The paths in meson.build use / as path separator, however, the paths
constructed during the directory structure walk use native path
separators, thus the path never compare equal to the excluded ones.
Normalize the exclusion paths before the comparison.
Also prevent from using a parent directory as builddir by mistake.
Co-authored-by: Volker Weißmann <volker.weissmann@gmx.de>
Co-authored-by: Charles Brunet <charles.brunet@optelgroup.com>
- MesonException for errors is clearer than SystemExit('error message')
and provides meson-formatted "ERROR: ..."
- `raise SystemExit` with no parameter isn't obvious that it intends to
exit successfully
While clarifying the latter, it was observed to cause
test_preprocessor_checks_CPPFLAGS() failure to be ignored. That test
checks get_define() on both c and cpp compilers, which means we need to
define either CPPFLAGS or both CFLAGS+CXXFLAGS.
We will still try to load `meson_options.txt` if `meson.options` doesn't
exist. Because there are some advantages to using `meson.options` even
with older versions of meson (such as better text editor handling)
we will not warn about the existence of a `meson.options` file if a
`meson_options.txt` file or symlink also exists.
The name `meson.options` was picked instead of alternative proposals,
such as `meson_options.build` for a couple of reasons:
1. meson.options is shorter
2. While the syntax is the same, only the `option()` function may be
called in meson.options, while, it may not be called in meson.build
3. While the two files share a syntax and elementary types (strings,
arrays, etc), they have different purposes: `meson.build` declares
build targets, `meson.options` declares options. This is similar to
the difference between C's `.c` and `.h` extensions.
As an implementation detail `Interpreter.option_file` has been removed,
as it is used exactly once, in the `project()` call to read the options,
and we can just calculate it there and not store it.
Fixes: #11176
CI runs with vs2019 and we were passing --backend=vs. This fix
reconfigure tests because we can't reconfigure with --backend=vs when
initial configuration determined the backend is actually vs2019.
It can only be used for projects that don't have any rules at all, i.e.
they are purely using Meson to:
- configure files
- run (script?) tests
- install files that exist by the end of the setup stage
This can be useful e.g. for Meson itself, a pure python project.
This was added in f774609 to only change the access time of the
coredata file if the coredata struct actually changed. However,
this doesn't work as pickle serializations aren't guaranteed to
be stable. Instead, let's manually check if options have changed
values and skip the save if they haven't changed.
We also extend the associated unit test to cover all the option
types and to ensure that configure does get executed if one of the
options changes value.
This test checks that rpaths are stripped correctly when their prefix
matches the source directory.
This test fails without the previous commit:
1/4 visitation FAIL 0.01s exit status 127
>>> MALLOC_PERTURB_=150 meson/tmpy7c0joy5/patron
――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――― ✀ ―――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――
stderr:
meson/tmpy7c0joy5/patron: error while loading shared libraries: libalexandria.so: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
Signed-off-by: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com>
These are necessary for projects outside Meson itself that want to
extend the 'meson install' functionality as meson-python does to
assemble Python package wheels from Meson projects.
Fixes#11426.
We do not need the python module's find_installation() for this, as this
does various things to set up building and installing python modules
(pure python and C-API). This functionality is already tested in the
python tests.
Elsewhere, when we just need an interpreter capable of running python
scripts in order to guarantee a useful scripting language for custom
commands, it suffices to use find_program(), which does not run an
introspection script or do module imports, and is thus faster and
a bit cleaner.
Either way, both methods are guaranteed to find the python3 interpreter,
deferring to mesonlib.python_command for that guarantee.
test "71 summary" can sometimes return the python command with the
".exe" part all uppercased for mysterious Windows reasons. Smooth this
over with ExternalProgram.
This method allows meson.build to introspect on the changed options.
It works by merely exposing the same set of data that is logged by
MesonApp._generate.
Fixes#10898
Now that we don't insert /utf-8 into the always args for MSVC < 19.00
we need to use a version > 19.00 for testing. This also means that
/Zc:__cplusplus will be added to the always args.
It is often more useful to generate shell script than dumping to stdout.
It is also important to be able to select the shell format.
Formats currently implemented:
- sh: Basic VAR=prepend_value:$VAR
- export: Same as 'sh', but also export VAR
- vscode: Same as 'sh', but without substitutions because they don't
seems to work. To be used in launch.json's envFile.
fix_jar() tries to remove an existing Class-Path entry from the jar
manifest by postprocessing the manifest and passing it to `jar -um`.
