Re: Generate Ddoc without compiling?
On Monday, 21 May 2018 at 12:53:47 UTC, Steven Schveighoffer wrote: On 5/21/18 8:37 AM, Jonathan M. Wilbur wrote: I want to put in a feature request, but I want to gauge whether it is even feasible or not, but a little background first: I am trying to create a Makefile to build the HTML documentation for a Dlang project. I would like to be able to update a single HTML file if the corresponding source changes, without having to recompile all of the others. My rule looks like this: $(DCOMPILER) -o- -op -d -Df$@ $< But that does not work, because some of the compiled modules import other modules, and the rule fails because DCOMPILER can't intelligently pull in the other source files. I think requiring a complete compile of all source to build the HTML documentation is a big impediment to making D highly scalable. Having said that, I don't see why it would be technically impossible to make DMD build the HTML (almost) without regard to the validity of the source code. Is this possible? And moreover: *should* it be done? Is it a bad idea? 1. I don't think it requires compiling all other files. 2. You may want to use -c (not sure what the exact error is you are receiving) 3. You may need to specify where the other includes are with -I (not sure what the exact error is you are receiving). I'm fairly certain D can do what you want it to do. But difficult to tell without more context/example. -Steve So it seems that I still have to include all of the interfaces (at least; source would work too), but I got it to work by adding the -I operator: html_documentation : $(htmldocs) $(htmldocs) : $(SRCDIR)/documentation/html/source/$(PACKAGE_SLUG)/%.html : $(SRCDIR)/source/$(PACKAGE_SLUG)/%.d $(DCOMPILER) -o- -op -d -I$(SRCDIR)/source $(SRCDIR)/source/macros.ddoc -Df$@ $< Since I am not producing binaries (per the "-o-" flag), I don't know if it is still doing all the work of compiling and just not writing the files to disk, or if it is just doing some basic lexing, but this is at least acceptable. Thanks for getting my noggin joggin'!
Generate Ddoc without compiling?
I want to put in a feature request, but I want to gauge whether it is even feasible or not, but a little background first: I am trying to create a Makefile to build the HTML documentation for a Dlang project. I would like to be able to update a single HTML file if the corresponding source changes, without having to recompile all of the others. My rule looks like this: $(DCOMPILER) -o- -op -d -Df$@ $< But that does not work, because some of the compiled modules import other modules, and the rule fails because DCOMPILER can't intelligently pull in the other source files. I think requiring a complete compile of all source to build the HTML documentation is a big impediment to making D highly scalable. Having said that, I don't see why it would be technically impossible to make DMD build the HTML (almost) without regard to the validity of the source code. Is this possible? And moreover: *should* it be done? Is it a bad idea?
Re: is the ubuntu sourceforge repository safe?
On Tuesday, 1 August 2017 at 10:01:17 UTC, Michael wrote: On Monday, 24 July 2017 at 11:02:55 UTC, Russel Winder wrote: On Sun, 2017-07-23 at 18:23 +, Michael via Digitalmars-d wrote: I stopped using it. It kept causing error messages in my package manager and I couldn't update it properly so I've just stuck to downloading the updates on release. If we are talking about D-Apt here http://d-apt.sourceforge.net/ it seems to be working fine for me on Debian Sid. 2.075 just installed this morning. I stopped using it a while ago as it was constantly causing me problems with being unable to check for new package updates. It was right when sourceforge was issuing security warnings and I couldn't be bothered to try and deal with it. Just following up on this, because I had the same problem: 1. Use wget or curl to download the .deb right from the archive wget http://downloads.dlang.org/releases/2018/dmd_2.080.0-0_i386.deb 2. Try to install it with dpkg dpkg -i dmd_2.080.0-0_i386.deb ### If you experience errors, add the following steps. If not, skip them. 3. Update your cache sudo apt-get update 4. Download the dependencies, if you need to. In my case, I needed libc6-dev and gcc, which you *would normally* install like so: sudo apt-get install libc6-dev gcc But I had errors when trying to do that, which were resolved by running: sudo apt --fix-broken install ### 5. Finally, run `dmd --version` to test that it works!
Static Analysis / Code Scanning Tool (SAST) for D?
Does anybody know of a SAST tool that can scan D code for security vulnerabilities? In other words, does anybody know of something that will analyze raw D source code for security vulnerabilities that the human eye may have missed?