Ninja backend will fail to find the vs dep dependency
prefix string in a mingw64 environment. This change
simply updates the regex to be able to capture mingw64's unique
file separation pattern.
When `self.wrap.filesdir` is a relative path, which happens when
`meson subprojects update` is run, the path to the patch must be
provided relative to the working directory in which `patch` or `git`
is run.
`self.wrap.filesdir` is absolute when `Resolve()` is invoked by the
Meson interpreter, which is why this wasn't detected by the tests.
Specifically, this is a combination of the following:
- Revert "visualstudio.py: Apply /utf-8 only on clang or VS2015+"
This reverts commit 6e7c3efa79.
- Revert "Visual Studio: Only use /utf-8 on VS2015 or later or clang-cl"
This reverts commit 8ed151bbd7.
The changes were broken and untested, although this is because of a lack
of general CI testing for all languages on Windows. At least, this broke
the use of ifort, and possibly more.
The changes are fundamentally a bit "exciting", as they step out of the
hierarchy of compiler definitions and apply arguments almost willy-nilly.
And apparently it's leaky all over the place. I don't understand all of
what is going on with it, but it plainly failed to achieve its desired
goal and needs to be rolled back ASAP.
This removes one line of stderr output per GObject Introspection file
processed, e.g.
g-ir-scanner: link: gcc -o Fwupd-2.0 Fwupd-2.0.o -L. -Wl,-rpath...
This error message was quite confusing when triggered by
use of an absolute path to the include dir of an external dependency
(numpy in my case). Changing that to a relative dir also isn't
a solution, because Meson will *not* do the "busywork to make paths
work" that the error message says it will.
Transpilers need to run on the build machine in order to generate their
output, which can then be taken by a cross-compiler to create the final
output.
For the same reasons commit 7aa28456d ("Add dependency type for
Valgrind") removed linking with valgrind, pkgconfig shouldn't generate
"Requirements" for it, in general.
This solves dbus meson port question/issue from:
https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/dbus/dbus/-/merge_requests/303#note_1444819
Signed-off-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com>
MachineChoice is a mesonlib object, not a compilers object, so it makes
no sense to import it from the latter simply because the latter imports
it too. This results in brittle module dependencies and everything
breaking when a refactor removes it from the latter.
... also it is a typing-only import so while we are fixing it to import
from the right place, we can also put it in a type-checking block.
The old implementation assumed a path is of Windows iff the second
character is a colon. However, that is not always true.
First, a colon can be included in a non-Windows path. For example, it is
totally fine to have a directory named ':' on Linux 5.17.0 tmpfs.
Second, a Windows path may start with \\ for UNC or extended length.
Use pathlib to handle all of these cases.
Regardless of which MachineChoice we base the platform on, we compare
its value to lowercased identifiers. So we need to lowercase the
targetplatform too... but we only did so sometimes.
This broke e.g. on "Win32", but only when *not* doing a cross build.
Fixes#10539
We have to handle this, because Windows needs to link to the implib of
the executable (???) in order to create a shared module. This is
explicitly checked for and handled in the backend, and creating a build
target with `link_with: some_exe` still works, even. But updating
declare_dependency to typed_kwargs neglected to take that into account,
so creating a convenience interface for those same arguments failed.
In PR 10263, we didn't account for that we may have initialize the Visual
Studio-like compiler two times, once for a C compiler and once for the
C++ compiler, so we end up with Meson breaking on Visual Studio 2013
or earlier, such as when building GLib.
Fix this by setting up the always_args member of
the VisualStudioLikeCompiler instance during __init__() as needed, so that
we avoid falling into modifying shared objects.
In commit 3dcc712583 we moved to
typed_pos_args. In the process, we deleted some code to specifically
raise an error if you use custom_target or generator outputs, instead
leaving it out of the typed pos args.
However, that support was specifically supposed to be there. It was only
an error in part of an if statement for handling old versions of
glib-compile-resources. The specific error it calls out is that we need
to manually parse the depfile at configure time, due to an external bug;
obviously this is impossible if the gresource is only created at build
time.
Reinstate the original error message check, and allow built outputs to
be used as compile_resources() inputs.
Fixes#10367
The check for if the project supports the -j flag was needlessly
complex. We support two types of project:
- waf, always supports -j
- make, if GNU, supports -j
We never checked waf, and the make check assumed that the entire
command, rather than just the last component, was "make". It also
neglects "gmake".
Since any possible build command *may* support -j, always run the
--version check. Detect either build command in the output.
The unit test was racy but surprisingly never failed on CI. The reason
is we need to ensure ninja build somelib.so before running `make` into
the external project.
We can use this lots of places, and it's always the same kwarg. There
doesn't seem to be a point in naming it badly, then evolving it to the
standard name in the one place it is currently used. This made it not
shareable.
Given a kwarg value that is itself a dict/list, we would only check if
the since_values was present within that container. If the since_values
is itself the dict or list type, then we aren't looking for recursive
structures, we just want to know when the function began to accept that
type.
This is relevant in cases where a function accepted a dict, and at one
point began accepting a list (of strings in the form 'key=value'), or
vice versa.
The check for whether or not a file is allowed to be accessed from a
subproject fails if the subproject is accessed via a symlink. Use the
absolute path of the subproject without resolving symlinks to fix the
check.
Extend unit test 106 to check for this in the future.
At several points in the code base, f-strings are not correctly expanded
due to missing 'f' string prefix. This fixes all the occurrences I could
find.
- Remove duplicated code in mdevenv.py
- Change the limit to 1024 instead of 2048 which is what has been
tested.
- Skip shortening if it is already short enough.
- Skip shortening with wine >= 6.4 which does not seems to have that
limitation any more.
- Downgrade exception to warning in the case WINEPATH cannot be
shortened under 1024 chars, it is possible that it will still work.
Regression in commit 7c757dff71.
SubprojectHolder is no longer an ObjectHolder and says so via a TODO:
this means that we have to fiddle with held_object. Yay.
The `add_deps` function did not behave correctly when a specified
dependency is not an instance of `dependencies.Dependency`.
Reorder the logic flow to perform this validation first.
Fixes#10468
When need to catch exceptions just like we do in coredata.load() to
print proper error message instead of backtrace when user mix meson
versions.
This happens frequently when user has a newer version of meson installed
in their HOME and then "sudo meson install" uses the system version of
meson.
When a subproject is disabled on the initial configuration we should not
add it into self.coredata.initialized_subprojects because that will
prevent calling self.coredata.init_builtins() on a reconfigure if the
subproject gets enabled.
Fixes: #10225.