This allows defining test suites for test-valgrind target without the risk
of e.g. being unable to differentiate the targets test-valgrind (testing
with valgrind) from test-valgrind (testing the valgrind subproject).
The directory from where the source files are sought when producing a
coverage report in text or XML format should not be the build directory
but the source directory instead.
Object files from a custom_target are like external objects and must be
added to the project.
Object files from a generator are automatically used by MSBuild, since they
are part of the CustomBuildStep and thus part of the same project as the
current build target.
Instead, return the values of the test and benchmark setup data files so
that the ninja/osx/vs backends can use those filenames instead of
hard-coding them.
When a CustomTarget is run with a command that is an executable built
by the project which also has a DLL built in the same project as a
dependency, the EXE can't run on Windows because the DLL can't be found.
On UNIX-like systems, we set the RPATH using the linker so these
dependencies can be found, but on Windows the only way is to set the
PATH environment variable.
The same problem exists for tests, so we reuse that infrastructure by
creating a new meson_exe.py script that can be used as a wrapper to run
CustomTarget commands on Windows. This can later also be extended to add
support for setting an environment while calling the command needed to
generate a CustomTarget: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/266
On MSVC, shared libraries only export symbols that have been explicitly exported
either as part of the symbol prototype or via a module definitions file.
On compilers other than MSVC, all symbols are exported in the shared library by
default and the format for the list of symbols to export is different, so this
is only used with the VisualStudio compiler.
The module defs file path can either be relative to the current source directory
or an absolute path using meson.source_root() + '/some/path'
backend.get_target_private_dir() includes the target directory in the path.
However, we want to treat all paths relative from the target directory,
because that's where our VS project file lives in.
A shebang line on Windows will be resolved to [binary, script_path].
Thus, we need to use both instead of just taking the first element of the
command.
Everything in the VS project file is relative to the project file itself.
The project file gets put in the target.subdir, so to include files from
there we just need to use '.'. To include from the private dir, we
need to use the relative path from the target dir to the target private
dir.