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authorLuca Falavigna <dktrkranz@debian.org>2010-06-15 09:21:32 +0000
committerLuca Falavigna <dktrkranz@debian.org>2010-06-15 09:21:32 +0000
commit340d57481935334465037d97c0db1555b70c0eb1 (patch)
tree8396a9a52eed6e40268c1916bcfa8957dddef71c /RELEASE.txt
parent86baccee0a1dddf43f7eefe48e2d9e9037468b9c (diff)
Imported Upstream version 2.0.0upstream/2.0.0
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diff --git a/RELEASE.txt b/RELEASE.txt
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-# Copyright (c) 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010 The SCons Foundation
-# src/RELEASE.txt 4720 2010/03/24 03:14:11 jars
+ A new SCons checkpoint release, 2.0.0.final.0, is now available
+ on the SCons download page:
+ http://www.scons.org/download.php
- SCons - a software construction tool
+ The primary purpose of this release is to remove support for Python
+ versions prior to 2.4 and streamline the SCons code base using more
+ modern python idioms.
- Release Notes
+ IMPORTANT: In 1.3.0 and 2.0.0, explicit dependencies (configured via
+ the Depends() call) are ignored for any nodes that do not have builders.
+ This known issue[1] will typically only happen if you explicitly
+ configure a builder call to create multiple output files, some of which
+ are "hidden" from SCons by not being listed in the targets list, and then
+ use Depends() to establish an explicit dependency on a "hidden" file.
+ [1] See http://scons.tigris.org/issues/show_bug.cgi?id=2647 for details.
-This is SCons, a tool for building software (and other files). SCons is
-implemented in Python, and its "configuration files" are actually Python
-scripts, allowing you to use the full power of a real scripting language
-to solve build problems. You do not, however, need to know Python to
-use SCons effectively.
+ A SCons "checkpoint release" is intended to provide early access to
+ new features so they can be tested in the field before being released
+ for adoption by other software distributions.
-So that everyone using SCons can help each other learn how to use it
-more effectively, please sign up for the scons-users mailing list using
-the instructions on the following page:
+ Note that a checkpoint release is developed using the same test-driven
+ development methodology as all SCons releases. Existing SCons
+ functionality should all work as it does in previous releases (except
+ for any changes identified in the release notes) and early adopters
+ should be able to use a checkpoint release safely for production work
+ with existing SConscript files. If not, it represents not only a bug
+ in SCons but also a hole in the regression test suite, and we want to
+ hear about it.
- http://scons.org/lists.php
+ New features may be more lightly tested than in past releases,
+ especially as concerns their interaction with all of the other
+ functionality in SCons. We are especially interested in hearing bug
+ reports about new functionality.
+ We do not recommend that downstream distributions (Debian, Fedora,
+ etc.) package a checkpoint release, mainly to avoid confusing the
+ "public" release numbering with the long checkpoint release names.
+ Here is a summary of the changes since 1.3:
-RELEASE 1.3.0 - Tue, 23 Mar 2010 21:44:19 -0400
+ NEW FUNCTIONALITY
- Please consult the CHANGES.txt file for a list of specific changes
- since last release.
+ - There should be no new functionality or bug fixes in this checkpoint.
+ Bug fixes will be found in the 1.3.1 series of checkpoints.
- Please note the following important changes in this release:
+ DEPRECATED FUNCTIONALITY
- -- DEPRECATED FEATURES WILL GENERATE MANDATORY WARNINGS IN 1.3.0
+ - All features or usages deprecated in 1.3 should have been removed.
+ Uses of formerly-deprecated features should get an error.
- In keeping with our deprecation cycle, the following deprecated
- features will still be supported in 1.3.0 but will generate
- mandatory, non-disableable warnings:
+ - The BuildDir() method and the build_dir option now get warnings.
- -- Support for Python versions 1.5, 1.6, 2.0, 2.1, 2.2, and 2.3.
- -- The overrides= keyword argument to the Builder() call.
- -- The scanner= keyword argument to the Builder() call.
- -- The BuildDir() function and env.BuildDir() method.
- -- The env.Copy() method.
- -- The SourceSignatures() function and
- env.SourceSignatures() method.
- -- The TargetSignatures() function and
- env.TargetSignatures() method.
- -- The Sig module (now an unnused stub).
- -- The --debug=dtree, --debug=stree and --debug=tree options.
- -- The --debug=nomemoizer option.
- -- The Options object and the related BoolOption(),
- EnumOption(), ListOption(), PackageOption() and
- PathOption() functions.
+ - The SourceCode() function and its associated factory functions have
+ started their deprecation cycle and can have a warning enabled.
- The mandatory warnings will be issued in order to make sure
- users of 1.3.0 notice *prior* to the release of SCons 2.0.0, that
- these features will be removed. In SCons 2.0.0 these features
- will no longer work at all, and will instead generate specific
- fatal errors when anyone tries to use them.
+ CHANGED/ENHANCED EXISTING FUNCTIONALITY
- Please note the following important changes since release 1.2.0:
+ - Any Command() or env.Command() calls that use the following Action
+ factory functions will have their targets rebuilt when upgrading
+ from any pre-2.0 release:
- -- Support for Latex glosseries and acronyms has been added
+ Chmod()
+ Copy()
+ Delete()
+ Mkdir()
+ Move()
+ Touch()
- -- MICROSOFT VISUAL STUDIO VERSION/ARCH DETECTION HAS CHANGED
+ (The rebuild occurs because the underlying Python class that
+ implements these functions has been changed to a new-style Python
+ class, and that changes the Python byte code and therefore the
+ build signature of the functions.)
