| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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In practice this test has not helped us find any problems AFAIK. Tests
like RunCMake.BuildDepends and other RunCMake tests cover much of what
this test was meant to do. Since CMakeTestMultipleConfigures takes a
long time to run on some generator/platform combinations, it is not
worth what it covers. Remove the test.
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Ancient versions of CMake required else(), endif(), and similar block
termination commands to have arguments matching the command starting the
block. This is no longer the preferred style.
Run the following shell code:
for c in else endif endforeach endfunction endmacro endwhile; do
echo 's/\b'"$c"'\(\s*\)(.\+)/'"$c"'\1()/'
done >convert.sed &&
git ls-files -z -- bootstrap '*.cmake' '*.cmake.in' '*CMakeLists.txt' |
egrep -z -v '^(Utilities/cm|Source/kwsys/)' |
egrep -z -v 'Tests/CMakeTests/While-Endwhile-' |
xargs -0 sed -i -f convert.sed &&
rm convert.sed
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cmake generated build tree. Theoretically, each generation run with exactly the same arguments should be identical to the previous generation... Practically, there are differences. This is a tool to help us measure those differences. For now, the test always succeeds. Eventually, we may add the code to make it fail when there are differences.
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