Adds a new maximum warning level that is roughly equivalent to "all warnings".
This adds a way to use `/Wall` with MSVC (without the previous broken warning),
`-Weverything` with clang, and almost all general warnings in GCC with
strictness roughly equivalent to clang's `-Weverything`.
The GCC case must be implemented by meson since GCC doesn't provide a similar
option. To avoid maintenance headaches for meson, this warning level is
defined objectively: all warnings are included except those that require
specific values or are specific to particular language revisions. This warning
level is mainly intended for new code, and it is expected (nearly guaranteed)
that projects will need to add some suppressions to build cleanly with it.
More commonly, it's just a handy way to occasionally take a look at what
warnings are present with some compiler, in case anything interesting shows up
you might want to enable in general.
Since the warnings enabled at this level are inherently unstable with respect
to compiler versions, it is intended for use by developers and not to be set as
the default.
It is always used as an immutable view so there is no point in doing
copies. However, mypy insist it must implement the same APIs as
Dict[OptionKey, UserOption[Any]] so keep faking it.
This is another toolchain also called `armclang`, but it is not a cross
compiler like Keil's `armclang`. It is essentially the same as `clang`
based on its interface and CMake's support of the toolchain.
Use an `armltd` prefix for the compiler ID.
Fixes: #7255
Dependencies is already a large and complicated package without adding
programs to the list. This also allows us to untangle a bit of spaghetti
that we have.
Currently mesonlib does some import tricks to figure out whether it
needs to use windows or posix specific functions. This is a little
hacky, but works fine. However, the way the typing stubs are implemented
for the msvcrt and fnctl modules will cause mypy to fail on the other
platform, since the functions are not implemented.
To aleviate this (and for slightly cleaner design), I've split mesonlib
into a pacakge with three modules. A universal module contains all of
the platform agnositc code, a win32 module contains window specific
code, a posix module contains the posix specific code, and a platform
module contains no-op implementations. Then the package's __init__ file
imports all of the universal functions and all of the functions from the
approriate platform module, or the no-op versions as fallbacks. This
makes mypy happy, and avoids `if`ing all over the code to switch between
the platform specific code.
This has a bunch of nice features. It obviously centralizes everything,
which is nice. It also means that env is only re-read at `meson --wipe`,
not `meson --reconfigure`. And it's going to allow more cleanups.
Since the current approach of demoting to the nearest C standard *might*
work, but might not. For projects like Glib that detect which standard
is used and fall back this is fine. For projects like libdrm that only
work with gnu standards, this wont. We're nog tusing a warning because
this shouldn't be fatal if --meson-fatal-warnings is used. Also demote a
similar message in IntelCl from warning to log.
And then update the choices in each leaf class. This way we don't end up
with another case where we implicitly allow an invalid standard to be
set on a compiler that doesn't have a 'std' setting currently.
Every class needs to set this, so it should be part of the base. For
classes that require is_cross, the positional argument remains in their
signature. For those that don't, they just allow the base class to set
their value to it's default of False.
* Add preliminary support for the CompCert C Compiler
The intention is to use this with the picolibc, so some GCC flags are
automatically filtered. Since CompCert uses GCC is for linking, those
GCC-linker flags which are used by picolibc, are automatically prefixed
with '-WUl', so that they're passed to GCC.
Squashed commit of the following:
commit 4e0ad66dca9de301d2e41e74aea4142afbd1da7d
Author: Sebastian Meyer <meyer@absint.com>
Date: Mon Aug 31 14:20:39 2020 +0200
remove '-fall' from default arguments, also filter -ftls-model=.*
commit 41afa3ccc62ae72824eb319cb8b34b7e6693cb67
Author: Sebastian Meyer <meyer@absint.com>
Date: Mon Aug 31 14:13:55 2020 +0200
use regex for filtering ccomp args
commit d68d242d0ad22f8bf53923ce849da9b86b696a75
Author: Sebastian Meyer <meyer@absint.com>
Date: Mon Aug 31 13:54:36 2020 +0200
filter some gcc arguments
commit 982a01756266bddbbd211c54e8dbfa2f43dec38f
Author: Sebastian Meyer <meyer@absint.com>
Date: Fri Aug 28 15:03:14 2020 +0200
fix ccomp meson configuration
commit dce0bea00b1caa094b1ed0c6c77cf6c12f0f58d9
Author: Sebastian Meyer <meyer@absint.com>
Date: Thu Aug 27 13:02:19 2020 +0200
add CompCert to meson (does not fully work, yet)
* remove unused import and s/cls/self/
fixes the two obvious LGTM warnings
* CompCert: Do not ignore unsupported GCC flags
Some are safe to ignore, however, as per
https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/7674, they should not be
ignored by meson itself. Instead the meson.build should take care to
select only those which are actually supported by the compiler.
* remove unused variable
* Only add arguments once.
* Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: Dylan Baker <dylan@pnwbakers.com>
* Remove erroneous ' ' from '-o {}'.format()
As noticed by @dcbaker
* added release note snippet for compcert
* properly split parameters
As suggested by @dcbaker, these parameters should be properly split into multiple strings.
Co-authored-by: Dylan Baker <dylan@pnwbakers.com>
* Update add_compcert_compiler.md
Added a sentence about the state of the implementation (experimental); use proper markdown
* properly separate arguments
Co-authored-by: Dylan Baker <dylan@pnwbakers.com>
Simmilar to gcc, the list of pre-processor defines can be fetched with
`-dM -E` option. The way cpu_family is determined on linux relies on
this list.
Fixes incorrect value of cpu_family on linux, when crosscompiling:
```
CC="clang -m32" meson ./build
```
Signed-off-by: Yevhenii Kolesnikov <yevhenii.kolesnikov@globallogic.com>
Co-authored-by: Dylan Baker <dylan@pnwbakers.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
A current rather untyped storage of options is one of the things that
contributes to the options code being so complex. This takes a small
step in synching down by storing the compiler options in dicts per
language.
Future work might be replacing the langauge strings with an enum, and
defaultdict with a custom struct, just like `PerMachine` and
`MachineChoice`.
Emscripten does have a stand alone linker, wasm-ld. This patch adds the
linker, adds detection for the linker, and removes the IsLinkerMixin for
emscripten. This is a little more correct, and makes the code a lot
cleaner and more robust.
Emscripten has pthread support (as well as C++ threads), but we don't
currently implement them. This fixes that by adding the necessary code.
The one thing I'm not sure about is setting the pool size. The docs
suggest that you really want to do this to ensure that your code works
correctly, but the number should really be configurable, not sure how to
set that.
Fixes#6684
Instead of checking the compiler id inside the VisualStudioLikeCompiler
class, this creates two subclasses that each represent the divergent
behavior of the two compilers