Previously if a user tried to pass a command line build
option that contained a '%' character the command line
parser assumed that there was string interpolation to be
done. As there is no sense in such a scenario no code
provides any input for the interpolation. This then leads to
a failure.
In this commit we specifically override the defaults in
ConfigParser and set interpolation to None, which disables
command line build option interpolation.
Fixes#6157
Previously, warnings genereated in CMake were not logged because
CMake sends them to stderr alongside the trace information. With
this PR, only real trace lines are send to the trace parser and
all other lines in stderr are logged as warnings.
In a large project, it can be hard to guess what meson "had in mind", when many different
warnings are added in different places. Let's make the message precise and specify the location.
WARNING: Consider using the built-in warning_level option instead of adding warning flags by hand.
↓
meson.build:414: WARNING: Consider using the built-in warning_level option instead of using "-Wextra".
This means that when either cflags or libs lookup fails, this will be
logged always in the log, leading to much easier to debug messages
like:
Called `/usr/local/bin/pkg-config --cflags gnutls` -> 1
pkg-config error with 'gnutls': Could not generate cargs for gnutls:
Package nettle was not found in the pkg-config search path.
Perhaps you should add the directory containing `nettle.pc'
to the PKG_CONFIG_PATH environment variable
Package 'nettle', required by 'gnutls', not found
Run-time dependency gnutls found: NO (tried pkgconfig)
Previously even when meson failed to obtain cflags or libs for a
dependency it would lead to the dependency being found, causing very
confusing errors at build time.
FreeBSD uses ${PREFIX}/libdata/pkgconfig as default pkgconf search path
for non-base libraries. This commit makes that directory the default
install_dir in the pkgconfig module on FreeBSD.
Under Windows, the colon ':' is used after the drive letter.
So, the colon should not be used as a list separator or for splitting,
otherwise it could lead to paths in CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH with a
semicolon ';' between the drive letter and the rest of the path, e.g:
-DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=C;/foo/bar
instead of
-DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=C:/foo/bar
Use os.pathsep instead of ':' to split the environmental variable
CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH