Tru64's make(1) resolves relative paths in "include" directives with
respect to the includer. This is inconsistent with all other known make
tools. Note that this make tool treats the path literally so we cannot
use our standard FULL path code which escapes spaces. Instead qualify
the paths with $(CMAKE_BINARY_DIR) to avoid the problem.
At this point, CTestTest3 causes more problems than it's worth.
It uses CVS to grab a remote (over the network) copy of kwsys
code for testing. This causes some sort of problem nearly every
night on the nightly CMake dashboards. Worse: it causes problems
on different machines on different nights, then the next day, it's
fine again. So: remove this test and monitor the coverage.
If we lose a significant portion of code coverage, I will revert
this commit and re-activate the test. However, if we do not lose
a significant portion of code coverage, I will remove the code
for the test as well as removing it from the CMakeLists.txt file.
Brad King and I discussed this over the last few weeks, and we both
think we have sufficient coverage of all the checkout and update code
in other locally (non-network) based tests.
On the other hand, even if we do take a mild hit on coverage temporarily,
it should be relatively easy to increase our coverage again by adding
bits to those other locally based tests.
The bootstrap script works under MSYS, so test it. Use a launcher batch
file since 'ctest --build-and-test' is a Windows program and will not
honor the shebang line in the script.
GCC places the vtable in the object implementing the first non-pure,
non-inline virtual method. Since the symbol is not weak on Tru64, make
the location unique by putting the destructor in a single object file.
The DynamicLoader::LibPrefix and DynamicLoader::LibExtension methods
previously hard-coded the module name components for each platform. Set
them from the CMAKE_SHARED_MODULE_PREFIX and CMAKE_SHARED_MODULE_SUFFIX
CMake variables instead. This ensures consistency in a program that
uses these methods to construct the file names for its own modules.
Even though this test is checking that the ctest running it can handle
test output without newlines we should run the just-built CMake binary.
This allows the MemCheck test mode to check the correct CMake.