command-t 1.7 → 1.8

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data/README.txt CHANGED
@@ -11,13 +11,14 @@ CONTENTS *command-t-contents*
11
11
  6. Commands |command-t-commands|
12
12
  7. Mappings |command-t-mappings|
13
13
  8. Options |command-t-options|
14
- 9. Tips |command-t-tips|
15
- 10. Authors |command-t-authors|
16
- 11. Development |command-t-development|
17
- 12. Website |command-t-website|
18
- 13. Donations |command-t-donations|
19
- 14. License |command-t-license|
20
- 15. History |command-t-history|
14
+ 9. FAQ |command-t-faq|
15
+ 10. Tips |command-t-tips|
16
+ 11. Authors |command-t-authors|
17
+ 12. Development |command-t-development|
18
+ 13. Website |command-t-website|
19
+ 14. Donations |command-t-donations|
20
+ 15. License |command-t-license|
21
+ 16. History |command-t-history|
21
22
 
22
23
 
23
24
  INTRODUCTION *command-t-intro*
@@ -70,7 +71,7 @@ If your Vim lacks support you'll see an error message like this:
70
71
  E319: Sorry, the command is not available in this version
71
72
 
72
73
  The version of Vim distributed with OS X may not include Ruby support (for
73
- exmaple, Snow Leopard, which was the current version of OS X when Command-T
74
+ example, Snow Leopard, which was the current version of OS X when Command-T
74
75
  was first released, did not support Ruby in the system Vim, but the current
75
76
  version of OS X at the time of writing, Mavericks, does). All recent versions
76
77
  of MacVim come with Ruby support; it is available from:
@@ -87,7 +88,7 @@ Ruby 1.9, but apparently has some bugs that need to be resolved).
87
88
  In addition to having Ruby support in Vim, your system itself must have a
88
89
  compatible Ruby install. "Compatible" means the same version as Vim itself
89
90
  links against. If you use a different version then Command-T is unlikely
90
- to work (see TROUBLE-SHOOTING below).
91
+ to work (see |command-t-trouble-shooting| below).
91
92
 
92
93
  On OS X Snow Leopard, Lion and Mountain Lion, the system comes with Ruby 1.8.7
93
94
  and all recent versions of MacVim (the 7.2 snapshots and 7.3) are linked
@@ -103,7 +104,7 @@ your distribution. You can usually find this out by examining the
103
104
  compilation and linking flags displayed by the |:version| command in Vim, and
104
105
  by looking at the output of:
105
106
 
106
- :ruby puts RUBY_VERSION
107
+ :ruby puts "#{RUBY_VERSION}-p#{RUBY_PATCHLEVEL}"
107
108
 
108
109
  A suitable Ruby environment for Windows can be installed using the Ruby
109
110
  1.8.7-p299 RubyInstaller available at:
@@ -702,6 +703,46 @@ settings can be used to control behavior:
702
703
  only during Command-T searches.
703
704
 
704
705
 
706
+ FAQ *command-t-faq*
707
+
708
+ Why does my build fail with "unknown argument -multiply_definedsuppress"? ~
709
+
710
+ You may see this on OS X Mavericks when building with the Clang compiler
711
+ against the system Ruby. This is an unfortunate Apple bug that breaks
712
+ compilation of many Ruby gems with native extensions on Mavericks. It has been
713
+ worked around in the upstream Ruby version, but won't be fixed in OS X until
714
+ Apple updates their supplied version of Ruby (most likely this won't be until
715
+ the next major release):
716
+
717
+ https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/9624
718
+
719
+ Workarounds include building your own Ruby (and then your own Vim and
720
+ Command-T), or more simply, building with the following `ARCHFLAGS` set:
721
+
722
+ ARCHFLAGS=-Wno-error=unused-command-line-argument-hard-error-in-future ruby extconf.rb
723
+ make
724
+
725
+ Why can't I open in a split with <C-CR> and <C-s> in the terminal? ~
726
+
727
+ It's likely that <C-CR> won't work in most terminals, because the keycode that
728
+ is sent to processes running inside them is identical to <CR>; when you type
729
+ <C-CR>, terminal Vim literally "sees" <CR>. Unfortunately, there is no
730
+ workaround for this.
731
+
732
+ If you find that <C-s> also doesn't work the most likely explanation is that
733
+ XON/XOFF flow control is enabled; this is the default in many environments.
734
+ This means that when you press <C-s> all input to the terminal is suspended
735
+ until you release it by hitting <C-q>. While input is suspended you may think
736
+ your terminal has frozen, but it hasn't.
737
+
738
+ To disable flow control, add the following to your `.zshrc` or
739
+ `.bash_profile`:
740
+
741
+ stty -ixon
742
+
743
+ See the `stty` man page for more details.
744
+
745
+
705
746
  TIPS *command-t-tips*
706
747
 
