A 64-bit MinGW windres is named "i686-w64-mingw32.shared-windres". The
get_filename_component NAME_WE mode may strip the ".shared-windres" part
and cause the result to no longer contain "windres". Instead, match the
"windres" name in the full CMAKE_RC_COMPILER value first, and use the
get_filename_component code path only for other resource compilers.
Ancient versions of CMake required else(), endif(), and similar block
termination commands to have arguments matching the command starting the
block. This is no longer the preferred style.
Run the following shell code:
for c in else endif endforeach endfunction endmacro endwhile; do
echo 's/\b'"$c"'\(\s*\)(.\+)/'"$c"'\1()/'
done >convert.sed &&
git ls-files -z -- bootstrap '*.cmake' '*.cmake.in' '*CMakeLists.txt' |
egrep -z -v '^(Utilities/cm|Source/kwsys/)' |
egrep -z -v 'Tests/CMakeTests/While-Endwhile-' |
xargs -0 sed -i -f convert.sed &&
rm convert.sed
...if it matches "windres", as opposed to being exactly equal to "windres"
Cross-compiling windres compilers are named something like
"i686-w64-mingw32-windres" (for example)
This adds copyright/license notification blocks CMake's non-find
modules. Most of the modules had no notices at all. Some had notices
referring to the BSD license already. This commit normalizes existing
notices and adds missing notices.
The build rule to run the resource compiler on Windows with a Makefiles
generator should include the placeholder to add the definition flags.
See issue #7769.