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The use of install (or another install-like program) can still be forced
with config.dist.cmd=install.
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This option has the effect of loading all the subdirectory buildfiles that
are not explicitly included.
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In particular, we now always print error message on non-0 exit except
in cases where such exit is ignored.
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Unlike normal and ad hoc prerequisites, a post hoc prerequisite is built
after the target, not before. It may also form a dependency cycle together
with normal/ad hoc prerequisites. In other words, all this form of dependency
guarantees is that a post hoc prerequisite will be built if its dependent
target is built.
See the NEWS file for details and an example.
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We still always use the public var_pool from context but where required,
all access now goes through scope::var_pool().
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Specifically, the dist target-specific variable now can specify a path
besides true or false. This path is the "imaginary" source location which
is used to derive the corresponding distribution local. This location can
be either a directory path (to remap with the same file name) or a file
path (to remap with a different name). If the path is relative, then it's
treated relative to the target directory. Note that to make things less
error prone, simple paths without any directory separators are not allowed
(use ./<name> instead).
Note that if multiple targets end up with the same source location, the
behavior is undefined and no diagnostics is issued.
Note also that such remapping has no effect in the bootstrap distribution
mode.
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Note that the unmatch (match but do not update) and match (update during
match) values are only supported by certain rules (and potentially only for
certain prerequisite types).
Additionally:
- All operation-specific variables are now checked for false as an override
for the prerequisite-specific include value. In particular, this can now be
used to disable a prerequisite for update, for example:
./: exe{test}: update = false
- The cc::link_rule now supports the update=match value for headers and ad hoc
prerequisites. In particular, this can be used to make sure all the library
headers are updated before matching any of its (or dependent's) object
files.
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See the config.cxx.translate_include variable documentation in cxx/init.cxx
for details.
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In this mode the dist meta-operation does not load the project (but does
bootstrap it) and adds all the source files into the distribution only
ignoring files and directories that start with a dot. This mode is primarily
meant for situation where the project cannot (yet) be loaded due to missing
dependencies.
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The new config.export variable specifies the alternative file to write the
configuration to as part of the configure meta-operation. For example:
$ b configure: proj/ config.export=proj-config.build
The config.export value "applies" only to the projects on whose root scope it
is specified or if it is a global override (the latter is a bit iffy but we
allow it, for example, to dump everything to stdout). This means that in order
to save a subproject's configuration we will have to use a scope-specific
override (since the default will apply to the outermost amalgamation). For
example:
$ b configure: subproj/ subproj/config.export=.../subproj-config.build
This could be somewhat unnatural but then it will be the amalgamation whose
configuration we normally want to export.
The new config.import variable specifies additional configuration files to be
loaded after the project's default config.build, if any. For example:
$ b create: cfg/,cc config.import=my-config.build
Similar to config.export, the config.import value "applies" only to the
project on whose root scope it is specified or if it is a global override.
This allows the use of the standard override "positioning" machinery (i.e.,
where the override applies) to decide where the extra configuration files are
loaded. The resulting semantics is quite natural and consistent with command
line variable overrides, for example:
$ b config.import=.../config.build # outermost amalgamation
$ b ./config.import=.../config.build # this project
$ b !config.import=.../config.build # every project
Both config.export and config.import recognize the special `-` file name as an
instruction to write/read to/from stdout/stdin, respectively. For example:
$ b configure: src-prj/ config.export=- | b configure: dst-prj/ config.import=-
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All non-const global state is now in class context and we can now have
multiple independent builds going on at the same time.
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