qt5base-lts/cmake/QtToolHelpers.cmake

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# Copyright (C) 2022 The Qt Company Ltd.
# SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause
# This function is used to define a "Qt tool", such as moc, uic or rcc.
#
Generate information about user-facing applications in build dir When packaging different Qt versions for Linux distributions (or any distribution with a common bin dir), Qt tools cannot be installed to /usr/bin, because the executable names of the different Qt versions clash. To solve this conflict, our recommendation is to install Qt's tools to /usr/lib/qt6/bin and to create versioned symlinks to user-facing tools in /usr/bin. User-facing tools are tools that are supposed to be started manually by the user. They are marked in Qt's build system. Distro package maintainers can now configure with -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr -DINSTALL_BINDIR=/usr/lib/qt6/bin -DINSTALL_PUBLICBINDIR=/usr/bin and will find a file called user_facing_tool_links.txt in the build directory after the cmake run. Nothing will be installed to INSTALL_PUBLICBINDIR. Each line of user_facing_tool_links.txt consists of the installation path of a user-facing application followed by a space and the versioned link name in INSTALL_PUBLICBINDIR. Example content: /usr/lib/qt6/bin/qmake /usr/bin/qmake6 To actually create the versioned symlinks, the content of this file can be fed to ln like this: xargs ln -s < build-dir/user_facing_tool_links.txt Or the package maintainer may decide to do something completely different as suits their needs. This patch adds the USER_FACING argument to qt_internal_add_tool to mark tools as user-facing. In addition, every Qt created by qt_internal_add_app is treated as user-facing. The only tool this patch marks as user-facing in qtbase is qmake. Pick-to: 6.1 Fixes: QTBUG-89170 Change-Id: I52673b1c8d40f40f56a74203065553115e2c4de5 Reviewed-by: Kai Koehne <kai.koehne@qt.io> Reviewed-by: Shawn Rutledge <shawn.rutledge@qt.io>
2021-02-11 13:01:58 +00:00
# USER_FACING can be passed to mark the tool as a program that is supposed to be
# started directly by users.
#
# We must pass this function a target name obtained from
# qt_get_tool_target_name like this:
# qt_get_tool_target_name(target_name my_tool)
# qt_internal_add_tool(${target_name})
#
# Option Arguments:
# INSTALL_VERSIONED_LINK
# Prefix build only. On installation, create a versioned hard-link of the installed file.
# E.g. create a link of "bin/qmake6" to "bin/qmake".
#
# One-value Arguments:
# EXTRA_CMAKE_FILES
# List of additional CMake files that will be installed alongside the tool's exported CMake
# files.
# EXTRA_CMAKE_INCLUDES
# List of files that will be included in the Qt6${module}Tools.cmake file.
# Also see TOOLS_TARGET.
# INSTALL_DIR
# Takes a path, relative to the install prefix, like INSTALL_LIBEXECDIR.
# If this argument is omitted, the default is INSTALL_BINDIR.
# TOOLS_TARGET
# Specifies the module this tool belongs to. The module's Qt6${module}Tools.cmake file
# will then contain targets for this tool.
# CORE_LIBRARY
# The argument accepts 'Bootstrap' or 'None' values. If the argument value is set to
# 'Bootstrap' the Qt::Bootstrap library is linked to the executable instead of Qt::Core.
# The 'None' value points that core library is not necessary and avoids linking neither
# Qt::Core or Qt::Bootstrap libraries. Otherwise the Qt::Core library will be publicly
# linked to the executable target by default.
function(qt_internal_add_tool target_name)
qt_tool_target_to_name(name ${target_name})
set(option_keywords
NO_INSTALL
USER_FACING
INSTALL_VERSIONED_LINK
EXCEPTIONS
NO_UNITY_BUILD)
set(one_value_keywords
TOOLS_TARGET
INSTALL_DIR
CORE_LIBRARY
${__default_target_info_args})
set(multi_value_keywords
EXTRA_CMAKE_FILES
EXTRA_CMAKE_INCLUDES
PUBLIC_LIBRARIES
${__default_private_args})
cmake_parse_arguments(PARSE_ARGV 1 arg
"${option_keywords}"
"${one_value_keywords}"
"${multi_value_keywords}")
_qt_internal_validate_all_args_are_parsed(arg)
qt_internal_find_tool(will_build_tools ${target_name} "${arg_TOOLS_TARGET}")
if(NOT will_build_tools)
return()
endif()
set(disable_autogen_tools "${arg_DISABLE_AUTOGEN_TOOLS}")
set(corelib "")
if(arg_CORE_LIBRARY STREQUAL "Bootstrap" OR arg_CORE_LIBRARY STREQUAL "None")
set(corelib CORE_LIBRARY ${arg_CORE_LIBRARY})
list(APPEND disable_autogen_tools "uic" "moc" "rcc")
endif()
set(exceptions "")
if(arg_EXCEPTIONS)
set(exceptions EXCEPTIONS)
endif()
set(install_dir "${INSTALL_BINDIR}")
if(arg_INSTALL_DIR)
set(install_dir "${arg_INSTALL_DIR}")
endif()
set(output_dir "${QT_BUILD_DIR}/${install_dir}")
if(arg_PUBLIC_LIBRARIES)
message(WARNING
"qt_internal_add_tool's PUBLIC_LIBRARIES option is deprecated, and will be "
"removed in a future Qt version. Use the LIBRARIES option instead.")
endif()
qt_internal_library_deprecation_level(deprecation_define)
if(arg_NO_UNITY_BUILD)
set(arg_NO_UNITY_BUILD "NO_UNITY_BUILD")
else()
set(arg_NO_UNITY_BUILD "")
endif()
qt_internal_add_executable("${target_name}"
OUTPUT_DIRECTORY "${output_dir}"
${exceptions}
NO_INSTALL
${arg_NO_UNITY_BUILD}
SOURCES ${arg_SOURCES}
NO_UNITY_BUILD_SOURCES ${arg_NO_UNITY_BUILD_SOURCES}
INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES
${arg_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES}
DEFINES
QT_USE_QSTRINGBUILDER
${arg_DEFINES}
${deprecation_define}
${corelib}
LIBRARIES
${arg_LIBRARIES}
${arg_PUBLIC_LIBRARIES}
Qt::PlatformToolInternal
COMPILE_OPTIONS ${arg_COMPILE_OPTIONS}
LINK_OPTIONS ${arg_LINK_OPTIONS}
MOC_OPTIONS ${arg_MOC_OPTIONS}
DISABLE_AUTOGEN_TOOLS ${disable_autogen_tools}
TARGET_VERSION ${arg_TARGET_VERSION}
TARGET_PRODUCT ${arg_TARGET_PRODUCT}
TARGET_DESCRIPTION ${arg_TARGET_DESCRIPTION}
TARGET_COMPANY ${arg_TARGET_COMPANY}
TARGET_COPYRIGHT ${arg_TARGET_COPYRIGHT}
# If you are putting anything after these, make sure that
# qt_set_target_info_properties knows how to process them
)
qt_internal_add_target_aliases("${target_name}")
_qt_internal_apply_strict_cpp("${target_name}")
qt_internal_adjust_main_config_runtime_output_dir("${target_name}" "${output_dir}")
if (WIN32)
_qt_internal_generate_longpath_win32_rc_file_and_manifest("${target_name}")
endif()
