We need to strongname our MSBuild assemblies, so that different versions
can be loaded side-by-side (one example being having both a legacy and a
.NET project in the same solution).
This required setting a version for Xamarin.iOS.Tasks.dll and
Xamarin.Mac.Tasks.dll, otherwise strong-naming won't work properly (all
versions of an assembly would have the same identity).
Also sign the corresponding test assemblies, since they poke into the
internals of the task assemblies.
Fixes https://github.com/xamarin/xamarin-macios/issues/9835.
* [msbuild] Convert to short-form csproj.
* [msbuild] Make asserts more useful.
* [msbuild] Make tests ignore the actual location of the test assembly.
* [msbuild] Short-style projects default to deterministic builds, which is not compatible with wildcard versions.
* [msbuild] Adjust test.
* Update .gitignore.
* Bump NUnit.ConsoleRunner version.
* [msbuild] Fix indentation.
* [msbuild] Simplify csproj.
* [builds] Improve mono/llvm dependencies.
* Create a list of all the files in the mono and llvm repositories, and save
these lists as a Make variable (in a generated Makefile - .deps.*.mk). We
don't list _all_ the files in each repository, because there are quite a few
(55k for mono), and Make measurably takes a while to check all of them, so
try to limit it to a sane subset, without risking missing changes to files
that actually matters.
* Always create stamp files when we're done with mono builds.
* Modify the mono/llvm builds to depend on all the files in their
repositories.
* Explicitly list the corresponding .stamp-build-* files as dependencies for
various files that are produced by the mono builds, so that make knows how
to build these files.
* Rewrite the *-facade-check targets to depend on the corresponding
*_BCL_TARGETS, so that we can avoid running a submake to the same Makefile
to execute the facade checks.
It now takes a little while (less than a second on my machine, which is
fine) for make to list all dependencies and get their timestamps, but if
executing multiple submakes this adds up to a multi-second timewaste.
So avoid the timewaste by not doing submakes, but instead use dependencies
to enforce the required target execution ordering.
* Don't depend on nicely named intermediate targets, since won't prevent
rebuilds:
build-cross64: setup-cross64
Since the `setup-cross64` file doesn't exist, `build-cross64` will always
execute. Instead depend on the stamp file:
build-cross64: .stamp-configure-cross64
And now `build-cross64` will only rebuild if needed.
* Don't try to list all intermediate files as .SECONDARY dependencies, instead
list none at all, which works as if all files were listed as dependencies.
* Some targets had to move later in the file, since variables used in dependencies:
foo: $(VARIABLE)
must be defined before that point in the file, as opposed to variables used in recipes:
foo:
$(MAKE) $(VARIABLE)
can be defined anywhere in the Makefile.
* Simplify the targets that sign assemblies significantly.
There are a few end results:
* It's now possible to do `make install`, without doing `make all` first. This
might seem weird, but that also ensures the more common `make all install`
works properly.
* Remakes (without any mono/llvm changes) in build/ are much faster, because
we now won't recurse into every mono build:
$ time make all -C builds/ -j8
[...]
real 0m1.873s
This even means that we might be able to make it a habit to remake in the
root directory, which doesn't take forever now:
$ time make all -j8
[...]
real 0m4.521s
Unfortunately adding `make install` to the mix still does some useless
stuff, and it ends up taking ~30 seconds to complete a full build:
$ time make all install -j8
[...]
real 0m32.542s
* [msbuild] Don't verify the xml syntax of targets files unless the files change.
* [build] Don't depend on installed files.
Don't depend on installed files, because that causes a rebuild when installing
to a different directory (i.e. package creation).
* Bump maccore to get build improvements.
Rebuilds are now very fast:
$ make all install -j8
$ time make all install -j8
real 0m5.735s
Less than 6s to figure out that nothing needs to be done.
And strangely flushing the disk cache doesn't make it much slower:
$ sudo purge
$ time make all install -j8
real 0m7.309s
Which probably means that Make mostly reads file metadata, and not actual file
contents (which is good).