If a logical block terminates with mismatching arguments we previously failed to remove the function blocker but replayed the commands anyway, which led to cases in which we failed to report the mismatch (return shortly after the ending command). The recent refactoring of function blocker deletion changed this behavior to produce an error on the ending line by not blocking the command. Furthermore, the function blocker would stay in place and complain at the end of every equal-level block of the same type. This teaches CMake to treat the begin/end commands (if/endif, etc.) as correct and just warns when the arguments mismatch. The change allows cases in which CMake 2.6.2 silently ignored a mismatch to run as before but with a warning.
BUG: Fix for issue #7470. Allow spaces in the path names of installed files with the NSIS CPack generator and component-based installs. Add an installed file to the CPackComponents test: it failed before the fix; now it passes.
This is CMake, the cross-platform, open-source make system. CMake is free software under a BSD-like license, see Copyright.txt. For documentation see the Docs/ directory once you have built CMake or visit http://www.cmake.org. Building CMake ============== Supported Platforms ------------------- MS Windows, Mac OS X, Linux, FreeBSD, Solaris, HP-UX, IRIX, BeOS, QNX Other UNIX-like operating systems may work too out of the box, if not it shouldn't be a major problem to port CMake to this platform. Contact the CMake mailing list in this case: http://www.cmake.org/mailman/listinfo/cmake If you don't have any previous version of CMake already installed -------------------------------------------------------------- * UNIX/Mac OSX/MinGW/MSYS/Cygwin: You need to have a compiler and a make installed. Run the bootstrap script you find the in the source directory of CMake. You can use the --help option to see the supported options. You may want to use the --prefix=<install_prefix> option to specify a custom installation directory for CMake. You can run the bootstrap script from within the CMake source directory or any other build directory of your choice. Once this has finished successfully, run make and make install. So basically it's the same as you may be used to from autotools-based projects: $ ./bootstrap; make; make install * Other Windows: You need to download and install a binary release of CMake in order to build CMake. You can get these releases from http://www.cmake.org/HTML/Download.html . Then proceed with the instructions below. You already have a version of CMake installed --------------------------------------------- You can build CMake as any other project with a CMake-based build system: run the installed CMake on the sources of this CMake with your preferred options and generators. Then build it and install it. For instructions how to do this, see http://www.cmake.org/HTML/RunningCMake.html
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