Both options have equal meaning. "-target:-" is used as input for zproject
and "-topdir:.. -zproject:1" is equally used as input for one of zproto's scripts. 2016-04-25 16:53 GMT+02:00 Osiris Pedroso <[email protected]>: > Thanks Kevin, very informative. > > On Q1, I believe you answered was "-target:-" means. > > What does the cmd line option "-zproject:1" mean on the line: > ``` > cd $(srcdir)/src; gsl -topdir:.. -zproject:1 -q sockopts.xml > ``` > > > On Mon, Apr 25, 2016 at 9:29 AM Kevin Sapper <[email protected]> > wrote: > >> Q1: >> With a minus in the gsl command you can set or override an attribute of >> project e.g. `project.topdir` or `project.target`. >> >> The snippet from Makemodule.am will re-generate all zproto models. As >> zproto does generate headers for its models which might conflict with an >> zproject api, zproject will be called with target "-" which means no >> target. Hence only the C api will be re-generated overriding unwanted >> zproto headers. >> >> Q2: >> No, `gsl project.xml` is the correct command. You'll use `make code` to >> refresh zproto models. >> >> Q3: >> No, changes are applied gradually downstream there is no pressure to do >> it right away. If there was a critical bug a mail to the mailing might be >> appropriate though. >> >> >> 2016-04-25 14:47 GMT+02:00 Osiris Pedroso <[email protected]>: >> >>> Up till now, I thought that the following command was what regenerated >>> the code for CZMQ project (or any other project using GSL code generation >>> for that matter): >>> ``` >>> root@OPLIN:~/git/czmq# gsl project.xml >>> ``` >>> >>> But I came across the contents of CZMQ's Makemodule.am, which has this >>> rule in it (similar rule exist in ZYRE and MALAMUTE): >>> ``` >>> # Produce generated code from models in the src directory >>> code: >>> cd $(srcdir)/src; gsl -topdir:.. -zproject:1 -q sockopts.xml >>> cd $(srcdir)/src; gsl -topdir:.. -zproject:1 -q zgossip.xml >>> cd $(srcdir)/src; gsl -topdir:.. -zproject:1 -q zgossip_msg.xml >>> cd $(srcdir); gsl -target:- project.xml >>> ``` >>> >>> **Question #1**: What does the GSL command line options "-zproject:1" >>> and "-target:-" mean? >>> I looked in GSL's README.md and the information is not there. The word >>> "zproject" is nowhere in the gsl sources... >>> ``` >>> Options currently recognised by GSL are: >>> >>> * -a argument: Pass arguments following filename to GSL script >>> * -q quiet: suppress routine messages >>> * -p parallel: process files in parallel >>> * -s:n size:n set script cache size - default is 1000000 >>> * -h help: show command-line summary >>> * -v version: show full version information >>> ``` >>> **Question#2**: So, if one wants to apply GSL & ZPROJECT latest changes, >>> is the correct approach to "make code" to get all modules regenerated for >>> each of these projects then? >>> >>> **Question #3**: If a contributor makes a change to a **.gsl** file, is >>> he expected to also regen all downstream projects affected by those changes >>> and PR them as well? What is the correct etiquette here? >>> >>> >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> zeromq-dev mailing list >>> [email protected] >>> http://lists.zeromq.org/mailman/listinfo/zeromq-dev >>> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> zeromq-dev mailing list >> [email protected] >> http://lists.zeromq.org/mailman/listinfo/zeromq-dev > > > _______________________________________________ > zeromq-dev mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.zeromq.org/mailman/listinfo/zeromq-dev >
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