It is common, at least in GNOME projects, to have scripts that must be
run only in the final destination, to update system icon cache, etc.
Skipping them from Meson ensures we can properly log that they have not
been run instead of relying on such scripts to to it (they don't
always).
Add function to Build class to get targets of type BuildTarget
Update xcode backend to call get_build_targets when iterating over targets.
This resolves crash in xcode backend when using custom targets:
AttributeError: ‘CustomTarget’ object has no attribute ‘objects’
On Windows this would fail because of missing DLL:
```
mylib = library(...)
exe = executable(..., link_with: mylib)
meson.add_install_script(exe)
```
The reason is on Windows we cannot rely on rpath to find libraries from
build directory, they are searched in $PATH. We already have all that
mechanism in place for custom_target() using ExecutableSerialisation
class, so reuse it for install/dist/postconf scripts too.
This has bonus side effect to also use exe_wrapper for those scripts.
Fixes: #8187
It doesn't make sense to check for the presence of git every time we use
it, but short-circuit any attempt to use a wrap right from the get-go
because we are trying to be fancy with submodules.
If git is not installed, simply do not try to figure out whether the
wrap is a submodule that can potentially be checked out/updated for the
user. Just take it on faith that it isn't one.
Fixes#2623
ARM64EC is a new ARM64 ABI made by Microsoft. The ARM64EC binaries can be loaded in x64 processes on the latest Windows Insider Preview on ARM64, and they don't need to be emulated for the sake of performance.
To support the ARM64EC build target, a new conceptual arm64 cpu type 'arm64ec' is added. The cpu can be specified in cross files like below to generate msbuild solution/vcxproj files with platform set to ARM64EC.
[target_machine]
system = 'windows'
cpu_family = 'aarch64'
cpu = 'arm64ec'
endian = 'little'
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.
Print the (shortened) output of the failed tests as they happen.
If neither --verbose nor --print-errorlogs was specified, omit the
summary of failures, because it is pretty much the same as the earlier
output of "meson test".
In non-parallel verbose mode the output of the test/benchmark
is not buffered, therefore the command line is only printed by
ConsoleLogger for failing tests and only after the test has run.
Verbose mode is designed mostly for CI systems, where output must
be human readable but is generally consumed from a browser with "Find"
commands rather than from a terminal. With this usecase in mind, it
is better to provide as much detail as possible, so add more output
and just tell the user which tests have started. Do so, using the
recently introduced TestResult.RUNNING state.
Ensure that all the required modifications are included in the logs.
This makes it possible for users to cut-and-paste from the logs when
trying to reproduce failures outside Meson.
Right now the same code is used to print the logs for both the console
and the text log. Differentiating them lets the important bits of
the console output stand out, and makes the console output a bit more
readable.
Automatically colorize the text when printing the AnsiDecorator, based
on the result of mlog.colorize_console(). This is how AnsiDecorator
is used most of the time anyway.
This commit performs some cleanup for the msvc and clang-cl arguments.
* "Disable Debug" (`/Od`) is no longer manually specified for optimization levels {`0`,`g`} (it is already the default for MSVC).
* "Run Time Checking" (`/RTC1`) removed from `debug` buildtype by default
* Clang-CL `debug` buildtype arguments now match MSVC arguments
* There is now no difference between `buildtype` flags and `debug` + `optimization` flags
Compiler tests, such as checking for atomics support, could fail
when compiling to WebAssembly multithreaded targets because the
compiler tests got compiled to 'output.wasm'.
Using the '.wasm' suffix in recent versions of emscripten engages
STANDALONE_WASM mode, which disables features that require a JS
runtime like shared memory.
This created false negatives on support of those features when
building a library to be linked into an executable that is not
in STANDALONE_WASM mode.
Changing these to 'output.o' will continue to produce WebAssembly
object files, but they will no longer be configured for standalone
runtime mode.
[why]
If we build and test a library we need to make sure that we find the
currently build library object first, before an older system installed
one.
This can be broken if the library in question is installed in a custom
path, and another library we depend on also is installed there.
[how]
Just move the rpath to the current build artifacts to the front.
Solves #8030.
Signed-off-by: Fini Jastrow <ulf.fini.jastrow@desy.de>
In Fortran it is common to use capital F in the suffix (eg. '.F90') if
the source file makes use of preprocessor statements. Such files should
probably be treated like all other fortran files by meson.
Case insensitivity for suffixes was already implemented several places
in meson before this. So most likely, the few places changed here were
oversights anyway.
Using verbose mode dropped stdout/stderr from the logs, because
it was not captured.
Now that we can easily stick code in the middle of the reading of
stdout/stderr, use that to print stdout and stderr on the fly
while also capturing them for the logs. The output is line-buffered.
As a side effect, this also fixes a possible deadlock due to
not using ensure_future around stdo_task and stde_task. In
particular:
- the stdo_task coroutine would not terminate until the test closed
stdo_task
- the stde_task coroutine would not start until the stdo_task
coroutine finished
Therefore, the test could get stuck waiting for its parent to
read the contents of stderr, but that would not happen because
Meson was still in the stdo_task coroutine.
There are still caveats here. Rust/cargo handles generated sources by
writing out all targets of a single repo into a single output directory,
setting a path to that via a build-time environment variable, and then
include those files via a set of functions and macros. Meson's build
layout is naturally different, and ninja makes working with environment
variables at compile time difficult.
Fixes#8157
we have two functions to do the exact same thing, and they're basically
implemented the same way. Instead, let's just use the BuildTarget one,
as it's more generally available.
The /ZI flag adds in "Edit and Continue" debug information, which will
cause massive slowdown. It is not a flag that we should be adding by
default to debug builds.
/Zi will still be added.