Extra compilers may define a depend_command that's used to generate
dependencies for each input. When GNUmake was enabled we failed to
run this command, which was affecting resource files, as resource
dependencies are handled by an extra compiler defined in resources.prf.
The result was that changes to resources included in a resources-file
did not trigger a re-run of qrc and subsequent recompile of the
resource object file.
We must always run these custom dependency commands, even when GNUmake
(and the extended gcc_MD_depends option) is enabled, as GCC is only able
to handle regular #include-type dependencies. Hence, the check for the
'include_deps' flag was removed from doDepends(), and the check for
GNUmake was moved to the one place where it still made sense -- when
deciding whether or not to do recursive dependency checking.
Change-Id: I5ddb75c873120c90f798808efc52e81500786301
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Simon Hausmann <simon.hausmann@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Marius Storm-Olsen <marius.storm-olsen@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>
Recursive QMAKE_EXTRA_TARGETS were omitting the `-f' option to make.
This would break in the case where the correct makefile was not named
`Makefile'. The included autotest demonstrates the problem.
Note that this was fixed for normal targets back in 2005
by faac7bd178654fd67a6f3f9cf4f6f2605071448d (p4 202370), but was not
fixed for extra targets.
Reviewed-by: ossi
(cherry picked from commit 96a3bf7a8bbc1e5361e16cbeeceb4be674b88c30)
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Branched from the monolithic repo, Qt master branch, at commit
896db169ea224deb96c59ce8af800d019de63f12