The output_is_64bit, sizeof, cross_sizeof, compute_int and cross_compute_int
methods are reimplemented for Fortran compilers. Those inherited from
CLikeCompiler do not work since they assume C or C++.
Note that those tests rely on Fortran 2008 features (notably the c_sizeof
operator).
Closes#12757
Introduce a global Cargo interpreter state that keeps track of enabled
features on each crate.
Before generating AST of a Cargo subproject, it downloads every
sub-subproject and resolves the set of features enabled on each of them
recursively. When it later generates AST for one its dependencies, its
set of features and dependencies is already determined.
This allows checking for tools that may not be available in older version of qt
or avoiding requesting tools that may not be necessary for a given project
Co-authored-by: Nirbheek Chauhan <nirbheek@centricular.com>
When projects do not specify a minimum meson version, we used to avoid
giving them the benefit of the Feature checks framework. Instead:
- warn for features that were added after the most recent semver bump,
since they aren't portable to the range of versions people might use
these days
- warn for features that were deprecated before the upcoming semver
bump, i.e. all deprecated features, since they aren't portable to
upcoming semver-compatible versions people might be imminently upgrading
to
Although it's not especially common, there are certainly cases where it's
useful to pass the path to an external program to a test program.
Fixes: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/3552
Signed-off-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au>
CMake has two target properties, LINK_OPTIONS and INTERFACE_LINK_OPTIONS.
The former is for link flags that apply only to the target (PRIVATE).
The latter is used for link flags that propagate to dependents (PUBLIC
or INTERFACE). Meson currently propagates all flags, PUBLIC and PRIVATE,
as part of the generated dependency() which causes problems when some of
the private flags are highly disruptive, e.g. `-Wl,--version-script`.
Tease apart the two kinds of link flags and, for non-static libraries,
only propagate the PUBLIC/INTERFACE flags and not the PRIVATE ones.
When trying to get the version of a program, meson was previously
hardcoded to run the binary with `--version`. This does work with the
vast majority of programs, but there are a few outliers (e.g. ffmpeg)
which have an unusual argument for printing out the version. Support
these programs by introducing a version_argument kwarg in find_program
which allows users to override `--version` with whatever the custom
argument for printing the version may be for the program.
Cargo.lock is essentially identical to subprojects/*.wrap files. When a
(sub)project has a Cargo.lock file this allows automatic fallback for
its cargo dependencies.
When running our integration tests in systemd we depend on each test
having a unique name. This is always the case unless --repeat is used,
in which case multiple tests with the same name run concurrently which
causes issues when allocating resources that use the test name as the
identifier.
Let's set MESON_TEST_ITERATION to the current iteration of the test so
we can use $TEST_NAME-$TEST_ITERATION as our test identifiers which will
avoid these issues.
This uses objfw-config to get to the flags, however, there's still
several todos that can only be addressed once dependencies can have
per-language flags.
The docs didn't really explain what the issue was with using it. And
it's not actually a "crash" either way.
The FeatureNew mentions that "name" is new, but it is standard for
these warnings to tell you both the type of object you're operating on
and the name of the method that is an issue. This omitted the former,
and was very confusing.
This is very similar to --gdb, except it doesn't spawn GDB, but
connects stdin/stdout/stderr directly to the test itself. This allows
interacting with integration tests that spawn a shell in a container
or virtual machine when the test fails.
In systemd we're migrating our integration tests to run using the
meson test runner. We want to allow interactive debugging of failed
tests directly in the virtual machine or container that is spawned
to run the test. To make this possible, we need meson test to connect
stdin/stdout/stderr of the test directly to the user's terminal, just
like is done with the --gdb option.
This fixes issues where a new option is added, an option is removed, the
constraints of an option are changed, an option file is added where one
didn't previously exist, an option file is deleted, or it is renamed
between meson_options.txt and meson.options
There is one case that is known to not work, but it's probably a less
common case, which is setting options for an unconfigured subproject.
We could probably make that work in some cases, but I don't think it
makes sense to download a wrap during meson configure.
commit 6a8330af598753d5982a37933beeac2d6b565386: hpp was clearly meant
and used several times, just not in the release notes themelves.
commit a75ced6d50a3d479eda6dcdc9c3482493f2161f0: C/C++ "what"? We
mention the std in the commit, but not in the text of the release notes.
Followup to 7b7d2e060b which handles ASAN and UBSAN.
It turns out that MSAN needs the same treatment. I've checked other sanitizers
like HWASAN and TSAN - it looks like they may both need it too, but Meson doesn't
currently suppose those anyway (see https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/12648).
Signed-off-by: Sam James <sam@gentoo.org>
Signed-off-by: Eli Schwartz <eschwartz93@gmail.com>