We don't need the legacy variable name system as for dependency()
fallbacks because meson.override_find_program() is largely used already,
so we can just rely on it.
The value for that key must be a coma separated list of dependecy names
provided by that subproject, when no variable name is needed because the
subproject uses override_dependency().
If object is not built pic, trying to link it into libshr.so fails:
[6/8] Linking target libshr.so.
FAILED: libshr.so
gcc -o libshr.so 'shr@sha/source2.o' -Wl,--no-undefined -Wl,--as-needed -shared -fPIC -Wl,--start-group -Wl,-soname,libshr.so -Wl,--end-group
Text relocation remains referenced
against symbol offset in file
.text (section) 0x20 shr@sha/source2.o
ld: fatal: relocations remain against allocatable but non-writable sections
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
ninja: build stopped: subcommand failed.
Signed-off-by: Alan Coopersmith <alan.coopersmith@oracle.com>
Since mesonbuild/environment.py doesn't recognize Studio compilers,
force use of gcc on Solaris for now.
Signed-off-by: Alan Coopersmith <alan.coopersmith@oracle.com>
Solaris linker added support for GNU-style --version-script in Solaris 11.4,
but requires adding the -z gnu-version-script-compat flag to enable it.
Signed-off-by: Alan Coopersmith <alan.coopersmith@oracle.com>
D lang compilers have an option -release (or similar) which turns off
asserts, contracts, and other runtime type checking. This patch wires
that up to the b_ndebug flag.
Fixes#7082
The implementation of this function has changed enough that the name
doesn't really reflect what it actually does. It basically returns true
unless you're cross compiling, need and exe_wrapper, and don't have one.
The original function remains but is marked as deprecated.
This makes one small change the meson source language, which is that it
defines that can_run_host_binaries will return true in build == host
compilation, which was the behavior that already existed. Previously
this was undefined in build == host compilation.
This revert a part of #7020 because it was using gir_inc_dirs
before it is set. Properly fix typelib_includes instead that was working
only when g-i is a pkgconfig dependency.
The system tool is always the wrong thing to use and cause hard to debug
issues when trying to link system libraries with cross built binaries.
The ExternalDependency base class already had a method to deal with
this, used by PkgConfigDependency and QtBaseDependency, so it should
make things more consistent.
Discussions in #6524 have shown that there are various possible uses of the
kconfig module and even disagreements in the exact file format between
Python-based kconfiglib and the tools in Linux. Instead of trying to
reconcile them, just rename the module to something less suggestive and
leave any policy to meson.build files.
In the future it may be possible to add some kind of parsing through
keyword arguments such as bool_true, quoted_strings, etc. and possibly
creation of key-value lists too. For now, configuration_data objects
provide an easy way to access quoted strings. Note that Kconfig stores
false as "absent" so it was already necessary to write "x.has_key('abc')"
rather than the more compact "x['abc']". Therefore, having to use
configuration_data does not make things much more verbose.
Gtest can output junit results with a command line switch. We can parse
this to get more detailed results than the returncode, and put those in
our own Junit output. We basically just throw away the top level
'testsuites' object, then fixup the names of the tests, and shove that
into our junit.
Initially produced using:
for d in "test cases/failing/"* ; do rm -r _build ; ./meson.py setup "$d" _build | grep ERROR >"$d"/expected_stdout.txt; done
then converted to json with jq using:
jq --raw-input --slurp 'split("\n") | {stdout: map({line: select(. != "")})}' expected_stdout.txt >test.json
or merged with existing json using:
jq --slurp '.[0] + .[1]' test.json expected.json >test.json.new
v2:
Add some comments to explain the match when it isn't totally obvious
v3:
Add or adjust existing re: in expected output to handle '/' or '\' path
separators appearing in message, not location.
v4:
Put expected stdout in test.json, rather than a separate expected_stdout.txt file
Park comments in an unused 'comments' key, as JSON doesn't have a syntax for comments