Enumerations always need to start with the same number, otherwise
Scaladoc doesn't recognize them as enumeration (no idea why).
Code blocks need to be surrounded by {{{}}}. The indentation of the
larger code block is still not correctly displayed, but I couldn't find
out why.
A TODO comment is moved out of the Scaladoc comment.
- Scala 2.8.x or 2.9.x are no longer used that often.
- Precompiled is a cross build liability as sbt (2.10.4) depends on 2.8.x/2.9.x code.
- Scripted test was modified to check 2.8 and 2.9 compilation
- Scala 2.8.x or 2.9.x are no longer used that often.
- Precompiled is a cross build liability as sbt (2.10.4) depends on 2.8.x/2.9.x code.
- Scripted test was modified to check 2.8 and 2.9 compilation
Java is a little anti-social and attempts to lazily allocate all
of system memory, even for simple operations such as printing out
the version. This causes sbt to fail to start in environments
where resources are limited (i.e. ulimit(1)). This setup is common
on shared infrastructure such as scientific computing clusters
where because of the resource limit not being specified sbt cannot
be used.
The limit is set to 512MB which ought to be ample and is in any case
the default from sbtconfig.txt. A better patch would use the limit
specified there but it isn't clear that that is worth the effort.
This allows attaching unmanaged sources on `per-ScalaVersion` basis.
Sources from `src/{main,test}/scala-<scalaBinaryVersion>` is collected
in addition to `src/{main,test}/scala` by default.
Note that the treatment of `scalaBinaryVersion` would vary depending on
`scalaVersion` pre-2.10 and 2.10 onwards.
For example:
- with `scalaVersion` `2.9.3`, the `scalaBinaryVersion` is set to `2.9.3`
thus the files in `src/{main,test}/scala-2.9.3` as well
`src/{main,test}/scala` would be available in the `sources` list.
- with `scalaVersion` `2.10.1`, the `scalaBinaryVersion` is set to `2.10`
thus the files in `src/{main,test}/scala-2.10` as well
`src/{main,test}/scala` would be available in the `sources` list.