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I can't ever recall actually needing the intermediate files or the checking
that a double compile produces. What I CAN remember is every DONT_OPTIMIZE
build needing 3 invocations of gcc instead of 1 just to do the checks and
produce those intermediate files.
Having said that, Richard pointed out that the reason for the double compile
was that there were cases in the past where a submitted patch failed to compile
because the submitter never tried it with the optimizations turned on.
To get the best of both worlds, COMPILE_DOUBLE has been split into its own
option. If DONT_OPTIMIZE is turned on, COMPILE_DOUBLE will also be selected
BUT you can then turn it off if all you need are the debugging symbols. This
way you have to make an informed decision about disabling COMPILE_DOUBLE.
To allow COMPILE_DOUBLE to be both auto-selected and turned off, a new feature
was added to menuselect. The <use> element can now contain an "autoselect"
attribute which will turn the used member on but not create a hard dependency.
The cflags.xml implementation for COMPILE_DOUBLE looks like this...
<member name="DONT_OPTIMIZE" displayname="Disable Optimizations ...">
<use autoselect="yes">COMPILE_DOUBLE</use>
<support_level>core</support_level>
</member>
<member name="COMPILE_DOUBLE" displayname="Pre-compile with ...>
<depend>DONT_OPTIMIZE</depend>
<support_level>core</support_level>
</member>
When DONT_OPTIMIZE is turned on, COMPILE_DOUBLE is turned on because
of the use.
When DONT_OPTIMIZE is turned off, COMPILE_DOUBLE is turned off because
of the depend.
When COMPILE_DOUBLE is turned on, DONT_OPTIMIZE is turned on because
of the depend.
When COMPILE_DOUBLE is turned off, DONT_OPTIMIZE is left as is because
it only uses COMPILE_DOUBLE, it doesn't depend on it.
I also made a few tweaks to the ncurses implementation to move things
left a bit to allow longer descriptions.
Change-Id: Id49ca930ac4b5ec4fc2d8141979ad888da7b1611
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This corrects a situation where menuselect can incorrectly enable a
module by default that has defaultenabled set to "no" and has
failed/non-selected dependencies. The bug is due to an inverted test
when checking for whether the given module should be set to enabled by
default on load.
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3975/
Reported by: John Bigelow
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/branches/13@422646 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
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This is the final patch in adding menuselect to Asterisk.
- The first patch (r418832) added menuselect along with mxml
- The second patch (r418833) removed mxml from menuselect
This patch adds support for libxml2 to menuselect, and makes libxml2 a
required library for Asterisk.
Note that the libxml2 portion of this patch was written by Sean Bright,
and was made available on a team branch:
http://svn.digium.com/svn/menuselect/team/seanbright/libxml2/
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3773/
ASTERISK-20703 #close
patches:
some_mysterious_team_branch uploaded by seanbright (License 5060)
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@418834 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
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This is the first patch that adds menuselect to Asterisk trunk, and removes
the svn:externals property. This is being done for two reasons:
(1) The removal of external repositories eases a future migration to git
(2) Asterisk is now the only thing that uses menuselect; as a result, there's
little need to keep it in an external repository
Subsequent patches will remove the mxml dependency from menuselect and tidy
up the build system.
ASTERISK-20703
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@418832 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
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