By default is OFF and marked as advanced.
It's also add custom cmake-developer-reference (ALL) target
Generated output will be installed to ${CMAKE_DOC_DIR}/developer-reference.
61a607e8 Help: Document AUTORCC behavior for same .qrc name case
e4f508e4 Tests/QtAutogen: Test same moc/qrc source names in different directories
4e9b97d7 QtAutogen: Allow multiple qrc files with the same name
41c9e14a QtAutogen: Allow multiple moc files with the same name
3c3b37b0 QtAutogen: Use std:: instead of ::std::
0a5dd3c7 cmFilePathUuid: Add class to generate deterministic unique file names
3a5f609c cmCryptoHash: New ByteHash methods that return a byte vector
f582dba6 cmCryptoHash: Return byte vector from internal Finalize method
74f0d4ab cmCryptoHash: New byte hash to string function
94c29976 cmCryptoHash: Documentation comments
Some callers may want the raw byte vector instead of the hex character
string. Convert the internal implementation to use this so that we
can later add public APIs to get it.
With the Makefile generator one can use `cd $subdir; make install` to build and
install targets associated with a given subdirectory. This is not possible to
do with the Ninja generator since there is only one `build.ninja` file at the
top of the build tree. However, we can approximate it by allowing one to run
`ninja $subdir/install` at the top of the tree to build the targets in the
corresponding subdirectory and install them.
This also makes sense for `test`, `package`, and other GLOBAL_TARGET targets.
It was already done for `all` by commit v3.6.0-rc1~240^2~2 (Ninja: Add
`$subdir/all` targets, 2016-03-11).
In cmGlobalNinjaGenerator::AppendTargetOutputs we previously
handled GLOBAL_TARGET outputs specially in order to avoid adding
directory components to the output. However, this is not necessary
because cmNinjaTargetGenerator::New already filters out copies of
these targets that are not at the top level. Instead we can simply
follow the same output computation code path as UTILITY targets.
CMake used to put all header search paths into HEADER_SEARCH_PATHS
attribute. Unfortunately this attribute does not support to declare
a search path as a system include.
As a hack one could add a -isystem /path to the cflags but then include
ordering is not deterministic. A better approach was chosen with this
patch by not filling HEADER_SEARCH_PATHS at all and to populate
the C, C++, and Fortran flags directly. The include paths used by
Xcode should be now identical to the ones used by Unix Makefiles and
Ninja generator.
The implementation of `install(EXPORT)` generates files into a staging
directory for later installation. We use the full install destination
in the path to the staging directory to avoid collisions. In order to
avoid exceeding maximum path lengths (especially on Windows) we compute
a hash of the install destination when it is too long. Fix this logic
to account for the length of the file name(s) when deciding whether to
switch to the hashed name.
Reported-by: Alan W. Irwin <irwin@beluga.phys.uvic.ca>
The `CMAKE_<LANG>_SIMULATE_ID` variables are not set to "GNU" for a
GNU-like Clang compiler on Windows. They are only set to "MSVC" for a
MSVC-like Clang. Revise our response file format selection accordingly.
Reported-by: Chaoren Lin <chaorenl@google.com>
This will allow additional information about the availability
and capabilities of extra generators to be queried without
actually creating them.
Instead of a static NewFactory() method like the main generator
factories have, use a static GetFactory() method to get a pointer to a
statically allocated extra generator factory. This simplifies memory
management.
f951d0ad Add tests for BUNDLE_EXTENSION
c63380b1 Update documentation about bundle extensions
134d5c1f Honor BUNDLE_EXTENSION also for Frameworks (#14742)
2b909c08 Honor BUNDLE_EXTENSION also for App Bundles (#16148)
Teach Visual Studio generators to include object files from object
libraries in the list of objects whose symbols are to be exported.
The Makefile and Ninja generators already did this. Update the
test to cover this case.
Reported-by: Bertrand Bellenot <Bertrand.Bellenot@cern.ch>
Revert these commits:
* v3.6.0-rc1~134^2
Tests: QtAutogen: Same source name in different directories test, 2016-04-13
* v3.6.0-rc1~134^2~1
Autogen: Generate qrc_NAME.cpp files in subdirectories, 2016-04-19
* v3.6.0-rc1~134^2~2
Autogen: Generate not included moc files in subdirectories, 2016-04-19
They regress existing builds that depend on the paths/symbols generated
previously. Another approach will be needed to solve the name collision
problem they were intended to solve. Leave the error diagnostics for
the colliding cases that were added in the same topic as the above
commits because they provide a useful early failure in relevant cases.
Fixes#16209.
Factor CMAKE_<LANG>_USE_RESPONSE_FILE_FOR_{OBJECTS,LIBRARIES} lookup out
into a common helper. Use a separate helper for each because more
specific logic may be added to each later.
Custom command dependencies are followed for each target's source files
and add their transitive closure to the corresponding target. This
means that when a custom command in one target has a dependency on a
custom command in another target, both will appear in the dependent
target's sources. For the Makefile, VS IDE, and Xcode generators this
is not a problem because each target gets its own independent build
system that is evaluated in target dependency order. By the time the
dependent target is built the custom command that belongs to one of its
dependencies will already have been brought up to date.
For the Ninja generator we need to generate a monolithic build system
covering all targets so we can have only one copy of a custom command.
This means that we need to reconcile the target-level ordering
dependencies from its appearance in multiple targets to include only the
least-dependent common set. This is done by computing the set
intersection of the dependencies of all the targets containing a custom
command. However, we previously included only the direct dependencies
so any target-level dependency not directly added to all targets into
which a custom command propagates was discarded.
Fix this by computing the transitive closure of dependencies for each
target and then intersecting those sets. That will get the common set
of dependencies. Also add a test to cover a case in which the
incorrectly dropped target ordering dependencies would fail.
Although we provide a `VS_GLOBAL_ROOTNAMESPACE` option to both set
the `RootNamespace` value and reference it, some users may try to
set `VS_GLOBAL_RootNamespace` to set `RootNamespace` as a variant
of the `VS_GLOBAL_<variable>` property. In this case we still
need to add the reference to `$(RootNamespace)`.