Arrange that destructors of local C++ objects in the wrapper function
get run on SWIG_fail (which calls Rf_error() which calls longjmp()).
We achieve this by putting almost everything in the function in its
own block, and end that right before Rf_error() at which point those
destructors will get called.
Arrange that destructors of local C++ objects in the wrapper function
get run on SWIG_fail (which calls lua_error() which calls longjmp()).
We achieve this by putting almost everything in the function in its
own block, and end that right before lua_error() at which point those
destructors will get called.
The out typemap uses a function name which doesn't match the name of the
function we want it to apply to, so this testcase wasn't actually
triggering an exception so wasn't actually testing anything!
With that fixed, the testcase fails to compile for PHP due to use of
SWIG_exception_fail() (which not all target languages implement), and
with that fixed, the _runme.php needs a try ... catch adding to handle
the raised exception.
Add Swig_obligatory_macros which must be called by each
target language to define SWIG_VERSION correctly
in the generated code, as well as the language specific
macro SWIGXXX where XXX is the target language name.
Drop the #ifdef SWIGXXX that was previously generated -
I can't see the point of this and if users are defining
this macro somehow, then users will need to change this
Closes#1050
Fix when using templates with more than one template parameter
and used as an input parameter in a virtual method in a
director class (problem affecting most of the scripting languages).
Fixes#2160
Resolve the return type to correctly determine if the type is a pointer or
reference to a director class.
SwigType_refptr_count_return() recently added as a simpler fix is no
longer needed.
The conventional approach of using the "type" rather than "decl" to
analyse the return type is used instead too.
Issue #1823
No meaningful progress to update CFFI to experimental status
has been made since CFFI was disabled in SWIG-4.0.0 as the first
stage to removal. This commit is the final stage to remove it.
See issue #1966 for an attempt at updating CFFI to experimental
status. Anyone wishing for SWIG to support CFFI again might
want to utilise this work.
This has only been present for backward compatibility since 2006
and now has the value 0 so doesn't do anything, so don't use it
as an example of a flag in the docs.
We had a banner for C, a banner for target languages (parameterised
to allow the comment sequence to be specified) and a special banner
for XML files in scilab.cxx.
The XML variant was only needed because the standard banner contains
`--` for a hyphen, so we now use ` - ` for that instead.
The C banner now calls Swig_banner_target_lang() with a suitable
comment sequence to print the actual banner text.
The only documentation is in the file itself and describes a Python
wrapper around the C function defined here, but digging though the git
history this Python wrapper doesn't seem to have ever actually been
generated by SWIG.
This file was also marked as deprecated in 2005.
Fixes#2390Fixes#2391
* python_subinterpreter_issues:
added comment in CHANGES.current
always get the type_pointer from capsule instead of using a static variable as the value may change after re-initilization/due to subinterpreters
added interpreter_counter to deinitialize only once in case of subinterpreters
Conflicts:
CHANGES.current
Lib/python/pyrun.swg
Such as:
class X final {};
This no longer gives a syntax error.
This change has introduced one more shift-reduce conflict in the parser.
with a conflict with a C style variable declaration with name final:
class X final;
resulting in a syntax error (for C++ not C). This is an an unusual style
for C++ code and more typical declarations do work:
X final;
Closes#672
Until now SWIG quietly ignored such errors unless -Wextra (or -Wall
which implies -Wextra) was passed, but this is unhelpful as it hides
problems. To illustrate this point, enabling this warning by
default revealled a typo in the preproc_defined.i testcase in
SWIG's own testsuite.
If you really don't want to see this warning, you can suppress it
with command line option -w202 or by using this in your interface
file:
%warnfilter(SWIGWARN_PP_EVALUATION);
Both will work with older versions of SWIG too.
Fixes#1465Fixes#2389
Ensure that SWIG_VERSION is defined both at SWIG-time and in the
generated C/C++ wrapper code (it was only defined in the wrapper
for some target languages previously).
SWIGGO and SWIGJAVASCRIPT are now defined in the generated wrappers
to match behaviour for all other target languages.
Stop defining SWIGVERSION in the wrapper. This only happened as a
side-effect of how SWIG_VERSION was defined but was never documented and
is redundant.
The new testcase also checks that SWIG is defined at SWIG-time but not
in the generated wrapper, and that exactly one of a list of
target-language specific macros is defined.
Fixes#1050