Commit Graph

6 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
minggo b1c8871208 linux build ok 2013-09-17 22:36:15 +08:00
Éloi Rivard 13afa85cb9 Refactored toplevel Makefile 2013-08-05 10:42:56 +02:00
Sam Clegg cb2f42d0c6 Share top level Makefile between emscripten, linux and nacl.
Remove the custom top level Makefile.emscripten and instead
add build-emscripten.sh which can be used like build-linux.sh
and build-nacl.sh.

Also, use the top level lib folder to store emscripten libs.
This brings it in line with the other make-based builds.
2013-06-25 11:45:01 -07:00
Sam Clegg 52791bd85d Add .travis.yml
This builds all libraries and examples in both debug
and release for Linux and NaCl platforms.

Add travis build status image to README.mdown.

Also, split the linux dependency installation into
its own script: install-deps-linux.sh
2013-04-29 16:46:51 -07:00
Sam Clegg 9eb9524659 Add 'make run' target for linux projects.
Also, a few other linux build system improvements:
- Add linux build of SimpleGame
- Update multi-platform templates to use new common
  build system.
- Remove redundant main.h files.
2013-03-08 10:01:03 -08:00
Sam Clegg 8677dad3c6 Improved build system from linux.
This change makes several fundamental improvements to the linux
build system:

- Remove duplication: a lot of the common make logic is now in
  a central shared makefile: cocos2dx/proj.linux/cocos2dx.mk

- Quiet by default: unless you specify V=1 on the commandline
  the output is now very clean and quiet.

- Dependencies: gcc's automatic dependancy generation is now
  used (-MMD).  This means that if you change a header file
  then all the object that depend on it now get rebuilt.

- Don't store objects in the source tree: previously object
  files were stored alongside the sources, which meant that
  debug and release object clobbered each other which leads
  to confusion and lots of unnecessary rebuilding.Q

- Library dependencies: each binary now depends on the libraries
  it links aginst.  This means that if the cocos2dx library
  changes then all examples will get re-linked.

- Top level Makefile: there is now a top level Makefile that
  can be shared/used by any platform the uses make as the
  build system (for example NaCl).  Everything can be built
  by simply running 'make' at the top level. e.g:

    make DEBUG=1
    make DEBUG=1 clean
2013-03-06 13:02:55 -08:00