Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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GUI only takes values UNX or WNT, so it is fairly pointless. One can check
whether OS is WNT or not instead.
Change-Id: I78ae32c03536a496a563e5deeb0fca78aebf9c34
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit.libreoffice.org/1304
Reviewed-by: Peter Foley <pefoley2@verizon.net>
Tested-by: Peter Foley <pefoley2@verizon.net>
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The idea is to get rid of GUIBASE and GUI checks as much as possible.
GUIBASE=aqua <=> OS=MACOSX
GUIBASE=WIN <=> OS=WNT
GUIBASE=cocoatouch <=> OS=IOS
GUIBASE=android <=> OS=ANDROID
Don't set GUIBASE to these values any more in configure.ac
either.
GUIBASE_FOR_BUILD is not used anywhere.
Conflicts:
configure.ac
postprocess/packcomponents/makefile.mk
postprocess/packregistry/makefile.mk
Change-Id: Ie0526b40e1073f2328ba6c333e28752104b0fed3
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We haven't been able to build NativeActivity-based apps (like the
android/qa/sc and anroid/qa/desktop thingies) since we switched to
DISABLE_DYNLOADING and a single DSO liblo-native-code.so anyway.
No lo_main() any more. <sal/main.h> should not be included ever when
compiling for Android of iOS now.
Lots of stuff binned from vcl's androidinst.cxx, in the (vain?) hope
that it will reduce the amount of never invoked GUI code that gets
linked in.
Change-Id: I25f584864c40110774c728a23151e089620442d9
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Always link in gb_STDLIBS, except when the library explicitly opts out
with gb_LinkTarget_disable_standard_system_libs.
Change-Id: I489a99114fbfa46d0421a27cf6c7b899dc268a4a
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... new gb_LinkTarget_add_standard_system_libs
Change-Id: Ib2bc843098db3d8c6822b45a3d21724e67f57d69
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Change-Id: I53316e0b9369d806197bccb42cf22d3497af43e7
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ENABLE_TELEPATHY was used in docsh.hxx but not defined consistently.
Add global define to gbuild.
Change-Id: I9746297a0be0e01573e336d4ee237bcc14d2d47d
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- register clients when we run --invisible
- create ScDocFuncSend only if we are going to use it
Change-Id: I7e33cd5a2e42e34a055146dc6c2bdac3657d6529
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Naming convention for gbuild methods:
- "add" is used for stuff that is logically a part of the target
(i.e. not registered at the Module, but defined in the target's makefile)
- "use" is used for stuff that is logically a different target
(i.e. it is registered at the Module, has it's own makefile, may be
in a different module than the target)
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