There was an ABI change for 64 bit aligned vectors between gcc 5 and gcc 6
on a few 64 bit platforms, and gcc 10 reports "note" level warnings for
each affected access, which is very noisy and hides more important
information.
These notes are issued because there is no reliable diagnostic for actual
problems.
This moves the generated files out of the source tree and into
the build directory. They are now regenerated each time they are
needed, based on the timestamp of the generated file compared to
the timestamp of the lemon file.
To do this, we also bundle lemon into the thirdparty directory
and build it for ourselves since it is a very tiny program and
not all platforms seem to distribute it in a consistent manner.
Fixes https://gitlab.com/kicad/code/kicad/issues/5013
The config.h header for ngspice is not packaged with all platforms so
use pkg-config to fetch the version information when available. When
pkg-config is not available, check if the ngspice/config.h file is
installed on the system before including it to build the ngspice version
string. If neither pkg-config or ngspice/config.h is available set the
version string to "unknown".
Fixes https://gitlab.com/kicad/code/kicad/issues/4851
Recent msys version does not find libngspice-0.dll, only
libngspice-0.dll.a when using find_library.
When not found, a find_file is made, instead of find_library.
Let cmake generate the needed version strings, so we don't
have to spend program time doing it. This simplifies the
settings manager versioning.
Also, convert some file line endings to UNIX from Windows.
A more robust fix for https://gitlab.com/kicad/code/kicad/-/issues/4015.
These help files are created from the .md source files and contain I18n strings,
but do not exist if kicad is not built from sources.
However they are needed by translators.
CHANGED: Update the Linux appdata file to include new tags
* Include version tags (and others) in the appdata file
* Refactor the version string generation to clean it up
This will sync the git tag for this commit. This should help prevent
confusion for users who were thinking that 5.0.0-r#####-g######## was
an older version than the 5.1 branch.
This changes make_lexer() so that it no longer generates a custom target
but instead attaches the generated files to an existing one (so the first
argument now is the name of an existing library or executable, and it needs
to come after the add_library/add_executable call).
The generated source is no longer listed in the project sources, as it is
added by the function. The files are generated in the build tree rather
than the source tree, and the directory is added to the include path for
the respective project as well as exported to projects linking against it.
Generated files in subdirectories are somewhat supported, but need to be
referenced with the same name as they were generated (i.e. including the
subdirectory name).
Fixes: lp:1831643
* https://bugs.launchpad.net/kicad/+bug/1831643
Fixes: lp:1832357
* https://bugs.launchpad.net/kicad/+bug/1832357
Fixes: lp:1833851
* https://bugs.launchpad.net/kicad/+bug/1833851
eeschema cpp files consume generated header files that have targets in
the common directory, so no dependencies get created from eeschema. We
add the dependencies in common to force the setting through libraries.
Fixes: lp:1831643
* https://bugs.launchpad.net/kicad/+bug/1831643
Building custom targets that depend on custom commands such as our
keyword lexer requires two layers of indirection to pick up changes
properly and not overwrite the same file in parallel builds.
Fixes: lp:1831643
* https://bugs.launchpad.net/kicad/+bug/1831643
This allows CI tools to get machine-readable test reports.
By default, this is off - when you test normally, you probably
want the regular console spew.
Boost tests use the in-built Boost test command line options.
The Python tests take an --xml parameter and output the tests
there.