Make the CMAKE_HOST_* variables always available in the toolchain file.
They are when the file is included in CMakeDetermineSystem.cmake, and
now also here. For the non-cross-compiling case this does not change
anything at all.
Alex
This allows the ctest_build command's TARGET option to name a target
in a subdirectory and still build properly with msbuild.
Add test case covering use of ctest_build() with such a TARGET.
In cmCTestHandlerCommand::InitialPass call InitializeHandler after setting
the CTest "SourceDirectory" and "BuildDirectory" configuration values
instead of before. This makes the values available to InitializeHandler
methods in subclasses, so also drop the duplicate configuration of those
values from cmCTestConfigureCommand::InitializeHandler.
Add test covering cmGlobalGenerator::GenerateBuildCommand for VS
solutions with MSBuild and building a target defined in a subdirectory
and not part of ALL.
Use cmVisualStudioSlnParser in GenerateBuildCommand() to provide correct
command line for MSBuild even when target project is stored in a
subdirectory.
Create class cmVisualStudioSlnParser as a generic parser for Visual
Studio .sln files. Implement minimum functionality but keep class
extensible. Add tests for the class.
Extend the cmGlobalGenerator::GenerateBuildCommand virtual method
signature with a "projectDir" parameter specifying the top of the
project build tree for which the build command will be generated.
Populate it from call sites in cmGlobalGenerator::Build where a
fully-generated build tree should be available.
Use of the mis-spelled variable name 'CMAKE_CROSS_COMPILING' was
introduced by commit 4b793ad1 (FindOpenSSL: find cross-compiled OpenSSL
from MinGW, 2012-07-23). Fix the spelling.
Use the suggestion from http://support.microsoft.com/kb/2262855 to escape
semicolons in preprocessor definitions for VS >= 10. Update the
COMPILE_DEFINITIONS documentation disclaimer list of known limitations
accordingly. Update our "Preprocess" test to cover the case.
Suggested-by: Jean-Christophe Fillion-Robin <jchris.fillionr@kitware.com>
Transform the path using ConvertToNinjaPath just as we do for all other
paths. This fixes the OutOfSource test for objects in the ../OutOfBinary
directory by computing the proper full path for the /Fd option.
Update the CMAKE_<LANG>_LINK_EXECUTABLE rule variable to invoke the
linker directly instead of through the compiler. We already do this
for DLL linking with CMAKE_<LANG>_CREATE_SHARED_LIBRARY.
This also works around a VS 6 cl bug. While invoking the link tool
internally it fails to correctly quote flags like /pdb:... with spaces
in the value.
The MS tools create two types of PDB files as explained here:
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/yd4f8bd1%28v=vs.71%29.aspxhttp://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/yd4f8bd1%28v=vs.80%29.aspxhttp://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/yd4f8bd1%28v=vs.90%29.aspxhttp://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/yd4f8bd1%28v=vs.100%29.aspx
One is created by the compiler (/Fd) and the other by the linker (/pdb).
The two options should not specify the same file. Split them up.
In the VS IDE generators, simply drop ProgramDataBaseFileName to
take the VS default "/Fd$(IntDir)vc$(PlatformToolsetVersion).pdb".
In the Makefile generators, set "/Fd" on the compile line to be
the directory containing object files (with a trailing slash the
compiler will add the "vc$(PlatformToolsetVersion).pdb" filename
automatically). Drop the /Fd option from the exe link command
line and add "/pdb" instead (already done for dll linking).
Update these rules for both MSVC and Intel tools.
Drop support for PDB_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY and PDB_NAME in STATIC
libraries because the generated .pdb files are only from /Fd
and not real linker-generated .pdb files. Update documentation to
clarify that the PDB_* properties are only for linker .pdb files.
This regresses the PDBDirectoryAndName test for STATIC libraries.
Since it is not clear at this time what should be done for STATIC
library .pdb files, comment out the relevant portion of the test
and leave a TODO comment.
This fixes bug #0013609, and is a possible solution to #0012864 as well.
The later will be completely fixed in another way. Both approaches
needs to be implemented because the current one is more automatic.
Inspired-By: Ari
In commit 0c727b90 (install(EXPORT): Force absolute paths for usr-move,
2013-03-08) and commit d4774140 (configure_package_config_file: force
absolute paths for usr-move, 2013-01-24) we supported Linux
distributions implementing the "/usr move" by assuming that installation
to (/usr)?/lib(64)? represents a non-relocatable system package.
When cross-compiling one may prepare a package for installation into a
system location on a target machine but install the package files on the
*host* machine inside another path for use with CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH.
In this case the package development files must still be relocatable.
Handle "/usr move" with a new approach that works with relocatable
files. Teach configure_package_config_file and install(EXPORT) to
generate special logic in a package configuration file or targets file
for installation under (/usr)?/lib(64)?. Teach the file to recognize
when it is loaded through a symlink that refers to the same realpath as
its original install destination. In such a case, use the original
install prefix. Otherwise, compute the prefix relative to the current
file location to make it relocatable.
CPACK_RPM_USER_BINARY_SPECFILE can now be specified on a per-component
basis using CPACK_RPM_<componentName>_USER_BINARY_SPECFILE.
Inspired-By: Theodore Papadopoulo with its patch proposal.
In VS IDE generators add a pre-build event to perform automoc instead of
using a separate custom target. This reduces the number of targets in the
.sln that need to be loaded by the IDE.
This also works around a VS 11 bug as discussed in issue 13900.
Suggested-by: Hauke Heibel <hauke.heibel@gmail.com>
When called with a non-existent LHS target name the user may be trying
to add file-level dependencies. Clarify the error message to explain
the difference between target-level and file-level dependencies. Point
the reader at the commands and options needed for the latter.