It's a combination of add_custom_target and add_custom_command that does
what most users probably expect should happen.
This also fixes `make clean` removing files tracked by git.
Debugging dependencies is rare so a Debug build type is usually not
needed. In cases where it _is_ needed it is easy to rebuild in Debug
mode. But since Release builds are more common, it makes more sense as a
default.
For Neovim itself we stick with a Debug build as a default, since
rebuilding and debugging is done _much_ more frequently than with
dependencies (which we _mostly_ expect to "just work").
Also remove the CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE variable in the Makefile, since this is
set by default in CMake.
- remove "ran-" prefix from touch files as it's redundant since the
they're already in the directory named `touches`.
- Include `contrib` when formatting with `make formatlua`.
- Use TARGET_FILE generator expression instead of assuming the
executable location.
- reuse logic that determines whether to use lua or luajit.
- add translations to the `nvim` target.
Makefile improvements:
- rename variable `CMAKE_PRG` to `CMAKE` to make it more consistent with
the builtin `MAKE` variable.
- stop propagating flags to generator. Users should use cmake for
non-standard use cases.
- remove `+` prefix from targets. If the user for whatever reason wants
to dry-run a target then they should be able to.
This will ensure that we can pass flags and make adjustments from the
top level cmake file instead of digging through the cmake directory.
More importantly, this will only format files that have been changed.
This has a slightly higher initial cost compared to previous solution as
all files must be initially formatted, but the gained speed up should
more than make up for it quickly.
`make formatlua` is always run due to a quirk of stylua of always changing
modification time of the file regardless if there were any changes. This is not
a major blocker as stylua is very fast.
This will abort if lint programs are not found, and is meant primarily
for the lint job in CI. Supersedes the REQUIRED argument in
add_glob_target as it's a superior replacement by being a built-in
solution.
- Simplify error checking when using execute_process.
- Set BUILD_SHARED_LIBS to OFF when building dependencies.
This is normally not needed, but msgpack interprets an unset
BUILD_SHARED_LIBS to build a shared library, which is the opposite of
the cmake behavior.
- Move function check_lua_module to Util.cmake.
- Remove unnecessary code.
- Make variable naming more consistent
clint takes around 5-10 seconds to lint tui/terminfo_defs.h. For CI this
is negligible, but it's annoying for local development as touching
terminfo_defs.h will skyrocket lint times. Furthermore, we have no
reason to touch or modify terminfo_defs.h as it's a generated file, so
linting it shouldn't be necessary. This should speed up "make lint" by
the same amount, so around 5-10 seconds.
EXCLUDE filters out all elements containing regex, meaning it works on
both files and directories.
Also rename add_glob_targets to add_glob_target since only one target is
being created.
Change the default build type to always be Debug, and allow only four
predefined build types: Debug, Release, RelWithDebInfo and MinRelSize.
Furthermore, flags meant for single-configuration generator (make,
ninja) will not be used for multi-configuration generators (visual
studio, Xcode), and flags meant for multi-configuration generators will
not be used for single-configuration generators.
This will allow Debug builds to be built with MSVC which requires that
all dependencies are also built with the Debug build type to avoid
runtime library mismatch.
The correct way to specify build type (for example Release) for
single-configuration generators (Make and Ninja) is to run
cmake -B build -D CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
cmake --build build
while for multi-configuration generators (Visual Studio, Xcode and Ninja
Multi-Config) is to run
cmake -B build
cmake --build build --config Release
Passing CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE for multi-config generators will now not only
not be used, but also generate a warning for the user.
Co-authored-by: dundargoc <gocundar@gmail.com>
The general idea is that add_glob_targets creates a "touch file", a
dummy file that acts as a dependency in order to check which files are
outdated since the last time the target was run.
Remove RunUncrustify.cmake as it's no longer necessary. It was initially
introduced to silence its noisy output. The per-file targets will
suppress the noisy output from uncrustify, except for the very first
run.
Also remove DefCmdTarget.cmake since add_glob_target already
incorporates its functionality.