GCC currently requires fat object files for static libraries, since the
linker would otherwise not load the .o file from the archive at all and
the linking would fail with a lot of undefined references. Clang on
Linux also needs this, but it has no equivalent flag, so enabling LTCG
for Clang on static libraries will result in linker error.
This commit does not add support for enabling it in configure. It can be
enabled on a per-project basis by doing CONFIG += ltcg or by passing
-config ltcg to qmake's command-line.
Change-Id: I52cf99f1ed9f1701e23a3b457ba3502fd28126ce
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@digia.com>
Unlike MSVC, ICC is capable of selecting each of the processor feature
levels, so let's define the right macros.
Version 9.1 is really old and not supported, so we don't need to keep
the old workaround.
The compiler has been complaining that option -GX is deprecated and will
be removed, so update it to use the same as MSVC does.
Change-Id: I4158fcf2331c1d27462bb1cb19725c7136efab4a
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@digia.com>
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
The Intel compiler does support C++11 options on the command-line.
configure.exe will correctly try to run it, but the test would fail for
incorrect reasons.
First, we need to pass the option -Qstd=c++11 to enable it.
Second, on Windows, the GCC experimental define isn't defined, nor is
__cplusplus updated yet. So we have to rely on the Intel-specific macro.
Third, we need CONFIG += console so that the application succeeds in
linking against a main() function, as opposed to a WinMain one.
Change-Id: I8f3252189df4f8854a9d9aa2cd919c288d2df420
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@digia.com>
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Since there was no extension specified for static libraries then it
would end up not being able to build Qt at all.
Change-Id: Iec9040640ba399544b86df27e370fcf23cabb4de
Reviewed-by: Joerg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@digia.com>
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@digia.com>
Instead of checking for dynamicgl in QT_CONFIG, which is apparently
not possible, revert them and do it in opengl.prf instead.
Dynamic GL is Windows-only for the time being so this should be sufficient.
Change-Id: If293ea4c9b024df52257086c8b6250602a44724d
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@digia.com>
Reviewed-by: Laszlo Agocs <laszlo.agocs@digia.com>
The patch introduces a new build configuration on Windows which
can be requested by passing -opengl dynamic to configure.
Platforms other than Windows (including WinRT) are not affected.
The existing Angle and desktop configurations are not affected.
These continue to function as before and Angle remains the default.
In the future, when all modules have added support for the dynamic
path, as described below, the default configuration could be changed
to be the dynamic one. This would allow providing a single set of
binaries in the official builds instead of the current two.
When requesting dynamic GL, Angle is built but QT_OPENGL_ES[_2] are
never defined. Instead, the code path that has traditionally been
desktop GL only becomes the dynamic path that has to do runtime
checks. Qt modules and applications are not linked to opengl32.dll or
libegl/glesv2.dll in this case. Instead, QtGui exports all necessary
egl/egl/gl functions which will, under the hood, forward all requests
to a dynamically loaded EGL/WGL/GL implementation.
Porting guide (better said, changes needed to prepare your code to
work with dynamic GL builds when the fallback to Angle is utilized):
1. In !QT_OPENGL_ES[_2] code branches use QOpenGLFunctions::isES() to
differentiate between desktop and ES where needed. Keep in mind that
it is the desktop GL header (plus qopenglext.h) that is included,
not the GLES one.
QtGui's proxy will handle some differences, for example calling
glClearDepth will route to glClearDepthf when needed. The built-in
eglGetProcAddress is able to retrieve pointers for standard GLES2
functions too so code resolving OpenGL 2 functions will function
in any case.
2. QT_CONFIG will contain "opengl" and "dynamicgl" in dynamic builds,
but never "angle" or "opengles2".
3. The preprocessor define QT_OPENGL_DYNAMIC is also available in
dynamic builds. The usage of this is strongly discouraged and should
not be needed anywhere except for QtGui and the platform plugin.
