cmake support in rippled. Currently supports:
* unity/nounity debug/release
* running protobuf
* sanitizer builds
* optional release build with assert turned on
* `target` variable to easily set compiler/debug/unity
(i.e. -Dtarget=gcc.debug.nounity)
* gcc/clang/visual studio/xcode
* linux/mac/win
* gcc 4 ABI, when needed
* ninja builds
* check openssl for acceptably recent release
* static builds
TBD:
* jemalloc support
* count
Notes:
* Use the -G"Visual Studio 14 2015 Win64" generator on Windows. Without
this a 32-bit project will be created. There is no way to set the
generator or force a 64-bit build in CMakeLists.txt (setting
CMAKE_GENERATOR_PLATFORM won't work). The best solution may be to
wrap cmake with a script.
* It is not possible to generate a visual studio project on linux or
mac. The visual studio generator is only available on windows.
* The visual studio project can be _either_ unity or
non-unity (selected at generation time). It does not appear possible
to disable compilation based on configuration.
* Language is _much_ worse than python, poor documentation and "quirky"
language support (for example, generator expressions can only be used
in limited contexts and seem to work differently based on
context (set_property can set multiple values, add_compile_options
can not/or is buggy)
* Could not call out to `sed` because cmake messed with the regular
expression before calling the external command. I did not see a way
around this.
* Makefile generators want to be single target. It wants a separate
directory for each target type. I saw some mentions on the web for
ways around this bug haven't look into it. The visual studio project
does support debug/release configurations in the same project (but
not unity/non-unity).
Log thread name and exception type on unhandled exceptions and use a
terminate handler to get a stack trace that includes the function that
thows the exception.
Constructing a Stream from a Sink would elide specifying the
Severity level of the Stream. That constructor is removed so
if a Stream is constructed from a Sink the Severity must be
specified.
Previously, writes using debugLog() tagged every entry with
"TRC:". Now users of debugLog() must specify the severity
level they want their information logged at.
The Ripple protocol represent transfer rates and trust line
qualities as fractions of one billion. For example, a transfer
rate of 1% is represented as 1010000000.
Previously, such rates where represented either as std::uint32_t
or std::uint64_t. Other, nominally related types, also used an
integral representation and could be unintentionally substituted.
The new Rate class addresses this by providing a simple, type
safe alternative which also helps make the code self-documenting
since arithmetic operations now can be clearly understood to
involve the scaling of an amount by a rate.