Similar incomplete generator expressions are already tested
in the GeneratorExpression unit test, but those are executed
with add_custom_target. The generator expressions in the include
directories are run through the preprocessor, whereas the ones
run through add_custom_target are not.
The version of Intel Fortran that actually uses 9.10 as a project format
is very old. Default to the latest format version (11.0) and use the
older format only when known to be necessary.
Suggested-by: Dick Munroe <munroe@csworks.com>
Since commit ad502502 (cmMakefile: Track configured files so we can
regenerate them, 2013-06-18) cmMakefile::ConfigureFile records the
configured file as an output file generated by CMake. The intention is
that for make and ninja we can re-run CMake when one of the files it
generates goes missing. However, files configured temporarily in
CMakeTmp directories by Check* modules do not live past the CMake
invocation.
We have to also track input files to the configure command. In theory
the input to a configure command could it self be a file that is going
to be deleted later (output from a custom command or configure_file).
Since commit ad502502 (cmMakefile: Track configured files so we can
regenerate them, 2013-06-18) cmMakefile::ConfigureFile records the
configured file as an output file generated by CMake. The intention is
that for make and ninja we can re-run CMake when one of the files it
generates goes missing. However, files configured temporarily in
CMakeTmp directories by Check* modules do not live past the CMake
invocation.
Teach cmMakefile::FinalPass to stop tracking files that don't
exist after we are finished generation.
Commit 10a069b5 (Genex: Fix $<CONFIG> with IMPORTED targets and
multiple locations., 2013-07-15) changed the logic here to include
handling of the MAP_IMPORTED_CONFIG_<CONFIG> target property, but
it was buggy in several ways.
Uppercase the configs in all cases, and compare the mapped configs
with the parameter to the CONFIG genex, instead of with the key of
the mapping.