In commit v3.0.0-rc1~9 (Help: Rename 3.0 release notes to 3.0.0,
2014-02-19) we anticipated the possibility of bugfix-only release notes.
However, in practice we have no release notes for bug fix releases
because we do not cover bug fixes in release notes at all, only new
features. Instead we've been updating the feature-level release notes
document in bug fix releases, treating errors in the document as bugs.
It makes more sense to maintain release notes at the feature-release
level, so rename the documents accordingly. Also update the document
titles and intro text to refer only to feature versions and not bugfix
versions.
Add section headers similar to the 3.1 release notes and move each
individual bullet into an appropriate section. Revise and consolidate
some bullets covering related areas.
Co-Author: Stephen Kelly <steveire@gmail.com>
Move all development release notes into a new version-specific document:
tail -q -n +3 Help/release/dev/* > Help/release/3.2.0.rst
git rm -- Help/release/dev/*
except the sample topic:
git checkout HEAD -- Help/release/dev/0-sample-topic.rst
Reference the new document from the release notes index document.
Add a title and intro sentence to the new document by hand.
809a5a5e Help: Add notes for topic 'CTestCoverageCollectGCOV-refinements'
03c0812c CTestCoverageCollectGCOV: Fix handling of international characters
8caa4e72 CTestCoverageCollectGCOV: Add test case
5c828cc8 CTestCoverageCollectGCOV: Allow custom flags to gcov
30cb628e CTestCoverageCollectGCOV: Fix handling of large file counts
Define an empty string in CMAKE_<LANG>_STANDARD_DEFAULT to mean that
the toolchain has no notion of lanuage standard levels. In this case
the <LANG>_STANDARD[_REQUIRED] properties will have no effect.
Update the RunCMake.CompileFeatures test to exclude the
LinkImplementationFeatureCycle test when there is no standard default.
It can never fail because no use of specific features will adjust the
CXX_STANDARD level required for any target since the standard levels
have no meaning in this case.
ab9fa54d Xcode: Switch to internal CMAKE_MAKE_PROGRAM lookup by generator (#15324)
11e2e6ca Xcode: Select make program at build time
e4055a61 Xcode: Add internal API to find xcodebuild
The "cmakexbuild" wrapper is not needed for Xcode 4 and above, and the
path to it may change when CMake moves. Avoid storing a specific path
to a build program in CMakeCache.txt and instead compute the value for
CMAKE_MAKE_PROGRAM on demand. However, if a user does set the value
explicitly then honor it.
This does for Xcode what commit v3.0.0-rc1~260^2~4 (VS: Switch to
internal CMAKE_MAKE_PROGRAM lookup by generators, 2013-11-15) did for
Visual Studio generators.
This will make them use the 'console' pool with the Ninja generator.
Impacted targets are:
- Built-in targets: install, install/local, install/strip, tests,
package, package_source, rebuild_cache
- Targets provided by the CTestTargets module: Nightly, Continuous,
Experimental,
and all their variants (*Start, *Configure, ...)
Read file names from the lines of a specified file. Reject input lines
starting in '-' to leave room for option parsing to be added later. Add
just '--add-file=' now to allow files starting in '-' to be specified.
d0adcccb try_run: Add tests for LINK_LIBRARIES with mock libraries.
223c5cb7 try_run: Add test for bad link libraries.
e2b1f058 try_run: Add support for LINK_LIBRARIES option.
Most functionality is already implemented in Source/cmCoreTryCompile.{h,cxx}.
Document and improve argument parsing.
This functionality is already being used by a number of modules, like
CheckCSourceCompiles.cmake, but it is not documented.
The command has been documented as 'deprecated', but it is not really
slated for removal and can still be used. Clarify this in the
documentation. While at it, revise the documentation to use wording
more consistent with that now in target_link_libraries.
Suggested-by: Christoph Grüninger <foss@grueninger.de>
When using system curl, we trust it to be configured with desired CA
certs. When using our own build of curl, we use os-configured CA certs
on Windows and OS X. On other systems, try to achieve this by searching
for common CA cert locations. According to a brief investigation, the
curl packages on popular Linux distros are currently configured as:
* Arch: /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt
* Debian with OpenSSL: /etc/ssl/certs
* Debian with GNU TLS: /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt
* Debian with NSS: /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt
* Fedora: /etc/pki/tls/certs/ca-bundle.crt
* Gentoo with OpenSSL: /etc/ssl/certs
* Gentoo without OpenSSL: /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt
Teach CMake and CTest to look for these paths and use them as a CA path
or bundle when no other os-configured or user-specified CAs are
available.
Provide a function to run gcov and create a tarball of results.
Since CDash tracks the md5sum of the files uploaded, use the
--mtime option with "cmake -E tar" so that tar files could be
created that would have the same md5sum with the same content.
This adds support for the new cdash API where arbitrary files can be
uploaded to the CDash server. This CDash API communicates via json
files so the json parser jsoncpp was added to the Utilities directory.