBUNDLE variables determine the order of preference between Apple-style and unix-style package components.
The CMake variable CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH specifies one or more directories to be prepended to all other search directories. This effectively “re-roots” the entire search under given locations. Paths which are descendants of the CMAKE_STAGING_PREFIX are excluded from this re-rooting, because that variable is always a path on the host system. By default the CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH is empty.
The CMAKE_SYSROOT variable can also be used to specify exactly one directory to use as a prefix. Setting CMAKE_SYSROOT also has other effects. See the documentation for that variable for more.
These variables are especially useful when cross-compiling to point to the root directory of the target environment and CMake will search there too. By default at first the directories listed in CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH are searched, then the CMAKE_SYSROOT directory is searched, and then the non-rooted directories will be searched. The default behavior can be adjusted by setting CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH_MODE_INCLUDE. This behavior can be manually overridden on a per-call basis using options:
CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH_BOTH- Search in the order described above.
 NO_CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH- 
    Do not use the 
CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATHvariable. ONLY_CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH- 
    Search only the re-rooted directories and directories below 
CMAKE_STAGING_PREFIX. 
The default search order is designed to be most-specific to least-specific for common use cases. Projects may override the order by simply calling the command multiple times and using the NO_* options:
find_file (<VAR> NAMES name PATHS paths... NO_DEFAULT_PATH)
find_file (<VAR> NAMES name)
  Once one of the calls succeeds the result variable will be set and stored in the cache so that no call will search again.
© 2000–2019 Kitware, Inc. and Contributors
Licensed under the BSD 3-clause License.
 https://cmake.org/cmake/help/v3.6/command/find_file.html