Ensure that Qt user projects build with sanitizer flags if Qt was
configured with any of the sanitizers enabled.
To compile Qt with sanitizer support enable any of Qt sanitizer
features.
Passing -DECM_ENABLE_SANITIZERS=address to CMake is NOT supported
anymore.
When configuring Qt using CMake directly, pass
-DFEATURE_sanitizer_address=ON
-DFEATURE_sanitizer_undefined=ON
instead of
-DECM_ENABLE_SANITIZERS=address;undefined
When configuring Qt with the configure script pass
-sanitize address -sanitize undefined
as usual.
QtConfig.cmake now records the sanitizer options that should be
enabled for all consuming projects based on the enabled Qt features.
This applies to internal Qt builds as well as well as tests an
examples.
The recorded sanitizer options are assigned to the ECM_ENABLE_SANITIZERS
variable in the directory scope where find_package(Qt6) is called.
The ECMEnableSanitizers module is included to add the necessary flags to
all targets in that directory scope or its children.
This behavior can be opted out by setting the
QT_NO_ADD_SANITIZER_OPTIONS variable in projects that use Qt and might
be handling sanitizer options differently.
Amends 7e03bc39b8
Pick-to: 6.2
Fixes: QTBUG-87989
Task-number: QTBUG-92083
Change-Id: I2e3371147277bdf8f55a39abaa34478dea4853a6
Reviewed-by: Robert Löhning <robert.loehning@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Fabian Kosmale <fabian.kosmale@qt.io>
The optional components arguments were not handled before which
caused the recorded package information for static builds to be
incorrect, it only recorded the package name without the component.
Remove REQUIRED_COMPONENTS TODO, there is no such find_package option,
it's already handled by the regular COMPONENTS code path.
Amends 07b6d3367d
Pick-to: 6.1 6.2
Fixes: QTBUG-94501
Change-Id: Ib48a7befcb70e20c3f21315897d51d3064b48134
Reviewed-by: Qt CI Bot <qt_ci_bot@qt-project.org>
Reviewed-by: Dominik Holland <dominik.holland@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Joerg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@qt.io>
When building Linux packages, we pass OpenGL_GL_PREFERENCE=LEGACY when
building qtbase. This is done to link against legacy OpenGL libs.
When building non-qtbase repos, we also need to set this variable to the
same value we have in qtbase.
Pick-to: 6.1
Task-number: QTBUG-89754
Fixes: QTBUG-94040
Change-Id: I567b629d245025d2b1544b91cfc265a9c921725f
Reviewed-by: Alexandru Croitor <alexandru.croitor@qt.io>
In cmake, targets are used as an entity for modules. This causes a
number of problems when we want to manipulate a module as a separate
entity with properties associated with it.
The _qt_internal_module_interface_name target property is introduced to
represent the module entity. All modules write a name to this property,
which will subsequently expand into the module name matched with
the module name in qmake.
The 'qt_internal_module_info' function is responsible for providing the
correct values for the module properties used when working with a module
target.
Unlike qmake, for internal modules in cmake it is expected that the
Private suffix will be specified explicitly. In case the user wants to
have a different module name, an additional argument
MODULE_INTERFACE_NAME of the qt_internal_add_module function is
introduced.
This also changes the way how target dependencies are collected and
resolved. Since the 'Private' suffix no longer means an unique
identifier of the module 'Private' part, we look for the both Private
and non-Private package names when resolving dependencies.
TODO: This change doesn't affect the existing internal modules, so to
keep compatibility with the existing code the existing internal modules
create 'Private' aliases. The code that provides backward compatibility
must be removed once all internal modules will get the proper names.
Taks-number: QTBUG-87775
Change-Id: Ib4f28341506fb2e73eee960a709e24c42bbcd5ec
Reviewed-by: Alexandru Croitor <alexandru.croitor@qt.io>
Needed for the upcoming static plugin mechanism, where we have to
extract the list of Qt module dependencies of a target and then extract
the plugins associated with those modules.
To do that we need to recursively collect the dependencies of a given
target.
Rename the moved functions to contain the __qt_internal prefix.
Also rename the existing QtPublicTargetsHelpers.cmake into
QtPlatformTargetHelpers.cmake to avoid confusion with the newly
introduced QtPublicTargetHelpers.cmake.
Task-number: QTBUG-92933
Change-Id: I48b5b6a8718a3424f59ca60f11fc9e97a809765d
Reviewed-by: Joerg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@qt.io>
... and configuring another repo using qt-configure-module.
It's possible to configure a top-level Qt with a subset of repos and
then afterwards configure additional repos with qt-configure-module.
We didn't define QT_REPO_DEPENDENCIES in that case, which caused all
plugin config files to be loaded on reconfiguration, thus causing
duplicate target errors.
Move the QT_SUPERBUILD check to be done every time in
QtBuildInternals.cmake rather than when configuring qtbase/qt5.
