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.
Regression test: libccpp has both C and C++ sources. The executable only
has C sources. It should still link using the C++ compiler. When using
both_libraries the static has no sources and thus no compilers,
resulting in the executable linking using the C compiler.
https://github.com/Netflix/vmaf/issues/1107
GeneratedLists as sources to `gnome.gdbus_codegen` worked until
version 0.60 of Meson, but broke in 0.61 because of the conversion to
typed_pos_args and typed_kwargs. Reinstate this by adding them to the
decorators and annotations.
Note that gdbus_codegen desugars to two custom_targets and therefore the
generator is invoked twice. This is not optimal, but it should not be
an issue and can be changed later.
Fixes: 53a187ba2 ("modules/gnome: use typed_pos_args for gdbus_codegen", 2021-11-01)
Fixes: ef52e6093 ("modules/gnome: use typed_kwargs for gdbus_codegen", 2021-11-08)
Custom targets as sources to `gnome.gdbus_codegen` worked until version 0.60
of Meson, but broke in 0.61 because of the conversion to typed_pos_args
and typed_kwargs. Reinstate this by adding custom targets to the
decorators and annotations.
While generators also used to work, they are a bit tricky because
gdbus_codegen desugars to two custom_targets and therefore the generator
is invoked twice. This should not be a problem, but be explicit and
leave that to a separate commit to highlight the problem.
Fixes: 53a187ba2 ("modules/gnome: use typed_pos_args for gdbus_codegen", 2021-11-01)
Fixes: ef52e6093 ("modules/gnome: use typed_kwargs for gdbus_codegen", 2021-11-08)
When using both_libraries(), or library() with default_library=both, we
remove all sources from args and kwargs when building the static
library, and replace them by the objects from the shared library. But
sources could also come from any InternalDependency, in which case we
currently build them twice (not efficient) and link both objects into
the static library.
It also means that when we needlessly build those source for the static
library, it miss order dependency on generated headers that we removed
from args/kwargs, which can cause build errors in the case the source
from static lib is compiled before the header in shared lib gets
generated.
This happened in GLib:
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/merge_requests/2917.
https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/9287 changed the `optimization=0`
to pass `-O0` to the compiler. This change is reasonable by itself
but unfortunately, it breaks `buildtype=plain`, which promises
that “no extra build flags are used”.
`buildtype=plain` is important for distros like NixOS,
which manage compiler flags for optimization and hardening
themselves.
Let’s introduce a new optimization level that does nothing
and set it as the default for `buildtype=plain`.
A subproject could have a sub-subproject as a git submodule, or part of
the subproject's release tarball, and still have a wrap file for it
(e.g. needed for [provide] section). In that case we need to use the
source tree for the sub-subproject inplace instead of downloading a new
copy into the main project.
This is the case with GLib 2.74, it has a subproject "gvdb" as git
submodule, and part of release tarball, it ships gvdb.wrap file as well.
In the debug logs, always log if a dependency lookup raises a
DependencyException. In the `required: false` case, this information
would otherwise disappear forever, and we would just not even log that
we tried it -- it doesn't appear in "(tried x, y and z)".
In the `required: true` case, we would re-raise the first exception if
it failed to be detected. Update the raise message with the same
information we print to the debug logs, indicating which dependency and
which method was used in the failing attempt.
wayland-scanner can generate header files that only include
wayland-client-core.h using a flag.
Add a core_only option to scan_xml to support this use case.
The returned GResource is transfer-none, since the generated function
basically calls g_static_resource_get_resource(). It should not be
unreffed. Causes an abort on Debian:
GLib-GIO:ERROR:../../../gio/gresource.c:1451:g_static_resource_fini: assertion failed: (g_atomic_int_get (&resource->ref_count) >= 2)
This is generally a bad idea, e.g. it causes OSError on freebsd.
It also gets ignored by solaris and thus causes unittest failures.