- The way SCons detects Visual Studio on Windows has changed in
- 1.3. By default, it should now use the latest installed
- Visual Studio version on your machine, and compile for 32 or
- 64 bits according to whether your OS is 32 or 64 bits (32/64
- bit python makes no difference).
+ FIXES
- Two new variables control Visual Studio: MSVC_VERSION and
- TARGET_ARCH. These variables ONLY take effect when passed to
- the Environment() constructor; setting them later has no
- effect. To use a non-default Visual Studio version, set
- MSVC_VERSION to e.g. "8.0" or "7.1". Setting it to "xxx" (or
- any nonexistent value) will make it print out the valid
- versions on your system. To use a non-default architecture,
- set TARGET_ARCH to "x86" or "x86_64" (various synonyms are
- accepted).
+ - MSVC/MSVS/SDK support has been improved. A number of issues with
+ determining the correct version and architecture have been resolved.
- In addition, MSVC_USE_SCRIPT can be used to bypass the
- above autodetection; setting it to the path of a Visual
- Studio .bat file (e.g. vcvars.bat) will cause SCons to
- run that bat file and extract the relevant variables
- from the result (typically %INCLUDE%, %LIB%, and %PATH%).
- Setting MSVC_USE_SCRIPT to None bypasses the Visual Studio
- autodetection entirely; use this if you are importing
- the shell env and running SCons in a Visual Studio cmd window.
+ IMPROVEMENTS
- Note that if you use MSVS_VERSION to build Visual Studio
- projects from your SConstructs, MSVS_VERSION must be set to
- the same version as MSVC_VERSION.
+ - Support for Python versions prior to 2.4 has been removed. As of
+ this writing, we believe that SCons will still work with Python 2.3,
+ but this is not guaranteed.
+ - Code paths that included special cases for older Python versions have
+ been streamlined.
+ - The code base has been converted to use more modern idioms. Although
+ we don't have any direct measurements (yet), we believe that SCons
+ startup time should be decreased and the overall code should run faster.
- Support for HOST_OS,HOST_ARCH,TARGET_OS, TARGET_ARCH has been
- added to allow specifying different target arch than the host
- system. This is only supported for Visual Studio/Visual C++
- at this time.
+ PACKAGING
- -- VISUAL C/C++ PRECOMPILED HEADERS WILL BE REBUILT
+ - No changes.
- Precompiled header files built with Visual C/C++ will be
- rebuilt after upgrading from 1.2.0 to a later release.
+ DOCUMENTATION
- This rebuild is normal and will occur because the command line
- defined by the $PCHCOM construction variable has had the $CCFLAGS
- variable added, and has been rearranged to put the "/Fo" output
- flag towards the beginning of the line, consistent with the
- related command lines for $CCCOM, $CXXCOM, etc.
+ - The entries for SourceCode() and its associated factory functions now
+ state that the functions are deprecated.
- -- CHANGES TO SOME LINKER COMMAND LINES WILL CAUSE RELINKING
+ DEVELOPMENT
- Changes to the command line definitions for the Microsoft link.exe
- linker, the OS/2 ilink linker and the Phar Lap linkloc linker
- will cause targets built with those tools be to be rebuilt after
- upgrading from 1.2.0 to a later release.
+ - Code no longer has to be compatible with Python versions back to 1.5.2.
+ Although code is tested with Python 2.3 and is still believed to work,
+ the official new floor is Python 2.4.
- This relink is normal and will occur because the command lines for
- these tools have been redefined to remove unnecessary nested $(
- and $) character strings.
-
- -- MSVS_USE_MFC_DIRS and MSVS_IGNORE_IDE_PATHS are obsoleted and
- have no effect.
-
- Please note the following important changes since release 1.1.0:
-
- -- THE $CHANGED_SOURCES, $CHANGED_TARGETS, $UNCHANGED_SOURCES
- AND $UNCHANGED_TARGETS VARIABLES WILL BECOME RESERVED
-
- A future release (probably 1.3.0) will make the construction
- variable names $CHANGED_SOURCES, $CHANGED_TARGETS,
- $UNCHANGED_SOURCES and $UNCHANGED_TARGETS into reserved
- construction variable names controlled by SCons itself (like
- the current $SOURCE, $TARGETS, etc.).
-
- Setting these variable names in the current release will generate
- a warning but still set the variables. When they become reserved
- variable names, they will generate a different warning message
- and attempts to set these variables will be ignored.
-
- SCons configurations that happen to use these variable names
- should be changed to use different variable names, in order
- to ensure that the configuration continues to work with future
- versions of SCons.
-
- -- THE Options OBJECT AND RELATED FUNCTIONS NOW GENERATE WARNINGS
-
- Use of the Options object, and related functions BoolOption(),
- EnumOption(), ListOption(), PackageOption() and PathOption()
- were announced as deprecated in release 0.98.1. Since then,
- however, no warning messages were ever implemented for the
- use of these deprecated functions.
-
- By default, release 1.2.0 prints warning messages when these
- deprecated features are used. Warnings about all deprecated
- features may be suppressed by using the --warn=no-deprecated
- command-line option:
-
- $ scons --warn=no-deprecated
-
- Or by using the appropriate SetOption() call in any SConscript
- file:
-
- SetOption('warn', 'no-deprecated')
-
- You may optionally disable just warnings about the deprecation
- of the Options object and its related functions as follows:
-
- SetOption('warn', 'no-deprecated-options')
-
- The current plan is for these warnings to become mandatory
- (non-suppressible) in release 1.3.0, and for the use of Options
- and its related functions to generate errors in release 2.0.
