Add the function cmake_expand_imported_targets() to expand imported
targets in a list of libraries into their on-disk file names for a
particular configuration. Adapt the implementation from KDE's
HANDLE_IMPORTED_TARGETS_IN_CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES which has been in
use for over 2 years. Call the function from all the Check*.cmake
macros to handle imported targets named in CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES.
Alex
6856b4d Merge topic 'link-shared-depend-cycle-issue-12647' into check_symbol_exists
8e1f376 add a test for Check{,CXX}SymbolExists
813eca6 CheckSymbolExists: force the compiler to keep the referenced symbol
0df1942 Detect SGI MIPSpro compiler version with its id
a5e892c Document compiler version macro formats used for detection
d7c6f41 Detect HP compiler version with its id
3dd9fa9 Detect SunPro compiler version with its id
c198730 Detect Watcom compiler version with its id
5899b98 Detect Clang compiler version with its id
b8cfa65 Detect PGI compiler version with its id
6dae666 Detect IBM XL compiler version with its id
4080d55 Detect Borland compiler version with its id
2cc205a Detect Intel compiler version with its id (#11937)
a6d83cc Detect MSVC compiler version with its id
a662855 Detect GNU compiler version with its id (#6251)
fa7141f Add framework to detect compiler version with its id (#12408)
Otherwise the compiler may optimize out the reference to the symbol as the
previous version was not really using this. This leads to symbols that are
only in a header but not in the given libraries to be reported as present.
This came up on the first try to fix bug 11333 as "gcc -O3" would optimize
out the reference to pthread_create() so the correct library the symbol is in
was not detected.
The new test code was suggested by Brad King.
When we have no MPI compiler wrapper and search explicitly for the MPI
C++ library append it correctly to the list of libraries instead of
using a space.
Suggested-by: Mourad Boufarguine <bouffa@gmail.com>
This fix bug #12863 whose symptom was a lot of "warning: File listed twice"
printed out by rpmbuild when processing the spec file.
Signed-off-by: Eric NOULARD <eric.noulard@gmail.com>
When GIT_EXECUTABLE points at ".../Git/cmd/git.cmd" in an msysGit
installation we previously failed to detect the version number in a
subtle case. The "git.cmd" assumes 'chcp' is in PATH. It is typically
available at "C:\Windows\System32\chcp.com". On 64-bit Windows the File
System Redirector maps this location to "C:\Windows\SysWOW64\chcp.com"
for 32-bit processes. However, some Windows installations fail to
provide chcp.com at this path. Whenever git.cmd runs in a 32-bit
command shell, as it does under a 32-bit CMake binary, it reports
'chcp' is not recognized as an internal or external command,
operable program or batch file.
on stderr. Capture stderr separately so it does not affect parsing
of the version number.
See also msysGit issue 358:
http://code.google.com/p/msysgit/issues/detail?id=358
Note that FindGit prefers "git.cmd" over "git.exe" because it sets up
the proper HOME environment variable necessary for Git ssh connections
to work the same as they do from the Git bash prompt.
Decode decimal digits from _SGI_COMPILER_VERSION or _COMPILER_VERSION to
compute version number components. See documentation at:
http://predef.sourceforge.net/precomp.html
The MSVC, HP, XL, SunPro, Watcom, Borland, and Intel compilers specify
their version number in components encoded in a single integer value.
Document the components that we use to compute version numbers.
Decode hex digits from __SUNPRO_C and __SUNPRO_CC to compute the version
number components. Note that the constant encodes decimal digits as hex
digits (never larger than 9). We represent them as decimal after
extraction. See documentation at
http://predef.sourceforge.net/precomp.html
Although the documented version number format is
0xVRP where V = Version, R = Revision, P = Patch
it holds only though SunPro C/C++ version 5.9. Later versions have
a two-digit revision (minor) number so their format is 0xVRRP.
When cmake searches for Python libs in Windows it searches in:
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\\SOFTWARE\\Python\\PythonCore\\${_CURRENT_VERSION}\\InstallPath]/libs
However, the information might not always reside there. The information
could also reside in:
[HKEY_CURRENT_USER\\SOFTWARE\\Python\\PythonCore\\${_CURRENT_VERSION}\\InstallPath]/libs
when one installs Python for a single user and not for all users.
Fix typo introduced in commit 66a08c10 (more uniform approach to enable
language, 2004-08-26). The optimization option should be /O2 for
Release configurations and /O1 for MinSizeRel.
Suggested-by: He Yuqi <yuqi.he@gmail.com>
This addresses Bug 11882 which provided a sample implementation for adding
support for cusparse. I went ahead and added all the libraries I thought
appropriate.
The default OS X 10.4 linker incorrectly searches for dependencies of
linked shared libraries only under the -isysroot location. It fails to
find dependencies of linked shared libraries in cases such as the
ExportImport test. It produces errors like:
/usr/libexec/gcc/i686-apple-darwin8/4.0.1/ld: warning can't open dynamic library:
libtestLib3Imp.dylib
referenced from: /.../ExportImport/Root/lib/libtestLib3lib.1.2.dylib
(checking for undefined symbols may be affected) (No such file or directory, errno = 2)
/usr/libexec/gcc/i686-apple-darwin8/4.0.1/ld: Undefined symbols: _testLib3Imp
referenced from libtestLib3lib expected to be defined in
libtestLib3Imp.dylib
or with CMAKE_SKIP_RPATH off to enable install_name in the Export side:
/usr/libexec/gcc/i686-apple-darwin8/4.0.1/ld: warning can't open dynamic library:
/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.4u.sdk/.../ExportImport/Export/impl/libtestLib3Imp.dylib
referenced from: /.../ExportImport/Export/libtestLib3lib.1.2.dylib
(checking for undefined symbols may be affected) (No such file or directory, errno = 2)
/usr/libexec/gcc/i686-apple-darwin8/4.0.1/ld: Undefined symbols:_testLib3Imp
referenced from libtestLib3lib expected to be defined in
/.../ExportImport/Export/impl/libtestLib3Imp.dylib
Note how "/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.4u.sdk" is prepended to the dependent
library path.
Commit 2cff26fa (Support linking to shared libs with dependent libs,
2008-01-31) and commit 82fcaebe (Pass dependent library search path to
linker on some platforms, 2008-02-01) worked around the problem by
defining platform variable CMAKE_LINK_DEPENDENT_LIBRARY_FILES. It tells
CMake to link to dependent libraries explicitly by their path thus
telling the linker where to find them.
Unfortunately the workaround had the side effect of linking dependent
libraries and defeats most benefits of LINK_INTERFACE_LIBRARIES.
Fortunately OS X 10.5 and above do not need to find transitive
dependencies at all so we can avoid the workaround on Modern OS X.