CMake: Record used package version for each target dependency When recording which package version to look for in QtFooModuleDependencies.cmake and other files like it, instead of using PROJECT_VERSION, use the version of the package that contains the dependency. For example if we're hypothetically building the qtdeclarative repo from the 6.4 branch, against an installed 6.2 qtbase, then the Qt6QmlModuleDependencies.cmake file will have a find_package(Qt6Core 6.2) call because qtdeclarative's find_package(Qt6Core) call found a 6.2 Core when it was configured. This allows switching the versioning scheme of specific Qt modules that might not want to follow the general Qt versioning scheme. The first candidate would be QtWebEngine which might want to follow the Chromium versioning scheme, something like Qt 6.94.0 where 94 is the Chromium major version. Implementation notes. We now record the package version of a target in a property called _qt_package_version. We do it for qt modules, plugins, 3rd party libraries, tools and the Platform target. When we try to look up which version to write into the QtFooModuleDependencies.cmake file (or the equivalent Plugins and Tools file), we try to find the version from a few sources: the property mentioned above, then the Qt6{target}_VERSION variable, and finally PROJECT_VERSION. In the latter case, we issue a warning because technically that should never have to happen, and it's a bug or an unforeseen case if it does. A few more places also need adjustments: - package versions to look for when configuring standalone tests and generating standalone tests Config files - handling of tools packages - The main Qt6 package lookup in each Dependencies.cmake files Note that there are some requirements and consequences in case a module wants to use a different versioning scheme like 6.94.0. Requirements. - The root CMakeLists.txt file needs to call find_package with a version different from the usual PROJECT_VERSION. Ideally it should look for a few different Qt versions which are known to be compatible, for example the last stable and LTS versions, or just the lowest supported Qt version, e.g. 6.2.6 or whenever this change would land in the 6.2 branch. - If the repository has multiple modules, some of which need to follow the Qt versioning scheme and some not, project(VERSION x.y.z) calls need to be carefully placed in subdirectory scopes with appropriate version numbers, so that qt_internal_add_module / _tool / _plugin pick up the correct version. Consequences. - The .so / .dylib names will contain the new version, e.g. .so.6.94 - Linux ELF symbols will contain the new versions - syncqt private headers will now exist under a include/QtFoo/6.94.0/QtFoo/private folder - pri and prl files will also contain the new version numbers - pkg-config .pc files contain the new version numbers - It won't be possible to write find_package(Qt6 6.94 COMPONENTS WebEngineWidgets) in user code. One would have to write find_package(Qt6WebEngineWidgets 6.94) otherwise CMake will try to look for Qt6Config 6.94 which won't exist. - Similarly, a find_package(Qt6 6.4 COMPONENTS Widgets WebEngineWidgets) call would always find any kind of WebEngine package that is higher than 6.4, which might be 6.94, 6.95, etc. - In the future, if we fix Qt6Config to pass EXACT to its subcomponent find_package calls, a find_package(Qt6 6.5.0 EXACT COMPONENTS Widgets WebEngineWidgets) would fail to find WebEngineWidgets, because its 6.94.0 version will not be equal to 6.5.0. Currently we don't pass through EXACT, so it's not an issue. Augments 5ffc744b791a114a3180a425dd26e298f7399955 Task-number: QTBUG-103500 Change-Id: I8bdb56bfcbc7f7f6484d1e56651ffc993fd30bab Reviewed-by: Michal Klocek <michal.klocek@qt.io> Reviewed-by: Alexey Edelev <alexey.edelev@qt.io> Reviewed-by: Jörg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@qt.io>
2022-05-17 06:44:43 +00:00
set_target_properties(${target_name} PROPERTIES
_qt_package_version "${PROJECT_VERSION}"
)
set_property(TARGET ${target_name}
APPEND PROPERTY
EXPORT_PROPERTIES "_qt_package_version")
if(CMAKE_VERSION VERSION_GREATER_EQUAL "3.19.0" AND QT_FEATURE_debug_and_release)
set_property(TARGET "${target_name}"
PROPERTY EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL "$<NOT:$<CONFIG:${QT_MULTI_CONFIG_FIRST_CONFIG}>>")
endif()
if (NOT target_name STREQUAL name)
set_target_properties(${target_name} PROPERTIES
OUTPUT_NAME ${name}
EXPORT_NAME ${name}
)
endif()
if(TARGET host_tools)
add_dependencies(host_tools "${target_name}")
if(arg_CORE_LIBRARY STREQUAL "Bootstrap")
add_dependencies(bootstrap_tools "${target_name}")
endif()
endif()
if(arg_EXTRA_CMAKE_FILES)
set_target_properties(${target_name} PROPERTIES
EXTRA_CMAKE_FILES "${arg_EXTRA_CMAKE_FILES}"
)
endif()
if(arg_EXTRA_CMAKE_INCLUDES)
set_target_properties(${target_name} PROPERTIES
EXTRA_CMAKE_INCLUDES "${arg_EXTRA_CMAKE_INCLUDES}"
)
endif()
Generate information about user-facing applications in build dir When packaging different Qt versions for Linux distributions (or any distribution with a common bin dir), Qt tools cannot be installed to /usr/bin, because the executable names of the different Qt versions clash. To solve this conflict, our recommendation is to install Qt's tools to /usr/lib/qt6/bin and to create versioned symlinks to user-facing tools in /usr/bin. User-facing tools are tools that are supposed to be started manually by the user. They are marked in Qt's build system. Distro package maintainers can now configure with -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr -DINSTALL_BINDIR=/usr/lib/qt6/bin -DINSTALL_PUBLICBINDIR=/usr/bin and will find a file called user_facing_tool_links.txt in the build directory after the cmake run. Nothing will be installed to INSTALL_PUBLICBINDIR. Each line of user_facing_tool_links.txt consists of the installation path of a user-facing application followed by a space and the versioned link name in INSTALL_PUBLICBINDIR. Example content: /usr/lib/qt6/bin/qmake /usr/bin/qmake6 To actually create the versioned symlinks, the content of this file can be fed to ln like this: xargs ln -s < build-dir/user_facing_tool_links.txt Or the package maintainer may decide to do something completely different as suits their needs. This patch adds the USER_FACING argument to qt_internal_add_tool to mark tools as user-facing. In addition, every Qt created by qt_internal_add_app is treated as user-facing. The only tool this patch marks as user-facing in qtbase is qmake. Pick-to: 6.1 Fixes: QTBUG-89170 Change-Id: I52673b1c8d40f40f56a74203065553115e2c4de5 Reviewed-by: Kai Koehne <kai.koehne@qt.io> Reviewed-by: Shawn Rutledge <shawn.rutledge@qt.io>
2021-02-11 13:01:58 +00:00
if(arg_USER_FACING)
set_property(GLOBAL APPEND PROPERTY QT_USER_FACING_TOOL_TARGETS ${target_name})
endif()
if(NOT arg_NO_INSTALL AND arg_TOOLS_TARGET)
# Assign a tool to an export set, and mark the module to which the tool belongs.
qt_internal_append_known_modules_with_tools("${arg_TOOLS_TARGET}")