-
- Please note the following important changes since release 0.98.4:
-
- -- scons.bat NOW RETURNS THE REAL SCONS EXIT STATUS
-
- The scons.bat script shipped with SCons used to exit with
- a status of 1 when it detected any failed (non-zero) exit
- status from the underlying Python execution of SCons itself.
- The scons.bat script now exits with the actual status
- returned by SCons.
-
- -- SCONS NOW WARNS WHEN TRYING TO LINK C++ AND FORTRAN OBJECT FILES
-
- Some C++ toolchains do not understand Fortran runtimes and create
- unpredictable executables when linking C++ and Fortran object
- files together. SCons now issues a warning if you try to link
- C++ and Fortran object files into the same executable:
-
- scons: warning: Using $CXX to link Fortran and C++ code together.
- This may generate a buggy executable if the '/usr/bin/gcc'
- compiler does not know how to deal with Fortran runtimes.
-
- The warning may be suppressed with either the --warning=no-link
- or --warning=no-fortran-cxx-mix command line options, or by
- adding either of the following lines to a SConscript file:
-
- SetOption('warn', 'no-link')
- SetOption('warn', 'no-fortran-cxx-mix')
-
- Please note the following important changes since release 0.98:
-
- -- SCONS NO LONGER SETS THE GNU TOOLCHAIN -fPIC FLAG IN $SHCXXFLAGS
-
- The GNU toolchain support in previous versions of SCons would
- add the -fPIC flag to the $SHCXXFLAGS construction variable.
- The -fPIC flag has been now been removed from the default
- $SHCXXFLAGS setting. Instead, the $SHCXXCOM construction variable
- (the default SCons command line for compiling shared objects
- from C++ source files) has been changed to add the $SHCCFLAGS
- variable, which contains the -fPIC flag.
-
- This change was made in order to make the behavior of the default
- C++ compilation line including $SHCCFLAGS consistent with the
- default C compilation line including $CCFLAGS.
-
- This change should have no impact on configurations that use
- the default $SHCXXCOM command line. It may have an impact on
- configurations that were using the default $SHCXXFLAGS value
- *without* the $SHCCFLAGS variable to get the -fPIC flag into a
- custom command line. You can fix these by adding the $SHCCFLAGS
- to the custom command line.
-
- Adding $SHCCFLAGS is backwards compatible with older SCons
- releases, although it might cause the -fPIC flag to be repeated
- on the command line if you execute it on an older version of
- SCons that sets -fPIC in both the $SHCCLAFGS and $SHCXXFLAGS
- variables. Duplicating the -fPIC flag on the g++ command line
- will not cause any compilation problems, but the change to the
- command line may cause SCons to rebuild object files.
-
- -- FORTRAN NOW COMPILES .f FILES WITH gfortran BY DEFAULT
-
- The Fortran Tool modules have had a major overhaul with the intent
- of making them work as-is for most configurations. In general,
- most configurations that use default settings should not see
- any noticeable difference.
-
- One configuration that has changed is if you have both a gfortran
- and g77 compiler installed. In this case, previous versions of
- SCons would, by default, use g77 by default to compile files with
- a .f suffix, while SCons 0.98.1 will use the gfortran compiler
- by default. The old behavior may be preserved by explicitly
- initializing construction environments with the 'g77' Tool module:
-
- env = Environment(tools = ['g77', 'default'])
-
- The above code is backwards compatible to older versions of SCons.
-
- If you notice any other changes in the behavior of default
- Fortran support, please let us know so we can document them in
- these release notes for other users.
-
- Please note the following important changes since release 0.97.0d20071212:
-
- -- SUPPORT FOR PYTHON VERSIONS BEFORE 2.2 IS NOW DEPRECATED
-
- SCons now prints the following warning when it is run by any
- Python 1.5, 2.0 or 2.1 release or sub-release:
-
- scons: warning: Support for pre-2.2 Python (VERSION) is deprecated.
- If this will cause hardship, contact dev@scons.tigris.org.
-
- You may disable all warnings about deprecated features by adding
- the option "--warn=no-deprecated" to the command line or to the
- $SCONSFLAGS environment variable:
-
- $ scons --warn=no-deprecated
-
- Using '--warn=no-deprecated' is compatible with earlier versions
- of SCons.
-
- You may also, as of this version of SCons, disable all warnings
- about deprecated features by adding the following to any
- SConscript file:
-
- SetOption('warn', 'no-deprecated')
-
- You may disable only the specific warning about running under
- a deprecated Python version by adding the following to any
- SConscript file:
-
- SetOption('warn', 'no-python-version')
-
- The warning may also be suppressed on the command line:
-
- $ scons --warn=no-python-version
-
- Or by specifying the --warn=no-python-version option in the
- $SCONSFLAGS environment variable.
-
- Using SetOption('warn', ...), and the 'no-python-version'
- command-line option for suppressing this specific warning,
- are *not* backwards-compatible to earlier versions of SCons.
-
- -- THE env.Copy() METHOD IS NOW OFFICIALLY DEPRECATED
-
- The env.Copy() method is now officially deprecated and will
- be removed in a future release. Using the env.Copy() method
- now generates the following message:
-
- scons: warning: The env.Copy() method is deprecated; use the env.Clone() method instead.
