* Makes it possible to define the linkage for every module
* Move the ScriptPCH into the root directory
* Changes the SCRIPTS cmake variable to a string type:
-> -DSCRIPTS=0 is -DSCRIPTS="minimal-static" now
(builds commands and spells statically)
-> -DSCRIPTS=1 is -DSCRIPTS="static" now
(builds all modules statically)
-> -DSCRIPTS="dynamic"
(builds all modules dynamically)
-> Also the default value which is provided by the SCRIPTS
variable is overwriteable through the SCRIPTS_COMMANDS,
SCRIPTS_SPELLS... variable.
*Mac OS X fires off over 200 warnings related to gsoap about the deprecated register method. CMake has been patched to remove this warning.
*Updated all occurences of finite() to std::isfinite. The method finite() is not standardized by anyone aside from BSD. std::isfinite() however is standarized by C++
*Removed -ncurses and -pthread from OS X compilation. Now that we use Boost and C++11 there is no longer a need for pthread in OS X. All it does is throw a warning. However, ncurses isn't needed either as it's built into the OS X SDK and linked by default.
Note: There are only 5 remaining warnings left when compiling on OS X. I did not attempt to fix these as they were related to 3rd party libraries statically linked into the code. The 5 warnings left are all related to unused variables.
** Info from CMake:
** The OLD behavior for this policy is to place definition values given to add_definitions directly in the generated build rules without attempting to escape anything.
** The NEW behavior for this policy is to generate correct escapes for all native build tools automatically.
If this breaks build, let us know on irc : irc.rizon.net/#trinity
-Wwrite-strings is default enabled when -Wall is set in clang/gcc, hence removed.
-Woverloaded-virtual is now enabled for C++-code only, this removes the useless warnings when dabbling with C-only code.