The proper solution is to simply reject any attempt to set this, and log a
warning.
The install_emptydir function does apply the mode as well, and since it
is a directory it actually does something. This is the only place where
we don't reset the mode.
Although install_subdir also installs directories, and in theory it
could set the mode as well, that would be a new feature. Also it doesn't
provide much granularity and has mixed semantics with files. Better to
let people use install_emptydir + install_subdir.
Fixes#5902
Compiled languages are Meson's bread and butter, but hardly required.
This is convenient, because many test caases specifically, do not care
about testing the compiler interactions.
In such cases, we can skip doing compiler lookups which aren't used, as
they only slow down test setup.
`configure_file` is both an extremely complicated implementation, and
a strange place for copying. It's a bit of a historical artifact, since
the fs module didn't yet exist. It makes more sense to move this to the
fs module and deprecate this `configure_file` version.
This new version works at build time rather than configure time, which
has the disadvantage it can't be passed to `run_command`, but with the
advantage that changes to the input don't require a full reconfigure.
install_mode can include the setuid bit, which has the special property
(mentioned in the set_mode logic for minstall itself) of needing to come
last, because it "will get wiped by chmod" (or at least chown).
In fact, it's not just chown that wipes setuid, but other changes as
well, such as the file contents. This is not an issue for install_data /
custom_target, but for compiled outputs, we run depfixer to handle
rpaths. This may or may not cause edits to the binary, depending on
whether we have a build rpath to wipe, or an install rpath to add. (We
also may run `strip`, but that external program already has its own mode
restoration logic.)
Fix this by switching the order of operations around, so that setting
the permissions happens last.
Fixes https://github.com/void-linux/void-packages/issues/38682
This was never meant to work, it's an implementation detail of using
`importlib.import_module` and that our modules used to be named
`unstable_` that this ever worked.
Thanks to `ModuleInfo`, all modules are just named `foo.py` instead of
`unstable_foo.py`, which simplifies the import method a bit. This also
allows for accurate FeatureNew/FeatureDeprecated use, as we know when
the module was added and if/when it was stabilized.
Instead of using FeatureNew/FeatureDeprecated in the module.
The goal here is to be able to handle information about modules in a
single place, instead of having to handle it separately. Each module
simply defines some metadata, and then the interpreter handles the rest.
In order to reliably link to static libraries or individual object
files, we need to take their languages into account as well. For static
libraries this is easy: we just add the static library's list of
compilers to the build target. For extracted objects, we need to only
add the ones for the objects we use.
But we did this really inefficiently -- in fact, downright terribly. We
iterated over all source files from the extracted objects, then tried to
look up a new compiler for them. Even though the extracted objects
already had a list of compilers! This broke once compilers were made
per-subproject, because while the extracted objects have a reference to
all the compilers it needs (just like static archives do, actually) we
might not actually be able to look up that compiler from scratch inside
the current subproject.
Fix this by asking the extracted objects to categorize all its own
sources and return the compilers we want.
Fixes#10579
Currently, if we run "meson configure -Doption=value", meson will
do a reconfigure when running "ninja build" afterwards, even if
the new value is the same one that was already configured previously.
To avoid this unnecessary reconfigure, let's use replace_if_different()
instead of unconditionally replacing the conf file in coredata's save()
function.
This forces the use of the Apple archiver, since that archiver doesn't
add extern'd variables to the symbol table automatically, and instead
requires that ranlib be used. A native file is used to ensure that
Apple's ar is used even in the presence of llvm or gcc in the path with
their superior archivers.
Co-authored-by: Dylan Baker <dylan@pnwbakers.com>
These checked that e.g. the cpp and fc ids are identical, which isn't
strictly what we want. Particularly, msvc doesn't even have a fortran
compiler, and what we really care about is whether we mix both gcc and
something else.
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.
This is undefined behaviour, and seems to have caused test failures
when backporting Meson to an older toolchain in the Steam Runtime.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>