-
- You may disable all warnings about deprecated features by adding
- the option "--warn=no-deprecated" to the command line or to the
- $SCONSFLAGS environment variable:
-
- $ scons --warn=no-deprecated
-
- Using '--warn=no-deprecated' is compatible with earlier versions
- of SCons.
-
- You may also, as of this version of SCons, disable all warnings
- about deprecated features by adding the following to any
- SConscript file:
-
- SetOption('warn', 'no-deprecated')
-
- You may disable only the specific warning about the deprecated
- env.Copy() method by adding the following to any SConscript
- file:
-
- SetOption('warn', 'no-deprecated-copy')
-
- The warning may also be suppressed on the command line:
-
- $ scons --warn=no-deprecated-copy
-
- Or by specifying the --warn=no-deprecated-copy option in the
- $SCONSFLAGS environment variable.
-
- Using SetOption('warn', ...), and the 'no-deprecated-copy'
- command-line option for suppressing this specific warning,
- are *not* backwards-compatible to earlier versions of SCons.
-
- -- THE --debug=dtree, --debug=stree AND --debug=tree OPTIONS ARE DEPRECATED
-
- The --debug=dtree, --debug=stree and --debug=tree methods
- are now officially deprecated and will be removed in a
- future release. Using these options now generate a warning
- message recommending use of the --tree=derived, --tree=all,status
- and --tree=all options, respectively.
-
- You may disable these warnings, and all warnings about
- deprecated features, by adding the option "--warn=no-deprecated"
- to the command line or to the $SCONSFLAGS environment
- variable:
-
- $ scons --warn=no-deprecated
-
- Using '--warn=no-deprecated' is compatible with earlier versions
- of SCons.
-
- -- THE TargetSignatures() AND SourceSignatures() FUNCTIONS ARE DEPRECATED
-
- The TargetSignatures() and SourceSignatures() functions,
- and their corresponding env.TargetSignatures() and
- env.SourceSignatures() methods, are now officially deprecated
- and will be be removed in a future release. Using ahy of
- these functions or methods now generates a message
- similar to the following:
-
- scons: warning: The env.TargetSignatures() method is deprecated;
- convert your build to use the env.Decider() method instead.
-
- You may disable all warnings about deprecated features by adding
- the option "--warn=no-deprecated" to the command line or to the
- $SCONSFLAGS environment variable:
-
- $ scons --warn=no-deprecated
-
- Using '--warn=no-deprecated' is compatible with earlier versions
- of SCons.
-
- You may also, as of this version of SCons, disable all warnings
- about deprecated features by adding the following to any
- SConscript file:
-
- SetOption('warn', 'no-deprecated')
-
- You may disable only the specific warning about the use of
- TargetSignatures() or SourceSignatures() by adding the
- following to any SConscript file:
-
- SetOption('warn', 'no-deprecated-target-signatures')
- SetOption('warn', 'no-deprecated-source-signatures')
-
- The warnings may also be suppressed on the command line:
-
- $ scons --warn=no-deprecated-target-signatures --warn=no-deprecated-source-signatures
-
- Or by specifying these options in the $SCONSFLAGS environment
- variable.
-
- Using SetOption('warn', ...), or the command-line options
- for suppressing these warnings, is *not* backwards-compatible
- to earlier versions of SCons.
-
- -- File(), Dir() and Entry() NOW RETURN A LIST WHEN THE INPUT IS A SEQUENCE
-
- Previously, if these methods were passed a list, the list was
- substituted and stringified, then passed as a single string to
- create a File/Dir/Entry Node. This rarely if ever worked with
- more than one element in the list. They now return a list of
- Nodes when passed a list.
-
- One case that works differently now is a passing in a
- single-element sequence; that formerly was stringified
- (returning its only element) and then a single Node would be
- returned. Now a single-element list containing the Node will
- be returned, for consistency.
-
- -- THE env.subst() METHOD NOW RETURNS A LIST WHEN THE INPUT IS A SEQUENCE
-
- The env.subst() method now returns a list with the elements
- expanded when given a list as input. Previously, the env.subst()
- method would always turn its result into a string.
-
- This behavior was changed because it interfered with being able
- to include things like lists within the expansion of variables
- like $CPPPATH and then have SCons understand that the elements
- of the "internal" lists still needed to be treated separately.
- This would cause a $CPPPATH list like ['subdir1', 'subdir']
- to show up in a command line as "-Isubdir1 subdir".
-
- -- THE Jar() BUILDER NOW USES THE Java() BUILDER CLASSDIR BY DEFAULT
-
- By default, the Jar() Builder will now use the class directory
- specified when the Java() builder is called. So the following
- input:
-
- classes = env.Java('classes', 'src')
- env.Jar('out.jar', classes)
-
- Will cause "-C classes" to be passed the "jar" command invocation,
- and the Java classes in the "out.jar" file will not be prefixed
- "classes/".
-
- Explicitly setting the $JARCHDIR variable overrides this default
- behavior. The old behavior of not passing any -C option to the
- "jar" command can be preserved by explicitly setting $JARCHDIR
- to None:
-
- env = Environment(JARCHDIR = None)
-
- The above setting is compatible with older versions of SCons.
-
- Please note the following important changes since release 0.97.0d20070918:
-
- -- SCons REDEFINES PYTHON open() AND file() ON Windows TO NOT PASS
- ON OPEN FILE HANDLES TO CREATED PROCESSES
-
- On Windows systems, SCons now redefines the Python open()
- and file() functions so that, if the Python Win32 extensions
- are available, the file handles for any opened files will *not*
- be inherited by subprocesses, such as the spawned compilers and
- other tools invoked to build the software.
