The file lock functionality added in commit v3.2.0-rc1~297^2~1 (file:
Add LOCK subcommand to do file and directory locking, 2014-11-26) forgot
to close the lock file descriptors. Eventually it was possible to run
out of file descriptors and locks could not longer be acquired. Fix
this by closing the file descriptor or handle when we are done with it.
Also set the member back to the initial value from the constructor
to leave everything in a consistent state (useful for debugging).
Co-Author: Ruslan Baratov <ruslan_baratov@yahoo.com>
The unknown argument warning added by commit v3.2.0-rc1~452^2
(configure_file: Warn about unknown arguments, 2014-10-31) failed to
account for options handled by the NewLineStyle member instead of
directly in the main loop. Simply whitelist them for now.
In commit v3.2.0-rc1~272^2~2 (Makefile: Fix rebuild with multiple custom
command outputs, 2014-12-05) we changed the generated makefile pattern
for multiple outputs from
out1: depends...
commands...
out2: out1
to
out1 out2: depends...
commands...
This was based on the incorrect assumption that make tools would treat
this as a combined output rule and run the command(s) exactly once for
them. It turns out that instead this new pattern is equivalent to
out1: depends...
commands...
out2: depends...
commands...
so the commands may be run more than once.
Some documents suggest using a "dedicated witness" stamp file:
stamp: depends...
rm -f stamp
touch stamp.tmp
commands...
mv stamp.tmp stamp
out1 out2: stamp
However, if the commands fail the error message will refer to the stamp
instead of any of the real outputs, which may be confusing to readers.
Also, this approach seems to have the same behavior of the original
approach that motiviated the above commit: multiple invocations are
needed to bring consumers of the outputs up to date.
Instead we can return to the original approach but add an explicit
touch to each extra output rule:
out1: depends...
commands...
out2: out1
touch -c out2
This causes make tools to recognize that all outputs have changed and
therefore to execute any commands that consume them.
Revert commit v3.2.0-rc1~165^2 (Encoding: Write Visual Studio solution
file with BOM, 2014-12-26). The BOM breaks the VS IDE version selector
when loading the .sln from Windows Explorer.
Since jsoncpp 0.7.0 (2014-11-20) the upstream may provide a CMake
package configuration file such that find_package(jsoncpp) will find a
jsoncppConfig.cmake file. In order to avoid conflicting with this
(especially on case-insensitive filesystems), and since we always prefer
projects to provide package config files (that they maintain), it is
better to not provide FindJsonCpp publicly.
Move FindJsonCpp into a private source directory that is not installed
so that we can still use it for building CMake itself.
Reported-by: Ryan Pavlik <ryan.pavlik@gmail.com>
At the start of each configure step we already reset the generator
selection (CMAKE_GENERATOR) to match that loaded for the current
project. Add missing code to reset the generator platform and toolset
(CMAKE_GENERATOR_PLATFORM and CMAKE_GENERATOR_TOOLSET) also so that they
do not leak across projects.
The libarchive APIs use nl_langinfo(CODESET) for iconv so they need the
locale to be set for LC_CTYPE. However, the rest of CMake does not
define any behavior for non-ASCII character classification/conversion so
we do not want to setlocale() globally. Add a RAII class to save, set,
and restore the locale around calls to libarchive APIs.
Inspired-by: Clinton Stimpson <clinton@elemtech.com>
Revert the changes made by commit v3.1.0-rc1~406^2~1 (Encoding: Add
setlocale() to applications, 2014-05-30) and commit v3.1.0-rc1~406^2
(Encoding: Change to only set LC_CTYPE, 2014-06-11), and other setlocale
calls added later in their spirit. CMake has not been taught how to
deal with non-C locales everywhere. We do not define any functionality
for character conversions for non-ASCII strings. Another solution will
be needed to address the original problem motivating addition of
setlocale() calls.
The CMAKE_<LANG>_STANDARD_DEFAULT variable indicates whether the
compiler has any notion of standard levels and that CMake knows
about them. If no language standard levels are available, skip
all logic to attempt to add a flag for the level.
Also fail with an internal error if a bad default value is set.
The refactoring in commit v3.1.0-rc1~812^2~16 (stringapi: Pass
configuration names as strings, 2014-02-09) broke the code path in
cmLocalGenerator::GenerateInstallRules that intends to pick a default
install configuration for multi-config generators. Fix the logic to
select an empty default configuration only when using a single-config
generator whose CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE is not set.
Inspired-by: Roman Wüger <roman.wueger@gmx.at>
Reported-by: NoRulez <norulez@me.com>