autowaf has no real shutdown functionality anyway. The automatic
shutdown function that could have been called wouldn't work anyway, as
it takes an argument.
The only reason it doesn't fail is that the top level wscript has no
shutdown handling and doesn't recurse to other scripts, so it is all
dead code.
Variables by these names are only used from the local wscript and when
running "waf configure", which already for other reasons only can run at
the top-level.
These variables are thus not mandatory and not used.
https://waf.io/book/ says
By default, the project name and version are set to noname and 1.0. To
change them, it is necessary to provide two additional variables in
the top-level project file
- and waf code inspection confirms that waf itself only will use the top
level APPNAME.
Also, the 'waf dist' comment doesn't seem relevant - especially after
this change - and is removed too.
(Note: libs/evoral/wscript and libs/temporal/wscript still use APPNAME
for other purposes.)
https://waf.io/book/ says
By default, the project name and version are set to noname and 1.0. To
change them, it is necessary to provide two additional variables in the
top-level project file
- and waf code inspection confirms that waf itself only will use the top
level VERSION.
Some wscripts will use
bld.env['VERSION']
but that will also just use the value set in the top wscript.
Done with ad hoc scripting hacks processing unused imports found by pyflakes:
for f in $( find * -name wscript ); do echo; pyflakes $f; done | grep 'waflib.Logs.* but unused' | cut -d: -f1 | while read f; do sed -i 's/^import waflib.Logs as Logs,/import/g' $f; done
for f in $( find * -name wscript ); do echo; pyflakes $f; done | grep 'waflib.Options.* but unused' | cut -d: -f1 | while read f; do sed -i 's/import waflib.Options as Options, /import /g' $f; done
for f in $( find * -name wscript ); do echo; pyflakes $f; done | grep 'waflib.Options.* but unused' | cut -d: -f1 | while read f; do sed -i 's/^from waflib import Options,/from waflib import/g' $f; done
for f in $( find * -name wscript ); do echo; pyflakes $f; done | grep ' imported but unused$' | sed "s/^\([^:]*\):[0-9]*:[0-9]* '\(.*\)'.*/\1 \2/g" | while read f lib; do sed -i "/^import $lib$/d" $f; done
for f in $( find * -name wscript ); do echo; pyflakes $f; done | grep 'waflib.Options.* but unused' | cut -d: -f1 | while read f; do sed -i '/from waflib import Options$/d' $f; done
for f in $( find * -name wscript ); do echo; pyflakes $f; done | grep 'waflib.TaskGen.* but unused' | cut -d: -f1 | while read f; do sed -i '/from waflib import TaskGen$/d' $f; done
for f in $( find * -name wscript ); do echo; pyflakes $f; done | grep 'waflib.Task.Task.* but unused' | cut -d: -f1 | while read f; do sed -i '/^from waflib.Task import Task$/d' $f; done
for f in $( find * -name wscript ); do echo; pyflakes $f; done | grep 'waflib.Tools.winres.* but unused' | cut -d: -f1 | while read f; do sed -i '/^from waflib.Tools import winres$/d' $f; done
for f in $( find * -name wscript ); do echo; pyflakes $f; done | grep 'waflib.Utils.* but unused' | cut -d: -f1 | while read f; do sed -i '/^import waflib.Utils as Utils$/d' $f; done
This is mostly a simple lexical search+replace but the absence of operator< for
std::weak_ptr<T> leads to some complications, particularly with Evoral::Sequence
and ExportPortChannel.
This was just a proxy for libs/evoral/evoral/Event.h. Note that the #define
that controlled allocation that was at the top of the removed header is
replicated in the Evoral header, so there are no semantic changes
* Remove unused direct calls into plugin
* Assume empty model to mean plugin-provided MIDNAM (!)
The route owned Instrument-Info is the central access point used
by the GUI for MIDI name lookups.
At this point in time, custom settings are saved/restored by the
GUI (MidiTimeAxisView). InstrumentInfo provides a volatile store
for MIDNAM mode and model.
It's long been a guideline (and IIRC a Weff-c++ warning) that either all, or
none, of the copy methods should be defined, but this became a standard warning
in GCC9. Presumably to account for a later language change though I'm not sure
which.
I don't remember why the ChanMapping copy constructor can't just be a simple
copy (it's just a map of POD), but figure it's safer to just copy what that
does.
gcc can recognize various regexps in comments. Since C++17 provides
[[fallthrough]], using /* fallthrough */ consistently seems
appropriate until we switch to C++17.
see also https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Warning-Options.html