Since commit 024d05ad (Fix use of module .def files for MS tools,
2009-09-29) module .def files work for any platform that sets
CMAKE_LINK_DEF_FILE_FLAG correctly. Set it in the Windows-GNU platform
information file to enable support with MinGW tools. Also enable the
test added by commit 0db2c850 (Test use of module .def files for MS
tools, 2009-09-29) for MinGW and MSYS generators.
Using sort results in a possibly-modified sorting
when all elements are "tied" - use stable_sort instead
to preserve the original ordering of tied elements.
The Clang compiler warns about extra parenthesis in the code
if ((form->curpage == field->page))
~ ^ ~
because the idiom is commonly used when an assignment is intended
instead of a comparison. Remove the extra enclosing layer.
Since CMake 2.6.3 add_custom_target() has a SOURCES option, this was not
yet considered in the C::B generator.
Also, now GENERATED files are not added to the project.
Alex
Now a virtual folder "Subprojects" is created, and in this virtual folder
is a linked resource for each project().
This can be considered a fix for #11657
Alex
When initializing CMAKE_(EXE|SHARED|MODULE)_LINKER_FLAGS from LDFLAGS
and CMAKE_(EXE|SHARED|MODULE)_LINKER_FLAGS_INIT quote the whole string
in case both are set.
Reported-by: Daniel R. Gomez <gomez@teragram.com>
The Intel Fortran plugin forgets to create the output directory into
which it will write a DLL's import library. Utilize the fix added by
commit f4b3bdc6 (Create an exe's implib output dir for VS, 2009-06-15)
and generalized by commit 764ac980 (Generalize exe implib dir creation
for VS, 2009-06-16). Create a pre-link rule to make the directory.
To avoid name clashes.
Before this commit, name clashes can occur when invoking gcov on a
project that uses the same file name in different directories. The
--preserve-paths flag ensures all file names have a complete path,
avoiding name clashes.
Thanks to "McBen <viertelvor12@gmx.net>" for the patch.
(Did not preserve original commit author information because
we have a push check for first and last name, and do not
accept authors with only an alias...)
OpenSSL is not part of the Linux Standard Base but its headers and
libraries may still be found at build time even though they may not be
available at runtime. Use it only if explicitly allowed.