For example it is now possible to do:
feature_summary(WHAT ENABLED_FEATURES
DISABLED_FEATURES)
That produces an output like:
--
-- The following features have been enabled:
* Feature1
* Feature2
-- The following features have been disabled:
* Feature2
Skipping the lists that are empty.
Without this patch this would require to do:
message(STATUS "")
feature_summary(WHAT ENABLED_FEATURES
DESCRIPTION "The following features have been enabled:")
feature_summary(WHAT DISABLED_FEATURES
DESCRIPTION "The following features have been disabled:")
And empty lists would not be skipped.
The behaviour when WHAT has a single argument (ALL or any option) is
unchanged.
When possible, get consistent version of the Python interpreter, headers path,
and library.
Now find_package(PythonLibs) internally calls find_package(PythonInterp
QUIET) and uses the resulting PYTHON_VERSION_MAJOR and
PYTHON_VERSION_MINOR to prefer these versions when looking for the
header path and library. The Python_ADDITIONAL_VERSIONS variable has
priority over the interpreter version.
Co-Author: Adam Wolf
Co-Author: Gert Wollny <gw.fossdev@gmail.com>
Create each DLL import library by passing "option implib=..." to the
linker for its SHARED library. This works even when there are no
symbols to be exported. Leave the option out for MODULE libraries
because we do not need an import library for them. For executables,
retain the separate invocation of wlib because we want an import
library only when the ENABLE_EXPORTS property is set, and in that
case the project should provide symbols.
Suggested-by: J Decker <d3ck0r@gmail.com>
Now it only links with the Qt libraries specified by the user,
instead of automatically including all dependencies.
Fixes#14750 and thanks to Orion Poplawski.
Since commit v2.8.12~437^2~2 (VS: Separate compiler and linker PDB files
2013-04-05) we no longer set /Fd with the PDB_NAME or PDB_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY
properties. Those properties now exclusively handle linker PDB files.
Since STATIC libraries do not link their compiler PDB file becomes more
important. Add new target properties "COMPILE_PDB_NAME[_<CONFIG>]" and
"COMPILE_PDB_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY[_<CONFIG>]" to specify the compiler PDB
file location and pass the value to the MSVC /Fd option.
If there is no ARGV1, that is fine; version will be made empty, and no
version will be passed to find_package().
This is relevant when find_dependency is invoked multiple times,
sometimes with a version specified and sometimes without.
find_dependency(dep1 3.4)
find_dependency(dep2) # version still set to 3.4.
Teach ExternalProject_Add a new BUILD_ALWAYS option to skip using
the build step stamp file and execute the step on every build.
Extend the BuildDepends test with a case to cover this option.
When building boost with an alternate namespace the libraries generated
will have a different naming convention. This is often done to ensure
no symbol conflicts with external libraries built against a different
version of boost. If the namespace used is "myprivateboost::" instead
of "boost::" then the libraries built will be named myprivateboost_foo
instead of boost_foo. Add an option to specify a custom namespace used
to alter the library names that get searched for.
Create platform information modules Platform/Darwin-Intel-(C|CXX).cmake
and helper module Platform/Darwin-Intel.cmake. Teach existing module
Platform/Darwin-Intel-Fortran.cmake to use the helper too. Move
information from Platform/Darwin-icc.cmake into these files and drop
information already in Platform/Darwin.cmake to avoid duplication.
Some distributions place boost_mpi next to the MPI libraries against
which it was built instead of next to the other Boost libraries. If
find_package(MPI) has already been run prior to find_package(Boost) then
MPI_CXX_LIBRARIES or MPI_C_LIBRARIES may be set to the location of the
MPI libraries. Teach FindBoost.cmake to look there for boost_mpi and
boost_mpi_python after looking next to the other Boost libraries but
not consider the location to be Boost_LIBRARY_DIR.