Also, removed detection of header file from <PREFIX>/include.
Can't find any example in alsa source code where the library headers
were installed outside of <PREFIX>/include/alsa.
We do not yet support "make install" in the external project case.
Document this explicitly in the interface. Require the caller to use an
option to "disable" the unsupported behavior. This will allow us to add
the behavior by default in the future without clobbering existing
projects that handle the installation themselves.
cmake_add_fortran_directory uses imported targets when using the
mingw fortran compiler. This change makes those targets global
in scope so they act just like the real targets that exist when
a fortran compiler exists and regular add_subdirectory is used.
Verify that MINGW_GFORTRAN not only points to a MinGW gfortran but also
one that compiles for the target architecture. This prevents using a
32-bit gfortran in a 64-bit MSVC build.
In the find_program(MINGW_GFORTRAN) call use the PATHS option for
hard-coded guesses instead of HINTS. This allows the user environment
to override the guesses and corrects usage of the command options.
Fix the implementation to allow full paths with spaces. Change the
interpretation of relative paths to be with respect to the current binary
directory. This matches the convention used in ExternalProject. Test
both full and relative paths in the VSGNUFortran test.
This patch adds a new module that allows for easy integration of MinGW
gfortran and the Visual Studio compiler. It is done in a function called
cmake_add_fortran_subdirectory. The patch also includes a test for this
feature.
Define a "check_language(<lang>)" macro to test whether <lang> can be
enabled. Cache the result in CMAKE_<lang>_COMPILER. Add a test case
covering expected results.
If CXX or Fortran is enabled before C then the values of
CMAKE_SHARED_MODULE_C_FLAGS
CMAKE_SHARED_MODULE_CREATE_C_FLAGS
may not be available. On platforms where MODULE library (plugin) creation
is the same as SHARED library creation initialize the MODULE creation
flags from the SHARED creation flags of the matching language instead of
assuming that C has been enabled first.
Teach the COnly and CxxOnly tests to build MODULE libraries. The latter
covers this specific case.
Causes compiler modules (currently only GNU) to set a
CMAKE_DEPFILE_FLAGS_${lang} variable, which communicates to
the generator the flags required to cause the compiler to create
dependency files.
CHECK_INCLUDE_FILES("foo.h" HAVE_FOO_H) gave an output like:
Looking for include files HAVE_FOO_H
After this change it does now what CHECK_INCLUDE_FILE() also does:
Looking for include files foo.h
When using the NSIS generator from CPack the file NSIS.template.in is
used to generate a project.nsi file for NSIS to process. The file
consists code in the NSIS scripting language. Among other functions
there is an onInit function the initializes the installer. The function
(tries to) recognise admin and power users but fails since NSIS
scripting language relative includes the jump from the current command
so +3 means "run the third command after this one", so a failed check
for admin completely skips the check for a power user and goes directly
to "done:".
User permission lookup was added in initial NSIS support by commit
a11b9a4c (Merge from CPack branch, 2006-01-01). Later commit b1b052fd
(Several changes to for NSIS, 2006-03-01) added a line inside a block
that should be skipped by a jump without updating the jump length.
Update the jump length to correct the behavior.