The sigrok core needs a list of all available drivers. Currently this list
is manually maintained by updating a global list whenever a driver is added
or removed.
Introduce a new special section that contains the list of all drivers. The
SR_REGISTER_DEV_DRIVER() and SR_REGISTER_DEV_DRIVER_LIST() macro is used to
add drivers to this new list. This is done by placing the pointers to the
driver into a special section. Since nothing else is in this section it is
known that it is simply a list of driver pointers and the core can iterate
over it as if it was an array.
The advantage of this approach is that the code necessary to add a driver
to the list is completely contained to the driver source and it is no
longer necessary to maintain a global list. If a driver is built it will
automatically appear in the list, if it is not built in won't. This means
that the list is always correct, whereas the previous approach used ifdefs
in the global driver list file which could get out-of-sync with the actual
condition when the driver was built.
Any sr_dev_driver structs that are no longer used outside the driver module
are marked as static.
Signed-off-by: Lars-Peter Clausen <lars@metafoo.de>
The former appended the necessary switch to enable C++11 to the CXXFLAGS
whereas AX_CXX_COMPILE_STDCXX appends it to CXX which has the benefit
that all C++ sources are compiled using the same C++ standard. Therefore
it is no longer necessary to manually hardcode '-std=c++11' anywhere
like we did in the Ruby bindings linker command and assures that the
compilation of them is done with C++11 support as well.
This fixes bug #795
The bindings file was not listed in EXTRA_DIST and therefore not
distributed. We also need to provide an target to uninstall the Ruby
bindings and add it to UNINSTALL_EXTRA in order to make `make distcheck`
happy.
This fixes bug #741
Refactor the sysclk-lwla driver to separate the generic logic from
the model-specific implementation. Based on this, implement support
for the SysClk LWLA1016 device.
Set both CFLAGS and CXXFLAGS when executing setup.py to build
the Python bindings. Newer versions of distutils/setuptools have
apparently started to pick up the latter when compiling C++.
Make the Python and Java bindings use the same set of preprocessor
macros for the SWIG parsing stage, taken from a make variable. Add
G_GNUC_{BEGIN,END}_IGNORE_DEPRECATIONS to that set.
Apparently this problem has been fixed in SWIG 3.0.6. However,
until we can require that version, define "private" as "protected"
when running the SWIG parser.
The SWIG 2.0.12 on my system bails out with a syntax error on the
"noexcept" keyword in C++11 code. Define "noexcept" to nothing (for
the SWIG parser only) to work around this problem.
The hard-coded location is bound to be wrong anyway. Instead, rely
on the new resource lookup code to find the firmware files in a
location relative to the library or executable.
The resource API provides a generic means for accessing resources
that are bundled with sigrok, such as device firmware files. Since
the manner of resource bundling is platform-dependent, users of
libsigrok may override the functions used to open, close and read
a resource. The default implementation accesses resources as files
located in one of the XDG data directories or a directory defined
at compile time.
This is set to | (or left empty) by SR_PROG_MAKE_ORDER_ONLY for
portability reasons, since not all Make implementations support
order-only prerequisites.
Extend setup.py to allow environment variables to be set on the
command line. Use that functionality to replace the pkg-config
invocations with flags passed on from make. Suppress the annoying
-Wstrict-prototypes warning by overriding the OPT variable.
Also move the "cd bindings/python" from Makefile.am to setup.py
to side-step problems with "cd" in make rules.
This also fixes bug #628.