707
748
  Working with very large repositories ~
@@ -744,8 +785,9 @@ Wait for 200ms of keyboard inactivity before computing search results. For
744
785
  example, if you are enter "foobar" quickly (ie. within 1 second), there is
745
786
  little sense in fetching the results for "f", "fo", "foo", "foob", "fooba" and
746
787
  finally "foobar". Instead, we can just fetch the results for "foobar". This
747
- setting trades off some immediate responsiveness at the micro level for a
748
- better search experience overall.
788
+ setting trades off some immediate responsiveness at the micro level for
789
+ better performance (real and perceived) and a better search experience
790
+ overall.
749
791
 
750
792
  let g:CommandTFileScanner = 'watchman'
751
793
 
@@ -759,7 +801,7 @@ repos the "watchman" scanner is the tool of choice.
759
801
 
760
802
  This scanner delegates the task of finding files to Facebook's `watchman` tool
761
803
  (https://github.com/facebook/watchman), which can return results for a 500,000
762
- file hierarchy within about 10 seconds.
804
+ file hierarchy within about a second.
763
805
 
764
806
  Note that Watchman has a range of configuration options that can be applied by
765
807
  files such as `/etc/watchman.json` or per-direcory `.watchmanconfig` files and
@@ -779,7 +821,7 @@ It's advisable to keep a long-running Vim instance in place and let it cache
779
821
  the directory listings rather than repeatedly closing and re-opening Vim in
780
822
  order to edit every file. On those occasions when you do need to flush the
781
823
  cache (ie. with |CommandTFlush| or <C-f> in the match listing window), use of
782
- the Watchman scanner should make the delay tolerable.
824
+ the Watchman scanner should make the delay barely noticeable.
783
825
 
784
826
  As noted in the introduction, Command-T works best when you adopt a
785
827
  "path-centric" mentality. This is especially true on very large hierarchies.
@@ -795,9 +837,17 @@ who know what they want to open and where it is to open it as quickly as
795
837
  possible; other tools such as NERDTree exist for visually exploring an unknown
796
838
  hierarchy.
797
839
 
840
+ Over time, you will get a feel for how economical you can afford to be with
841
+ your search queries in a given repo. In the example above, if "foo" is not a
842
+ very common pattern in your hierarchy, then you may find that you can find
843
+ what you need with a very concise query such as "foomanjs". With time, this
844
+ kind of ongoing calibration will come quite naturally.
845
+
798
846
  Finally, it is important to be on a relatively recent version of Command-T to
799
847
  fully benefit from the available performance enhancements:
800
848
 
849
+ - version 1.8 (March 2013) sped up the Watchman file scanner by switching its
850
+ communication from the JSON to the binary Watchman protocol
801
851
  - version 1.7 (February 2014) added the |g:CommandTInputDebounce| and
802
852
  |g:CommandTFileScanner| settings, along with support for the Watchman file
803
853
  scanner
@@ -821,13 +871,13 @@ order):
821
871
  Ivan Ukhov Paul Jolly Vít Ondruch
822
872
  Jeff Kreeftmeijer Pavel Sergeev Woody Peterson
823
873
  Lucas de Vries Rainux Luo Yan Pritzker
824
- Marcus Brito Scott Bronson Yiding Jia
825
- Marian Schubert Seth Fowler Zak Johnson
826
- Matthew Todd
874
+ Marcus Brito Roland Puntaier Yiding Jia
875
+ Marian Schubert Scott Bronson Zak Johnson
876
+ Matthew Todd Seth Fowler
827
877
 
828
878
  As this was the first Vim plug-in I had ever written I was heavily influenced
829
879
  by the design of the LustyExplorer plug-in by Stephen Bach, which I understand
830
- is one of the largest Ruby-based Vim plug-ins to date.
880
+ was one of the largest Ruby-based Vim plug-ins at the time.
831
881
 
