diff options
author | Boris Kolpackov <boris@codesynthesis.com> | 2016-07-22 09:23:55 +0200 |
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committer | Boris Kolpackov <boris@codesynthesis.com> | 2016-07-22 09:23:55 +0200 |
commit | 4c3e451a852b537c04f5b73af23639902117b94f (patch) | |
tree | 951c165070ebf531580dcecef85976dc194e735d /build2/context.cxx | |
parent | c1d08dbc56d0c8d3346deaba5d6b1946b6d711f4 (diff) |
Change default var override from 'projects and subprojects' to amalgamation
The 'projects and subprojects' semantics resulted in some counter-intuitive
behavior. For example, in a project with tests/ as a subproject if one builds
one of the tests directly with a non-global override (say C++ compiler), then
the main project would be built without the overrides. I this light,
overriding in the whole amalgamation seems like the right thing to do. The
old behavior can still be obtained with scope qualification, for example:
b ./:foo=bar
Diffstat (limited to 'build2/context.cxx')
-rw-r--r-- | build2/context.cxx | 3 |
1 files changed, 3 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/build2/context.cxx b/build2/context.cxx index 60e55bd..e08fb52 100644 --- a/build2/context.cxx +++ b/build2/context.cxx @@ -183,6 +183,9 @@ namespace build2 if (r.first.type != nullptr) fail << "typed override of variable " << n; + // Global and scope overrides we can enter directly. Project ones will + // be entered by the caller for for each amalgamation/project. + // if (c == '!' || !dir.empty ()) { scope& s (c == '!' ? gs : scopes.insert (dir, false)->second); |