4. Code in need of the library handle can use
QOpenGLFunctions::platformGLHandle().
The decision on which library to load is currently based on a simple
test that creates a dummy window/context and tries to resolve an
OpenGL 2 function. If this fails, it goes for Angle. This seems to work
well on Win7 PCs for example that do not have proper graphics drivers
providing OpenGL installed but are D3D9 capable using the default drivers.
Setting QT_OPENGL to desktop or angle skips the test and forces
usage of the given GL. There are also two new application attributes
that could be used for the same purpose.
If Angle is requested but the libraries are not present, desktop is
tried. If desktop is requested, or if angle is requested but nothing
works, the EGL/WGL functions will still be callable but will return 0.
This conveniently means that eglInitialize() and such will report a failure.
Debug messages can be enabled by setting QT_OPENGLPROXY_DEBUG. This will
tell which implementation is chosen.
The textures example application is ported to OpenGL 2, the GL 1
code path is removed.
[ChangeLog][QtGui] Qt builds on Windows can now be configured for
dynamic loading of the OpenGL implementation. This can be requested
by passing -opengl dynamic to configure. In this mode no modules will
link to opengl32.dll or Angle's libegl/libglesv2. Instead, QtGui will
dynamically choose between desktop and Angle during the first GL/EGL/WGL
call. This allows deploying applications with a single set of Qt libraries
with the ability of transparently falling back to Angle in case the
opengl32.dll is not suitable, due to missing graphics drivers for example.
Task-number: QTBUG-36483
Change-Id: I716fdebbf60b355b7d9ef57d1e069eef366b4ab9
Reviewed-by: Friedemann Kleint <Friedemann.Kleint@digia.com>
Reviewed-by: Jørgen Lind <jorgen.lind@digia.com>
Replace all tabs with proper space characters and consistently align
the '=' characters. The default alignment for the '=' of 25 characters
has been left as is to get a minimal diff. Lines with the '=' further
to the right and those belonging to 'proper code (TM)' have not been
touched.
The work was mostly done using the following python script (might
come in handy again...):
import sys, re
indent_eq = 25 + 0*4 # 25 characters was the most widely used indentation for the '=' character
p = re.compile(r'(\w+)[ \t]*([\-\+]?)(=$|= )[ \t]*(.*$)')
for fn in sys.argv[1:]:
with open(fn, 'r+') as f:
lines = []
nl_count = 0
continuity_indent = None
for l in f:
m = p.match(l)
nl = l
if m:
n_spaces = max(m.start(3), indent_eq - 1) - len(m.group(2)) - len(m.group(1))
if m.group(2) and m.start(2) >= indent_eq-1 and m.start(2) % 4 == 0:
n_spaces -= 1 # left-shift '+=' by one if the '+' is aligned to a multiple of 4
n_spaces = max(1, n_spaces) # we want at least one space before '='/'+='
nl = m.group(1) + ' '*n_spaces + ''.join(m.group(2,3,4)) + '\n'
continuity_indent = nl.find('= ') + 2 if l[-2] == '\\' else None # remember indent on '\\$'
elif continuity_indent:
nl = ' '*continuity_indent + l.lstrip()
if l[-2] != '\\': # check when to stop the continuation
continuity_indent = None
elif l.startswith('#'):
nl = l.expandtabs(2)
if l != nl:
nl_count += 1
lines.append(nl)
if nl_count > 0:
print fn, nl_count, len(lines)
f.seek(0)
f.writelines(lines)
f.truncate()
Change-Id: I1d2870d0a2fe2e30d398c140fe523e69dd20c81b
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@digia.com>
Remove all trailing whitespace from the following list of files:
*.cpp *.h *.conf *.qdoc *.pro *.pri *.mm *.rc *.pl *.qps *.xpm *.txt *README
excluding 3rdparty, test-data and auto generated code.
