It is often desirable to use ~ for home directory in -D compilation args.
Why the transform to pathlib.Path and back to str? Because this is one of many
places where the list(map(str,..))) will be eliminated upon Python 3.6 being
minimum Meson Python requirement.
This is a mixin class for DynamicLinkers that aims to provide only the
most basic posix-like linker arguments, in other words bits that gnu ld,
apple's ld, solaris's ld, and other completely disjoint linkers that are
used on Unix-like OSes share.
Ifort can generate dependency information (.d files), it just does it
differently than GNU compilers do. This also fixes a bug caused by
adding the dependency generation commands to the GNULike class later in
this series.
These two functions are different only in the classes that they use, a
couple of simple in-line ternaries takes care of that and reduces code
duplication.
Clang doesn't really like having no-undefined plus the address sanitizer, but
gcc doesn't mind. This all happens to work with clang + gnu ld, but with clang
+ apple ld this turns into a dumpster fire. Just add b_lundef=false to make
everyone happy.
the fact that foo and bar are not directories makes Apple's ld upset, and with
fatal warnings it dies on this test. Using real directories makes it happy.
We support 3 D compilers, DMD, LDC, and GDC. DMD is the reference
compiler, and LDC attempts to largely mirror it's command line usage.
GDC does not, it instead acts like GCC (which makes sense). The current
abstraction puts DMD behavior in the base D compiler and then overrides
then in the GnuDCompiler class.
This is messy, but it becomes more problematic when splitting the linker
and compiler abstractions apart.
I've opted to instead split the DCompiler class into two separate
classes. The DCompiler implements core D functinoality, and
DmdLikeCompilerMixin, which implements the DMD and LDC command line
arguments. I've then mxed that into the DmdDCompiler and LLVMDCompiler
classes, and mixed the GnuCompiler into the GnuDCompiler class to get
Gnu command line behavior.
GLib does not currently use override_find_program() for this tool
because it is compiled and would not work in cross build. But this
prepares Meson for when/if GLib will rewrite it in Python.
See https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1859.
Build and target info is confusing in that case. However still log that
information, as it is useful in case something slips out of sync and
needs to be debugged.