| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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All compilers hosting CMake support the std class.
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Replace it by cmStandardIncludes.h which drags in the proper header depending
on what the compiler provides to fix this error:
CMake/Source/cmExtraCodeLiteGenerator.cxx:27: sstream: No such file or directory
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Disallow the use of config-specific source files with
the Visual Studio and Xcode generators. They don't have
any way to represent the condition currently.
Use the same common-config API in cmQtAutoGenerators. While
it accepts config-specific files, it doesn't have to support
multiple configurations yet.
Loop over the configs in cmTargetTraceDependencies
and cmGlobalGenerator::WriteSummary and consume all source
files.
Loop over the configs in cmComputeTargetDepends and compute the
object library dependencies for each config.
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Use an ad-hoc clang tool for matching the calls which should be
ported.
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Use the clang RemoveCStrCalls tool to automatically migrate the
code. This was only run on linux, so does not have any positive or
negative effect on other platforms.
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Casts from std::string -> cmStdString were high on the list of things
taking up time. Avoid such implicit casts across function calls by just
using std::string everywhere.
The comment that the symbol name is too long is no longer relevant since
modern debuggers alias the templates anyways and the size is a
non-issue since the underlying methods are generated since it's
inherited.
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