Case where CPACK_CMAKE_GENERATOR value is non existent or
or contains multiple words that were not quoted was not
handled and produced a segmentation fault.
When configured to use UTF-8 internally, add a UTF-8 BOM
to generated .sln files for Visual Studio to correctly
handle them.
Otherwise, some versions of Visual Studio will read them
as ANSI encoded files.
When uploading files greater 2GB a cast to 'int' overflows, leading to a
bad alloc when passed to new. Also avoid floating point arithmetic when
integer calculations will work as well.
Reported-by: Justin Borodinsky <justin.borodinsky@gmail.com>
07fc7b75 Tests: Test using objects from a language enabled in a subdirectory (#15325)
fdbfcfdf Ninja: Generate rules only for languages compiled in a target (#15325)
e2a489c7 Remove some temporary vectors for ExpandListArgument.
0f99feec cmGeneratorExpression: Remove unused header.
722f1a71 CTest: Expand a string directly into a container.
Refactoring in commit v3.1.0-rc1~688^2~2 (cmTarget: Compute languages
from object libraries on demand, 2014-03-18) taught cmTarget::GetLanguages
to (correctly) include the languages of object library sources. Previously
this was done only in cmTarget::ComputeLinkImplementationLanguages to
choose the linker language.
The Ninja generator writes out generic build rules for each language
compiled within a target using the rule variables defined in the
directory of the target. This only needs to be done for languages
actually compiled within the current target. Switch from using the
cmTarget::GetLanguages method to get the list of languages over to
using cmTarget::GetSourceFiles directly so we do not get the languages
in object libraries.
Strictly speaking this should make no difference because it is not safe
to use objects from a language not enabled in the directory containing
a target or else the link information for the language may not be
considered. However, in cases when no link information happens to be
needed for a language it was possible in CMake 3.0 and below to enable
a language only in a subdirectory providing an object library, and then
use the objects from a containing directory. The above change teaches
the Ninja generator to continue working in this case.
b189c599 Tests: Run CFBundleTest only with valid configuration
3a605693 Xcode: Call IsCFBundleOnApple to decide if bundle is being built
207b7af0 cmTarget: Use GetCFBundleDirectory within GetFullNameInternal
One piece of code has some ambiguous type deduction that seems to
resolve correctly for most compilers but not for the Oracle compiler.
Make it more explicit.
Narrow down the decision if a CFBundle is built to one place.
This is a preparation patch to add another target property
which, if set, will imply BUNDLE. Having only one function
which will have to look at both properties helps to keep code
clean.
Signed-off-by: Gregor Jasny <gjasny@googlemail.com>
Also add a 'CMAKE_ANDROID_API_MIN' variable to set the property
default. Teach the VS generator to write the MIN API value into
Nsight Tegra project files.
In cmCTestMemCheckHandler::PostProcessBoundsCheckerTest return early
if the output file name is empty. We already do this in the similar
cmCTestMemCheckHandler::AppendMemTesterOutput method.
When install(EXPORT) is given an absolute destination we cannot compute
the install prefix relative to the installed export file location.
Previously we disallowed installation of targets in such exports with a
relative destination, but did not enforce this for target property
values besides the location of the main target file. This could lead to
broken installations when the EXPORT is installed to an absolute path
but usage requirements are specified relative to the install prefix.
Since an EXPORT installed to an absolute destination cannot be relocated
we can just hard-code the value of CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX as the base for
relative paths. This will allow absolute install(EXPORT) destinations
to work with relative destinations for targets and usage requirements.
Extend the ExportImport test with a case covering this behavior.
A few pieces of code have some ambiguous type deduction that seems to
resolve correctly for most compilers but not for the Oracle compiler.
This makes those few instances more explicit.
In the unlikely event that someone has a billion+ scripts (or some
codepath returns negative numbers), we could overflow and make a pile of
errors a non-error. This change also allows us to use flags for the
error in the future rather than just "something went wrong".