# Also append the tool to the module list.
qt_internal_append_known_module_tool("${arg_TOOLS_TARGET}" "${target_name}")
qt_get_cmake_configurations(cmake_configs)
set(install_initial_call_args
EXPORT "${INSTALL_CMAKE_NAMESPACE}${arg_TOOLS_TARGET}ToolsTargets")
foreach(cmake_config ${cmake_configs})
qt_get_install_target_default_args(
OUT_VAR install_targets_default_args
RUNTIME "${install_dir}"
CMAKE_CONFIG "${cmake_config}"
ALL_CMAKE_CONFIGS "${cmake_configs}")
# Make installation optional for targets that are not built by default in this config
if(QT_FEATURE_debug_and_release
AND NOT (cmake_config STREQUAL QT_MULTI_CONFIG_FIRST_CONFIG))
set(install_optional_arg OPTIONAL)
else()
unset(install_optional_arg)
endif()
qt_install(TARGETS "${target_name}"
${install_initial_call_args}
${install_optional_arg}
CONFIGURATIONS ${cmake_config}
${install_targets_default_args})
unset(install_initial_call_args)
endforeach()
if(arg_INSTALL_VERSIONED_LINK)
qt_internal_install_versioned_link(WORKING_DIRECTORY "${install_dir}"
TARGETS "${target_name}")
endif()
qt_apply_rpaths(TARGET "${target_name}" INSTALL_PATH "${install_dir}" RELATIVE_RPATH)
CMake: Work around build rpath issue when CMAKE_STAGING_PREFIX is set CMake has logic to rewrite build rpaths that contain CMAKE_STAGING_PREFIX to instead point to CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX. This breaks running executables from the build directory, because their build rpath will point to a location where the libraries might not exist yet (we didn't install Qt yet). Work around this by setting CMAKE_STAGING_PREFIX to a fake path, so that CMake does not do the rewriting anymore. CMAKE_STAGING_PREFIX needs to be set at subdirectory scope, not function scope, which is why qt_internal_apply_staging_prefix_build_rpath_workaround() is a macro that is called from within each Qt internal function that creates a target. The workaround can be disabled by configuring with -DQT_NO_STAGING_PREFIX_BUILD_RPATH_WORKAROUND=ON The downside of this workaround is that it breaks per-subdirectory install rules like 'ninja src/gui/install'. Regular global installation like 'ninja install' works fine. This is similar to what we do for tests in qt_set_up_fake_standalone_tests_install_prefix() introduced by 20292250d44e08437306096e9096fc655cc9fb8b The reason it's not as good for other target types is because in contrast to tests, we do want to install them. In case if someone does call `ninja src/gui/install' they will most likely get a permission error, telling them it's not possible to install into /qt_fake_staging_prefix/ check_qt_internal_apply_staging_prefix_build_rpath_workaround Fixes: QTBUG-102592 Change-Id: I6ce78dde1924a8d830ef5c62808ff674c9639d65 Reviewed-by: Jörg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@qt.io>
2022-04-14 16:04:41 +00:00
qt_internal_apply_staging_prefix_build_rpath_workaround()
endif()
qt_enable_separate_debug_info(${target_name} "${install_dir}" QT_EXECUTABLE)
qt_internal_install_pdb_files(${target_name} "${install_dir}")
endfunction()
function(qt_export_tools module_name)
# Bail out when not building tools.
if(NOT QT_WILL_BUILD_TOOLS)
return()
endif()
# If no tools were defined belonging to this module, don't create a config and targets file.
if(NOT "${module_name}" IN_LIST QT_KNOWN_MODULES_WITH_TOOLS)
return()
endif()
# The tools target name. For example: CoreTools
set(target "${module_name}Tools")
set(path_suffix "${INSTALL_CMAKE_NAMESPACE}${target}")
qt_path_join(config_build_dir ${QT_CONFIG_BUILD_DIR} ${path_suffix})
qt_path_join(config_install_dir ${QT_CONFIG_INSTALL_DIR} ${path_suffix})
# Add the extra cmake statements to make the tool targets global, so it doesn't matter where
# find_package is called.
# Also assemble a list of tool targets to expose in the config file for informational purposes.
set(extra_cmake_statements "")
set(tool_targets "")
set(tool_targets_non_prefixed "")
# List of package dependencies that need be find_package'd when using the Tools package.
set(package_deps "")
# Additional cmake files to install
set(extra_cmake_files "")
set(extra_cmake_includes "")
CMake: Record used package version for each target dependency When recording which package version to look for in QtFooModuleDependencies.cmake and other files like it, instead of using PROJECT_VERSION, use the version of the package that contains the dependency. For example if we're hypothetically building the qtdeclarative repo from the 6.4 branch, against an installed 6.2 qtbase, then the Qt6QmlModuleDependencies.cmake file will have a find_package(Qt6Core 6.2) call because qtdeclarative's find_package(Qt6Core) call found a 6.2 Core when it was configured. This allows switching the versioning scheme of specific Qt modules that might not want to follow the general Qt versioning scheme. The first candidate would be QtWebEngine which might want to follow the Chromium versioning scheme, something like Qt 6.94.0 where 94 is the Chromium major version. Implementation notes. We now record the package version of a target in a property called _qt_package_version. We do it for qt modules, plugins, 3rd party libraries, tools and the Platform target. When we try to look up which version to write into the QtFooModuleDependencies.cmake file (or the equivalent Plugins and Tools file), we try to find the version from a few sources: the property mentioned above, then the Qt6{target}_VERSION variable, and finally PROJECT_VERSION. In the latter case, we issue a warning because technically that should never have to happen, and it's a bug or an unforeseen case if it does. A few more places also need adjustments: - package versions to look for when configuring standalone tests and generating standalone tests Config files - handling of tools packages - The main Qt6 package lookup in each Dependencies.cmake files Note that there are some requirements and consequences in case a module wants to use a different versioning scheme like 6.94.0. Requirements. - The root CMakeLists.txt file needs to call find_package with a version different from the usual PROJECT_VERSION. Ideally it should look for a few different Qt versions which are known to be compatible, for example the last stable and LTS versions, or just the lowest supported Qt version, e.g. 6.2.6 or whenever this change would land in the 6.2 branch. - If the repository has multiple modules, some of which need to follow the Qt versioning scheme and some not, project(VERSION x.y.z) calls need to be carefully placed in subdirectory scopes with appropriate version numbers, so that qt_internal_add_module / _tool / _plugin pick up the correct version. Consequences. - The .so / .dylib names will contain the new version, e.g. .so.6.94 - Linux ELF symbols will contain the new versions - syncqt private headers will now exist under a include/QtFoo/6.94.0/QtFoo/private folder - pri and prl files will also contain the new version numbers - pkg-config .pc files contain the new version numbers - It won't be possible to write find_package(Qt6 6.94 COMPONENTS WebEngineWidgets) in user code. One would have to write find_package(Qt6WebEngineWidgets 6.94) otherwise CMake will try to look for Qt6Config 6.94 which won't exist. - Similarly, a find_package(Qt6 6.4 COMPONENTS Widgets WebEngineWidgets) call would always find any kind of WebEngine package that is higher than 6.4, which might be 6.94, 6.95, etc. - In the future, if we fix Qt6Config to pass EXACT to its subcomponent find_package calls, a find_package(Qt6 6.5.0 EXACT COMPONENTS Widgets WebEngineWidgets) would fail to find WebEngineWidgets, because its 6.94.0 version will not be equal to 6.5.0. Currently we don't pass through EXACT, so it's not an issue. Augments 5ffc744b791a114a3180a425dd26e298f7399955 Task-number: QTBUG-103500 Change-Id: I8bdb56bfcbc7f7f6484d1e56651ffc993fd30bab Reviewed-by: Michal Klocek <michal.klocek@qt.io> Reviewed-by: Alexey Edelev <alexey.edelev@qt.io> Reviewed-by: Jörg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@qt.io>
2022-05-17 06:44:43 +00:00
set(first_tool_package_version "")
foreach(tool_name ${QT_KNOWN_MODULE_${module_name}_TOOLS})
