Instead of including yuzu and all the sources it uses directly, include
only what specifically belongs to yuzu. Submodules can be downloaded
separately later using git since a shallow clone includes minimally all
the repository information needed for it.
[REUSE] is a specification that aims at making file copyright
information consistent, so that it can be both human and machine
readable. It basically requires that all files have a header containing
copyright and licensing information. When this isn't possible, like
when dealing with binary assets, generated files or embedded third-party
dependencies, it is permitted to insert copyright information in the
`.reuse/dep5` file.
Oh, and it also requires that all the licenses used in the project are
present in the `LICENSES` folder, that's why the diff is so huge.
This can be done automatically with `reuse download --all`.
The `reuse` tool also contains a handy subcommand that analyzes the
project and tells whether or not the project is (still) compliant,
`reuse lint`.
Following REUSE has a few advantages over the current approach:
- Copyright information is easy to access for users / downstream
- Files like `dist/license.md` do not need to exist anymore, as
`.reuse/dep5` is used instead
- `reuse lint` makes it easy to ensure that copyright information of
files like binary assets / images is always accurate and up to date
To add copyright information of files that didn't have it I looked up
who committed what and when, for each file. As yuzu contributors do not
have to sign a CLA or similar I couldn't assume that copyright ownership
was of the "yuzu Emulator Project", so I used the name and/or email of
the commit author instead.
[REUSE]: https://reuse.software
Follow-up to 01cf05bc75
With our recent switchover from conan to vcpkg, we're shipping a few
more dll files, these need to be in the full zip.
cp .\build\bin\*.dll .\artifacts\
also tacking on the fix where we're shipping scm_rev.cpp accidentally
This is related to 8486
Ninja places the exe files into .\build\bin while MSBuild may place them
into .\build\bin\Release
upload.ps1 was originally written for use with Azure Dev Ops to cough up
about 5 files and the script appears to be used for both CI and
mainline builds
GHA (GitHub Actions) makes available a single zip of the items uploaded by
each Upload action (artifacts directory), so we want to work with that.
I'm doing changes to upload.ps1 to accomplish this.
The changes to the verify.yml are as follows
-DGIT_BRANCH=pr-verify changes the header in yuzu, instead of saying
HEAD-<hash>-dirty it'll say pr-verify-<hash>
-DCLANG_FORMAT_SUFFIX=discordplzdontclang tricks the CMake stuff for
discord-rpc to NOT run clang-format, as this was marking CI builds as
dirty
I'm also making it upload just the exe by itself, as the msvc builds are
quite chunky. but maybe this is unnecessary.
Currently the MSVC artifact option is a 274MB zip that contains 3 copies
of the DLLs, and 4 copies of the source tarball, and zero copies of yuzu.exe
This PR should have msvc artifacts of about 190MB that downloads as 81 MB zip
Between packages breaking, Conan always being a moving target for
minimum required CMake support, and now their moves to Conan 2.0 causing
existing packages to break, I suppose this was a long time coming. vcpkg
isn't without its drawbacks, but at the moment it seems easier on the
project to use for external packages.
Mostly removes the logic for Conan from the root CMakeLists file,
leaving basic find_package()'s in its place. Sets only the
find_package()'s that require CONFIG mode as necessary. clang and linux
CI now use the vcpkg toolchain file configured in the Docker container
when possible.
mingw CI turns off YUZU_TESTS because there's no way on the container to
run Windows executables on a Linux host anyway, and it's not easy to get
Catch2 there.
Uses the MinGWClangCross toolchain script to build yuzu. Disables our
bundled SDL2 to use the system ones that have been modified to not use
`-mwindows`. Also set's `-e` to stop the script on an error (as opposed
to packaging nothing).
Uses LLVM's linker for linking yuzu. Adds -femulated-tls due to a
libstdc++ incompatibility between GCC and Clang in vulkan_common.
Qt can make use of qwindowsvistastyle.dll if present, and our MinGW
container has the library, but it was not being copied during the
packaging process. Thus, yuzu looked like a Windows 98 application when
using the PR-verify artifacts.
This copies over the DLL during packaging, for that sweet-sweet Windows
Vista style.
In addition, set the Qt plugins path instead of the plugins/platforms
path. This way we can use the directory directly, rather than appending
a `..` everytime we need something just outside of it.
After updating to 1.0.24, MinGW fails to build libusb as a result of
numerous errors. So we build libusb their way and let them update the
nontrivial stuff.
This only applies to MinGW: the old path is still in use for Linux
toolchains as well as MSVC.
This will dynamically link libusb, since I hit build errors with the old
way we used to resolve the conflict with SDL2.
Unicorn has been removed, yet CI still enables building with Unicorn.
This just cleans up a few leftovers by removing the variable from the
CMake parameters in CI.
* Remove git submodules that will be loaded through conan
* Move custom Find modules to their own folder
* Use conan for downloading missing external dependencies
* CI: Change the yuzu source folder user to the user that the containers run on
* Attempt to remove dirty mingw build hack
* Install conan on the msvc build
* Only set release build type when using not using multi config generator
* Re-add qt bundled to workaround an issue with conan qt not downloading prebuilt binaries
* Add workaround for submodules that use legacy CMAKE variables
* Re-add USE_BUNDLED_QT on the msvc build bot
This is possible now with the updated Docker images and their updated packages.
Before, there were build errors due to old QT5 packages on Ubuntu, but now since
they have updated packages it is feasible to build with Vulkan enabled once more.