-
- This prevents certain race conditions where a file handle for
- a file opened by Python (either in a Python function action,
- or directly in a SConscript file) could be inherited and help
- open by a subprocess, interfering with the ability of other
- processes to create or modify the file.
-
- In general, this should not cause problems for the vast majority
- of configurations. The only time this would be a problem would be
- in the unlikely event that a process spawned by SCons specifically
- *expected* to use an inherited file handle opened by SCons.
-
- If the Python Win32 extensions are not installed or are an
- earlier version that does not have the ability to disable file
- handle inheritance, SCons will print a warning message when the
- -j option is used. The warning message may be suppressed by
- specifying --warn=no-parallel-support.
-
- Please note the following important changes since release 0.97.0d20070809:
-
- -- "content" SIGNATURES ARE NOW THE DEFAULT BEHAVIOR
-
- The default behavior of SCons is now to use the MD5 checksum of
- all file contents to decide if any files have changed and should
- cause rebuilds of their source files. This means that SCons may
- decide not to rebuild "downstream" targets if a a given input
- file is rebuilt to the exact same contents as the last time.
- The old behavior may preserved by explicity specifying:
-
- TargetSignatures("build")
-
- In any of your SConscript files.
-
- -- TARGETS NOW IMPLICITLY DEPEND ON THE COMMAND THAT BUILDS THEM
-
- For all targets built by calling external commands (such as a
- compiler or other utility), SCons now adds an implicit dependency
- on the command(s) used to build the target.
-
- This will cause rebuilds of all targets built by external commands
- when running SCons in a tree built by previous version of SCons,
- in order to update the recorded signatures.
-
- The old behavior of not having targets depend on the external
- commands that build them can be preserved by setting a new
- $IMPLICIT_COMMAND_DEPENDENCIES construction variable to a
- non-True value:
-
- env = Environment(IMPLICIT_COMMAND_DEPENDENCIES = 0)
-
- or by adding Ignore() calls for any targets where the behavior
- is desired:
-
- Ignore('/usr/bin/gcc', 'foo.o')
-
- Both of these settings are compatible with older versions
- of SCons.
-
- -- CHANGING SourceSignature() MAY CAUSE "UNECESSARY" REBUILDS
-
- If you change the SourceSignature() value from 'timestamp' to
- 'MD5', SCons will now rebuild targets that were already up-to-date
- with respect to their source files.
-
- This will happen because SCons did not record the content
- signatures of the input source files when the target was last
- built--it only recorded the timestamps--and it must record them
- to make sure the signature information is correct. However,
- the content of source files may have changed since the last
- timestamp build was performed, and SCons would not have any way to
- verify that. (It would have had to open up the file and record
- a content signature, which is one of the things you're trying to
- avoid by specifying use of timestamps....) So in order to make
- sure the built targets reflect the contents of the source files,
- the targets must be rebuilt.
-
- Change the SourceSignature() value from 'MD5' to 'timestamp'
- should correctly not rebuild target files, because the timestamp
- of the files is always recorded.
-
- In previous versions of SCons, changing the SourceSignature()
- value would lead to unpredictable behavior, usually including
- rebuilding targets.
-
- -- THE Return() FUNCTION NOW ACTUALLY RETURNS IMMEDIATELY
-
- The Return() function now immediately stops processing the
- SConscript file in which it appears and returns the values of the
- variables named in its arguments. It used to continue processing
- the rest of the SConscript file, and then return the values of the
- specified variables at the point the Return() function was called.
-
- The old behavior may be requested by adding a "stop=False"
- keyword argument to the Return() call:
-
- Return('value', stop=False)
-
- The "stop=" keyword argument is *not* compatible with SCons
- versions 0.97.0d20070809 or earlier.
-
- Please note the following important changes since release 0.97:
-
- -- env.CacheDir() NOW ONLY AFFECTS CONSTRUCTION ENVIRONMENT TARGETS
-
- The env.CacheDir() method now only causes derived files to be
- retrieved from the specified cache directory for targets built
- with the specified specified construction environment ("env").
-
- Previously, any call to env.CacheDir() or CacheDir() would modify
- a global setting and cause all built targets to be retrieved
- from the specified cache directory. This behavior was changed so
- that env.CacheDir() would be consistent with other construction
- environment methods, which only affect targets built with the
- specified construction environment.
-
- The old behavior of changing the global behavior may be preserved
- by changing any env.CacheDir() calls to:
-
- CacheDir('/path/to/cache/directory')
-
- The above change is backwards-compatible and works in all earlier
- versions of SCons that support CacheDir().
-
- -- INTERPRETATION OF SUFFIX-LESS SOURCE ARGUMENTS HAS CHANGED
-
- The interpretation of source arguments (files) without suffixes
- has changed in one specific configuration.
-
- Previously, if a Builder had a src_suffix specified (indicating
- that source files without suffixes should have that suffix
- appended), the suffix would only be applied to suffix-less source
- arguments if the Builder did *not* have one or more attached
- source Builders (that is, the Builder was not a "multi-stage"
- Builder). So in the following configuration:
-
- build_foo = Builder(src_suffix = '.foo')
- build_bar = Builder(src_suffix = '.bar',
- src_builder = build_bar)
-
- env = Environment(BUILDERS = {
- 'Foo' : build_foo,
- 'Boo' : build_bar,
- })
-
- env.Foo('tgt1', 'src1')
- env.Bar('tgt2', 'src2')
-
- SCons would have expected to find a source file 'src1.foo' for the
- env.Foo() call, but a source file 'src2' for the env.Bar() call.