Amends 98e8180e56
Pick-to: 6.1
Fixes: QTBUG-86670
Fixes: QTBUG-91887
Fixes: QTBUG-92578
Change-Id: I975835ffa02f702799a3c9f68a5e059d2763a951
Reviewed-by: Joerg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@qt.io>
Previously, in a top-level build we always generated the final prl
file somewhere under QT_BUILD_DIR (which is qtbase_build_dir). After
each repo was processed by QtPostProcess.cmake, we installed the prl
files found in PROJECT_BINARY_DIR.
For qtquickcontrols2 this meant that qml plugin prl files were placed
under qtbase/qml, but we tried installing the prl files from
qtquickcontrols2/qml, which didn't have any prl files.
In a static Qt build, qmake's qt.prf calls qmlimportscanner to
identify which plugins should be linked to the executable. This worked
fine because the plugin .pri files were installed correctly.
None of the qml plugin library dependencies were linked in though.
This is supposed to happen in qmake's C++ code where it tries to
find the associated prl file of a linked library in order to extract
all its dependencies. Because no prl file was found, linking failed
with multiple undefined symbols.
Fix this by installing the prl files from QT_BUILD_DIR rather than
PROJECT_BINARY_DIR.
Note that this will create multiple install rules for certain files,
but it's harmless. An example is imageformats.
We process qtbase plugins, see qjpeg, issue an install rule from under
the qtbase/plugins/imageformats folder. We then process
qtimageformats plugins, see webp, issue another install rule from
under qtbase/plugins/imageformats.
The first install rule will install both qjpeg and qwebp, the second
install rule will merely say all plugins are up-to-date.
Pick-to: 6.1 6.0
Change-Id: I8a4bb67bfafc1d016eab62f4fe66b6ba378ceeb2
Fixes: QTBUG-93021
Reviewed-by: Joerg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@qt.io>
Use the same approach we use for iOS, which is to set multiple
CMAKE_OSX_ARCHITECTURES values and let the clang front end
deal with lipo-ing the final libraries.
For now, Qt can be configured to build universal macOS libraries by
passing 2 architectures to CMake, either via:
-DCMAKE_OSX_ARCHITECTURES="x86_64;arm64"
or
-DCMAKE_OSX_ARCHITECTURES="arm64;x86_64"
Currently we recommend specifying the intel x86_64 arch as the first
one, to get an intel slice configuration that is comparable to a
non-universal intel build.
Specifying the arm64 slice first could pessimize optimizations and
reduce the feature set for the intel slice due to the limitation
that we run configure tests only once.
The first specified architecture is the one used to do all the
configure tests.
It 'mostly' defines the common feature set of both architecture
slices, with the excepion of some special handling for sse2 and
neon instructions.
In the future we might want to run at least the Qt architecture config
test for all specified architectures, so that we can extract all the
supported sub-arches and instruction sets in a reliable way.
For now, we use the same sse2 hack as for iOS simulator_and_device
builds, otherwise QtGui fails to link due to missing
qt_memfill32_sse2 and other symbols.
The hack is somewhat augmented to ensure that reconfiguration
still succeeds (same issue happened with iOS). Previously the sse2
feature condition was broken due to force setting the feature
to be ON. Now the condition also checks for a special
QT_FORCE_FEATURE_sse2 variable which we set internally.
Note that we shouldn't build for arm64e, because the binaries
get killed when running on AS with the following message:
kernel: exec_mach_imgact: not running binary built against
preview arm64e ABI.
Aslo, by default, we disable the arm64 slice for qt sql plugins,
mostly because the CI provisioned sql libraries that we depend on only
contain x86_64 slices, and trying to build the sql plugins for both
slices will fail with linker errors.
This behavior can be disabled for all targets marked by
qt_internal_force_macos_intel_arch, by setting the
QT_FORCE_MACOS_ALL_ARCHES CMake option to ON.
To disble it per-target one can set
QT_FORCE_MACOS_ALL_ARCHES_${target} to ON.
Task-number: QTBUG-85447
Change-Id: Iccb5dfcc1a21a8a8292bd3817df0ea46c3445f75
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
When building and installing a Qt repo that provides plugins for a Qt
module within a different repository (for example, qtimageformats
providing imageformat plugins for QtGui), re-configuring that repository
would result in configuration errors like
"add_library cannot create ALIAS target "Qt6::QTgaPlugin" because
another target with the same name already exists."
This happened, because the find_package(Qt6 COMPONENTS Gui) calls pulled
in the Qt6*PluginConfig.cmake files that create imported targets for the
plugins we want to build.
To fix this, when building Qt, we now load only plugins that are
provided by repositories the currently building repository depends on.
We read the repo dependencies from dependencies.yaml when the
Qt6BuildInternals package is loaded, but only in static builds and only
if we're currently building a Qt repository.
To find out whether we're building a Qt repository, we check whether
QT_REPO_MODULE_VERSION is defined. We cannot check QT_BUILDING_QT,
because that variable is not available for the first find_package calls
in the repository's top-level project file.
