Refactoring in commit 49f10f0d (cmGeneratorTarget: Adopt Fortran module
directory generation, 2016-06-10) accidentally made a local variable
declared `static` causing results to be re-used incorrectly.
The cmDependsJavaParserHelper tries to implement a "deep copy" in the
assignment operator of the internal class CurrentClass. To do that, it
uses std::copy and std::back_inserter. The copy constructor is
implemented in terms of the assignment operator but it does not
initialize the member NestedClasses, a pointer to vector. This pointer
is dereferenced in the assignment operator. Change the pointer to a
value and rely on the compiler generated special functions.
FindBoost only detects Debug and Release configurations. All other
configurations will fall back to the configuration listed as the first
entry in `IMPORTED_CONFIGURATIONS`. Switch the order so that `Release`
is listed first, as this is a better fallback than `Debug` for the
`RelWithDebInfo` and `MinSizeRel` configurations. See issue #16091.
Download http://www.gnu.org/licenses/lgpl.txt and place it as
Licenses/LGPLv3.txt in our source tree. When building cmake-gui, use
option CMake_GUI_DISTRIBUTE_WITH_Qt_LGPL to enable notification in the
"About" dialog of how the distribution of Qt is licensed. Install the
license file as ${CMAKE_ROOT}/Licenses/LGPLv3.txt so that the dialog can
display a path to it.
Factor the flag generation out of cmCommonTargetGenerator::GetFlags
into a new cmLocalGenerator::GetTargetCompileFlags method.
This will allow it to be used without a target generator available.
Add a cmLocalGenerator::GetTargetFortranFlags virtual method to get
generator-specific generation of Fortran-specific flags. Implement it
in cmLocalCommonGenerator by moving the implementation from
cmCommonTargetGenerator::AddFortranFlags. This will allow it to be used
without having a target generator available.
Inspired-by: Tobias Hunger <tobias.hunger@qt.io>
Move code to create/get the fortran module directory from the
cmCommonTargetGenerator to cmGeneratorTarget.
Rename the ComputeFortranModuleDirectory method to
CreateFortranModuleDirectory as this method *creates* the directory if
it is missing.
Even in relatively small projects using `--trace` (and `--trace-expand`)
may produce a lot of output. When developing a custom module usually
one is interested in output of only a few particular modules.
Add a `--trace-source=<file>` option to enable tracing only a subset of
source files. The final output would be only from requested modules,
ignoring anything else not matched to given filename(s).
Create a LINK_WHAT_YOU_USE target property and corresponding
CMAKE_LINK_WHAT_YOU_USE variable to enable this behavior.
Extend link commands by running `ldd -u -r` to detect shared
libraries that are linked but not needed.