-
- This behavior has now been made consistent, so that the two
- above calls would expect source files named 'src1.foo' and
- 'src2.bar', respectively.
-
- Note that, if genuinely desired, the old behavior of building
- from a source file without a suffix at all (when the Builder has
- a src_suffix *and* a src_builder) can be specified explicity by
- turning the string into a File Node directly:
-
- env.Bar('tgt2', File('src2'))
-
- The above use of File() is backwards-compatible and will work
- on earlier versions of SCons.
-
- -- THE DEFAULT EXECUTION PATH FOR Solaris HAS CHANGED
-
- On Solaris systems, SCons now adds the "/opt/SUNWspro/bin"
- directory to the default execution $PATH variable before the
- "/usr/ccs/bin" directory. This was done to reflect the fact
- that /opt/SUNWspro/ is the default for SUN tools, but it may
- cause a different compiler to be used if you have compilers
- installed in both directories.
-
- -- GENERATED config.h FILES NOW SAY "#define HAVE_{FEATURE} 1"
-
- When generating a "config.h" file, SCons now defines values that
- record the existence of a feature with a "1" value:
-
- #define HAVE_FEATURE 1
-
- Instead of printing the line without a "1", as it used to:
-
- #define HAVE_FEATURE
-
- This should not cause any problems in the normal use of "#ifdef
- HAVE_{FEATURE}" statements interpreted by a C preprocessor, but
- might cause a compatibility issue if a script or other utility
- looks for an exact match of the previous text.
-
- Please note the following planned, future changes:
-
- -- THE Options OBJECT AND RELATED FUNCTIONS WILL BE DEPRECATED
-
- The Options object is being replaced by a new Variables
- object, which uses a new Variables.AddVariable() method
- where the previous interface used Options.AddOptions().
-
- Similarly, the following utility functions are being replaced
- by the following similarly-named functions:
-
- BoolOption() BoolVariable()
- EnumOption() EnumVariable()
- ListOption() ListVariable()
- PackageOption() PackageVariable()
- PathOption() PathVariable()
-
- And also related, the options= keyword argument when creating
- construction environments with the Environment() functions is
- being replaced with a variables= keyword argument.
-
- In some future release a deprecation warning will be added to
- existing uses of the Options object, its methods, the above
- utility functions, and the options= keyword argument of the
- Environment() function. At some point after the deprecation
- warning is added, the Options object, related functions and
- options= keyword argument will be removed entirely.
-
- You can prepare for this by changing all your uses of the Options
- object and related functions to the Variables object and the new
- function names, and changing any uses of the options= keyword
- argument to variables=.
-
- NOTE: CONVERTING TO USING THE NEW Variables OBJECT OR THE
- RELATED *Variable() FUNCTIONS, OR USING THE NEW variable=
- KEYWORD ARGUMENT, IS NOT BACKWARDS COMPATIBLE TO VERSIONS OF
- SCons BEFORE 0.98. YOUR SConscript FILES WILL NOT WORK ON
- EARLIER VERSIONS OF SCons AFTER MAKING THIS CHANGE.
-
- If you change SConscript files in software that you make available
- for download or otherwise distribute, other users may try to
- build your software with an earlier version of SCons that does
- not have the Variables object or related *Variable() functions.
- We recommend preparing for this in one of two ways:
-
- -- Make your SConscript files backwards-compatible by
- modifying your calls with Python try:-except: blocks
- as follows:
-
- try:
- vars = Variables('custom.py', ARGUMENTS)
- vars.AddVariables(
- BoolVariable('WARNINGS', 'cmopile with -Wall', 1),
- EnumVariable('DEBUG', 'debug version', 'no'
- allowed_values=('yes', 'no', 'full'),
- map={}, ignorecase=0),
- ListVariable('SHAREDLIBS',
- 'libraries to build shared',
- 'all',
- names = list_of_libs),
- PackageVariable('X11',
- 'use X11 from here',
- '/usr/bin/X11'),
- PathVariable('QTDIR', 'root of Qt', qtdir),
- )
- except NameError:
- vars = Options('custom.py', ARGUMENTS)
- vars.AddOptions(
- BoolOption('WARNINGS', 'cmopile with -Wall', 1),
- EnumOption('DEBUG', 'debug version', 'no'
- allowed_values=('yes', 'no', 'full'),
- map={}, ignorecase=0),
- ListOption('SHAREDLIBS',
- 'libraries to build shared',
- 'all',
- names = list_of_libs),
- PackageOption('X11',
- 'use X11 from here',
- '/usr/bin/X11'),
- PathOption('QTDIR', 'root of Qt', qtdir),
- )
-
- Additionally, you can check for availability of the new
- variables= keyword argument as follows:
-
- try:
- env = Environment(variables=vars)
- except TypeError:
- env = Environment(options=vars)
-
- (Note that we plan to maintain the existing Options object
- name for some time, to ensure backwards compatibility,
- so in practice it may be easier to just continue to use
- the old name until you're reasonably sure you won't have
- people trying to build your software with versions of
- SCons earlier than 0.98.1.)
-
- -- Use the EnsureSConsVersion() function to provide a
- descriptive error message if your SConscript files
- are executed by an earlier version of SCons:
-
- EnsureSConsVersion(0, 98, 1)
-
- -- THE BuildDir() METHOD AND FUNCTION WILL BE DEPRECATED
-
- The env.BuildDir() method and BuildDir() function are being
- replaced by the new env.VariantDir() method and VariantDir()
- function.
