We modify the signature of _HDF5_parse_compile_line to pass the command
line variable name rather than the command line itself. Otherwise the
CMake language MACRO implementation tries to parse the command line as
CMake syntax, which does not like backslashes.
We re-implement this module to support architecture-dependent type
sizes. In the mixed-size case we generate C preprocessor code to select
the detected type size for each architecture.
before this patch -F<framework> dir had to be added manually in some way
when using Qt4 installed as framework and when using FindQt4.cmake directly,
i.e. without UseQt4.cmake. With this patch the framework dir is
automatically added to QT_INCLUDE_DIR when Qt is installed as a framework.
Ok by Clinton, tested already in KDE by Mike Arthur.
Alex
The commit "FortranCInterface: Honor language flags in checks" taught
the FortranCInterface module to pass C and Fortran flags into its
detection and verification checks. We improve on the change to allow
the '=' character in the language flags. This requires passing the
cache entry type with the -D options.
CMake 2.8 was released with the FindHDF5 module setting HDF5_INCLUDE_DIR rather
than the correct plural HDF5_INCLUDE_DIRS. Since this went into a release, it is
now necessary to set the singular for backwards compatibility.
Replace them with CPACK_PACKAGE_NAME. The registry keys involved in this commit are used by Windows to track things in the Add/Remove programs portion of the Control Panel. With '\' characters in the keyname, the calls do not do what they are intended to do and the installed program never shows up in the control panel view. (Details noted in the issue itself.) Thanks to 'killerfox' for the patch.
Default to "" for CMAKE_OSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET if CMAKE_OSX_SYSROOT is set. Also, add new error message to detect the case where there is a deployment target, but no SDK has been set. Fix args to STRING REGEX call so that it works even if _sdk_path variable is empty inside sanity check function.
When there is no shared object to link to a second call to find library is
necessary to find the static Python library. Fixes an issue raised on the CMake
mailing list, and it should be included in the next CMake patch release.
We add the macro CMAKE_FORCE_Fortran_COMPILER to the cross-compiling
helper module CMakeForceCompiler.cmake so that toolchain files can force
a Fortran compiler as well as C and C++ compilers. See issue #10032.
CMake does not enable Fortran for its own build, but it needs to find a
Fortran compiler to know if it is possible to enable Fortran tests.
Previously we searched for a hard-coded list of Fortran compilers which
was duplicated from the CMakeDetermineFortranCompiler.cmake module. We
now run CMake on a small test project that enables the Fortran language
and reports the compiler it found. This represents a more realistic
check of whether the Fortran tests will be able to find a compiler.
Previously this module gave only very brief documentation. We extend
the module's documentation to describe CTestConfig.cmake, interaction
with dashboard scripts, and the CTEST_USE_LAUNCHERS option.
We remove the shared library compile/link flags "-fPIC" and "-shared"
because they are not provided by all compilers on Linux. This allows us
to drop code from the Linux-XL-*.cmake files that erases the bad flags.
All other supported compilers already provide their correct flags for
Linux in their own platform information files.
We factor flags from Platform/Linux-PGI-Fortran.cmake into language
independent helper modules
Compiler/PGI.cmake
Platform/Linux-PGI.cmake
and invoke the macros from
Compiler/PGI-<lang>.cmake
Platform/Linux-PGI-<lang>.cmake
This enables general support for the PGI compilers.
The commit "Split GNU compiler information files" intended to move GNU
flags from the platform-wide Platform/SunOS.cmake module into
Platform/SunOS-GNU-<lang>.cmake
using a helper module Platform/SunOS-GNU.cmake to consolidate flags.
However, it accidentally put Fortran flags in the C language module and
left out the Fortran module altogether. This fixes those mistakes.
Several platform-wide linker flag variables are defined in
Modules/Platform/<os>.cmake files for C and then copied by the
Modules/CMake<lang>Information.cmake file for each language.
We now use this approach for the variables
CMAKE_EXE_EXPORTS_${lang}_FLAG
CMAKE_SHARED_LIBRARY_SONAME_${lang}_FLAG
CMAKE_SHARED_LIBRARY_CREATE_${lang}_FLAGS
to avoid duplication for multiple languages in each platform file.
The commit "Split GNU compiler information files" broke the settings of
CMAKE_SHARED_LIBRARY_CREATE_${lang}_FLAGS
CMAKE_SHARED_MODULE_CREATE_${lang}_FLAGS
and started using just "-shared" for them. This worked when tested on newer
Mac machines, but older ones really need "-dynamiclib" and "-bundle" (which are
the documented flags anyway).