832
882
  While the Command-T codebase doesn't contain any code directly copied from
833
883
  LustyExplorer, I did use it as a reference for answers to basic questions (like
@@ -926,6 +976,12 @@ POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
926
976
 
927
977
  HISTORY *command-t-history*
928
978
 
979
+ 1.8 (31 March 2014)
980
+
981
+ - taught Watchman file scanner to use the binary protocol instead of JSON,
982
+ roughly doubling its speed
983
+ - build changes to accommodate MinGW (patch from Roland Puntaier)
984
+
929
985
  1.7 (9 March 2014)
930
986
 
931
987
  - added |g:CommandTInputDebounce|, which can be used to improve responsiveness
@@ -11,13 +11,14 @@ CONTENTS *command-t-contents*
11
11
  6. Commands |command-t-commands|
12
12
  7. Mappings |command-t-mappings|
13
13
  8. Options |command-t-options|
14
- 9. Tips |command-t-tips|
15
- 10. Authors |command-t-authors|
16
- 11. Development |command-t-development|
17
- 12. Website |command-t-website|
18
- 13. Donations |command-t-donations|
19
- 14. License |command-t-license|
20
- 15. History |command-t-history|
14
+ 9. FAQ |command-t-faq|
15
+ 10. Tips |command-t-tips|
16
+ 11. Authors |command-t-authors|
17
+ 12. Development |command-t-development|
18
+ 13. Website |command-t-website|
19
+ 14. Donations |command-t-donations|
20
+ 15. License |command-t-license|
21
+ 16. History |command-t-history|
21
22
 
22
23
 
23
24
  INTRODUCTION *command-t-intro*
@@ -70,7 +71,7 @@ If your Vim lacks support you'll see an error message like this:
70
71
  E319: Sorry, the command is not available in this version
71
72
 
72
73
  The version of Vim distributed with OS X may not include Ruby support (for
73
- exmaple, Snow Leopard, which was the current version of OS X when Command-T
74
+ example, Snow Leopard, which was the current version of OS X when Command-T
74
75
  was first released, did not support Ruby in the system Vim, but the current
75
76
  version of OS X at the time of writing, Mavericks, does). All recent versions
76
77
  of MacVim come with Ruby support; it is available from:
@@ -87,7 +88,7 @@ Ruby 1.9, but apparently has some bugs that need to be resolved).
87
88
  In addition to having Ruby support in Vim, your system itself must have a
88
89
  compatible Ruby install. "Compatible" means the same version as Vim itself
89
90
  links against. If you use a different version then Command-T is unlikely
90
- to work (see TROUBLE-SHOOTING below).
91
+ to work (see |command-t-trouble-shooting| below).
91
92
 
92
93
  On OS X Snow Leopard, Lion and Mountain Lion, the system comes with Ruby 1.8.7
93
94
  and all recent versions of MacVim (the 7.2 snapshots and 7.3) are linked
@@ -103,7 +104,7 @@ your distribution. You can usually find this out by examining the
103
104
  compilation and linking flags displayed by the |:version| command in Vim, and
104
105
  by looking at the output of:
105
106
 
106
- :ruby puts RUBY_VERSION
107
+ :ruby puts "#{RUBY_VERSION}-p#{RUBY_PATCHLEVEL}"
107
108
 
108
109
  A suitable Ruby environment for Windows can be installed using the Ruby
109
110
  1.8.7-p299 RubyInstaller available at:
@@ -702,6 +703,46 @@ settings can be used to control behavior:
702
703
  only during Command-T searches.
703
704
 
