CMake convention is to use a project namespace, i.e. Foo::, for imported
targets. When multiple targets are imported from a project, this looks
like Foo::Bar1 Foo::Bar2, etc. This adds the nlohmann_json:: namespace to
the exported target names.
This also allows the generated project config files to be used from the
build directory instead of just the install directory.
- updated documentation wrt. new repository layout
- temporarily switched off Homebrew --HEAD building (can only be switched on after release)
- set copyright date to 2018
* Rename 'develop' folder to 'include/nlohmann'
* Rename 'src' folder to 'single_include/nlohmann'
* Use <nlohmann/*> headers in sources and tests
* Change amalgamate config file
The tool used before created a lot of duplicates inside the generated amalgamation. The new tool is a single Python file which seems to do the same job.
The rewrite uses more cmake build-in automatisms and build-in generates
variables to allow better generic reuse.
* cmake files are installed to
``` <install_prefix>/lib/cmake/nlohmann_json/ ``` for best support on
most systems
* include path is set to ``` include ``` for usage as ``` #include
<nlohmann/json.hpp> ```
- Add prefix header
- Include catch.hpp
- Include json.hpp
- Replace private with public for all json_unit files
- Move `unit.cpp` to an object library
- cotire issue: strip whitespace from CMAKE_INCLUDE_SYSTEM_FLAG_CXX
Instead of copying the test executable and the JSON files used by
the tests at install time, define CMake/CTest tests for running
the json_unit executable from any build directory with the project's
source directory as its working directory.
- call enable_testing in the main lists file to allow the definition
of tests
- remove install commands from the test directory's lists file
- define two tests
- json_unit_default for running the default tests by executing
json_unit without any arguments
- json_unit_all for running all the tests by executing json_unit
with the "*" argument
- update the AppVeyor configuration file to use the new testing method