this was a somewhat magic support for sysroots, automatically rewriting
a number of path-holding variables. this was (as usual) completely
undocumented, extremely fragile, and we are coming up with something
better now anyway.
Change-Id: I045910f532cb3efc839ea81c7a48f8db695e4092
Reviewed-by: Joerg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@nokia.com>
As in the past, to avoid rewriting various autotests that contain
line-number information, an extra blank line has been inserted at the
end of the license text to ensure that this commit does not change the
total number of lines in the license header.
Change-Id: I311e001373776812699d6efc045b5f742890c689
Reviewed-by: Rohan McGovern <rohan.mcgovern@nokia.com>
And enable this configuration option for the resource compiler. This
results in a re-run of qmake whenever you touch a qrc file, which is
needed to keep the dependencies up to date. Otherwise you might end
up in the situation where you add a file to a qrc, edit the file some
time later, but a rebuild does not regenerate a cpp file and compile
that, so the final binary is stale.
Technically this dependency problem is present for all source files,
and qrc files are no different than any cpp file that you add a new
header #include to, or adding a Q_OBJECT macro to a header. To pick
up these changes we have to re-run qmake, so that qmake can run its
internal dependency checking, and any extra compiler dependency
commands.
The reason we're making this change for rcc files it that conceptually
people treat them as a "project" files, and expect them to behave similarly
to .pro or .pri files, in that editing the file will invalidate the
makefile. In practice this is often what happens when adding new
headers, as you touch the project file when changing the HEADERS
variable.
Task-number: QTBUG-13334
Change-Id: If69149678e7fba6d812d31dcc17877427f9a6122
Reviewed-by: Simon Hausmann <simon.hausmann@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Kai Koehne <kai.koehne@nokia.com>
This is the beginning of revision history for this module. If you
want to look at revision history older than this, please refer to the
Qt Git wiki for how to use Git history grafting. At the time of
writing, this wiki is located here:
http://qt.gitorious.org/qt/pages/GitIntroductionWithQt
If you have already performed the grafting and you don't see any
history beyond this commit, try running "git log" with the "--follow"
argument.
Branched from the monolithic repo, Qt master branch, at commit
896db169ea224deb96c59ce8af800d019de63f12