Note A): the only non 3rdparty c++-files that still
have trailing whitespace after this change are:
* src/corelib/codecs/cp949codetbl_p.h
* src/corelib/codecs/qjpunicode.cpp
* src/corelib/codecs/qbig5codec.cpp
* src/corelib/xml/qxmlstream_p.h
* src/tools/qdoc/qmlparser/qqmljsgrammar.cpp
* src/tools/uic/ui4.cpp
* tests/auto/other/qtokenautomaton/tokenizers/*
* tests/benchmarks/corelib/tools/qstring/data.cpp
* util/lexgen/tokenizer.cpp
Note B): in about 30 files some overlapping 'leading tab' and
'TAB character in non-leading whitespace' issues have been fixed
to make the sanity bot happy. Plus some general ws-fixes here
and there as asked for during review.
Change-Id: Ia713113c34d82442d6ce4d93d8b1cf545075d11d
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@digia.com>
The printer support API has moved to printsupport module/plugins
Change-Id: I6fdc6c08e600d0f7cc8d79bef808227b54880904
Reviewed-by: Miikka Heikkinen <miikka.heikkinen@digia.com>
Reviewed-by: Oliver Wolff <oliver.wolff@digia.com>
Reviewed-by: Friedemann Kleint <Friedemann.Kleint@digia.com>
on the way to eliminate scoping based on the spec.
gcc and msvc go as such into CONFIG, the other ones get the vendor
prefixed, as most are mostly unknown and thus likely to clash with
users' flags.
Change-Id: Ie622f53d90e96dbf05ce7d8c638cd355f04fa20c
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Joerg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@digia.com>
"CONFIG += qt warn_on release link_prl" is in every single spec (though
for link_prl there is one genuine exception and two apparent omissions).
Change-Id: I72e1e315586af828eefa3b0b70998ab892ec3c1a
Reviewed-by: Joerg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@nokia.com>
there is no reason whatsoever to duplicate this so many times, and even
less reason to have specs with a deviating default.
Change-Id: Ia25836c079580adebc373697b8bd03598f79c69b
Reviewed-by: Joerg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@nokia.com>
not strictly necessary, but nicer.
QMAKE_PLATFORM (and thus CONFIG) now also contains the name of the OS, and
its family (if applicable, e.g., bsd). this also adds more feature search
paths.
Change-Id: I3ab971e6e3b2b32cae53b95e4bc67a86688bc5cb
Reviewed-by: Qt Doc Bot <qt_docbot@qt-project.org>
Reviewed-by: Joerg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@nokia.com>
this is in fact a shell-related flag, which determines how QMAKE_DIR_COPY
is assumed to behave.
Change-Id: If774f8a83b40c9ae7107c8e7ef7263af8a2e6c6e
Reviewed-by: Joerg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@nokia.com>
there are only two types. everything else is duplication.
Change-Id: I87f2bdd3d56b94bb2ecdb60e8861afeb9af3666f
Reviewed-by: Joerg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@nokia.com>
they are equivalent to QT_INSTALL_(HEADERS|LIBS)/get.
Change-Id: Ic4b47f3ca7db55785b96f19020a2fa020a8d25bd
Reviewed-by: Joerg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@nokia.com>
Follow-up to d13bedb9d8
where the regexp was a bit too tight and missed many specs.
Also cleaned up QMAKE_IDC, QMAKE_RCC and QMAKE_IDL.
Change-Id: Ia15007141739019ef5ccfdda0c856c478f732b85
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@nokia.com>
This is the beginning of revision history for this module. If you
want to look at revision history older than this, please refer to the
Qt Git wiki for how to use Git history grafting. At the time of
writing, this wiki is located here:
http://qt.gitorious.org/qt/pages/GitIntroductionWithQt
If you have already performed the grafting and you don't see any
history beyond this commit, try running "git log" with the "--follow"
argument.
Branched from the monolithic repo, Qt master branch, at commit
896db169ea224deb96c59ce8af800d019de63f12