Commit a7ba0ad93e introduced the -Wno-
language. The warning about deprecated functions, variables or types is
-Wdeprecated-declarations.
Change-Id: I6d269851afefc6a3fc3bf6599c3c702eb164245e
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@digia.com>
It sounds like a good thing to have this warning, but for
future-proofing we can't have it. The system libraries might change
and add deprecation marks (OS X does that often). If they do that, we
don't want poor developers to have to fix all warnings before they can
build Qt again.
Change-Id: I4ff317da0de596c470bb1efe6e59bcf70aeec8fc
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@digia.com>
This allows us to go back to older versions of Qt with newer compilers,
that didn't exist when those versions were released. It also allows
someone upgrading their compiler and not being faced with having to fix
all warnings before Qt compiles.
This commit whitelists the following compilers:
* Apple Clang versions 4.0, 4.1 and 4.2 (OS X only)
* Intel Compiler versions 13.0, 13.1 and 14.0 (Linux only)
* GCC versions 4.6, 4.7 and 4.8 (all OS)
Notably, Clang on other other OS besides OS X and MSVC are missing.
Change-Id: I665160d40a59336da1904f2a6c1eda543e592b48
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@digia.com>
This is enabled only for -developer-builds and only for certain
compiler-version combinations that are in a whitelist.
It also requires each library, plugin or tool to declare whether it is
supposedly clean of warnings. When most targets are clean, we can
consider inverting.
Change-Id: I17b5c4e45aee5078f9788e846a45d619c144095a
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@digia.com>
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@digia.com>
This file is now included by three types of Qt output: modules,
plugins (including QML plugins) and tools.
Change-Id: I5085f6ff37f70e9228303bf0520040adc2e2d7a5
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@digia.com>