When this symbol is defined, e.g. via CFLAGS, building a program that
uses the ModemManager API will fail if the program references
deprecated symbols.
For now we just use it to keep gtk-doc-scan happy and avoid
unnecessary warnings.
Using an intermediate constant variable breaks compilation with C
compilers, as these variables cannot be used as initializers.
Instead, define a deprecated type and cast all deprecated symbols to
that type. We lose the information about what the new replacement
symbol is, but we don't break compilation.
E.g.:
test.c: In function ‘main’:
test.c:8:5: warning: ‘MMModemBandDeprecated’ is deprecated [-Wdeprecated-declarations]
printf ("band: %d\n", MM_MODEM_BAND_U2100);
^~~~~~
Those Roman numeral suffixes in MM_MODEM_BAND_EUTRAN_* were replaced
with 1, 2, 3, ..., etc. This patch adds a compatibility header,
ModemManager-compat.h, to alias the old MM_MODEM_BAND_EUTRAN_* values to
the new values.