704
705
 
706
+ FAQ *command-t-faq*
707
+
708
+ Why does my build fail with "unknown argument -multiply_definedsuppress"? ~
709
+
710
+ You may see this on OS X Mavericks when building with the Clang compiler
711
+ against the system Ruby. This is an unfortunate Apple bug that breaks
712
+ compilation of many Ruby gems with native extensions on Mavericks. It has been
713
+ worked around in the upstream Ruby version, but won't be fixed in OS X until
714
+ Apple updates their supplied version of Ruby (most likely this won't be until
715
+ the next major release):
716
+
717
+ https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/9624
718
+
719
+ Workarounds include building your own Ruby (and then your own Vim and
720
+ Command-T), or more simply, building with the following `ARCHFLAGS` set:
721
+
722
+ ARCHFLAGS=-Wno-error=unused-command-line-argument-hard-error-in-future ruby extconf.rb
723
+ make
724
+
725
+ Why can't I open in a split with <C-CR> and <C-s> in the terminal? ~
726
+
727
+ It's likely that <C-CR> won't work in most terminals, because the keycode that
728
+ is sent to processes running inside them is identical to <CR>; when you type
729
+ <C-CR>, terminal Vim literally "sees" <CR>. Unfortunately, there is no
730
+ workaround for this.
731
+
732
+ If you find that <C-s> also doesn't work the most likely explanation is that
733
+ XON/XOFF flow control is enabled; this is the default in many environments.
734
+ This means that when you press <C-s> all input to the terminal is suspended
735
+ until you release it by hitting <C-q>. While input is suspended you may think
736
+ your terminal has frozen, but it hasn't.
737
+
738
+ To disable flow control, add the following to your `.zshrc` or
739
+ `.bash_profile`:
740
+
741
+ stty -ixon
742
+
743
+ See the `stty` man page for more details.
744
+
745
+
705
746
  TIPS *command-t-tips*
706
747
 
707
748
  Working with very large repositories ~
@@ -744,8 +785,9 @@ Wait for 200ms of keyboard inactivity before computing search results. For
744
785
  example, if you are enter "foobar" quickly (ie. within 1 second), there is
745
786
  little sense in fetching the results for "f", "fo", "foo", "foob", "fooba" and
746
787
  finally "foobar". Instead, we can just fetch the results for "foobar". This
747
- setting trades off some immediate responsiveness at the micro level for a
748
- better search experience overall.
788
+ setting trades off some immediate responsiveness at the micro level for
789
+ better performance (real and perceived) and a better search experience
790
+ overall.
749
791
 
750
792
  let g:CommandTFileScanner = 'watchman'
751
793
 
@@ -759,7 +801,7 @@ repos the "watchman" scanner is the tool of choice.
759
801
 
760
802
  This scanner delegates the task of finding files to Facebook's `watchman` tool
761
803
  (https://github.com/facebook/watchman), which can return results for a 500,000
762
- file hierarchy within about 10 seconds.
804
+ file hierarchy within about a second.
763
805
 
764
806
  Note that Watchman has a range of configuration options that can be applied by
765
807
  files such as `/etc/watchman.json` or per-direcory `.watchmanconfig` files and
@@ -779,7 +821,7 @@ It's advisable to keep a long-running Vim instance in place and let it cache
779
821
  the directory listings rather than repeatedly closing and re-opening Vim in
780
822
  order to edit every file. On those occasions when you do need to flush the
781
823
  cache (ie. with |CommandTFlush| or <C-f> in the match listing window), use of
782
- the Watchman scanner should make the delay tolerable.
824
+ the Watchman scanner should make the delay barely noticeable.
783
825
 
784
826
  As noted in the introduction, Command-T works best when you adopt a
785
827
  "path-centric" mentality. This is especially true on very large hierarchies.
@@ -795,9 +837,17 @@ who know what they want to open and where it is to open it as quickly as
795
837
  possible; other tools such as NERDTree exist for visually exploring an unknown
796
838
  hierarchy.
797
839
 
840
+ Over time, you will get a feel for how economical you can afford to be with
841
+ your search queries in a given repo. In the example above, if "foo" is not a
842
+ very common pattern in your hierarchy, then you may find that you can find
843
+ what you need with a very concise query such as "foomanjs". With time, this
844
+ kind of ongoing calibration will come quite naturally.
845
+
798
846
  Finally, it is important to be on a relatively recent version of Command-T to
799
847
  fully benefit from the available performance enhancements:
800
848
 
849
+ - version 1.8 (March 2013) sped up the Watchman file scanner by switching its
850
+ communication from the JSON to the binary Watchman protocol
801
851
  - version 1.7 (February 2014) added the |g:CommandTInputDebounce| and
802
852
  |g:CommandTFileScanner| settings, along with support for the Watchman file
803
853
  scanner
@@ -821,13 +871,13 @@ order):
821
871
  Ivan Ukhov Paul Jolly Vít Ondruch
822
872
  Jeff Kreeftmeijer Pavel Sergeev Woody Peterson
823
873
  Lucas de Vries Rainux Luo Yan Pritzker
824
- Marcus Brito Scott Bronson Yiding Jia
825
- Marian Schubert Seth Fowler Zak Johnson
826
- Matthew Todd
874
+ Marcus Brito Roland Puntaier Yiding Jia
875
+ Marian Schubert Scott Bronson Zak Johnson
876
+ Matthew Todd Seth Fowler
827
877
 
