-Fixes to unwrapper (remove degenerates), makes Thekla not crash
-Added optional cancel button in EditorProgress
-Added function to force processing of events (needed for cancel button)
Now that we have a built-in stacktrace on a segfault it would be useful
to have debug information on debug_release builds so that bugreports can
include this information. Without this debug info we will still get
function names in the backtrace but not file location.
This commit will by default build all targets with minimal debug info
and then strip the information into separate files. On MacOS this is a
.dSYM file, on Linux/MingW this is a .debug file. MacOSX will
automatically load a dSYM file if it exists in its debugger. On
Linux/MingW we create a 'gnu debuglink' meaning that gdb and friends
will automatically find the debug symbols if they exist.
Existing workflow for developers does not change at all, except that we
now create two instead of one build artifact by default.
This commit also adds a 'debug_symbols' option to X11, MacOS, and MingW
targets. The default is 'yes' which corresponds to -g1. The alternatives
are 'no' (don't generate debug infos at all) or 'full' which runs with
-g2. A target=debug build will now build with -g3.
We need the efficient SRWLock methods which are not supported on Vista,
and loading them dynamically while providing fallbacks is not worth the
effort. Closes#10243.
Sorry Vista users... As you are running a supported which is no longer
supported by Microsoft (https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/help/13853/windows-lifecycle-fact-sheet),
we can only encourage you to upgrade to a more recent version if you can,
or switch to Linux, which should give your old hardware a new youth.
Tried to organize the configure(env) calls in sections, using the same order
for all platforms whenever possible.
Apart from cosmetic changes, the following issues were fixed:
- Android: cleanup linkage, remove GLESv1_CM and GLESv2
- iPhone: Remove obsolete "ios_gles22_override" option
- OSX:
* Fix bits detection (default to 64) and remove obsolete "force_64_bits" option
(closes#9449)
* Make "fat" bits argument explicit
- Server: sync with X11
- Windows: clean up old DirectX 9 stuff
- X11:
* Do not require system OpenSSL for building (closes#9443)
* Fix typo'ed use_leak_sanitizer option
* Fix .llvm suffix overriding custom extra_suffix
All the warnings are factored out of the platform-specific files and moved to
SConstruct. Will have to check that it does not introduce regressions on some
platforms/compilers.
(cherry picked from commit 31107daa1a)
Passed as a compiler define to be sure it is always define before windows.h
is loaded. This means that Godot officially requires Vista API or later, it will
not work on Windows XP or earlier.
Also fix a bogus check for Windows 7 API.
Done with `autopep8 --select=E7`, fixes:
- E701 - Put colon-separated compound statement on separate lines.
- E702 - Put semicolon-separated compound statement on separate lines.
- E703 - Put semicolon-separated compound statement on separate lines.
- E711 - Fix comparison with None.
- E712 - Fix (trivial case of) comparison with boolean.
- E713 - Fix (trivial case of) non-membership check.
- E721 - Fix various deprecated code (via lib2to3).
( @Akien : this PR is for current HEAD only, not to be cherry-picked for 2.1.1 )
this is manual revertion of #6501 which introduced a bug that prevented
scons from detecting Mingw under Windows when MSVC was installed.
(thanks to @vnen for finding this)
AND
it fixes the actual bug that prevented scons from detecting MSVC standalone
compiler ( a confusions between ``VSINSTALLDIR`` and ``VCINSTALLDIR`` )
The freeware Standalone MSVC C++ Build Tools are available here :
http://landinghub.visualstudio.com/visual-cpp-build-tools
Not fully happy about the way this one interacts with the various
platforms. Maybe the platform_config.h should be generated by the
SCsub instead of passing a define just to know where is the header.
Under Windows, Scons is now capable of detecting and compiling with
standalone MSVC compilers (aka "Visual C++ Build Tools").
http://landinghub.visualstudio.com/visual-cpp-build-tools
Tried with version 2015, and native x86 and x64 compilers under
Windows 10 pro 64 and Windows 8.1 64, with the default Win8 SDK
provided by the "Visual C++ Build Tools" web-installer.
Follow the same compiling instructions than for compiling with Visual
Studio, except that Visual Studio is no more required.
KNOWN ISSUES :
- ``methods.detect_visual_c_compiler_version()`` will emit a warning message
on computers where the ``VSINSTALLDIR`` environement variable is not present.
But it should compile just fine and still automatically detects the 32 or
64 bits according to the compiler you picked.
TODO :
- eventually, update ``platform/winrt/dectet.py`` with function
``methods.msvc_is_detected()`` and try to compile winrt/UWP with
these standalone compilers (if you did not select Win10 SDK when
installing the standalone tools, you can run it again).
- update doc to make users aware of "Visual C++ Build Tools" aka
"stadalone MSVC".
- eventually, update ``methods.detect_visual_c_compiler_version()``
- Fix buildsystem for WinRT/UWP platform.
- Add audio driver and joystick mapping for WinRT.
- Enable thread class for WinRT.
- Refactor MSVC compiler architecture detection to methods.py, so it can
be used by Windows and WinRT.
For reference, when you include a Windows header (be it directly windows.h or something that includes it)
put it at the end of the includes. it seems I forgot.
This allows us not to have to hack our definitions in the upstream files,
making it easier to upgrade to newer versions in the future.
For the include paths to work, the headers are moved to a GL subfolder to
match their upstream location.