Use the clang RemoveCStrCalls tool to automatically migrate the
code. This was only run on linux, so does not have any positive or
negative effect on other platforms.
The command itself is owned by the cmMakefile class, but the
cmVariableWatch which holds a pointer to the cmVariableWatchCommand via
the client_data for the callback outlives the cmMakefile class in the Qt
GUI. This means that when the cmMakefile is destroyed, the variable
watch is still in effect, but with a stale pointer.
To fix this, each callback is now a separate entity completely and
doesn't rely on the command which spawned it at all.
An example CMakeLists.txt which demonstrates the issue (only displayed
in cmake-gui, so no tests can be written for it):
set(var 0)
variable_watch(var)
Replace the boolean value that indicates whether an argument is unquoted
or quoted with a generalized enumeration of possible argument types.
For now "Quoted" and "Unquoted" remain the only types.
Use makefile->IssueMessage() to print the unprocessed watch message in a
format consistent with other CMake messages and with a more complete
call stack for the access.
When a watch does not specify a command to call then variable_watch
prints out a message to stderr. Remove code after that which collects
all variable values to construct a message that is never printed.
Otherwise such code causes a READ_ACCESS watch to trigger on all
variables in the currents scope.
Reported-by: Yichao Yu <yyc1992@gmail.com>
This converts the CMake license to a pure 3-clause OSI-approved BSD
License. We drop the previous license clause requiring modified
versions to be plainly marked. We also update the CMake copyright to
cover the full development time range.