828
878
  As this was the first Vim plug-in I had ever written I was heavily influenced
829
879
  by the design of the LustyExplorer plug-in by Stephen Bach, which I understand
830
- is one of the largest Ruby-based Vim plug-ins to date.
880
+ was one of the largest Ruby-based Vim plug-ins at the time.
831
881
 
832
882
  While the Command-T codebase doesn't contain any code directly copied from
833
883
  LustyExplorer, I did use it as a reference for answers to basic questions (like
@@ -926,6 +976,12 @@ POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
926
976
 
927
977
  HISTORY *command-t-history*
928
978
 
979
+ 1.8 (31 March 2014)
980
+
981
+ - taught Watchman file scanner to use the binary protocol instead of JSON,
982
+ roughly doubling its speed
983
+ - build changes to accommodate MinGW (patch from Roland Puntaier)
984
+
929
985
  1.7 (9 March 2014)
930
986
 
931
987
  - added |g:CommandTInputDebounce|, which can be used to improve responsiveness
data/doc/tags CHANGED
@@ -9,6 +9,7 @@ command-t-commands command-t.txt /*command-t-commands*
9
9
  command-t-contents command-t.txt /*command-t-contents*
10
10
  command-t-development command-t.txt /*command-t-development*
11
11
  command-t-donations command-t.txt /*command-t-donations*
12
+ command-t-faq command-t.txt /*command-t-faq*
12
13
  command-t-history command-t.txt /*command-t-history*
13
14
  command-t-installation command-t.txt /*command-t-installation*
14
15
  command-t-intro command-t.txt /*command-t-intro*
@@ -11,12 +11,12 @@ ECHO = $(ECHO1:0=@echo)
11
11
  #### Start of system configuration section. ####
12
12
 