# Specific tools can have package dependencies.
# e.g. qtwaylandscanner depends on WaylandScanner (non-qt package).
get_target_property(extra_packages "${tool_name}" QT_EXTRA_PACKAGE_DEPENDENCIES)
if(extra_packages)
list(APPEND package_deps "${extra_packages}")
endif()
get_target_property(_extra_cmake_files "${tool_name}" EXTRA_CMAKE_FILES)
if (_extra_cmake_files)
foreach(cmake_file ${_extra_cmake_files})
file(COPY "${cmake_file}" DESTINATION "${config_build_dir}")
list(APPEND extra_cmake_files "${cmake_file}")
endforeach()
endif()
get_target_property(_extra_cmake_includes "${tool_name}" EXTRA_CMAKE_INCLUDES)
if(_extra_cmake_includes)
list(APPEND extra_cmake_includes "${_extra_cmake_includes}")
endif()
if (QT_WILL_RENAME_TOOL_TARGETS)
string(REGEX REPLACE "_native$" "" tool_name ${tool_name})
endif()
set(extra_cmake_statements "${extra_cmake_statements}
if (NOT QT_NO_CREATE_TARGETS)
CMake: Allow promoting the Qt libraries to be global targets User projects can set the QT_PROMOTE_TO_GLOBAL_TARGETS variable to true so that the various imported targets created by find_package(Qt6) are promoted to global targets. This would allow a project to find Qt packages in a subdirectory scope while using those Qt targets from a different scope. E.g. it fixes errors like CMake Error at CMakeLists.txt:5 (target_link_libraries): Error evaluating generator expression: $<TARGET_OBJECTS:Qt6::Widgets_resources_1> Objects of target "Qt6::Widgets_resources_1" referenced but no such target exists. when trying to use a static Qt from a sibling scope. Various 3rd party dependency targets (like Atomic or ZLIB) are not made global due to limitations in CMake, but as long as those targets are not mentioned directly, it shouldn't cause issues. The targets are made global in the generated QtFooAdditionalTargetInfo.cmake file. To ensure that resource object libraries promoted, the generation of the file has to be done at the end of the defining scope where qt_internal_export_additional_targets_file is called, which is achieved with a deferred finalizer. Replaced all occurrences of target promotion with a helper function which allows tracing of all promoted targets by specifying --log-level=debug to CMake. Pick-to: 6.2 Fixes: QTBUG-92878 Change-Id: Ic4ec03b0bc383d7e591a58c520c3974fbea746d2 Reviewed-by: Alexey Edelev <alexey.edelev@qt.io> Reviewed-by: Qt CI Bot <qt_ci_bot@qt-project.org> Reviewed-by: Joerg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@qt.io>
2021-05-20 11:38:30 +00:00
__qt_internal_promote_target_to_global(${INSTALL_CMAKE_NAMESPACE}::${tool_name})
endif()
")
list(APPEND tool_targets "${QT_CMAKE_EXPORT_NAMESPACE}::${tool_name}")
list(APPEND tool_targets_non_prefixed "${tool_name}")
CMake: Record used package version for each target dependency When recording which package version to look for in QtFooModuleDependencies.cmake and other files like it, instead of using PROJECT_VERSION, use the version of the package that contains the dependency. For example if we're hypothetically building the qtdeclarative repo from the 6.4 branch, against an installed 6.2 qtbase, then the Qt6QmlModuleDependencies.cmake file will have a find_package(Qt6Core 6.2) call because qtdeclarative's find_package(Qt6Core) call found a 6.2 Core when it was configured. This allows switching the versioning scheme of specific Qt modules that might not want to follow the general Qt versioning scheme. The first candidate would be QtWebEngine which might want to follow the Chromium versioning scheme, something like Qt 6.94.0 where 94 is the Chromium major version. Implementation notes. We now record the package version of a target in a property called _qt_package_version. We do it for qt modules, plugins, 3rd party libraries, tools and the Platform target. When we try to look up which version to write into the QtFooModuleDependencies.cmake file (or the equivalent Plugins and Tools file), we try to find the version from a few sources: the property mentioned above, then the Qt6{target}_VERSION variable, and finally PROJECT_VERSION. In the latter case, we issue a warning because technically that should never have to happen, and it's a bug or an unforeseen case if it does. A few more places also need adjustments: - package versions to look for when configuring standalone tests and generating standalone tests Config files - handling of tools packages - The main Qt6 package lookup in each Dependencies.cmake files Note that there are some requirements and consequences in case a module wants to use a different versioning scheme like 6.94.0. Requirements. - The root CMakeLists.txt file needs to call find_package with a version different from the usual PROJECT_VERSION. Ideally it should look for a few different Qt versions which are known to be compatible, for example the last stable and LTS versions, or just the lowest supported Qt version, e.g. 6.2.6 or whenever this change would land in the 6.2 branch. - If the repository has multiple modules, some of which need to follow the Qt versioning scheme and some not, project(VERSION x.y.z) calls need to be carefully placed in subdirectory scopes with appropriate version numbers, so that qt_internal_add_module / _tool / _plugin pick up the correct version. Consequences. - The .so / .dylib names will contain the new version, e.g. .so.6.94 - Linux ELF symbols will contain the new versions - syncqt private headers will now exist under a include/QtFoo/6.94.0/QtFoo/private folder - pri and prl files will also contain the new version numbers - pkg-config .pc files contain the new version numbers - It won't be possible to write find_package(Qt6 6.94 COMPONENTS WebEngineWidgets) in user code. One would have to write find_package(Qt6WebEngineWidgets 6.94) otherwise CMake will try to look for Qt6Config 6.94 which won't exist. - Similarly, a find_package(Qt6 6.4 COMPONENTS Widgets WebEngineWidgets) call would always find any kind of WebEngine package that is higher than 6.4, which might be 6.94, 6.95, etc. - In the future, if we fix Qt6Config to pass EXACT to its subcomponent find_package calls, a find_package(Qt6 6.5.0 EXACT COMPONENTS Widgets WebEngineWidgets) would fail to find WebEngineWidgets, because its 6.94.0 version will not be equal to 6.5.0. Currently we don't pass through EXACT, so it's not an issue. Augments 5ffc744b791a114a3180a425dd26e298f7399955 Task-number: QTBUG-103500 Change-Id: I8bdb56bfcbc7f7f6484d1e56651ffc993fd30bab Reviewed-by: Michal Klocek <michal.klocek@qt.io> Reviewed-by: Alexey Edelev <alexey.edelev@qt.io> Reviewed-by: Jörg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@qt.io>
2022-05-17 06:44:43 +00:00
if(NOT first_tool_package_version)
qt_internal_get_package_version_of_target("${tool_name}" tool_package_version)
if(tool_package_version)
set(first_tool_package_version "${tool_package_version}")
endif()
endif()
endforeach()
string(APPEND extra_cmake_statements
"set(${QT_CMAKE_EXPORT_NAMESPACE}${module_name}Tools_TARGETS \"${tool_targets}\")")
# Extract package dependencies that were determined in QtPostProcess, but only if ${module_name}
# is an actual target.
# module_name can be a non-existent target, if the tool doesn't have an existing associated
# module, e.g. qtwaylandscanner.
if(TARGET "${module_name}")
get_target_property(module_package_deps "${module_name}" _qt_tools_package_deps)
if(module_package_deps)
list(APPEND package_deps "${module_package_deps}")
endif()
endif()
# Configure and install dependencies file for the ${module_name}Tools package.
configure_file(
"${QT_CMAKE_DIR}/QtModuleToolsDependencies.cmake.in"
"${config_build_dir}/${INSTALL_CMAKE_NAMESPACE}${target}Dependencies.cmake"
@ONLY
)
qt_install(FILES
"${config_build_dir}/${INSTALL_CMAKE_NAMESPACE}${target}Dependencies.cmake"
DESTINATION "${config_install_dir}"
COMPONENT Devel
)
if(extra_cmake_files)
qt_install(FILES
${extra_cmake_files}
DESTINATION "${config_install_dir}"
COMPONENT Devel
)
endif()
