9

Similar: Travis CI with Clang 3.4 and C++11

How does one get Travis CI to work with C++14?

Here is our current .travis.yml file:

language: cpp
compiler:
 - gcc
 - clang
os:
 - linux
 - osx
script:
    make main

Here is our makefile

# Factor Pro

# Macros
CXXFLAGS = -Os -std=c++14

# Rules
all::main

main: main.cpp
    g++ -o main $(CXXFLAGS) main.cpp

clean:
    rm -rf *.o main

It works on osx, but not linux.

1
  • You need to endure your C++ compiler supports C++14. Try printing "g++ -v". If necessary, add a package that's sufficient to compile your code. Jan 31, 2016 at 3:52

1 Answer 1

16

The default GCC and Clang versions are horribly outdated, and you'll need to install newer versions manually like this:

language: generic
os: osx
matrix:
  include:
    - os: linux
      env: COMPILER_NAME=gcc CXX=g++-5 CC=gcc-5
      addons:
        apt:
          packages:
            - g++-5
          sources: &sources
            - llvm-toolchain-precise-3.8
            - ubuntu-toolchain-r-test
    - os: linux
      env: COMPILER_NAME=clang CXX=clang++-3.8 CC=clang-3.8
      addons:
        apt:
          packages:
            - clang-3.8
          sources: *sources

You can install multiple versions of Clang and GCC like this.

Note: I'm using language: generic, because if language: cpp, TravisCI's horribly-outdated CC and CXX override per-cell exports and it's faster.

I also recommend you use

    $(CXX) -o main $(CXXFLAGS) main.cpp

Because the C++ compiler is almost never g++ in the real world.

1
  • 5
    @PyRulez *sources is a "backreference" to the previous &sources at line 11 -- the whole tree from under the property marked by &sources is copied under the property marked by *sources. Jan 31, 2016 at 17:35

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