This commit fixes a bug where it was impossible to specify
/INCREMENTAL to Fortran projects built with Visual Studio.
The problem was due to the fact that .vfproj files expect
the value of this flag to be "linkIncremental{No,Yes},
whereas .vcproj files expect this value to be 0, 1, or 2.
The implementation of this fix adds a new data structure for
Visual Studio linker flags specific to Fortran. This can
easily be extended in the future if more such discrepencies
between C/C++ and Fortran linking are discovered.
The existing versions have been used since commit
v3.1.0-rc1~635^2~8 (cmTarget: Add CXX_STANDARD and CXX_EXTENSION
target properties., 2013-10-13), but further discussions since then
increased the initial minimum compiler versions this feature is
available for.
Clang 3.4 uses C99 by default, and Clang 3.6 uses C11 by default:
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.compilers.clang.devel/39379
GNU 4.9 uses C90 by default, and GNU 5.0 uses C11 by default:
https://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-5/changes.html
Test that the default compiler settings result in the expected dialect
macros being defined for both C and CXX. Remove the unused main.c
file from the CompileFeatures unit test.
fa1a066a Merge branch 'backport-fix-CMP0054-MSVC' into fix-CMP0054-MSVC
4d52cd36 Avoid if() quoted auto-dereference when checking for "MSVC"
543c4304 Avoid if() quoted auto-dereference when checking for "MSVC"
OS X provides a stub 'java' to inform callers that Java is not present.
When checking the 'java -version' output, look for such a message and if
found pretend 'java' was not found.
Suggested-by: Sean McBride <sean@rogue-research.com>
When CMake is built with CMake 3.1 or later, appropriate -std=
options will be added for GNU and Clang compilers while building
C and CXX code.
This allows taking advantage of 'hidden' language features such
as move-constructors, and allows the standard library to enable
the use of more-advanced features too, where available.
This does not change CMake host compiler requirements.
Re-run if the input file changes or if the output file is removed.
This only works with the Makefile generators currently. The limitation
of the Ninja generator is tracked as issue #15256. The IDE
generators will need larger refactoring as they currently rely on
being able to determine the depends and output files at the start of
generate-time, which is too early for the file(GENERATE) case.
Improve the fix from commit v2.8.9~136^2 (CPackRPM: avoid leakage of RPM
directive from one component to another, 2012-06-05) to clean up more
temporary variables.
Reviewed-by: Domen Vrankar <domen.vrankar@gmail.com>
Since commit v2.8.11~227^2~1 (Don't allow targets args in the new target
commands, 2013-01-29) the target_include_directories command does not
support target names on the right hand side, but that commit forgot to
remove it from the docs. It was never released with such support.
Update the command documentation now.
67bd514a Ninja: Refactor restat to be a string internally
ef42e57d Ninja: Use a TARGET_FILE variable to hold the link output file
592644c4 Tests/BuildDepends: Drop unneeded help for Ninja
Since commit b22e2de8 (HPUX support, 2001-11-05) the FindCurses
module searches for a 'cur_colr' library, but that is not needed
anymore. AFAICT, the cur_colr package was introduced in HP-UX 10.00 and
marked as deprecated in 10.30 by X/OPEN curses (which replaced the even
older HP curses in 10.10).
In order to use cur_colr after 10.10 you should use the
/usr/include/curses_colr when compiling. Since FindCurses doesn't even
search that path the headers cannot possibly match out of the box. If
users want cur_colr they can set the cache entries by hand.
There is no 64-bit version of cur_colr in 11.11PA and it will be gone
completely in 11.31PA:
http://h21007.www2.hp.com/portal/download/files/unprot/STK/HPUX_STK/impacts/i964.html
It is simplest to drop cur_colr support from FindCurses since it was
only partially implemented anyway.
Use check_include_file instead of check_include_file_concat to look
for OpenSSL headers. They do not need to participate in a sequence
of dependent system headers. Also they may cause winsock.h to be
included before ws2tcpip.h, causing the latter to not be detected
in the sequence.