-
- In some future release a deprecation warning will be added
- to existing uses of the env.BuildDir() method and BuildDir()
- function. At some point after the deprecation warning, the
- env.Builder() method and BuildDir() function will either
- be removed entirely or have their behavior changed.
-
- You can prepare for this by changing all your uses of the
- env.BuildDir() method to env.VariantDir() and uses of the
- global BuildDir() function to VariantDir(). If you use a
- named keyword argument of "build_dir" when calling
- env.BuildDir() or BuildDir():
-
- env.BuildDir(build_dir='opt', src_dir='src')
-
- The keyword must be changed to "variant_dir":
-
- env.VariantDir(variant_dir='opt', src_dir='src')
-
- NOTE: CHANGING USES OF env.BuildDir() AND BuildDir() to
- env.VariantDir() AND VariantDir() IS NOT BACKWARDS COMPATIBLE
- TO VERSIONS OF SCons BEFORE 0.98. YOUR SConscript FILES
- WILL NOT WORK ON EARLIER VERSIONS OF SCons AFTER MAKING
- THIS CHANGE.
-
- If you change SConscript files in software that you make
- available for download or otherwise distribute, other users
- may try to build your software with an earlier version of
- SCons that does not have the env.VariantDir() method or
- VariantDir() fnction. We recommend preparing for this in
- one of two ways:
-
- -- Make your SConscript files backwards-compatible by
- including the following code near the beginning of your
- top-level SConstruct file:
-
- import SCons.Environment
- try:
- SCons.Environment.Environment.VariantDir
- except AttributeError:
- SCons.Environment.Environment.VariantDir = \
- SCons.Environment.Environment.BuildDir
-
- -- Use the EnsureSConsVersion() function to provide a
- descriptive error message if your SConscript files
- are executed by an earlier version of SCons:
-
- EnsureSConsVersion(0, 98)
-
- -- THE SConscript() "build_dir" KEYWORD ARGUMENT WILL BE DEPRECATED
-
- The "build_dir" keyword argument of the SConscript function
- and env.SConscript() method are being replaced by a new
- "variant_dir" keyword argument.
-
- In some future release a deprecation warning will be added
- to existing uses of the SConscript()/env.SConscript()
- "build_dir" keyword argument. At some point after the
- deprecation warning, support for this keyword argument will
- be removed entirely.
-
- You can prepare for this by changing all your uses of the
- SConscript()/env.SConscript() 'build_dir" keyword argument:
-
- SConscript('src/SConscript', build_dir='opt')
-
- To use the new "variant_dir" keyword argument:
-
- SConscript('src/SConscript', variant_dir='opt')
-
- NOTE: USING THE NEW "variant_dir" KEYWORD IS NOT BACKWARDS
- COMPATIBLE TO VERSIONS OF SCons BEFORE 0.98. YOUR SConscript
- FILES WILL NOT WORK ON EARLIER VERSIONS OF SCons AFTER
- MAKING THIS CHANGE.
-
- If you change SConscript files in software that you make
- available for download or otherwise distribute, other users
- may try to build your software with an earlier version of
- SCons that does not support the "variant_dir" keyword.
-
- If you can insist that users use a recent version of SCons
- that supports "variant_dir", we recommend using the
- EnsureSConsVersion() function to provide a descriptive error
- message if your SConscript files are executed by an earlier
- version of SCons:
-
- EnsureSConsVersion(0, 98)
-
- If you want to make sure that your SConscript files will
- still work with earlier versions of SCons, then your best
- bet is to continue to use the "build_dir" keyword until the
- support is removed (which, in all likelihood, won't happen
- for quite some time).
-
- -- SCANNER NAMES HAVE BEEN DEPRECATED AND WILL BE REMOVED
-
- Several internal variable names in SCons.Defaults for various
- pre-made default Scanner objects have been deprecated and will
- be removed in a future revision. In their place are several new
- global variable names that are now part of the publicly-supported
- interface:
-
- NEW NAME DEPRECATED NAME
- -------- ----------------------------
- CScanner SCons.Defaults.CScan
- DSCanner SCons.Defaults.DScan
- SourceFileScanner SCons.Defaults.ObjSourceScan
- ProgramScanner SCons.Defaults.ProgScan
-
- Of these, only ObjSourceScan was probably used at all, to add
- new mappings of file suffixes to other scanners for use by the
- Object() Builder. This should now be done as follows:
-
- SourceFileScanner.add_scanner('.x', XScanner)
-
- -- THE env.Copy() METHOD WILL CHANGE OR GO AWAY ENTIRELY
-
- The env.Copy() method (to make a copy of a construction
- environment) is being replaced by the env.Clone() method.
-
- As of SCons 0.98, a deprecation warning has been added to
- current uses of the env.Copy() method. At some point in
- the future, the env.Copy() method will either be removed
- entirely or have its behavior changed.
-
- You can prepare for this by changing all your uses of env.Copy()
- to env.Clone(), which has the exact same calling arguments.
-
- NOTE: CHANGING USES OF env.Copy() TO env.Clone() WILL MAKE
- YOUR SConscript FILES NOT WORK ON VERSIONS OF SCons BEFORE
- 0.96.93.
