PLplot Release 5.15.0
This is a release of the PLplot plotting package. It represents the
ongoing best efforts (roughly ~50 commits since the last release) of
the PLplot development community to improve this package, and it is
the only version of PLplot that we attempt to support. Releases in
the 5.x.y series should be available roughly two times per year.
Note that PLplot has been continuously developed since 1986 so it has
accumulated a lot of cruft since that time. Therefore, we are now
slowing removing that cruft to improve the lot of both new users and
new members of the development team. As a result virtually every
PLplot release has some backwards incompatibilities introduced to help
clean it up so please pay careful attention to the OFFICIAL NOTICES
FOR USERS below (and also in the various sections of
README.cumulated_release if you need backward incompatibility
information for several recent releases) where we document such
incompatibilities to make life easier for those who have prior
experience with older PLplot releases.
If you encounter a problem with this release that is not already
documented on our bug tracker, then please send bug reports to PLplot
developers via our mailing lists (preferred for initial discussion of
issues) at . If it turns out
no quick resolution is possible via mailing-list discussion, then the
issue should be placed on our bug tracker at
.
This software is primarily distributed under the LGPL. See the
Copyright file for all licensing details.
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CONTENTS
1. OFFICIAL NOTICES FOR USERS
1.1 CMake version compatibility
1.2 Remove typedefs for PL_NC_GENERIC_POINTER and PL_GENERIC_POINTER
1.3 Fix typedef for PLINT_NC_VECTOR
2. Improvements relative to the previous release
2.1 Bug fixes
2.2 Update PLplot to be consistent with modern free software
2.3 Rewrite the configuration of the INSTALL_RPATH target property
2.4 Rewrite the rpath configuration of traditionally built examples
2.5 Factor the PLplot export files
2.6 Introduce symbolic constants in our color-map routines
2.7 New implementation of the range checks for the validity of cmap0 and cmap1 user input
2.8 New implementation of the -bg command-line option
2.9 Implement ctest for the build system of the installed examples
3. PLplot testing
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1. OFFICIAL NOTICES FOR USERS
1.1 CMake version compatibility
Our build system is implemented using CMake. The minimum version of
CMake we currently allow is 3.13.2 on all platforms, and currently the
latest version of CMake that has been officially released is 3.14.4.
Note, that as of the time of this release we have the following
free distribution packaging support for modern CMake versions:
* Cygwin: 3.13.1 from
* MinGW-w64/MSYS2: 3.14.4 from
* Fink: 3.11.0 from
* MacPorts: 3.14.4 from
* Homebrew: 3.14.4 from
* Debian Testing: 3.13.4 (from where Testing = Buster is likely to become the official Debian Stable release of Debian in mid-2019, i.e., soon, see ).
* Other modern Linux distributions: likely 3.13.4 or greater since they typically package later versions of CMake than are available for Debian Stable.
It appears from the above table that binary packages for CMake for our
minimum allowed version (3.13.2) or later should be available soon or
immediately on most modern free software distributions. However,
PLplot users of distributions that do not package 3.13.2 or later
(e.g., Cygwin and Fink) will need to build CMake 3.13.2 or later for
themselves before they build PLplot-5.15.0
This particular PLplot release has been comprehensively tested for
CMake-3.13.2 through 3.14.4 on a variety of platforms (see
for details
of recent tests on all platforms).
Therefore, if the CMake version is within this range there is an
excellent chance that our build system will "just work" on all
platforms. Furthermore, if later on you try CMake versions greater
than the latest version of CMake that is available at the time of this
PLplot release (3.14.4), our build system will likely continue to work
well because CMake has an excellent reputation for preserving
backwards compatibility.
1.2 Remove typedefs for PL_NC_GENERIC_POINTER and PL_GENERIC_POINTER
typedef PLPointer PL_NC_GENERIC_POINTER;
typedef PLPointer PL_GENERIC_POINTER;
were introduced as of 5.12.0 as the start of a plan that was almost
immediately abandoned. So these typedefs were officially deprecated
in 5.13.0, and they are now being dropped as of this release.
This cruft-removal causes a backwards-incompatible change to our C API
that is of no concern for users who do not use PL_NC_GENERIC_POINTER
and PL_GENERIC_POINTER in their code. However, for the remaining
users the solution must be to replace PL_NC_GENERIC_POINTER and
PL_GENERIC_POINTER by PLPointer everywhere in their code.
1.3 Fix typedef for PLINT_NC_VECTOR
This typedef (first defined as of 5.12.0) has been changed from
-typedef int * PLINT_NC_VECTOR;
+typedef PLINT * PLINT_NC_VECTOR;
to fix an inconsistency that was incorrectly and inadvertently created
for 5.12.0 between this typedef and all other PLINT* typedefs.