This moves GNU compiler info on Windows into new-style modules
Platform/Windows-GNU-<lang>.cmake
using language-independent helper module
Platform/Windows-GNU.cmake
to define macros consolidating the information.
This moves GNU compiler flags into new-style modules
Compiler/GNU-<lang>.cmake
Platform/<os>-GNU-<lang>.cmake
We use language-independent helper modules
Compiler/GNU.cmake
Platform/<os>-GNU.cmake
to define macros consolidating the information.
The CMakeBackwardCompatibilityC module provides some try-compile results
that were automatically provided by CMake 1.4. When performing the
checks for OS X universal binaries we just pick one architecture to get
through the checks without error. Since CMake 1.4 did not support any
universal binaries, projects that want them should not depend on this
compatibility module anyway.
This is a GNU-specific option that should not be specified for all
compilers on Linux. It tells the GNU compiler to pass -export-dynamic
to the linker to export symbols from executables for use by plugins.
Since we provide the ENABLE_EXPORTS target property to do the same thing
in a cross-platform way, there is no need to pass -rdynamic always.
Since the option is not useful for GNU tools and breaks other tools on
Linux we simply remove it from CMAKE_SHARED_LIBRARY_LINK_<lang>_FLAGS.
This also allows us to stop setting the variable in other Linux compiler
files just to erase the bad flag.
See issue #9985.
The Watcom tools do their own command-line parsing and do not accept
double-quotes. Instead we single-quote the target output name when
invoking wlink and other Watcom tools. This fixes support for spaces in
the target output directory path when it is not under the build tree.
-use find_package(PkgConfig) instead of include(UsePkgConfig)
-remove the "if already cached make silent" logic, this is already handled by find_package_handle_standard_args()
-remove the if(WIN32) around pkg-config, it shouldn't be necessary
Alex
We pass CMAKE_C_FLAGS, CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS, and CMAKE_Fortran_FLAGS through
try_compile() for the FortranCInterface Detect and Verify projects.
This honors user-specified compiler flags for each language, thus
supporting flags that affect the Fortran mangling.
The FortranCInterface module should execute with CMake 2.8.0 behavior
even if policies are set differently by the including project. In
particular, it makes use of empty list elements and therefore expects
NEW behavior of CMP0007.
Qt4Macros.cmake: all the "public" macros of FindQt4.cmake
Qt4ConfigDependentSettings.cmake: the code for detecting the
Qt-configuration dependent additional libraries, e.g. when linking statically.
There should be no functional changes in this patch.
The patch reduces the length of FindQt4.cmake from 1700 lines to around 1000
lines, which is still long enough, but this should make the file a easier to
handle (and it is similar to what we do in KDE with FindKDE4Internal.cmake
and KDE4Macros.cmake)
Ok by Clinton.
Alex
This should not change the result (since both should be in the same
directory), but seems a bit more logical and is also in sync with what is done in the KDE version.
Alex
-the mark_as_advanced() calls for the variables coming from qmake are now in
the corresponding section, and not in the section where the include dirs are
foudn
Alex
Some compilers use implicit link options of the form
-lcrt*.o
-lgcc*
-lSystem (on Mac)
-lSystemStubs (on Mac)
that provide system-wide symbols not specific to any language.
These need not be listed explicitly for mixed-language linking.
We teach CMake to remove the above items from the implicit library list
of each language. This change makes it possible to mix GNU compiler
versions in some cases.
BUILD_SHARED_LIBS is now only recognized when calling CUDA_ADD_LIBRARY. If you want the CMAKE_SHARED_LIBRARY_C/CXX_FLAGS to be used, pass SHARED as an argument. This prevents -fPIC from being used on objects destined for executables by default.
We replace "/MD" with ifort-specific flags as follows:
/MD -> /threads /libs:dll
/MDd -> /threads /libs:dll /dbglibs
We also enable the "/MD" equivalent for all Fortran configurations.
Previously multithreaded dll runtimes were used for release builds and
threaded static runtimes for debug builds. For mixed Fortran C/C++
projects, this led to link warnings for Debug but not for Release.
See issue #8744.
We add Intel and MinGW Fortran linker options to create the import
library portion of a DLL. This allows other binaries to link to a
Fortran DLL.
We also update the Fortran test to use a .def file to specify exports
since there is no __declspec(dllexport) markup syntax in Fortran.