| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Due to MCST LCC compiler identification is now changed to LCC,
there should be a way for old projects to still identify it as GNU,
as it was before.
This commits adds the policy:
CMP0129: Compiler id for MCST LCC compilers is now LCC, not GNU.
This policy controls such a behavior.
OLD behaivior is to treat LCC as GNU, NEW is to treat is as LCC.
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Divert LCC compiler as a new one, instead of treating it as GNU.
Since old times, Elbrus C/C++/Fortran Compiler (LCC) by MCST has been
passing checks for GNU compilers, so it has been identified as GNU.
Now, with intent of seriously upstreaming its support, it has been
added as a separate LCC compiler, and its version displays not a
supported GCC version, but LCC version itself (e.g. LCC 1.25.19 instead
of GNU 7.3.0).
This commit adds its support for detection, and also converts basically
every check like 'is this compiler GNU?' to 'is this compiler GNU or
LCC?'. The only places where this check is untouched, is where it
regards other platforms where LCC is unavailable (primarily non-Linux),
and where it REALLY differs from GNU compiler.
Note: this transition may break software that are already ported to
Elbrus, but hardly relies that LCC will be detected as GNU; still such
software is not known.
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Detect MSYS as CYGWIN, with the required adaptations.
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This change was originally made by commit 74b1c9fc8e (Explicitly specify
language flag when source LANGUAGE property is set, 2020-06-01,
v3.19.0-rc1~722^2), but it was reverted by commit 30aa715fac (Revert
"specify language flag when source LANGUAGE property is set",
2020-11-19) to restore compatibility with pre-3.19 behavior.
Implement the change again, but add policy CMP0119 to make this change
while preserving compatibility with existing projects.
Note that the `Compiler/{Clang,Intel,MSVC}-CXX` modules do not need to
specify `-TP` for their MSVC-like variants because we already use the
flag in `CMAKE_CXX_COMPILE_OBJECT`. Similarly for `Compiler/XL-CXX`
and `Platform/Windows-Embarcadero`.
Note also that this does not seem possible to implement for XL C.
Even with `-qsourcetype=c`, `xlc` complains about an unknown suffix:
`1501-218 (W) file /.../AltExtC.zzz contains an incorrect file suffix`.
It returns non-zero even with `-qsuppress=1501-218`.
Co-Author: Robert Maynard <robert.maynard@kitware.com>
Fixes: #14516, #20716
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Revert commit 74b1c9fc8e (Explicitly specify language flag when source
LANGUAGE property is set, 2020-06-01, v3.19.0-rc1~722^2) and the lookup
tables from its two immediate ancestors. The purpose of that change was
to convert an explicit `LANGUAGE` source file property into an explicit
language specification compiler flag like `-x c`. This seems reasonable
since the property is documented as meaning "indicate what programming
language the source file is". It is also needed to help compilers deal
with non-standard source file extensions they don't recognize.
However, some projects have been setting `LANGUAGE C` on `.S` assembler
source files to mean "use the C compiler". Passing `-x c` for them
breaks the build because the `.S` sources are not written in C. These
projects should be updated to use `enable_language(ASM)`, for which
CMake often chooses the C compiler as the assembler when using
toolchains that support it (which would have to be the case for projects
using the approach).
Revert the change for now to preserve the old behavior for such projects.
We can re-introduce it with a policy in a future version of CMake.
Fixes: #21469
Issue: #14516, #20716
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Since commit 3b547e2e4b (VS: Simplify logic adding source file C/C++
language flag to MSVC, 2020-05-15, v3.18.0-rc1~139^2~1) we only add a
per-source language selection flag when the source file extension does
not match the compiler's default. This approach breaks when a project
adds a target-wide `-TP` flag.
Although such projects likely did not work with non-VS generators, we
did support them before in Visual Studio generators. Add a special case
to tolerate such flags again.
Fixes: #21005
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Fixes: #14516, #20716
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Run the `Utilities/Scripts/clang-format.bash` script to update
all our C++ code to a new style defined by `.clang-format`.
Use `clang-format` version 3.8.
* If you reached this commit for a line in `git blame`, re-run the blame
operation starting at the parent of this commit to see older history
for the content.
* See the parent commit for instructions to rebase a change across this
style transition commit.
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Ancient CMake versions required upper-case commands. Later command
names became case-insensitive. Now the preferred style is lower-case.
Run the following shell code:
cmake --help-command-list |
grep -v "cmake version" |
while read c; do
echo 's/\b'"$(echo $c | tr '[:lower:]' '[:upper:]')"'\(\s*\)(/'"$c"'\1(/g'
done >convert.sed &&
git ls-files -z -- bootstrap '*.cmake' '*.cmake.in' '*CMakeLists.txt' |
egrep -z -v '^(Utilities/cm|Source/kwsys/)' |
xargs -0 sed -i -f convert.sed &&
rm convert.sed
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