this is in fact a shell-related flag, which determines how QMAKE_DIR_COPY
is assumed to behave.
Change-Id: If774f8a83b40c9ae7107c8e7ef7263af8a2e6c6e
Reviewed-by: Joerg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@nokia.com>
instead of making the "real" targets depend on the makefiles, add
conditional makefile generation to the targets themselves.
this causes makefile generation to follow the recursion order determined
by the project, which is important when dealing with prl and module pri
files.
a side effect of this is that qmake and make calls are interleaved now,
which is entirely different from a 'qmake -r' run.
on the downside, calling make with multiple targets which operate on the
same subprojects without prior makefile generation will make a mess, as
the qmake calls will be racing. this should be no problem, as qmake does
not generate recursive targets where this would be useful - at least by
default.
it is not sufficient to just order the creation of the makefiles
non-recursively (e.g., by using gnu-specific order-only-prerequisites),
as an interrupted and subsequently resumed build would happily skip the
nested makefiles.
workable alternative approaches would be walking the entire tree in a
pre-pass to ensure makefile presence (which is incredibly slow) or
creating additional stamp files only after recursing and having the
makefiles depend on them (which is ugly).
Task-number: QTBUG-23376
Reviewed-by: Joerg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@nokia.com>
Change-Id: I88d3e7610215677d362026de316513d3bea04b06
instead of hard-coding platform differences, use a variable.
Change-Id: I20e98811ad5f07429148c6f88aedbabc3ba58fff
Reviewed-by: Joerg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@nokia.com>
there are only two types. everything else is duplication.
Change-Id: I87f2bdd3d56b94bb2ecdb60e8861afeb9af3666f
Reviewed-by: Joerg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@nokia.com>