# Configure and install the ${module_name}Tools package Config file.
CMake: Enable NEW policies by CMake version with a global default When a CMake release introduces a new policy that affects most Qt modules, it may be appropriate to make each module aware of that newer CMake version and use the NEW policy without raising the minimum CMake version requirement. To reduce the churn associated with making that change across all Qt modules individually, this change allows it to be updated in a central place (qtbase), but in a way that allows a Qt module to override it in its own .cmake.conf file if required (e.g. to address the issues identified by policy warnings at a later time). The policies are modified at the start of the call to qt_build_repo_begin(). For commands defined by the qtbase module, qtbase needs to be in control of the policy settings at the point where those commands are defined. The above mechanism should not affect the policy settings for these commands, so the various *Config.cmake.in files must not specify policy ranges in a way that a Qt module's .cmake.conf file could influence. Starting with CMake 3.12, policies can be specified as a version range with the cmake_minimum_required() and cmake_policy() commands. All policies introduced in CMake versions up to the upper limit of that range will be set to NEW. The actual version of CMake being used only has to be at least the lower limit of the specified version range. This change uses cmake_minimum_required() rather than cmake_policy() due to the latter not halting further processing upon failure. See the following: https://gitlab.kitware.com/cmake/cmake/-/issues/21557 Task-number: QTBUG-88700 Pick-to: 6.0 Change-Id: I0a1f2611dd629f847a18186394f500d7f52753bc Reviewed-by: Alexandru Croitor <alexandru.croitor@qt.io>
2020-11-30 07:46:49 +00:00
qt_internal_get_min_new_policy_cmake_version(min_new_policy_version)
qt_internal_get_max_new_policy_cmake_version(max_new_policy_version)
configure_package_config_file(
"${QT_CMAKE_DIR}/QtModuleToolsConfig.cmake.in"
"${config_build_dir}/${INSTALL_CMAKE_NAMESPACE}${target}Config.cmake"
INSTALL_DESTINATION "${config_install_dir}"
)
CMake: Record used package version for each target dependency When recording which package version to look for in QtFooModuleDependencies.cmake and other files like it, instead of using PROJECT_VERSION, use the version of the package that contains the dependency. For example if we're hypothetically building the qtdeclarative repo from the 6.4 branch, against an installed 6.2 qtbase, then the Qt6QmlModuleDependencies.cmake file will have a find_package(Qt6Core 6.2) call because qtdeclarative's find_package(Qt6Core) call found a 6.2 Core when it was configured. This allows switching the versioning scheme of specific Qt modules that might not want to follow the general Qt versioning scheme. The first candidate would be QtWebEngine which might want to follow the Chromium versioning scheme, something like Qt 6.94.0 where 94 is the Chromium major version. Implementation notes. We now record the package version of a target in a property called _qt_package_version. We do it for qt modules, plugins, 3rd party libraries, tools and the Platform target. When we try to look up which version to write into the QtFooModuleDependencies.cmake file (or the equivalent Plugins and Tools file), we try to find the version from a few sources: the property mentioned above, then the Qt6{target}_VERSION variable, and finally PROJECT_VERSION. In the latter case, we issue a warning because technically that should never have to happen, and it's a bug or an unforeseen case if it does. A few more places also need adjustments: - package versions to look for when configuring standalone tests and generating standalone tests Config files - handling of tools packages - The main Qt6 package lookup in each Dependencies.cmake files Note that there are some requirements and consequences in case a module wants to use a different versioning scheme like 6.94.0. Requirements. - The root CMakeLists.txt file needs to call find_package with a version different from the usual PROJECT_VERSION. Ideally it should look for a few different Qt versions which are known to be compatible, for example the last stable and LTS versions, or just the lowest supported Qt version, e.g. 6.2.6 or whenever this change would land in the 6.2 branch. - If the repository has multiple modules, some of which need to follow the Qt versioning scheme and some not, project(VERSION x.y.z) calls need to be carefully placed in subdirectory scopes with appropriate version numbers, so that qt_internal_add_module / _tool / _plugin pick up the correct version. Consequences. - The .so / .dylib names will contain the new version, e.g. .so.6.94 - Linux ELF symbols will contain the new versions - syncqt private headers will now exist under a include/QtFoo/6.94.0/QtFoo/private folder - pri and prl files will also contain the new version numbers - pkg-config .pc files contain the new version numbers - It won't be possible to write find_package(Qt6 6.94 COMPONENTS WebEngineWidgets) in user code. One would have to write find_package(Qt6WebEngineWidgets 6.94) otherwise CMake will try to look for Qt6Config 6.94 which won't exist. - Similarly, a find_package(Qt6 6.4 COMPONENTS Widgets WebEngineWidgets) call would always find any kind of WebEngine package that is higher than 6.4, which might be 6.94, 6.95, etc. - In the future, if we fix Qt6Config to pass EXACT to its subcomponent find_package calls, a find_package(Qt6 6.5.0 EXACT COMPONENTS Widgets WebEngineWidgets) would fail to find WebEngineWidgets, because its 6.94.0 version will not be equal to 6.5.0. Currently we don't pass through EXACT, so it's not an issue. Augments 5ffc744b791a114a3180a425dd26e298f7399955 Task-number: QTBUG-103500 Change-Id: I8bdb56bfcbc7f7f6484d1e56651ffc993fd30bab Reviewed-by: Michal Klocek <michal.klocek@qt.io> Reviewed-by: Alexey Edelev <alexey.edelev@qt.io> Reviewed-by: Jörg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@qt.io>
2022-05-17 06:44:43 +00:00
# There might be Tools packages which don't have a corresponding real module_name target, like
# WaylandScannerTools.
# In that case we'll use the package version of the first tool that belongs to that package.
if(TARGET "${module_name}")
qt_internal_get_package_version_of_target("${module_name}" tools_package_version)
elseif(first_tool_package_version)
set(tools_package_version "${first_tool_package_version}")
else()
# This should never happen, because tools_package_version should always have at least some
# value. Issue an assertion message just in case the pre-condition ever changes.
set(tools_package_version "${PROJECT_VERSION}")
if(FEATURE_developer_build)
message(WARNING
"Could not determine package version of tools package ${module_name}. "
"Defaulting to project version ${PROJECT_VERSION}.")
endif()
endif()
message(TRACE
"Exporting tools package ${module_name}Tools with package version ${tools_package_version}"
"\n included targets: ${tool_targets_non_prefixed}")
write_basic_package_version_file(
CMake: Allow disabling package version check When building Qt repos, all find_package(Qt6) calls request a PROJECT_VERSION version which is set in .cmake.conf via QT_REPO_MODULE_VERSION. This means trying to configure qtsvg from a 6.3 branch using a 6.2 qtbase won't work, because qtsvg will call find_package(Qt6 6.3) and no such Qt6 package version exists. There are certain scenarios where it might be useful to try to do that though. One of them is doing Qt development while locally mixing branches. Another is building a 6.4 QtWebEngine against a 6.2 Qt. Allow to opt out of the version check by configuring each Qt repo with -DQT_NO_PACKAGE_VERSION_CHECK=TRUE. This setting is not recorded and will have to be set again when configuring another repo. The version check will also be disabled by default when configuring with the -developer-build feature. This will be recorded and embedded into each ConfigVersion file. If the version check is disabled, a warning will be shown mentioning the incompatible version of a package that was found but that package will still be accepted. The warning will show both when building Qt or using Qt in a user project. The warnings can be disabled by passing -DQT_NO_PACKAGE_VERSION_INCOMPATIBLE_WARNING=TRUE Furthermore when building a Qt repo, another warning will show when an incompatible package version is detected, to suggest to the Qt builder whether they want to use the incompatible version by disabling the version check. Note that there are no compatibility promises when using mixed non-matching versions. Things might not work. These options are only provided for convenience and their users know what they are doing. Pick-to: 6.2 Fixes: QTBUG-96458 Change-Id: I1a42e0b2a00b73513d776d89a76102ffd9136422 Reviewed-by: Craig Scott <craig.scott@qt.io>
2021-10-22 11:38:00 +00:00