13
13
  srcdir = .
14
- topdir = /Users/glh/.rbenv/versions/2.1.1/include/ruby-2.1.0
14
+ topdir = /Users/glh/.rbenv/versions/2.0.0-p247/include/ruby-2.0.0
15
15
  hdrdir = $(topdir)
16
- arch_hdrdir = /Users/glh/.rbenv/versions/2.1.1/include/ruby-2.1.0/x86_64-darwin13.0
16
+ arch_hdrdir = /Users/glh/.rbenv/versions/2.0.0-p247/include/ruby-2.0.0/x86_64-darwin13.1.0
17
17
  PATH_SEPARATOR = :
18
18
  VPATH = $(srcdir):$(arch_hdrdir)/ruby:$(hdrdir)/ruby
19
- prefix = $(DESTDIR)/Users/glh/.rbenv/versions/2.1.1
19
+ prefix = /Users/glh/.rbenv/versions/2.0.0-p247
20
20
  rubysitearchprefix = $(rubylibprefix)/$(sitearch)
21
21
  rubyarchprefix = $(rubylibprefix)/$(arch)
22
22
  rubylibprefix = $(libdir)/$(RUBY_BASE_NAME)
@@ -49,7 +49,7 @@ dvidir = $(docdir)
49
49
  htmldir = $(docdir)
50
50
  infodir = $(datarootdir)/info
51
51
  docdir = $(datarootdir)/doc/$(PACKAGE)
52
- oldincludedir = $(DESTDIR)/usr/include
52
+ oldincludedir = /usr/include
53
53
  includedir = $(prefix)/include
54
54
  localstatedir = $(prefix)/var
55
55
  sharedstatedir = $(prefix)/com
@@ -67,7 +67,7 @@ CXX = g++
67
67
  LIBRUBY = $(LIBRUBY_A)
68
68
  LIBRUBY_A = lib$(RUBY_SO_NAME)-static.a
69
69
  LIBRUBYARG_SHARED =
70
- LIBRUBYARG_STATIC = -l$(RUBY_SO_NAME)-static -framework CoreFoundation
70
+ LIBRUBYARG_STATIC = -l$(RUBY_SO_NAME)-static
71
71
  empty =
72
72
  OUTFLAG = -o $(empty)
73
73
  COUTFLAG = -o $(empty)
@@ -76,14 +76,14 @@ RUBY_EXTCONF_H =
76
76
  cflags = $(optflags) $(debugflags) $(warnflags)
77
77
  optflags = -O3 -fno-fast-math
78
78
  debugflags = -ggdb3
79
- warnflags = -Wall -Wextra -Wno-unused-parameter -Wno-parentheses -Wno-long-long -Wno-missing-field-initializers -Wunused-variable -Wpointer-arith -Wwrite-strings -Wdeclaration-after-statement -Wshorten-64-to-32 -Wimplicit-function-declaration -Wextra-tokens
79
+ warnflags = -Wall -Wextra -Wno-unused-parameter -Wno-parentheses -Wno-long-long -Wno-missing-field-initializers -Wunused-variable -Wpointer-arith -Wwrite-strings -Wdeclaration-after-statement -Wshorten-64-to-32 -Wimplicit-function-declaration
80
80
  CCDLFLAGS = -fno-common
81
81
  CFLAGS = $(CCDLFLAGS) -O3 -Wno-error=shorten-64-to-32 -pipe $(ARCH_FLAG)
82
82
  INCFLAGS = -I. -I$(arch_hdrdir) -I$(hdrdir)/ruby/backward -I$(hdrdir) -I$(srcdir)
83
- DEFS =
84
- CPPFLAGS = -I/Users/glh/.rbenv/versions/2.1.1/include -D_XOPEN_SOURCE -D_DARWIN_C_SOURCE -D_DARWIN_UNLIMITED_SELECT -D_REENTRANT $(DEFS) $(cppflags)
83
+ DEFS = -DWATCHMAN_BUILD
84
+ CPPFLAGS = -DHAVE_FCNTL_H -DHAVE_SYS_ERRNO_H -DHAVE_SYS_SOCKET_H -DHAVE_RUBY_ST_H -DHAVE_ST_H -I/Users/glh/.rbenv/versions/2.0.0-p247/include -D_XOPEN_SOURCE -D_DARWIN_C_SOURCE -D_DARWIN_UNLIMITED_SELECT -D_REENTRANT $(DEFS) $(cppflags)
85
85
  CXXFLAGS = $(CCDLFLAGS) $(cxxflags) $(ARCH_FLAG)
86
- ldflags = -L. -L/Users/glh/.rbenv/versions/2.1.1/lib -fstack-protector
86
+ ldflags = -L. -L/Users/glh/.rbenv/versions/2.0.0-p247/lib
87
87
  dldflags = -Wl,-undefined,dynamic_lookup -Wl,-multiply_defined,suppress
88
88
  ARCH_FLAG =
89
89
  DLDFLAGS = $(ldflags) $(dldflags) $(ARCH_FLAG)
@@ -99,12 +99,12 @@ RUBY_VERSION_NAME = $(RUBY_BASE_NAME)-$(ruby_version)
99
99
  RUBYW_BASE_NAME = rubyw
100
100
  RUBY_BASE_NAME = ruby
101
101
 
102
- arch = x86_64-darwin13.0
102
+ arch = x86_64-darwin13.1.0
103
103
  sitearch = $(arch)
104
- ruby_version = 2.1.0
104
+ ruby_version = 2.0.0
105
105
  ruby = $(bindir)/ruby
106
106
  RUBY = $(ruby)
107
- ruby_headers = $(hdrdir)/ruby.h $(hdrdir)/ruby/ruby.h $(hdrdir)/ruby/defines.h $(hdrdir)/ruby/missing.h $(hdrdir)/ruby/intern.h $(hdrdir)/ruby/st.h $(hdrdir)/ruby/subst.h $(arch_hdrdir)/ruby/config.h
107
+ ruby_headers = $(hdrdir)/ruby.h $(hdrdir)/ruby/defines.h $(arch_hdrdir)/ruby/config.h
108
108
 
109
109
  RM = rm -f
110
110
  RM_RF = $(RUBY) -run -e rm -- -rf
@@ -132,11 +132,11 @@ extout =
132
132
  extout_prefix =
133
133
  target_prefix =
134
134
  LOCAL_LIBS =
135
- LIBS = -lpthread -ldl -lobjc
136
- ORIG_SRCS = ext.c match.c matcher.c
135
+ LIBS = -lpthread -lpthread -ldl -lobjc
136
+ ORIG_SRCS = ext.c match.c matcher.c watchman.c
137
137
  SRCS = $(ORIG_SRCS)
138
- OBJS = ext.o match.o matcher.o
139
- HDRS = $(srcdir)/ext.h $(srcdir)/match.h $(srcdir)/matcher.h $(srcdir)/ruby_compat.h
138
+ OBJS = ext.o match.o matcher.o watchman.o
139
+ HDRS = $(srcdir)/ext.h $(srcdir)/match.h $(srcdir)/matcher.h $(srcdir)/ruby_compat.h $(srcdir)/watchman.h
140
140
  TARGET = ext
141
141
  TARGET_NAME = ext
142
142
  TARGET_ENTRY = Init_$(TARGET_NAME)
@@ -144,13 +144,12 @@ DLLIB = $(TARGET).bundle
144
144
  EXTSTATIC =
145
145
  STATIC_LIB =
146
146
 
