The recursivemake backend sets IMPORT_LIBRARY to the same value as
SHARED_LIBRARY on non-Windows platforms, so we can simply use
IMPORT_LIBRARY everywhere.
NO_INSTALL_IMPORT_LIBRARY is only used in one place, and since we don't even
use $(DIST)/lib for gecko, it actually doesn't make a difference presently.
We want the ability to read data from any moz.build file without needing
a full build configuration (running configure). This will enable tools
to consume metadata by merely having a copy of the source code and
nothing more.
This commit creates the EmptyConfig object. It is a config object that -
as its name implies - is empty. It will be used for reading moz.build
files in "no config" mode.
Many moz.build files make assumptions that variables in CONFIG are
defined and that they are strings. We create the EmptyValue type that
behaves like an empty unicode string. Since moz.build files also do some
type checking, we carve an exemption for EmptyValue, just like we do for
None.
We add a test to verify that reading moz.build files in "no config" mode
works. This required some minor changes to existing moz.build files to
make them work in the new execution mode.
moz.build files should execute in filesystem traversal mode. Add a test
that verifies this is true.
This test performs a brute force filesystem scan to find relevant
moz.build files. This can be a little slow. That's unfortunate. But it's
a price we need to pay in order to ensure metadata extraction mode
continues to work.
xpt files don't have a dependency on backend files to avoid rebuilding all
of them when adding or removing new files. On incremental builds, some kind
of dependencies are required to ensure the xpt files are refreshed when
adding or removing new idls.
Generating the list of idl deps to generate an xpt from its dependency list
makes us give all _previous_ dependencies, inherited from the .deps makefiles.
This leads to removed files being listed on xpidl-process.py command line, and
the command subsequently failing.
Instead, use generated lists of idl dependencies. At the same time, lighten the
generated Makefile further by not emitting xpt dependencies on their containing
directory, and instead generating it from the $xpt_files list.
This brings down the Makefile size from 100k to 38k.
Now that the mozbuild backend knows about FINAL_TARGET, we are able to
install generated xpt files into their final location. This saves us
from copying xpt files into their final location on every build.
Original patch by gps, rebased and comments addressed by Ms2ger
--HG--
extra : transplant_source : %E2%DC%0F%E0%AD%C2%25%A1%B8%A9%FE%B0%8C%60%FF%CB%02G%25%E5
See the revisions a few steps prior for more fine-grained information. This just
needs to be relanded because our automation doesn't like non-ASCII commit
messages.
--HG--
extra : amend_source : 0ee4e0da1ea9ada815abfe989c51030db24aac56
CLOSED TREE
Backed out changeset 28abb8af2d62 (bug 1099430)
Backed out changeset 358aa39360d5 (bug 1099430)
Backed out changeset 3313e545f4f6 (bug 1099430)
With these substitutions, it is possible to have comm-central's versions of
these files merely include the mozilla-central versions and avoid having to port
small changes to these files.
win_srcdir is used as the Windows path for the srcdir, and so it needs to use
comm-central's topsrcdir to work properly. In contrast, WIN_TOP_SRC is really
only used to define BUILD_TOOLS, which refers to files in mozilla-central/build,
and so that can and should remain the mozilla-central topsrcdir.
This change allows us to use use MOZILLA_DIR even for changes in config.mk. The
corollary is that comm-central needs to define MOZILLA_DIR before calling into
baseconfig.mk, which it already does.
The change to the test Makefile is needed since it decides to skip including
config.mk, and hence baseconfig.mk, where it would need to grab the MOZILLA_DIR
declaration.
buildlist invocations are slow and can occur in parallel since the
underlying program obtains a lock on the modified file.
Moving the XPT-related buildlist invocation from the serial libs tier to
the parallel misc tier decreased my no-op build time on OS X from 43.5s
to 37.0s.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 7d274024c401b1ecfbc771424a69eb487808fcbf
The installation rule for EXTRA_JS_MODULES and EXTRA_PP_JS_MODULES
became unused after b961ba8f0892 (bug 1044162). We remove the dead code.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 40adf7514d15ae4ba5bbfe3ac101061657aac841
This used to be necessary to avoid the conflicting names between import
libraries and static libraries, but that's now prevented by the whole
moz.build machinery.
There are, sadly, many combinations of linkage in use throughout the tree.
The main differentiator, though, is between program/libraries related to
Gecko or not. Kind of. Some need mozglue, some don't. Some need dependent
linkage, some standalone.
Anyways, these new templates remove the need to manually define the
right dependencies against xpcomglue, nspr, mozalloc and mozglue
in most cases.
Places that build programs and were resetting MOZ_GLUE_PROGRAM_LDFLAGS
or that build libraries and were resetting MOZ_GLUE_LDFLAGS can now
just not use those Gecko-specific templates.
This hack has actually not been actively used since sqlite, nss and nspr are
all folded together, because no shared library is actually linked in
db/sqlite3/src.
Since essentially everything is linked to libmozglue and libmozglue takes
precedence in symbol resolution in our dynamic linker, there is no need
to wrap most symbols. PR_GetEnv/PR_SetEnv still needs wrapping because
there's no other way to actually wrap the calls from NSPR itself and NSS,
as well as the symbols wrapped because our dynamic linker can't find them
in system libraries on some devices because they're weak.
Ever since bug 969164, the js build system, when building gecko (not when
building standalone) uses a autoconf-js.mk file for its config.
One of the suboptimal ways we have to retrigger builds when the build
configuration changes (changes to e.g. configure.in can do that) is to
make most things depend on autoconf.mk. Which unfortunately doesn't
account for the fact the js/src subdirectory uses a different file.
In practice, this means that some classes of changes to the js build
system, not accompanied with toplevel build system changes may no
trigger the corresponding rebuilds in the js subtree on incremental
builds.