Due to common subexpression elimination instruction set extensions may
leak from the objects where they were enabled when doing link-time
optimizations.
To avoid that this patch disables LTCG/LTO on files built with extra
instruction set extensions.
Change-Id: Ie34ad900be7fb04a0dc4d3562187ee170c183333
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@theqtcompany.com>
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
By using the special "ar" and "ranlib" tools, the symbol table is made
visible, so we don't need fat LTO binaries. Since we need to store the
new tool names, we may as well clean up ltcg.prf with variable names for
the fat mode too.
Change-Id: I7e53af0c74a3d069313f38500b72538af1d61128
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@theqtcompany.com>
While it does not look like the clang-based mkspecs had any problems so
far with not having QMAKE_LINK_C and QMAKE_LINK_C_SHLIB defined, it
makes sense to set them to $$QMAKE_CC just like the GCC-based ones so
CONFIG=use_c_linker works as expected.
Change-Id: Ib660d12b001dd7a877b6f03e79715db08a272968
Reviewed-by: Gabriel de Dietrich <gabriel.dedietrich@theqtcompany.com>
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@theqtcompany.com>
GCC currently requires fat object files for static libraries, since the
linker would otherwise not load the .o file from the archive at all and
the linking would fail with a lot of undefined references. Clang on
Linux also needs this, but it has no equivalent flag, so enabling LTCG
for Clang on static libraries will result in linker error.
This commit does not add support for enabling it in configure. It can be
enabled on a per-project basis by doing CONFIG += ltcg or by passing
-config ltcg to qmake's command-line.
Change-Id: I52cf99f1ed9f1701e23a3b457ba3502fd28126ce
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@digia.com>
This commit will make qmake use -isystem automatically for any
compilers that declare support for it for any paths that are listed in
QMAKE_DEFAULT_INCDIRS.
Change-Id: I36fefc6d5bba61671f65669f0ea42704b3c3cf31
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@digia.com>
The correct CFLAGS are already present in gcc-base.conf, which is
used as a basis for g++, LLVM, and Clang.
Change-Id: Ic19e28edc55e109ecfe372826b295b817afcd36e
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@digia.com>
Replace all tabs with proper space characters and consistently align
the '=' characters. The default alignment for the '=' of 25 characters
has been left as is to get a minimal diff. Lines with the '=' further
to the right and those belonging to 'proper code (TM)' have not been
touched.
The work was mostly done using the following python script (might
come in handy again...):
import sys, re
indent_eq = 25 + 0*4 # 25 characters was the most widely used indentation for the '=' character
p = re.compile(r'(\w+)[ \t]*([\-\+]?)(=$|= )[ \t]*(.*$)')
for fn in sys.argv[1:]:
with open(fn, 'r+') as f:
lines = []
nl_count = 0
continuity_indent = None
for l in f:
m = p.match(l)
nl = l
if m:
n_spaces = max(m.start(3), indent_eq - 1) - len(m.group(2)) - len(m.group(1))
if m.group(2) and m.start(2) >= indent_eq-1 and m.start(2) % 4 == 0:
n_spaces -= 1 # left-shift '+=' by one if the '+' is aligned to a multiple of 4
n_spaces = max(1, n_spaces) # we want at least one space before '='/'+='
nl = m.group(1) + ' '*n_spaces + ''.join(m.group(2,3,4)) + '\n'
continuity_indent = nl.find('= ') + 2 if l[-2] == '\\' else None # remember indent on '\\$'
elif continuity_indent:
nl = ' '*continuity_indent + l.lstrip()
if l[-2] != '\\': # check when to stop the continuation
continuity_indent = None
elif l.startswith('#'):
nl = l.expandtabs(2)
if l != nl:
nl_count += 1
lines.append(nl)
if nl_count > 0:
print fn, nl_count, len(lines)
f.seek(0)
f.writelines(lines)
f.truncate()
Change-Id: I1d2870d0a2fe2e30d398c140fe523e69dd20c81b
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@digia.com>
on the way to eliminate scoping based on the spec.
gcc and msvc go as such into CONFIG, the other ones get the vendor
prefixed, as most are mostly unknown and thus likely to clash with
users' flags.
Change-Id: Ie622f53d90e96dbf05ce7d8c638cd355f04fa20c
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Joerg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@digia.com>
This allows us to have different flags for the compilers for
supporting the same feature. For example, the official flag in GCC to
support AVX2 is -mavx2, but ICC does not support it (yet), requiring
-march=core-avx2 or -xCORE-AVX2. That flag, instead, enables support
for all the features that the "Core-AVX2" processor (codename Haswell)
will support. And clearly, the MSVC flags are different.
Change-Id: I33b6d8617520925e807747180a8dbaafd79b7a9a
Reviewed-by: Sean Harmer <sean.harmer@kdab.com>
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@nokia.com>
Enabling support for C++11 adds CONFIG+=c++11 to the Qt build. Projects
using Qt can check for C++11 support using contains(QT_CONFIG, c++11) in
their .pr[iof] files.
The QMAKE_CXXFLAGS_CXX11 and QMAKE_LFLAGS_CXX11 qmake varibles contain
any arguments the compiler needs to enable C++11. CONFIG+=c++11 adds
these arguments to the build.
Support for clang, g++, and the Intel C++ Compiler for Linux are
included in this commit.
Change-Id: Id77f86d7ad4d5c740b890446a40b105879a0d327
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@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