For systems that provide the stdint.h header the PLINT typedef is
typedef int32_t PLINT;
but for those systems that do not provide that header, this typedef is
typedef int PLINT;
Therefore the above change to the typedef for PLINT_NC_VECTOR is
backwards-incompatible (requiring recompilation of user code but no
changes to that code to fix the problem) for users with systems that
(a) provide the stdint.h header, and (b) define int differently than
int32_t for those systems.
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2. Improvements relative to the previous release
2.1 Bug fixes
The bug fixes in this release are noted in the ~50 commit messages
collected in ChangeLog.release.
Commit plplot-5.14.0-8-gdb9d90d0b should be of particular note since
it finally makes results achieved with our qt device driver linked to
Qt5 similar to the high quality of results achieved with that same
device driver when it is linked to Qt4.
2.2 Update PLplot to be consistent with modern free software
This ongoing project is implemented by making sure PLplot passes all
[comprehensive
tests](:
"The set of directories specified by a given DT_RUNPATH entry is
used to find only the immediate dependencies of the executable or
shared object containing the DT_RUNPATH entry. That is, it is used
only for those dependencies contained in the DT_NEEDED entries of
the dynamic structure containing the DT_RUNPATH entry, itself. One
object's DT_RUNPATH entry does not affect the search for any other
object's dependencies."
As a result PLplot's use of the new libLASi release (which necessarily
had to be built locally and with a non-standard install prefix) failed
for our traditional build.
To address this issue I (AWI) have completely rewritten our rpath
configuration logic for the INSTALL_RPATH property of installed
targets to (i) be consistent with the above additional DT_RUNPATH
constraint, and (ii) have that configuration done in a standardized
way for all our installed targets (executables, dll's (modules)
generated by swig, ordinary dll's, shared libraries and static
libraries). The result of this work is a substantial reduction in the
number of lines of CMake logic in our build system (since virtually
all of the INSTALL_RPATH logic is now taken care of in the new
process_rpath function).
Note that this new logic always uses the transitive INSTALL_RPATH
method for the static build case and by default uses non-transitive
INSTALL_RPATH method for the shared library case (regardless of
whether the device drivers are dynamic or nondynamic). And that
default for the shared library case works well for Debian Testing.
But if there are still some Unix platforms out there that only work
for the transitive INSTALL_RPATH method for the shared library case,
the user can choose that method by setting the
-DNON_TRANSITIVE_RPATH=OFF cmake option. And as always if the user
(typically a binary package maintainer) specifies -DUSE_RPATH=OFF, the
INSTALL_RPATH target property (transitive or otherwise) will not be
set at all for installed targets with the result that DT_RPATH (old
Unix systems) and DT_RUNPATH (modern Unix systems) will not be set for
those targets.
N.B. in the rewritten INSTALL_RPATH logic the simplifying assumption
is made that in both the non-transitive and transitive rpath cases,
that all non-system library locations must be mentioned in the derived
DT_RPATH or DT_RUNPATH. Of course, this assumption is only necessary
if the relevant libraries are shared so the result in the case where
the relevant library (whether external or internal) is static is the
non-standard location of that library is unnecessarily listed in the
resulting DT_RPATH or DT_RUNPATH. So the result is the run-time
loader has to check a bit more before deciding that location
information is irrelevant so it adds slightly to start-up latency.
However, implementing a check whether external and internal libraries
are shared or not would so complicate our build system code and
therefore make it more fragile that I have decided to stick with using
this simplifying assumption.
2.4 Rewrite the rpath configuration of traditionally built examples
In this case, "traditionally built" refers to the traditional (GNU
make + pkg-config) build of the installed examples (including the
ocaml examples) AND the CMake-based builds of the ocaml examples in
the core build tree and the build tree for the installed examples.
(OCaml is a special case because there is no CMake official support
for this language so even for the CMake-based build of ocaml examples,
low-level CMake add_custom_command/target pairs must be used that are
very similar to the traditional build of the installed ocaml examples.
This change updated the somewhat sloppy transitive rpath method that
was used before for traditionally built examples to the rigorous
method I have implemented (see Section 2.3) recently for the case of
the INSTALL_RPATH property for installed targets. That is, for the
non-transitive rpath case the traditionally built examples only refer
to the directory location of the "PLPLOT::" libraries that the plplot
examples in question depend on, and for the transitive case append the
INSTALL_RPATH locations for just the internal libraries that are
dependencies of the examples in question. See the process_rpath
function in cmake/modules/plplot_functions.cmake for details.)
Note we use the same simplifying assumption mentioned in Section 2.3
to decide which library locations should be inserted in DT_RPATH or
DT_RUNPATH for traditionally built examples.
