commit | ff761fba8274d93bd73e76c8b8a1f2d0776dd840 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Henrik Kjellander <kjellander@webrtc.org> | Wed Nov 04 08:31:52 2015 +0100 |
committer | Henrik Kjellander <kjellander@webrtc.org> | Wed Nov 04 07:32:04 2015 +0000 |
tree | 96c265eedccf0c04a5b29c5edbeec43cf2122d18 | |
parent | 5af9a28bd6b8a6a9753a005fc2a53cfdc15e9a67 [diff] |
modules: more interface -> include renames This changes the following module directories: * webrtc/modules/audio_conference_mixer/interface * webrtc/modules/interface * webrtc/modules/media_file/interface * webrtc/modules/rtp_rtcp/interface * webrtc/modules/utility/interface To avoid breaking downstream, I followed this recipe: 1. Copy the interface dir to a new sibling directory: include 2. Update the header guards in the include directory to match the style guide. 3. Update the header guards in the interface directory to match the ones in include. This is required to avoid getting redefinitions in the not-yet-updated downstream code. 4. Add a pragma warning in the header files in the interface dir. Example: #pragma message("WARNING: webrtc/modules/interface is DEPRECATED; " "use webrtc/modules/include") 5. Search for all source references to webrtc/modules/interface and update them to webrtc/modules/include (*.c*,*.h,*.mm,*.S) 6. Update all GYP+GN files. This required manual inspection since many subdirectories of webrtc/modules referenced the interface dir using ../interface etc(*.gyp*,*.gn*) BUG=5095 TESTED=Passing compile-trybots with --clobber flag: git cl try --clobber --bot=win_compile_rel --bot=linux_compile_rel --bot=android_compile_rel --bot=mac_compile_rel --bot=ios_rel -m tryserver.webrtc R=stefan@webrtc.org, tommi@webrtc.org Review URL: https://codereview.webrtc.org/1417683006 . Cr-Commit-Position: refs/heads/master@{#10500}
WebRTC is a free, open software project that provides browsers and mobile applications with Real-Time Communications (RTC) capabilities via simple APIs. The WebRTC components have been optimized to best serve this purpose.
Our mission: To enable rich, high-quality RTC applications to be developed for the browser, mobile platforms, and IoT devices, and allow them all to communicate via a common set of protocols.
The WebRTC initiative is a project supported by Google, Mozilla and Opera, amongst others. This page is maintained by the Google Chrome team.
See http://www.webrtc.org/native-code/development for instructions on how to get started developing with the native code.