147
- TIMESTAMP_DIR = .
148
- BINDIR = $(bindir)
149
- RUBYCOMMONDIR = $(sitedir)$(target_prefix)
150
- RUBYLIBDIR = $(sitelibdir)$(target_prefix)
151
- RUBYARCHDIR = $(sitearchdir)$(target_prefix)
152
- HDRDIR = $(rubyhdrdir)/ruby$(target_prefix)
153
- ARCHHDRDIR = $(rubyhdrdir)/$(arch)/ruby$(target_prefix)
147
+ BINDIR = $(DESTDIR)$(bindir)
148
+ RUBYCOMMONDIR = $(DESTDIR)$(sitedir)$(target_prefix)
149
+ RUBYLIBDIR = $(DESTDIR)$(sitelibdir)$(target_prefix)
150
+ RUBYARCHDIR = $(DESTDIR)$(sitearchdir)$(target_prefix)
151
+ HDRDIR = $(DESTDIR)$(rubyhdrdir)/ruby$(target_prefix)
152
+ ARCHHDRDIR = $(DESTDIR)$(rubyhdrdir)/$(arch)/ruby$(target_prefix)
154
153
 
155
154
  TARGET_SO = $(DLLIB)
156
155
  CLEANLIBS = $(TARGET).bundle
@@ -180,7 +179,7 @@ distclean: clean distclean-so distclean-static distclean-rb-default distclean-rb
180
179
  realclean: distclean
181
180
  install: install-so install-rb
182
181
 
183
- install-so: $(DLLIB) $(TIMESTAMP_DIR)/.RUBYARCHDIR.time
182
+ install-so: $(DLLIB) ./.RUBYARCHDIR.time
184
183
  $(INSTALL_PROG) $(DLLIB) $(RUBYARCHDIR)
185
184
  clean-static::
186
185
  -$(Q)$(RM) $(STATIC_LIB)
@@ -190,8 +189,8 @@ pre-install-rb: Makefile
190
189
  pre-install-rb-default: Makefile
191
190
  pre-install-rb-default:
192
191
  $(ECHO) installing default ext libraries
193
- $(TIMESTAMP_DIR)/.RUBYARCHDIR.time:
194
- $(Q) $(MAKEDIRS) $(@D) $(RUBYARCHDIR)
192
+ ./.RUBYARCHDIR.time:
193
+ $(Q) $(MAKEDIRS) $(RUBYARCHDIR)
195
194
  $(Q) $(TOUCH) $@
196
195
 
197
196
  site-install: site-install-so site-install-rb
@@ -232,12 +231,12 @@ $(DLLIB): $(OBJS) Makefile
232
231
  $(ECHO) linking shared-object $(DLLIB)
233
232
  -$(Q)$(RM) $(@)
234
233
  $(Q) $(LDSHARED) -o $@ $(OBJS) $(LIBPATH) $(DLDFLAGS) $(LOCAL_LIBS) $(LIBS)
235
- $(Q) $(POSTLINK)
234
+ $(Q) test -z '$(RUBY_CODESIGN)' || codesign -s '$(RUBY_CODESIGN)' -f $@
236
235
 
237
236
 
238
237
 
239
238
  ###
240
- # Copyright 2010 Wincent Colaiuta. All rights reserved.
239
+ # Copyright 2010-2014 Wincent Colaiuta. All rights reserved.
241
240
  #
242
241
  # Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
243
242
  # modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
@@ -260,4 +259,4 @@ $(DLLIB): $(OBJS) Makefile
260
259
  # ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
261
260
  # POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
262
261
 
263
- CFLAGS += -std=c99 -Wall -Wextra -Wno-unused-parameter
262
+ CFLAGS += -Wall -Wextra -Wno-unused-parameter