Note this more rigorous approach solved an ocaml rpath bug that was
exposed by the DT_RUNPATH Debian Testing platform. So as far as I
know the combination of this change and the INSTALL_RPATH changes
described in section 2.3 eliminates the last known regression against
the good test results I achieved with the old sloppy rpath method on
the Debian Jessie platform with its old-fashioned but nevertheless
working DT_RPATH capability.
In sum, recent comprehensive tests on the Debian Testing platform
support the idea that our rewritten INSTALL_RPATH configuration for
installed targets and our rewritten rpath configuration for
traditionally built executables generates working DT_RUNPATH results
for the case where either/both PLplot libraries or external libraries
are installed in non-standard locations. And presumably that good
result also holds true for generated DT_RPATH results since even quite
sloppy rpath configuration seems to have worked well in the past on
such systems (e.g., Debian Jessie). However, if there are Unix
platforms still out there where the run-time loader (operating at run
time in contrast to the linker that operates at build time) errors out
by saying it cannot find a library for the present rpath methods, the
first thing the user should try is -DUSE_RPATH=ON (if they are not
using that default already) and the second thing they should try if
this trouble occurs for the shared build case is
-DNON_TRANSITIVE_RPATH=OFF.
2.5 Factor the PLplot export files
Packagers of binary versions of PLplot used in free software
distributions such as Debian and Fedora typically split the PLplot
installation into many different package components, and users of
those distributions have the option of only installing the subset of
those packages (and their dependencies) that they need. However, the
CMake-based build system that is part of the examples package (which
contains source code for all our test examples) can currently only
build the examples if the user installs all binary components of
PLplot.
The current change is a large step toward removing that constraint.
This change factors the the two previous integrated PLplot export
files into two exported files per exported target (which can be an
installed library, module, or executable). So if packagers distribute
these factored export files in the same binary packages which contain
the actual libraries, modules, or executables which are described by
the exported targets, then *any* CMake-based build systems for
software that depends on the PLplot installation can simply
interrogate that installation (using the if(TARGET ...) command) to
see what subset of the PLplot targets have been installed and act
accordingly.
N.B. the CMake-based build system for the example source code that is
installed is a (large) example of such software. But that software
has not yet been changed as described above so packagers will have to
wait until the next release before the source code for the appropriate
subset of the examples in that package can be built properly against
the subset of binary PLplot packages that have been installed by
users.
2.6 Introduce symbolic constants in our color-map routines
These new symbolic constants (in their C/C++ form) are
// Default number of colors for cmap0 and cmap1.
#define PL_DEFAULT_NCOL0 16
#define PL_DEFAULT_NCOL1 128
// minimum and maximum PLINT RGB values.
#define MIN_PLINT_RGB 0
#define MAX_PLINT_RGB 255
// minimum and maximum PLFLT cmap1 color index values.
#define MIN_PLFLT_CMAP1 0.
#define MAX_PLFLT_CMAP1 1.
// minimum and maximum PLFLT alpha values.
#define MIN_PLFLT_ALPHA 0.
#define MAX_PLFLT_ALPHA 1.
These constants should be defined for our core C "plplot" library and
all our different supported language bindings. These symbolic
constants are used, for example, in our range checks for the validity
of cmap0 and cmap1 user input.
2.7 New implementation of the range checks for the validity of cmap0 and cmap1 user input
Instead of exiting when cmap0 or cmap1 user input is invalid, the
philosophy for the new implementation of cmap0 and cmap1 range
checking is to issue a warning message, substitute something
reasonable, and continue. In addition, for the new implementation we
attempt to catch all invalid cmap0 or cmap1 user input rather than
just a subset of such cases.
2.8 New implementation of the -bg command-line option
The -bg command-line option is used to specify the RGB and (optional)
alpha values of the background. The new implementation is much more
careful about checking for user input errors in both the RGB and alpha
values and follows the philosophy of warning and continuing with
reasonable default values when the user specifies an non-parsable or
invalid value for the RGB or alpha values of the background.
2.9 Implement ctest for the build system of the installed examples
Previously the ctest command was only configured for the CMake-based
build system of the core build of PLplot libraries and the source code
of the PLplot examples that appears in the PLplot source tree. What
is changed now is the ctest command has also been configured for the
CMake-based build system of the installed source code for the PLplot
examples using in most cases common CMake logic as for the core build
case. As a result, the ctest results in the two very different cases
cover the same tests. In addition the same (good) ctest results have
been achieved for these two different builds confirming that all is
well with the core build of PLplot libraries and examples as well as
the installed binary version of PLplot libraries and corresponding
CMake-based build system for the installed source code for the PLplot
examples that is built against those installed libraries.
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3. PLplot testing
Comprehensive tests of this release are documented in
. In addition,
developers and users who have used the evolving git master tip
development version of PLplot for their plotting needs during this
release cycle have provided additional important testing of this
release of PLplot.
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