Now that the reference documentation uses gi-docgen, it's more
troublesome to generate in less standard build scenarios like
cross-compiling.
In distributions like Debian, reference documentation is generally
packaged separately (in libglib2.0-doc in Debian's case), but man pages
are generally packaged alongside the executables themselves (in the
libglib2.0-bin and libglib2.0-dev-bin packages, in Debian's case). We
can exclude the reference documentation when cross-compiling, but ideally
we would like the man pages to still be built, so that a cross-compiled
libglib2.0-bin or libglib2.0-dev-bin package has the same content as a
native build.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@debian.org>
They are now installed to (e.g.)
`${prefix}/share/doc/glib-2.0/{glib,gmodule,gobject,gio}/index.html`.
We might want to drop one level of nesting out of that, but for the
moment I thought I’d keep it in so we can disambiguate by installed
major version.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@gnome.org>
Helps: #3037
Because the documentation is no longer built using gtk-doc.
Keep the old option around, but deprecated.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@gnome.org>
Helps: #3037
Gate the API reference on the availability of the introspection data as
well, so we don't accidentally try and generate the documentation
without a description of our API.
The files here are copied from the docs-gtk-org
branch of gtk.
This adds gi-docgen to the CI Dockerfiles and ensures the new versions
(including the OS upgrades from the previous commit) are used during CI.
Helps: #3037
Given that it can be computed using an error-prone strings comparisons it
is better to provide a variable everywhere, so that we don't have the
risk of comparing values that are always false.
There is currently no `dllimport` attribute on any of our function,
which prevents MSVC to optimize function calls.
To fix that issue, we need to redeclare all our visibility macros for
each of our libraries, because when compiling e.g. GIO code, we need
dllimport in GLIB headers and dllexport in GIO headers. That means they
cannot use the same GLIB_AVAILABLE_* macro.
Since that's a lot of boilerplate to copy/paste after each version bump,
this MR generate all those macros using a python script.
Also simplify the meson side by using `gnu_symbol_visibility : 'hidden'`
keyword argument instead of passing the cflag manually.
This leaves only API index to add manually into glib-docs.xml when
bumping GLib version. That file cannot be generated because Meson does
not allow passing a buit file to gnome.gtkdoc()'s main_xml kwarg
unfortunately.
Building the references requires libraries with all their symbols
available. Passing `-Dgtk_doc=true` and `-Ddefault_library=static`
should be considered a configuration error.
gtk-doc 1.33 hasn’t been released yet, but when it is, it’ll contain
three fixes which are necessary for correctly detecting which symbols
are undocumented/undeclared/unused in GLib:
• gtk-doc@b866a90b
• gtk-doc@ca42972c
• gtk-doc@b922e148
1.32.1 is the development version number which will eventually be
released as 1.33.
Until then, we can’t run the gtk-doc tests in CI because they reliably
fail spuriously. See !1488.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
This reverts commit c0146be3a4.
The revert was originally added because the original change broke
gnome-build-meta. Now that the problem has been diagnosed, the original
commit can be fixed — see the commit which follows this one.
See: !1487
The public functions exposed as static inlines currently don't have
annotations to describe when they were introduced. This means that
compiling this file:
#include <glib.h>
void foo (void)
{
g_rec_mutex_locker_new (NULL);
}
with:
gcc -c test.c \
-I/tmp/glib/include/glib-2.0 \
-I/tmp/glib/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/glib-2.0/include \
-Werror \
-DGLIB_VERSION_MAX_ALLOWED=GLIB_VERSION_2_28 \
-DGLIB_VERSION_MIN_REQUIRED=GLIB_VERSION_2_28
will not produce any error message, despite using
`g_rec_mutex_locker_new`, a function that was introduced after 2.28.
This patch adds some annotations to all the publicly exposed static
inline functions I could find.
I could not use the existing G_AVAILABLE* macros, because they may
expand to `extern`. This would then clash with the `static` keyword and
produce:
../glib/gthread.h:397:1: error: multiple storage classes in declaration specifiers
397 | static inline GRecMutexLocker *
| ^~~~~~
So I opted for adding a new set of macros,
GLIB_AVAILABLE_STATIC_INLINE_IN_2_XY.
With this patch applied, the example from above produces the expected
warning:
test.c: In function ‘foo’:
test.c:5:3: error: ‘g_rec_mutex_locker_new’ is deprecated: Not available before 2.60 [-Werror=deprecated-declarations]
5 | g_rec_mutex_locker_new (NULL);
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In file included from /tmp/glib/include/glib-2.0/glib/gasyncqueue.h:32,
from /tmp/glib/include/glib-2.0/glib.h:32,
from test.c:1:
/tmp/glib/include/glib-2.0/glib/gthread.h:398:1: note: declared here
398 | g_rec_mutex_locker_new (GRecMutex *rec_mutex)
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Now that we require Meson 0.52 to build the doc, we can also pull
gtk-doc as subproject when missing from the system. This requires
to pull gtk-doc master because needed changes there haven't been release
yet.
Those lists were getting very long. We can’t quite entirely automate the
list generation since Meson doesn’t have a range() function, but we can
at least combine three of them into one.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>