The traceback was caused when a file without a parent directory (which
is implicitly ".") is added to the resources object. The code assumed
that all files within the resources object would have a parent
directory.
This commit changes the check to account for files that are in the root
directory of a project and have no preceding `./`
The file `project_api.py` was poorly named and caused much confusion.
Given that it was actually a front end to the exporters, I put it into
the export sub-dir.
When constructing a toolchain for export, we currently set the
`build_dir` to the `export_dir`. When exporting offline, the
`export_dir` is always set to the root of the project. The toolchains
ignore their `build_dir` when scanning for sorces, so when the exporters
use the toolchains to scan for their resources, they get nothing.
In this patch we set the `build_dir` of the toolchain that the exports
use to nothing. A path of nothing should not match anything, and will
therefore not ignore everything when scanning for resources.
We have scripts (written in python) that are run after a binary image is
created in the tools. These scripts are not really exportable, as they
are part of the tools and may include and use any bits of python code
they please. So we don't export them. This patch disables export
combinations that would not work because the post-binary hook is not
exported. A white-list is used for forward compatibility.
Recently the Keil IDE has released version 5.23. This version requires
the FPU to be set as part of the <Cpu> tag in the .uvprojx (XML project
file). This patch adds the appropriate FPU settings based on the
trailing F (FPU enabled) or FD (Double precesion FPU enabled) string of
the core.
Before, `make_gcc_arm` would export a makefile with both linker flags in
the `$(LD)` make variable and the `$(LD_FLAGS)` make variable. This only
affected GCC based makefiles, as the `$(LD)` make variable would only
contain the linker for both ARMC5 and IAR. This patch enforces the
`$(LD)` behavior of ARMC5 and IAR on all of the compilers by truncating
`$(LD)` to just the command
For toolchains that do not implicitly run the C pre-processor on their
linker scripts the toolchain is expected to define a `preproc`
attribute. The Makefiles then pick up on this attribute and add another
rule for pre-processing the linker script automatically.