-
- If you change SConscript files in software that you make
- available for download or otherwise distribute, other users
- may try to build your software with an earlier version of
- SCons that does not have the env.Clone() method. We recommend
- preparing for this in one of two ways:
-
- -- Make your SConscript files backwards-compatible by
- including the following code near the beginning of your
- top-level SConstruct file:
-
- import SCons.Environment
- try:
- SCons.Environment.Environment.Clone
- except AttributeError:
- SCons.Environment.Environment.Clone = \
- SCons.Environment.Environment.Copy
-
- -- Use the EnsureSConsVersion() function to provide a
- descriptive error message if your SConscript files
- are executed by an earlier version of SCons:
-
- EnsureSConsVersion(0, 96, 93)
-
- -- THE CheckLib Configure TEST WILL CHANGE BEHAVIOR
-
- The CheckLib() Configure test appends the lib(s) to the
- Environment's LIBS list in 1.3 and earlier. In 1.3 there is a
- new CheckLib argument, append, which defaults to True to
- preserve the old behavior. In a future release, append will
- be changed to default to False, to conform with autoconf and
- user expectations, since it is usually used to build up
- library lists in a right-to-left way.
-
-
-
- SCons is developed with an extensive regression test suite, and a
- rigorous development methodology for continually improving that suite.
- Because of this, SCons is of sufficient quality that you can use it
- for real work.
-
- The interfaces in release 1.0 will *not* be knowingly changed in
- any new, future 1.x release. If an interface change should ever
- become necessary due to extraordinary circumstances, the change
- and an appropriate transition strategy will be documented in these
- RELEASE notes.
-
- As you use SCons, please heed the following:
-
- - Please report any bugs or other problems that you find to our bug
- tracker at our SourceForge project page:
-
- http://sourceforge.net/tracker/?func=add&group_id=30337&atid=398971
-
- We have a reliable bug-fixing methodology already in place and
- strive to respond to problems relatively quickly.
-
- - Documentation is spottier than we'd like. You may need to dive
- into the source code to figure out how to do something. Asking
- questions on the scons-users mailing list is also welcome. We
- will be addressing the documentation in upcoming releases, but
- would be more than glad to have your assistance in correcting this
- problem... :-)
-
- - The "SCons Design" documentation on the SCons web site is very
- out of date, as we made significant changes to portions of the
- interface as we figured out what worked and what didn't during the
- extensive beta implementation. The "SCons Design" document should
- be used only for historical purposes, or for just an extremely
- general understanding of SCons' architectural goals.
-
- - There may be performance issues. Improving SCons performance
- is an ongoing priority. If you still find the performance
- unacceptable, we would very much like to hear from you and learn
- more about your configuration so we can optimize the right things.
-
- - Error messages don't always exist where they'd be helpful.
- Please let us know about any errors you ran into that would
- have benefitted from a (more) descriptive message.
-
- KNOWN PROBLEMS IN THIS RELEASE:
-
- For a complete list of known problems, consult the SCons Issue Tracker
- at tigris.org:
-
- http://scons.tigris.org/project_issues.html
-
- - Support for parallel builds (-j) does not work on WIN32 systems
- prior to *official* Python release 2.2 (not 2.2 pre-releases).
-
- Prior to Python 2.2, there is a bug in Python's Win32
- implementation such that when a thread spawns an external command,
- it blocks all threads from running. This breaks the SCons
- multithreading architecture used to support -j builds.
-
- We have included a patch file, os_spawnv_fix.diff, that you can
- use if you you want to fix your version of Python to support
- parallel builds in SCons.
-
- - Again, the "SCons Design" documentation on the SCons web site is
- out of date. Take what you read there with a grain of salt.
-
- - On Win32 systems, you must put a space between the redirection
- characters < and >, and the specified files (or construction
- variable expansions):
-
- command < $SOURCE > $TARGET
-
- If you don't supply a space (for example, "<$SOURCE"), SCons will
- not recognize the redirection.
-
- - MSVC .res files are not rebuilt when icons change.
-
- - The -c option does not clean up .sconsign files or directories
- created as part of the build, and also does not clean up
- SideEffect files (for example, Visual Studio .pdb files).
-
- - When using multiple Repositories, changing the name of an include
- file can cause an old version of the file to be used.
-
- - There is currently no way to force use of a relative path (../*)
- for directories outside the top-level SConstruct file.
-
- - The Jar() Builder will, on its second or subsequent invocation,
- package up the .sconsign files that SCons uses to track signatures.
- You can work around this by using the SConsignFile() function
- to collect all of the .sconsign information into a single file
- outside of the directory being packaged by Jar().
-
- - SCons does not currently have a way to detect that an intermediate
- file has been corrupted from outside and should be rebuilt.
-
- - Unicode characters in path names do not work in all circumstances.
-
- - SCons does not currently automatically check out SConstruct or
- SConscript files from SCCS, RCS or BitKeeper.
-
- - No support yet for the following planned command-line options:
-
- -d -e -l --list-actions --list-derived --list-where
- -o --override -p -r -R -w --write-filenames
- -W --warn-undefined-variables
-
-
-
-Thank you for your interest, and please let us know how we can help
-improve SCons for your needs.
-
-Steven Knight
-knight at baldmt dot com
-http://www.baldmt.com/~knight/
-
-With plenty of help from the SCons Development team:
- Chad Austin
- Charles Crain
- Bill Deegan
- Steve Leblanc
- Greg Noel
- Gary Oberbrunner
- Anthony Roach
- Greg Spencer
- Christoph Wiedemann
+ Thanks to Greg Noel, Steven Knight, Dirk Baechle, William Deegan,and
+ W. Trevor King for their contributions to this release.
+Copyright (c) 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010 The SCons Foundation
+src/RELEASE.txt 5023 2010/06/14 22:05:46 scons