"${config_build_dir}/${INSTALL_CMAKE_NAMESPACE}${target}ConfigVersionImpl.cmake"
CMake: Record used package version for each target dependency When recording which package version to look for in QtFooModuleDependencies.cmake and other files like it, instead of using PROJECT_VERSION, use the version of the package that contains the dependency. For example if we're hypothetically building the qtdeclarative repo from the 6.4 branch, against an installed 6.2 qtbase, then the Qt6QmlModuleDependencies.cmake file will have a find_package(Qt6Core 6.2) call because qtdeclarative's find_package(Qt6Core) call found a 6.2 Core when it was configured. This allows switching the versioning scheme of specific Qt modules that might not want to follow the general Qt versioning scheme. The first candidate would be QtWebEngine which might want to follow the Chromium versioning scheme, something like Qt 6.94.0 where 94 is the Chromium major version. Implementation notes. We now record the package version of a target in a property called _qt_package_version. We do it for qt modules, plugins, 3rd party libraries, tools and the Platform target. When we try to look up which version to write into the QtFooModuleDependencies.cmake file (or the equivalent Plugins and Tools file), we try to find the version from a few sources: the property mentioned above, then the Qt6{target}_VERSION variable, and finally PROJECT_VERSION. In the latter case, we issue a warning because technically that should never have to happen, and it's a bug or an unforeseen case if it does. A few more places also need adjustments: - package versions to look for when configuring standalone tests and generating standalone tests Config files - handling of tools packages - The main Qt6 package lookup in each Dependencies.cmake files Note that there are some requirements and consequences in case a module wants to use a different versioning scheme like 6.94.0. Requirements. - The root CMakeLists.txt file needs to call find_package with a version different from the usual PROJECT_VERSION. Ideally it should look for a few different Qt versions which are known to be compatible, for example the last stable and LTS versions, or just the lowest supported Qt version, e.g. 6.2.6 or whenever this change would land in the 6.2 branch. - If the repository has multiple modules, some of which need to follow the Qt versioning scheme and some not, project(VERSION x.y.z) calls need to be carefully placed in subdirectory scopes with appropriate version numbers, so that qt_internal_add_module / _tool / _plugin pick up the correct version. Consequences. - The .so / .dylib names will contain the new version, e.g. .so.6.94 - Linux ELF symbols will contain the new versions - syncqt private headers will now exist under a include/QtFoo/6.94.0/QtFoo/private folder - pri and prl files will also contain the new version numbers - pkg-config .pc files contain the new version numbers - It won't be possible to write find_package(Qt6 6.94 COMPONENTS WebEngineWidgets) in user code. One would have to write find_package(Qt6WebEngineWidgets 6.94) otherwise CMake will try to look for Qt6Config 6.94 which won't exist. - Similarly, a find_package(Qt6 6.4 COMPONENTS Widgets WebEngineWidgets) call would always find any kind of WebEngine package that is higher than 6.4, which might be 6.94, 6.95, etc. - In the future, if we fix Qt6Config to pass EXACT to its subcomponent find_package calls, a find_package(Qt6 6.5.0 EXACT COMPONENTS Widgets WebEngineWidgets) would fail to find WebEngineWidgets, because its 6.94.0 version will not be equal to 6.5.0. Currently we don't pass through EXACT, so it's not an issue. Augments 5ffc744b791a114a3180a425dd26e298f7399955 Task-number: QTBUG-103500 Change-Id: I8bdb56bfcbc7f7f6484d1e56651ffc993fd30bab Reviewed-by: Michal Klocek <michal.klocek@qt.io> Reviewed-by: Alexey Edelev <alexey.edelev@qt.io> Reviewed-by: Jörg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@qt.io>
2022-05-17 06:44:43 +00:00
VERSION "${tools_package_version}"
COMPATIBILITY AnyNewerVersion
ARCH_INDEPENDENT
)
CMake: Allow disabling package version check When building Qt repos, all find_package(Qt6) calls request a PROJECT_VERSION version which is set in .cmake.conf via QT_REPO_MODULE_VERSION. This means trying to configure qtsvg from a 6.3 branch using a 6.2 qtbase won't work, because qtsvg will call find_package(Qt6 6.3) and no such Qt6 package version exists. There are certain scenarios where it might be useful to try to do that though. One of them is doing Qt development while locally mixing branches. Another is building a 6.4 QtWebEngine against a 6.2 Qt. Allow to opt out of the version check by configuring each Qt repo with -DQT_NO_PACKAGE_VERSION_CHECK=TRUE. This setting is not recorded and will have to be set again when configuring another repo. The version check will also be disabled by default when configuring with the -developer-build feature. This will be recorded and embedded into each ConfigVersion file. If the version check is disabled, a warning will be shown mentioning the incompatible version of a package that was found but that package will still be accepted. The warning will show both when building Qt or using Qt in a user project. The warnings can be disabled by passing -DQT_NO_PACKAGE_VERSION_INCOMPATIBLE_WARNING=TRUE Furthermore when building a Qt repo, another warning will show when an incompatible package version is detected, to suggest to the Qt builder whether they want to use the incompatible version by disabling the version check. Note that there are no compatibility promises when using mixed non-matching versions. Things might not work. These options are only provided for convenience and their users know what they are doing. Pick-to: 6.2 Fixes: QTBUG-96458 Change-Id: I1a42e0b2a00b73513d776d89a76102ffd9136422 Reviewed-by: Craig Scott <craig.scott@qt.io>
2021-10-22 11:38:00 +00:00
qt_internal_write_qt_package_version_file(
"${INSTALL_CMAKE_NAMESPACE}${target}"
"${config_build_dir}/${INSTALL_CMAKE_NAMESPACE}${target}ConfigVersion.cmake"
)
qt_install(FILES
"${config_build_dir}/${INSTALL_CMAKE_NAMESPACE}${target}Config.cmake"
"${config_build_dir}/${INSTALL_CMAKE_NAMESPACE}${target}ConfigVersion.cmake"
CMake: Allow disabling package version check When building Qt repos, all find_package(Qt6) calls request a PROJECT_VERSION version which is set in .cmake.conf via QT_REPO_MODULE_VERSION. This means trying to configure qtsvg from a 6.3 branch using a 6.2 qtbase won't work, because qtsvg will call find_package(Qt6 6.3) and no such Qt6 package version exists. There are certain scenarios where it might be useful to try to do that though. One of them is doing Qt development while locally mixing branches. Another is building a 6.4 QtWebEngine against a 6.2 Qt. Allow to opt out of the version check by configuring each Qt repo with -DQT_NO_PACKAGE_VERSION_CHECK=TRUE. This setting is not recorded and will have to be set again when configuring another repo. The version check will also be disabled by default when configuring with the -developer-build feature. This will be recorded and embedded into each ConfigVersion file. If the version check is disabled, a warning will be shown mentioning the incompatible version of a package that was found but that package will still be accepted. The warning will show both when building Qt or using Qt in a user project. The warnings can be disabled by passing -DQT_NO_PACKAGE_VERSION_INCOMPATIBLE_WARNING=TRUE Furthermore when building a Qt repo, another warning will show when an incompatible package version is detected, to suggest to the Qt builder whether they want to use the incompatible version by disabling the version check. Note that there are no compatibility promises when using mixed non-matching versions. Things might not work. These options are only provided for convenience and their users know what they are doing. Pick-to: 6.2 Fixes: QTBUG-96458 Change-Id: I1a42e0b2a00b73513d776d89a76102ffd9136422 Reviewed-by: Craig Scott <craig.scott@qt.io>
2021-10-22 11:38:00 +00:00
"${config_build_dir}/${INSTALL_CMAKE_NAMESPACE}${target}ConfigVersionImpl.cmake"
DESTINATION "${config_install_dir}"
COMPONENT Devel
)
set(export_name "${INSTALL_CMAKE_NAMESPACE}${target}Targets")
qt_install(EXPORT "${export_name}"
NAMESPACE "${QT_CMAKE_EXPORT_NAMESPACE}::"
DESTINATION "${config_install_dir}")
qt_internal_export_additional_targets_file(
TARGETS ${QT_KNOWN_MODULE_${module_name}_TOOLS}
TARGET_EXPORT_NAMES ${tool_targets}
EXPORT_NAME_PREFIX ${INSTALL_CMAKE_NAMESPACE}${target}
CONFIG_INSTALL_DIR "${config_install_dir}")
# Create versionless targets file.
configure_file(
"${QT_CMAKE_DIR}/QtModuleToolsVersionlessTargets.cmake.in"
"${config_build_dir}/${INSTALL_CMAKE_NAMESPACE}${target}VersionlessTargets.cmake"
@ONLY
)
qt_install(FILES
"${config_build_dir}/${INSTALL_CMAKE_NAMESPACE}${target}VersionlessTargets.cmake"
DESTINATION "${config_install_dir}"
COMPONENT Devel
)
endfunction()
