It's supposed to emit an error message, but instead it did a traceback.
It used to be, if no install_dir was specified then it was simply not in
kwargs, but due to typed_kwargs it will now be there, but not have
viable contents, so the dict membership check got skipped.
Fixes#9522
Since 0.59.0 Meson downloads multiple wraps in parallel, so the
packagecache directory could be created by one then the 2nd would hit
error when calling os.mkdir() because it already exists.
fixes#6314
in case of backend is vs2017 or vs2019 place LanguageStandard tag with stdcpp version and LanguageStandard_C tag with stdc version in .vcxproj file
We say:
> If version 4.2 or higher of the first is found, targets coverage-text,
> coverage-xml, coverage-sonarqube and coverage-html are generated.
But this is totally untrue. Make it true, by actually checking (and
not generating broken coverage commands when older versions of gcovr are
found).
Fixes#9505
Python is a whitespace significant language, changing indent level
implies that scope is changing. So when a string like
```python
def foo():
a = '''
somthing
'''
return a
```
It's visually misleading. Couple that with folding editors like vim
getting utterly confused by this, and it turns into a real pain. Using
textwrap.dedent allows us to get rid of that:
```python
def foo():
a = texwrap.dedent(
'''
something
''')
return a
```
But we still get the same result
There is no reason for these inititializers to exist, all they do is
defer to the parent initializer. Worse, since they are not type
annotated thy prevent the parent type annotations from being used
install: false was only available since 0.50, so we should not warn
people who support older versions to use something they cannot.
Fortunately, we can do FeatureDeprecated for this -- and then it even
gets summarized. Unfortunately, it's not well used, and certainly isn't
here.
It turns out this could be missing in GResource*Target as well, due
mostly to the same problem, side effects of mutating a shared
dictionary; though it could also happen with a specific set of keywords
given and other omitted.
Fixes#9350
Unless parsing TAP output, there is no strict requirement for
"meson test" to process test output one line at a time; it simply
looks nicer to not print a partial line if it can be avoided.
However, in the case of extremely long lines StreamReader.readline
can fail with a ValueError. Use readuntil('\n') instead and
just process whatever pieces of the line it returns.
Fixes: #8591
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>