* regex for version
* fields names improved
* codestyle
* m prefix for fsmodel
* string duplication removed
* find in files: show all entries
* spaces
* added hint to checkboxes; element naming fixed
* layout naming improvement
* spacing 6->1
* openssl.cfg: Add OpenSSL library configuration with tests
Reference: https://www.openssl.org/docs/man1.1.1/man3/
* openssl.cfg: Add some configurations for EVP functions
Add alloc/dealloc configuration for EVP_CIPHER_CTX_new and
EVP_CIPHER_CTX_free.
Add configuration for encryption functions that are used in example code
which is added to the tests.
* donate-cpu-server.py: Use tools to prepare code to work with Python 3
The following commands were used for these changes:
futurize -1 -w donate-cpu-server.py
2to3 -w donate-cpu-server.py
* Make the server work under Python 3
Manually fixed the Unicode issues. Received data is decoded, sent data
is encoded.
* Add backward compatible type hints (in comments)
This enables better static analysis and suggestions in an IDE.
* Fix Pylint warning "Comparison to literal"
* .travis.yml: Fix/enhance pylint verification and Python compilation
donate-cpu-server.py is only Python 3 compatible, so it must be ignored
for pylint verification under Python 2.
All Python scripts that were verified with pylint under Python 2 are
now also verified with pylint under Python 3.
* donate-cpu-server.py: Add shebang and mark script as executable
* start_donate_cpu_server_test_local.sh: Directly execute server
Since the server script is executable now and has a shebang it can
be directly executed.
* Use Python 3.0 function annotations instead of comment type hints
Reference: https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-3107/
* libsigc++.cfg: Add configuration for library libsigc++
Reference: https://libsigcplusplus.github.io/libsigcplusplus/
* Make code compatible with libsigc++-2.0 instead of 3.0
Since Version 3.0 C++14 is required which is not (fully) supported in
some older GCC versions.
Fall back to "~/daca@home" if "/var/daca@home" does not exist.
Print the used work path when the script starts.
This way we do not have to change the server script before uploading
it to the server while being fully backwards compatible.
Check if "python" is available, if not check for "python3" and use
the available Python interpreter. If no Python interpreter is found,
"make" fails with an according error message.
This solves the issue that not all modern Linux distributions any longer
install Python 2 by default, so "python" is not available and
"make MATCHCOMPILER=yes" would fail. Instead of forcing the users to
install Python 2, Python 3 is used in such a case now if it is
available.
* reduce.py: Allow reducing error messages, print output in case of error
Allow reducing code that triggers (false positive) error messages.
Print Cppcheck output in case Cppcheck returns unsuccessfully and no
segfault is expected. This helps fixing messed up command lines (for
example issues with the path).
* Use "else" as suggested
* donate-cpu.py: Add internal timing information of Cppcheck to output
The option "--showtime=top5" is added to the Cppcheck command line.
The timing output is collected and only for HEAD it is shown in the new
category "head-timing-info" in the results output.
The timing output is indented with one white space, so even in the
unlikely case that a function is named "head result:" or "diff:" it does
not break the parser in the server.
* donate-cpu.py: Also print the "old" timing information for comparison
Some projects only use this (older?) style of Qt header inclusion.
There are (older) books and examples which use this style, too.
It seems to be perfectly valid, so we should support it.
Previously, external files were not searched at all, and dependencies
on header files in cli was not taken into account for test files.
To add dependency of headers in externals, we also need to search for
includes with angular brackets.
There is no point in checking which libraries to use for each cppcheck
version since there is no change. Refactor the checking to a separate
function and run that once instead. This halves the time it takes to
check for libraries.
I looked into many packages where the detection failed and they all use
`#include "ruby.h"`. Some of these packages seem to be Ruby modules,
others seem to be "normal" software.
This adds one line in the package report to show the git hash and commit
date. This makes it possible to see exactely which revision the result
was obtained with.
The cppcheck head info line is now shown as
head-info: 1a25d3f9e (2019-08-30 18:34:14 +0200)