# Returns the target name for the tool with the given name.
#
# In most cases, the target name is the same as the tool name.
# If the user specifies to build tools when cross-compiling, then the
# suffix "_native" is appended.
function(qt_get_tool_target_name out_var name)
if (QT_WILL_RENAME_TOOL_TARGETS)
set(${out_var} ${name}_native PARENT_SCOPE)
else()
set(${out_var} ${name} PARENT_SCOPE)
endif()
endfunction()
# Returns the tool name for a given tool target.
# This is the inverse of qt_get_tool_target_name.
function(qt_tool_target_to_name out_var target)
set(name ${target})
if (QT_WILL_RENAME_TOOL_TARGETS)
string(REGEX REPLACE "_native$" "" name ${target})
endif()
set(${out_var} ${name} PARENT_SCOPE)
endfunction()
# Sets QT_WILL_BUILD_TOOLS if tools will be built and QT_WILL_RENAME_TOOL_TARGETS
# if those tools have replaced naming.
function(qt_check_if_tools_will_be_built)
# By default, we build our own tools unless we're cross-building.
set(need_target_rename FALSE)
if(CMAKE_CROSSCOMPILING)
set(will_build_tools FALSE)
if(QT_FORCE_BUILD_TOOLS)
set(will_build_tools TRUE)
set(need_target_rename TRUE)
endif()
else()
set(will_build_tools TRUE)
if(QT_FORCE_FIND_TOOLS)
set(will_build_tools FALSE)
if(QT_FORCE_BUILD_TOOLS)
set(will_build_tools TRUE)
set(need_target_rename TRUE)
endif()
endif()
endif()
set(QT_WILL_BUILD_TOOLS ${will_build_tools} CACHE INTERNAL "Are tools going to be built" FORCE)
set(QT_WILL_RENAME_TOOL_TARGETS ${need_target_rename} CACHE INTERNAL
"Do tool targets need to be renamed" FORCE)
endfunction()
# Use this macro to exit a file or function scope unless we're building tools. This is supposed to
# be called after qt_internal_add_tools() to avoid special-casing operations on imported targets.
macro(qt_internal_return_unless_building_tools)
if(NOT QT_WILL_BUILD_TOOLS)
return()
endif()
endmacro()
# Equivalent of qmake's qtNomakeTools(directory1 directory2).
# If QT_BUILD_TOOLS_BY_DEFAULT is true, then targets within the given directories will be excluded
# from the default 'all' target, as well as from install phase. The private variable is checked by
# qt_internal_add_executable.
function(qt_exclude_tool_directories_from_default_target)
if(NOT QT_BUILD_TOOLS_BY_DEFAULT)
set(absolute_path_directories "")
foreach(directory ${ARGV})
list(APPEND absolute_path_directories "${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}/${directory}")
endforeach()
set(__qt_exclude_tool_directories "${absolute_path_directories}" PARENT_SCOPE)
endif()
endfunction()
function(qt_internal_find_tool out_var target_name tools_target)
qt_tool_target_to_name(name ${target_name})
# Handle case when a tool does not belong to a module and it can't be built either (like
# during a cross-compile).
if(NOT tools_target AND NOT QT_WILL_BUILD_TOOLS)
message(FATAL_ERROR "The tool \"${name}\" has not been assigned to a module via"
" TOOLS_TARGET (so it can't be found) and it can't be built"
" (QT_WILL_BUILD_TOOLS is ${QT_WILL_BUILD_TOOLS}).")
endif()
if(QT_WILL_RENAME_TOOL_TARGETS AND (name STREQUAL target_name))
message(FATAL_ERROR
"qt_internal_add_tool must be passed a target obtained from qt_get_tool_target_name.")
endif()
set(full_name "${QT_CMAKE_EXPORT_NAMESPACE}::${name}")
set(imported_tool_target_already_found FALSE)
# This condition can only be TRUE if a previous find_package(Qt6${tools_target}Tools)
# was already done. That can happen if QT_FORCE_FIND_TOOLS was ON or we're cross-compiling.
# In such a case, we need to exit early if we're not going to also build the tools.
if(TARGET ${full_name})
get_property(path TARGET ${full_name} PROPERTY LOCATION)
message(STATUS "Tool '${full_name}' was found at ${path}.")
set(imported_tool_target_already_found TRUE)
if(NOT QT_WILL_BUILD_TOOLS)
set(${out_var} "FALSE" PARENT_SCOPE)
return()
endif()
endif()
# We need to search for the host Tools package when doing a cross-build
# or when QT_FORCE_FIND_TOOLS is ON.
# As an optimiziation, we don't search for the package one more time if the target
# was already brought into scope from a previous find_package.
set(search_for_host_package FALSE)
if(NOT QT_WILL_BUILD_TOOLS OR QT_WILL_RENAME_TOOL_TARGETS)
set(search_for_host_package TRUE)
endif()
if(search_for_host_package AND NOT imported_tool_target_already_found)
set(tools_package_name "${INSTALL_CMAKE_NAMESPACE}${tools_target}Tools")
message(STATUS "Searching for tool '${full_name}' in package ${tools_package_name}.")
# Create the tool targets, even if QT_NO_CREATE_TARGETS is set.
# Otherwise targets like Qt6::moc are not available in a top-level cross-build.
set(BACKUP_QT_NO_CREATE_TARGETS ${QT_NO_CREATE_TARGETS})
set(QT_NO_CREATE_TARGETS OFF)
# When cross-compiling, we want to search for Tools packages in QT_HOST_PATH.
# To do that, we override CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH and CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH.
#
# We don't use find_package + PATHS option because any recursive find_dependency call
# inside a Tools package would not inherit the initial PATHS value given.
# TODO: Potentially we could set a global __qt_cmake_host_dir var like we currently
# do with _qt_cmake_dir in Qt6Config and change all our host tool find_package calls
# everywhere to specify that var in PATHS.
#
# Note though that due to path rerooting issue in
# https://gitlab.kitware.com/cmake/cmake/-/issues/21937
# we have to append a lib/cmake suffix to CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH so the value does not get
# rerooted on top of CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH.
# Use QT_HOST_PATH_CMAKE_DIR for the suffix when available (it would be set by
# the qt.toolchain.cmake file when building other repos or given by the user when
# configuring qtbase) or derive it from from the Qt6HostInfo package which is
# found in QtSetup.
set(${tools_package_name}_BACKUP_CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH ${CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH})
set(${tools_package_name}_BACKUP_CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH "${CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH}")
if(QT_HOST_PATH_CMAKE_DIR)
set(qt_host_path_cmake_dir_absolute "${QT_HOST_PATH_CMAKE_DIR}")
elseif(Qt${PROJECT_VERSION_MAJOR}HostInfo_DIR)
get_filename_component(qt_host_path_cmake_dir_absolute
"${Qt${PROJECT_VERSION_MAJOR}HostInfo_DIR}/.." ABSOLUTE)
else()
# This should never happen, serves as an assert.
message(FATAL_ERROR
"Neither QT_HOST_PATH_CMAKE_DIR nor "
"Qt${PROJECT_VERSION_MAJOR}HostInfo_DIR available.")
