Instead of messing with global variables and the like, we introduce two target properties:
- WITH_CXX_EXCEPTIONS: if you want to use C++ exceptions
- WITH_CXX_RTTI: if you need RTTI in your module
You can use the newly introduced set_target_cpp_properties function, with WITH_EXCEPTIONS and WITH_RTTI arguments
We also introduce two libraries :
- cpprt: for C++ runtime routines
- cppstl: for the C++ standard template library
NB: On GCC, this requires to create imported libraries with the related built-in libraries:libsupc++, limingwex, libstdc++
Finally, we manage the relevant flags with the ad-hoc generator expressions
So, if you don't need exceptions, nor RTTI, nor use any runtime at all: you simply have nothing else to do than add your C++ file to your module
JIRA-user "Illen" reported booting from his Z170 controller worked up to
0.4.12-dev-936-g89aaf0e
and would refuse booting - beginning with uniata commit
0.4.12-dev-937-g
b546130731
For sure this workaround is just a temporary and no proper solution,
but was confirmed to be working by "Illen".
We have no clear understanding of the real bug yet.
Can be replaced by something better at any time.
It was already committed into 0.4.12, 0.4.13, 0.4.14.
We never had an affected release therefore.
Since no one took care of this bug ever,
the workaround will now be committed to master as well.
cherry picked from commit 0.4.13-RC-9-g
11178f38e4
There is no need to compile our DLLs as shared libraries since we are
managing symbols exports and imports through spec files.
On my system, this reduces the configure-time by a factor of two.