People might put more extraneous whitespace in a @since line in a
documentation comment, which should not affect the ordering of
methods/signals/etc. in the generated output.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=770372
Add --dependency-file=foo.d option to generate a gcc -M -MF style
dependency file for other build tools. The current output of
--generate-dependencies is only useful for use directly in Makefile
rules, but can't be used in other build systems like that.
The generated dependency file looks like this:
$ glib-compile-resources --sourcedir= test.gresource.xml --dependency-file=-
test.gresource.xml: test1.txt test2.txt test2.txt
test1.txt:
test2.txt:
test2.txt:
Unlike --generate-dependencies, the --dependency-file option can be
used together with other --generate options to create dependencies
as side-effect of generating sources.
Based on a patch by Tim-Philipp Müller in
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745754
The changes in this patch, compared to his are to always return
the hash table with file information from parse_resource_file, so
we can use it for dependency output, regardless if generate_dependencies
was TRUE or not.
Add --dependency-file=foo.d option to generate a gcc -M -MF style
dependency file for other build tools. The current output of
--generate-dependencies is only useful for use directly in Makefile
rules, but can't be used in other build systems like that.
The generated dependency file looks like this:
$ glib-compile-resources --sourcedir= test.gresource.xml --dependency-file=-
test.gresource.xml: test1.txt test2.txt test2.txt
test1.txt:
test2.txt:
test2.txt:
Unlike --generate-dependencies, the --dependency-file option can be
used together with other --generate options to create dependencies
as side-effect of generating sources.
Based on a patch by Tim-Philipp Müller.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745754
Previously, this would not work, as it would result in comparing the
order of a string and an integer. Make it work, and make 'UNRELEASED'
compare higher than other versions so it's always treated as the latest
version.
'UNRELEASED' is commonly used by maintainers to highlight new API while
it's being prototyped, until they know which version it will actually
be released in. At the time of release, they replace all 'UNRELEASED'
strings in git with the new version number.
An example of this usage is here:
d380ac6a2a (9208ee267cb05db1afd3a5c323d71e51db489447_7619_7656)https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=769995