Cuurently, a set of directories is filtered out from the output based on
the location of system includes on most common linux distro's. This
commit does away with the blacklist and implements a whitelist approach:
only the files inside the source root are shown.
Print full destination path in 'Installing subdir ...' message,
including DESTDIR, consistent with other installation functions.
Use separate dst_dir and full_dst_dir variables to avoid mixing up
the order in the future and make code more readable.
Closes#3006.
- Pass exclude_files and exclude_directories relative to src_dir,
same as specified by user and documented in public install_subdir().
- Make do_copydir() interface similar to do_copyfile():
install src_dir contents to dst_dir.
- Remove src_prefix/src_dir code, it adds confusion and duplicates arguments.
Use single src_dir parameter instead.
- Make callers specify that src_dir contents should be installed
under dst_dir/basename(src_dir) if necessary.
- Use os.path.relpath() instead of string manipulations on paths.
- Add documentation to do_copydir(): specify types and add usage example.
According to Python documentation[1] dirname and basename
are defined as follows:
os.path.dirname() = os.path.split()[0]
os.path.basename() = os.path.split()[1]
For the purpose of better readability split() is replaced
by appropriate function if only one part of returned tuple
is used.
[1]: https://docs.python.org/3/library/os.path.html#os.path.split
Examples:
meson.build:2:0: ERROR: Dependency is both required and not-found
meson.build:4: WARNING: Keyword argument "link_with" defined multiple times.
These are already matched by the default compilation-error-regexp-alist in
emacs.
Also:
Don't start 'red' markup until after the \n before an error
Unabsorb full-stop at end of warning with location from mlog.warning()
Update warning_location test
This allows for much easier cross compiler configuration for tools like
LLVM. This patch does honor the 'native' keyword, and falls back to
searching PATH if the binary name is not specified.
I'd be fine with either removing the fallback behavior, or marking it as
deprecated and removing it later.
Fixes#2921
has_argument and other similar methods of compiler objects only support
checking compiler flags. If they are used to check linker flags, the
results are very likely to be wrong and developers should be warned.
Adding the current subdir when extracting resources deps wasn't good,
it is CustomTarget job to handle that.
Signed-off-by: Alexis Jeandet <alexis.jeandet@member.fsf.org>
Currently only not found deps implicitly pulled from a Library object
are ignored. We should also ignore not found deps passed directly to
generate() method.
This makes the unit testing more complicated because libfoo pkgconfig
dependency cannot be found when generated from the within the same
meson.build.
This replaces calls to .rstrip('git'), .rstrip('svn') with a regex that
takes the leading numbers and dots, and throws away the rest. This also
moves the code up to the ConfigToolDepdency level, since these config
tools are of various quality and some of them are good, and some are
not. This shouldn't affect well behaved tools.
This should future proof LLVM against future suffixes (like someone
doing something strange like using Mercurial as a VCS).
I'm not sure this is a good idea, but at the moment it seems a bit too easy
to write something like dep.get_pkgconfig_variable('inculdedir:') (sic) and
not notice it's not doing anything useful.
The output may be a binary data stream, not subject to any locale
encoding. This avoids any encoding errors that might arise as a result.
Also fixes github issue #2868.
This is important so people can not trick Meson to select a
subproject_dir that is not in the project's source directory.
It also ensures a string is used for the path.
They now are published by the D Language Foundation, and not Digital
Mars. Therefore, their signature has changed slightly.
(We can not check for 'DMD', because that string appears in every
compiler version output to denote the frontend version used by the
compiler).