Generate CMake config files which export Qt targets with a Qt:: prefix
(i.e. without a major version suffix in the namespace)
Change-Id: Ia07f98be6d0e24c196e3880b7469f1f0c6232c06
Reviewed-by: Alexandru Croitor <alexandru.croitor@qt.io>
This change introduces a new function called qt_find_package()
which can take an extra option called PROVIDED_TARGETS, which
associates targets with the package that defines those targets.
This is done by setting the INTERFACE_QT_PACKAGE_NAME and
INTERFACE_QT_PACKAGE_VERSION properties on the imported targets.
This information allows us to generate appropriate find_dependency()
calls in a module's Config file for third party libraries.
For example when an application links against QtCore, it should also
link against zlib and atomic libraries. In order to do that, the
library locations first have to be found by CMake. This is achieved by
embedding find_dependency(ZLIB) and find_dependency(Atomic) in
Qt5CoreDependencies.cmake which is included by Qt5CoreConfig.cmake.
The latter is picked up when an application project contains
find_package(Qt5Core), and thus all linking dependencies are resolved.
The information 'which package provides which targets' is contained
in the python json2cmake conversion script. The generated output of
the script contains qt_find_package() calls that represent that
information.
The Qt5CoreDependencies.cmake file and which which dependencies it
contains is generated at the QtPostProcess stop.
Note that for non-static Qt builds, we only need to propagate public
3rd party libraries. For static builds, we need all third party
libraries.
In order for the INTERFACE_QT_PACKAGE_NAME property to be read in any
scope, the targets on which the property is set, have to be GLOBAL.
Also for applications and other modules to find all required third
party libraries, we have to install all our custom Find modules, and
make sure they define INTERFACE IMPORTED libraries, and not just
IMPORTED libraries.
Change-Id: I694d6e32d05b96d5e241df0156fc79d0029426aa
Reviewed-by: Tobias Hunger <tobias.hunger@qt.io>
CMake will now generate config and target files for each module that
provides tools. As a result, namespaced global targets such as
Qt5::moc or Qt5::rcc can be made available.
Third party projects that require just these tools, and not the Qt
modules themselves, should specify CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH pointing to the
installed Qt location, and call find_package(Qt5CoreTools),
find_package(Qt5GuiTools), etc.
It is also possible to call
find_package(Qt5Tools REQUIRED Core Widgets) where the last option
is a list of modules whose tools should be imported.
Note that all the tools are in the Qt5::
namespace and not in the Qt5CoreTools:: or Qt5WidgetsTools::
namespace.
This commit also changes the behavior regarding when to build tools
while building Qt itself.
When cross compiling Qt (checked via CMAKE_CROSSCOMPILING) or when
-DQT_FORCE_FIND_TOOLS=TRUE is passed, tools added by add_qt_tool will
always be searched for and not built.
In this case the user has to specify the CMake variable QT_HOST_PATH
pointing to an installed host Qt location.
When not cross compiling, tools added by add_qt_tool are built from
source.
When building leaf modules (like qtsvg) that require some tool that was
built in qtbase (like moc), the module project should contain a
find_package(Qt5ToolsCore) call and specify an appropriate
CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH so that the tool package is found.
Note that because HOST_QT_TOOLS_DIRECTORY was replaced by QT_HOST_PATH,
the ensure syncqt code was changed to make it work properly with
both qtbase and qtsvg.
Here's a list of tools and their module associations:
qmake, moc, rcc, tracegen, qfloat16-tables, qlalr -> CoreTools
qvkgen -> GuiTools
uic -> WidgetTools
dbus related tools -> DBusTools
Task-number: QTBUG-74134
Change-Id: Ie67d1e2f8de46102b48eca008f0b50caf4fbe3ed
Reviewed-by: Tobias Hunger <tobias.hunger@qt.io>
It broke builds because the qconfig.h file was created in the wrong
directory.
This reverts commit 25f67fbb07.
Change-Id: Ia458ef4193a3985a9ba613d82f679b7df5ca0107
Reviewed-by: Simon Hausmann <simon.hausmann@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Liang Qi <liang.qi@qt.io>
Presumably this was a copy paste that was not intended.
Change-Id: I09e3bb12b3b3f7af75726d7a952d79814ea9c876
Reviewed-by: Simon Hausmann <simon.hausmann@qt.io>
Only has warnings for now
Next to come is the support for developer-build and enabling Werror
Change-Id: I8070dc06eb439c2a03007cce975c8147ff7e1582
Reviewed-by: Kevin Funk <kevin.funk@kdab.com>
For now create targets a la "Qt5::Core" to stay compatible with the
current Qt5 naming scheme. The name is controllable via a CMake option.
Change-Id: If43c058221949b1900c2093f39ccc9d0f38028f1
Reviewed-by: Simon Hausmann <simon.hausmann@qt.io>
Introduce a new cached variable INSTALL_CMAKE_NAMESPACE for defining the
prefix used for CMake config files (c.f. "${PREFIX}Core/${PREFIX}CoreConfig.cmake")
Also make sure to `find_dependency(...)` the required packages inside
the individual CMake config files. I.e. in Qt5WidgetsConfig.cmake,
search for Qt5Core, etc. pp..
Change-Id: Idc027925fe9d5323091c4853803ad5ce44b1afc6
Reviewed-by: Jean-Michaël Celerier <jean-michael.celerier@kdab.com>
Reviewed-by: Tobias Hunger <tobias.hunger@qt.io>
This simplifies the handling of features a bit as it removes the special
code to store two sets of features in Qt::Core.
Change-Id: I536d41cfc76a02af054e3cfbad6bda50b1e9e49a
Reviewed-by: Simon Hausmann <simon.hausmann@qt.io>
... and fix the fallout of this change. It results in more targets being
passed overall (instead of a strange mix of targets and module names),
so this is a good thing(TM).
Change-Id: I1c4326b80e2c6675356587879ec8471ef7249a50
Reviewed-by: Simon Hausmann <simon.hausmann@qt.io>