All changes were created by running
"pyupgrade --py3-only --keep-percent-format"
and committing the results. I have not touched string formatting for
now.
- use set literals
- simplify .format() parameter naming
- remove __future__
- remove default "r" mode for open()
- use OSError rather than compatibility aliases
- remove stray parentheses in function(generator) scopes
The way the tracking is currently done it works if no new subprojects
are added to a configured build directory. For cases where we want to
add a new subproject, it fails because we don't initialize builtins for
that subproject. This corrects that by checking to see if the subproject
already exists, and if it doesn't initializes the bultins for it.
Fixes: #8421
By default all subprojects are installed. If --skip-subprojects is given
with no value only the main project is installed. If --skip-subprojects
is given with a value, it should be a coma separated list of subprojects
to skip and all others will be installed.
Fixes: #2550.
Or other language flags that use CPPFLAGS (like CXXFLAGS). The problem
here is actually rather simple, `dict.setdefault()` doesn't work like I
thought it did, I thought it created a weak entry, but it actually is
equivalent to:
```python
if k not in dict:
dict[k] = v
```
Instead we'll use an intermediate dictionary (a default dictionary
actually, since that makes things a little cleaner) and then add the
keys from that dict to self.options as applicable.
Test case written by Jussi, Fix by Dylan
Co-authored-by: Jussi Pakkanen
Fixes: #8361Fixes: #8345
This new keyword argument makes it possible to run specific
test setups only on a subset of the tests. For example, to
mark some tests as slow and avoid running them by default:
add_test_setup('quick', exclude_suites: ['slow'], is_default: true)
add_test_setup('slow')
It will then be possible to run the slow tests with either
`meson test --setup slow` or `meson test --suite slow`.
[why]
If we build and test a library we need to make sure that we find the
currently build library object first, before an older system installed
one.
This can be broken if the library in question is installed in a custom
path, and another library we depend on also is installed there.
[how]
Just move the rpath to the current build artifacts to the front.
Solves #8030.
Signed-off-by: Fini Jastrow <ulf.fini.jastrow@desy.de>
many compilers allowed "nodiscard" C++17 feature with pre-c++17 flags.
The C++17 filesystem typically actually does require -std=c++17.
This makes this unit test more representative of C++17 flag support.
Right now sub-sub projects are not correctly registered, because we
don't have a way to pass up past the first level of subproject. This
patch changes that by making the build_Def_files as defined in the
Interpreter initializer accurate for translated dependencies, ie, cmake
dependencies won't define a dependency on a non-existent meson.build.
This means that it can always add the subi.build_def_files because they
are always accurate.
Currently if you change the `choices` field in the meson_options.txt
file, no update will be done until `meson setup --wipe` is called. Now
if the choices change then the options will be properly merged.
If the currently select value is still valid it is guaranteed to be
kept, if it is now invalid the new default value will be used and a
warning will be printed.
Fixes#7386
`pathlib.Path.glob()` also returns directories that match source
filenames (i.e. a directory named `test.h/`), but `clang-format` and
`clang-tidy` fail when handed a directory. We manually skip calling
`clang-format` and `clang-tidy` on those directories.
If the meson.build doesn't use a native compiler, the native compiler
options (e.g. 'c_args') shouldn't be present in the output of 'meson
introspect --buildoptions'.
Something like {a: foo} currently stymies the IntrospectionInterpreter and
breaks introspection of the source directory. The fix is just to walk the keys
and return a dummy dictionary.
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
Add the ids of any target that needs to be rebuilt before running the
tests as computed by the backend, to the introspection data for tests and benchmarks.
This also includes anything that appears on the test's command line.
Without this information, IDEs must update the entire build before running
any test. They can now instead selectively build the test executable
itself and anything that is needed to run it.
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
when that statement gets evaluated, the interpreter remembers the
version target and if it was part of the evaluation of a `if` condition
then the target meson version is temporally overriden within that
if-block.
Fixes: #7590
- Exceptions raised during subproject setup were ignored.
- Allow c_stdlib in native file, was already half supported.
- Eliminate usage of subproject variable name by overriding
'<lang>_stdlib' dependency name.
This allows adding a `[project options]` section to a cross or native file
that contains the options defined for a project in it's meson_option.txt
file.
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>
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.