However, `jar -um` can only add/replace manifest entries, not remove
them, and it also complains loudly when replacing an entry:
Dec 13, 2022 7:11:19 PM java.util.jar.Attributes read
WARNING: Duplicate name in Manifest: Manifest-Version.
Ensure that the manifest does not have duplicate entries, and
that blank lines separate individual sections in both your
manifest and in the META-INF/MANIFEST.MF entry in the jar file.
Thus fix_jar() produces one such warning for each entry in the manifest
and accomplishes nothing else.
Use jar -uM instead. This completely removes the manifest from the jar
and allows adding it back as a normal zip member, fixing fix_jar() and
avoiding the warnings.
Fixes: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/10491
Fixes: c70a051e93 ("java: remove manifest classpath from installed jar")
In commit a7e458effa we stopped erroring
out on invalid TAP stream contents, with the rationale that "prove" has
become more lenient.
A close reading of the TAP spec indicates why, though:
> A TAP parser is required to not consider an unknown line as an error but
> may optionally choose to capture said line and hand it to the test
> harness, which may have custom behavior attached. This is to allow for
> forward compatability. Test::Harness silently ignores incorrect lines,
> but will become more stringent in the future. TAP::Harness reports TAP
> syntax errors at the end of a test run.
The goal of treating unknown lines as an error in the TAP parser is not
because unknown lines are fine and dandy. The goal is to allow
implementing future versions of TAP, and handling it via existing
parsers. Since Meson has both a parser and a harness, let's do exactly
that -- pass these lines as a distinctive status to the test harness,
then have the test harness complain.
The pkg-config dependency class has some interesting logic for finding a
good pkg-config that will be used for dependency lookups. We sometimes
need to use it, though, outside of the class. Make that possible.
Adds a new maximum warning level that is roughly equivalent to "all warnings".
This adds a way to use `/Wall` with MSVC (without the previous broken warning),
`-Weverything` with clang, and almost all general warnings in GCC with
strictness roughly equivalent to clang's `-Weverything`.
The GCC case must be implemented by meson since GCC doesn't provide a similar
option. To avoid maintenance headaches for meson, this warning level is
defined objectively: all warnings are included except those that require
specific values or are specific to particular language revisions. This warning
level is mainly intended for new code, and it is expected (nearly guaranteed)
that projects will need to add some suppressions to build cleanly with it.
More commonly, it's just a handy way to occasionally take a look at what
warnings are present with some compiler, in case anything interesting shows up
you might want to enable in general.
Since the warnings enabled at this level are inherently unstable with respect
to compiler versions, it is intended for use by developers and not to be set as
the default.
Factors out opening the meson log into its own function so that
it can be used in the places where with was done before.
Additionally instead of checking if the file exists before opening it,
try to open it and handle the exception when it is not found.
We use a dummy project with a vague name and try to find flags for it
based on the installable pkg-config files. This sort of works,
generally, because it attempts to match `-lct` which doesn't exist
because the test case isn't installed, and that link argument is passed
directly through.
Except, sometimes that library does exist. It is provided by the
"freetds" project, which may be a dependency other tools. In that case,
Meson finds a library, and the `dependency()` resolves to
`/usr/lib/libct.so` and the test fails.
Fortunately, we do have an API to say that we really want to get back
the same flags pkg-config returned. Use this.
It was only trying to guess install tag, and log missing tags, for files
installed by install_data(). Do it also for all other files, especially
custom_taget() that commonly installs generated headers.
Those classes are used by wrapper scripts and we should not have to
import the rest of mesonlib, build.py, and all their dependencies for
that.
This renames mesonlib/ directory to utils/ and add a mesonlib.py module
that imports everything from utils/ to not have to change `import
mesonlib` everywhere. It allows to import utils.core without importing
the rest of mesonlib.
This removes the need for the use of the global statement. I've also
updated the test that overrides this to use mock.patch instead of hand
monkey patching.
This is wasteful and generally unneeded, since code can just use the
compiler they detected instead of manually poking at the internals of
this subpackage.
It also avoids importing an absolute ton of code the instant one runs
`from . import compilers`
In various situations we want to figure out what type of compiler we
have, because we want to know stuff like "is it the pgi one", or "does
it use msvc style". The compiler object has this property already, via
an API specifically designed to communicate this info, but instead we
performed isinstance checks on a compiler class.
This is confusing and indirect, and has the side effect of requiring
more imports everywhere. We should do away with it.
Save off the hash of the wrap file when first configuring a subproject.
When reconfiguring a subproject, check the hash of the wrap file
against the stored hash. If they don't match then warn the user.