endif()
set(CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH "${qt_host_path_cmake_dir_absolute}")
# Look for tools in additional host Qt installations. This is done for conan support where
# we have separate installation prefixes per package. For simplicity, we assume here that
# all host Qt installations use the same value of INSTALL_LIBDIR.
if(DEFINED QT_ADDITIONAL_HOST_PACKAGES_PREFIX_PATH)
file(RELATIVE_PATH rel_host_cmake_dir "${QT_HOST_PATH}"
"${qt_host_path_cmake_dir_absolute}")
foreach(host_path IN LISTS QT_ADDITIONAL_HOST_PACKAGES_PREFIX_PATH)
set(host_cmake_dir "${host_path}/${rel_host_cmake_dir}")
list(PREPEND CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH "${host_cmake_dir}")
endforeach()
list(PREPEND CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH "${QT_ADDITIONAL_HOST_PACKAGES_PREFIX_PATH}")
endif()
list(PREPEND CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH "${QT_HOST_PATH}")
find_package(
${tools_package_name}
${PROJECT_VERSION}
NO_PACKAGE_ROOT_PATH
NO_CMAKE_ENVIRONMENT_PATH
NO_SYSTEM_ENVIRONMENT_PATH
NO_CMAKE_PACKAGE_REGISTRY
NO_CMAKE_SYSTEM_PATH
NO_CMAKE_SYSTEM_PACKAGE_REGISTRY)
# Restore backups.
set(CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH "${${tools_package_name}_BACKUP_CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH}")
set(CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH "${${tools_package_name}_BACKUP_CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH}")
set(QT_NO_CREATE_TARGETS ${BACKUP_QT_NO_CREATE_TARGETS})
if(${${tools_package_name}_FOUND} AND TARGET ${full_name})
# Even if the tool is already visible, make sure that our modules remain associated
# with the tools.
qt_internal_append_known_modules_with_tools("${tools_target}")
get_property(path TARGET ${full_name} PROPERTY LOCATION)
message(STATUS "${full_name} was found at ${path} using package ${tools_package_name}.")
if (NOT QT_FORCE_BUILD_TOOLS)
set(${out_var} "FALSE" PARENT_SCOPE)
return()
endif()
endif()
endif()
if(NOT QT_WILL_BUILD_TOOLS)
if(${${tools_package_name}_FOUND})
set(pkg_found_msg "")
string(APPEND pkg_found_msg
"the ${tools_package_name} package, but the package did not contain the tool. "
"Make sure that the host module ${tools_target} was built with all features "
"enabled (no explicitly disabled tools).")
else()
set(pkg_found_msg "")
string(APPEND pkg_found_msg
"the ${tools_package_name} package, but the package could not be found. "
"Make sure you have built and installed the host ${tools_target} module, "
"which will ensure the creation of the ${tools_package_name} package.")
endif()
message(FATAL_ERROR
"Failed to find the host tool \"${full_name}\". It is part of "
${pkg_found_msg})
else()
message(STATUS "Tool '${full_name}' will be built from source.")
endif()
set(${out_var} "TRUE" PARENT_SCOPE)
endfunction()
# This function adds an internal tool that should be compiled at configure time.
# TOOLS_TARGET
# Specifies the module this tool belongs to. The Qt6${TOOLS_TARGET}Tools module
# will then expose targets for this tool. Ignored if NO_INSTALL is set.
function(qt_internal_add_configure_time_tool target_name)
set(one_value_args INSTALL_DIRECTORY TOOLS_TARGET CONFIG)
set(multi_value_args)
set(option_args NO_INSTALL)
cmake_parse_arguments(PARSE_ARGV 1 arg
"${option_args}" "${one_value_args}" "${multi_value_args}")
qt_internal_find_tool(will_build_tools ${target_name} "${arg_TOOLS_TARGET}")
if(NOT will_build_tools)
return()
endif()
qt_tool_target_to_name(name ${target_name})
set(extra_args "")
if(arg_NO_INSTALL OR NOT arg_TOOLS_TARGET)
list(APPEND extra_args "NO_INSTALL")
else()
set(install_dir "${INSTALL_BINDIR}")
if(arg_INSTALL_DIRECTORY)
set(install_dir "${arg_INSTALL_DIRECTORY}")
endif()
set(extra_args "INSTALL_DIRECTORY" "${install_dir}")
endif()
if(arg_CONFIG)
set(tool_config "${arg_CONFIG}")
elseif(QT_MULTI_CONFIG_FIRST_CONFIG)
set(tool_config "${arg_QT_MULTI_CONFIG_FIRST_CONFIG}")
else()
set(tool_config "${CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE}")
endif()
Replace the syncqt.pl script with syncqt tool syncqt.pl adds an extra dependency on perl when building Qt. Modern C++ provides the convenient cross-platform way to access a filesystem and to use regular expressions, so we may replace the perl script with C++ application. The syncqt executable is built at configure time and installed as QtCore tool. It's running at configure time to deliver the required header files for IDE to build a consistent code model and at the build time to keep tracking changes in header files and generate the missing aliases without reconfiguring. 'syncqt' only parses header files from a CMake build tree, so the resulting Qt installation only contains interfacing headers that belong to the platform that Qt is built for. 'sync.profile' files are not used as the 'source of truth' for sync qt procedure anymore, all the necessary information is taken from either CMake files at configure time or from the module header files while parsing them. syncqt.pl is still in place since it's required as fallback solution for a smooth transition to the new syncqt implementation for all qt repositories. This patchset only enables the C++ based syncqt for 'qtbase' repository. From the performance perspective C++ version works faster then perl script, also the configure time is reduced significally on subsequent reconfigurations - up x2 times faster when re-configuring repository, but it also takes time to compile the tool itself the first time. Numbers for qtbase: syncqt.pl syncqt.cpp initial: 0m16,035s 0m20,413s reconfig: 0m6,819s 0m3,725s The syncing procedure can be run separately for each module using <ModuleName>_sync_headers targets. The 'sync_headers' target can be used to sync all the modules at once. Task-number: QTBUG-87480 Task-number: QTBUG-103196 Change-Id: I8c938bcaf88a8713b39bbfd66d9e7ef12b2c3523 Reviewed-by: Alexandru Croitor <alexandru.croitor@qt.io>
2022-08-15 16:29:41 +00:00
string(REPLACE "\\\;" "\\\\\\\;" unparsed_arguments "${arg_UNPARSED_ARGUMENTS}")
qt_internal_add_configure_time_executable(${target_name}
OUTPUT_NAME ${name}
CONFIG ${tool_config}
${extra_args}
Replace the syncqt.pl script with syncqt tool syncqt.pl adds an extra dependency on perl when building Qt. Modern C++ provides the convenient cross-platform way to access a filesystem and to use regular expressions, so we may replace the perl script with C++ application. The syncqt executable is built at configure time and installed as QtCore tool. It's running at configure time to deliver the required header files for IDE to build a consistent code model and at the build time to keep tracking changes in header files and generate the missing aliases without reconfiguring. 'syncqt' only parses header files from a CMake build tree, so the resulting Qt installation only contains interfacing headers that belong to the platform that Qt is built for. 'sync.profile' files are not used as the 'source of truth' for sync qt procedure anymore, all the necessary information is taken from either CMake files at configure time or from the module header files while parsing them. syncqt.pl is still in place since it's required as fallback solution for a smooth transition to the new syncqt implementation for all qt repositories. This patchset only enables the C++ based syncqt for 'qtbase' repository. From the performance perspective C++ version works faster then perl script, also the configure time is reduced significally on subsequent reconfigurations - up x2 times faster when re-configuring repository, but it also takes time to compile the tool itself the first time. Numbers for qtbase: syncqt.pl syncqt.cpp initial: 0m16,035s 0m20,413s reconfig: 0m6,819s 0m3,725s The syncing procedure can be run separately for each module using <ModuleName>_sync_headers targets. The 'sync_headers' target can be used to sync all the modules at once. Task-number: QTBUG-87480 Task-number: QTBUG-103196 Change-Id: I8c938bcaf88a8713b39bbfd66d9e7ef12b2c3523 Reviewed-by: Alexandru Croitor <alexandru.croitor@qt.io>
2022-08-15 16:29:41 +00:00
${unparsed_arguments}
)
if(TARGET host_tools)
add_dependencies(host_tools "${target_name}_build")
endif()
if(NOT arg_NO_INSTALL AND arg_TOOLS_TARGET)
qt_internal_add_targets_to_additional_targets_export_file(
TARGETS ${target_name}
TARGET_EXPORT_NAMES ${QT_CMAKE_EXPORT_NAMESPACE}::${name}
EXPORT_NAME_PREFIX ${INSTALL_CMAKE_NAMESPACE}${arg_TOOLS_TARGET}Tools
)
endif()
endfunction()