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Specifically, the c module now provides the c.as-cpp submodules which can be
loaded in order to register the S{} target type and enable Assembler with C
Preprocessor compilation in the c compile rule. For details, refer to
"Assembler with C Preprocessor Compilation" in the manual.
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Seeing that std::map is becoming a common Buildfile variable type.
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Specifically, now config.<tool> (like config.cli) is handled by the import
machinery (it is like a shorter alias for config.import.<tool>.<tool>.exe
that we already had). And the cli module now uses that instead of custom
logic.
This also adds support for uniform tool metadata extraction that is handled by
the import machinery. As a result, a tool that follows the "build2 way" can be
imported with metadata by the buildfile and/or corresponding module without
any tool-specific code or brittleness associated with parsing --version or
similar outputs. See the cli tool/module for details.
Finally, two new flavors of the import directive are now supported: import!
triggers immediate importation skipping any rule-specific logic while import?
is optional import (analogous to using?). Note that optional import is always
immediate. There is also the import-specific metadata attribute which can be
specified for these two import flavors in order to trigger metadata
importation. For example:
import? [metadata] cli = cli%exe{cli}
if ($cli != [null])
info "cli version $($cli:cli.version)"
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This would be necessary if someone runs two parallel top-level contexts.
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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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constructor
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