* use dashed link for optional dependency
* output full dependency tree
* add warning if requested package does not exist
* [vcpkg] Formatting
* [vcpkg] Fix issue when parsing qualified dependencies
Before this change, "harfbuzz[glib] (!x86)" would parse as "harfbuzz[glib]||!x86" instead of the desired "harfbuzz|glib|!x86"
* [vcpkg] Improve depend-info handling of features and qualified dependencies.
* Add detection for VCPKG_DOWNLOADS environment variable in vcpkgpaths.cpp.
* Pass the downloads directory from VcpkgPaths to cmake.
* Also fixup bootstrap on *nix.
* Make error message a little prettier.
* Make that bash script actually work :)
* [vcpkg] Alter Optional<> usage style
* [vcpkg-docs] Add section on Environment Variables to the docs
remove_if is already stable, so separate stable and unstable versions are unnecessary.
https://iterator.wordpress.com/2016/01/31/algorithms_0/
Unstable remove_if algorithms are possible that might win, as indicated in that article; but plain remove_if provides the most consistent behavior.
* [Vulkan] Add a vulkan port based on the cuda port
* Add VULKAN_SDK env variable to whitelist
* * Added some additional diagnostic information
* Corrected if NOT exists statement
I'm seeing the error below:
Building package zlib[core]:x86-windows...
A suitable version of git was not found (required v2.17.1). Downloading portable git v2.17.1...
Downloading git...
WinHttpSendRequest() failed: 12002
I suspect the WinHttpSendRequest error is due to being behind a proxy -
most download issues seem to be this. Or perhaps because a sys admin
somewhere has disabled WinInet, somehow. I don't know. I don't know
how to debug WinHttpSendRequest(); a quick google search didn't help.
By printing the URL that vcpkg is trying to download, and where it's
trying to download to, I can pop the URL in my browser, save it at the
location specified, and move on with my life.
Response files are a convenient way of specifying bulk parameters,
typically supported by compilers and linkers. For vcpkg response files
provide a convenient way of installing sets of packages from simple
newline separate list files.
platforms in help
Currently vcpkg displays environment variable names in the help as
%VARIABLENAME% on non-Windows platforms, where it should be
$VARIABLENAME. This patch adds a macro to fix this.