In each Qt6*PluginConfig.cmake file, we bail out if the plugin's
repository is not one of the ones in QT_REPO_DEPENDENCIES.
Fixes: QTBUG-86670
Fixes: QTBUG-91887
Change-Id: I8f6c8398032227032742f1ca019e983ff2bcd745
Reviewed-by: Alexandru Croitor <alexandru.croitor@qt.io>
androiddeployqt relies on *-android-dependencies.xml files to know
what dependencies like jar files and permissions a Qt module requires.
CMake create those files under Qt prefix's lib dir but CMake was not
accounting for module plugins.
Fixes: QTBUG-90812
Pick-to: 6.1 6.0
Change-Id: Ib3b2e2bb237159b4851ac0f23dc75f8e56af3f7a
Reviewed-by: Alexandru Croitor <alexandru.croitor@qt.io>
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>
When doing a per-repository build of Qt, as it is done for the installer
packages, the build of qtbase has no knowledge of plugins that might be
built and installed from other repositories. That means we must not
write a fixed list of known plugins when exporting Qt modules of qtbase.
In particular, qtsvg adds imageformat plugins that are supposed to be
picked up by qtbase's QtGui module when linking a project against a
statically linked Qt.
${install-prefix}/lib/cmake/Qt6Gui/Qt6GuiPlugins.cmake missed the
include statements for qtsvg's plugin config files and operated on a
fixed list of plugins, all from qtbase.
Apart from that, the Qt6::Gui target's property QT_PLUGINS did only
contain the qtbase plugins.
This patch fixes the situation in the following way:
1. All Qt6*PluginConfig.cmake files in
${install-prefix}/lib/cmake/Qt6Gui are detected and included.
2. From those file names, the target names of the plugins are
deduced. This is safe as the file name of those generated files is a
direct result of the plugin's target name.
3. The QT_PLUGINS property of the module is updated with the detected
plugin target names.
Fixes: QTBUG-89643
Change-Id: Ifc3c39aa9948277ead5ebb209ec5eff64746308b
Reviewed-by: Alexey Edelev <alexey.edelev@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Cristian Adam <cristian.adam@qt.io>
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>
In qt_internal_create_module_depends_file we're checking the target
property INTERFACE_MODULE_HAS_HEADERS. However, this property is not
exported, and in per-repo builds we do not have access to this.
As we cannot export INTERFACE_* properties, we export another one,
called _qt_module_has_headers.
This amends commit 598e873c84.
Fixes: QTBUG-88503
Change-Id: I04b3e24add6e95b577a049c80683b7361ff72f59
Reviewed-by: Alexandru Croitor <alexandru.croitor@qt.io>
Fix the overly strict regex in qt_internal_create_module_depends_file to
allow for - and _ in module names.
We had the above mentioned dependency cycle, because the module name
Core_qobject was translated to just Core, creating a Core -> Core
dependency.
Amends da7609e7d0.
Fixes: QTBUG-88437
Change-Id: I866f7ce31e9a1b92fe4c0a6450295c2f3c761558
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
We need to handle the possibility of versioned dep (Qt6::Foo).
Change-Id: I66797dbc59f00500892958e9c99c4555cddcb980
Reviewed-by: Alexandru Croitor <alexandru.croitor@qt.io>
If not, the resulting dep would end up as 'Foo>', but we need 'Foo'.
Change-Id: I246b66eb0ac6b076eea200c4d1ad84bba8ed179c
Reviewed-by: Alexandru Croitor <alexandru.croitor@qt.io>
Add a new function that returns the minimum CMake version required to
build Qt. Pass that value to cmake_minimum_required() when building
qtbase and its standalone tests.
The minimum supported CMake version is read from qtbase/.cmake.conf
and its value should be updated when the need arises. It's the main
source of truth for all repos.
Provide a way to lower the minimum CMake version at configure time by
passing a value via QT_FORCE_MIN_CMAKE_VERSION.
This is not an officially supported way of building Qt. If the
specified version is lower than Qt's supported minimum, show a
warning.
Nevertheless the option is useful for testing how Qt builds with a
different minimum CMake version due to different policies being
enabled by default.
Issue warnings for CMake versions that are higher than the minimum
version but are known to cause issues when building Qt.
A counterpart change is needed in qt5 to ensure the minimum CMake
version is set at the proper time for top-level builds.
Ideally we would use the same 'check the CMake minimum version` code
in all our repositories, but that will cause lots of duplication because
we can't really find_package() the code and doing something like
include(../qtbase/foo.cmake) hardcodes assumptions about repo
locations.
So for now we don't bump the minimum version in child repo
cmake_minimum_required calls (qtsvg, qtdeclarative, etc).
Instead we record both the minimum supported version and the computed
minimum version (in case a different version was forced) in
QtBuildInternalsExtra.cmake.
Then we require qtbase's computed min version in
qt_build_repo_begin().
This won't set policies as cmake_minimum_required would, but at least
it propagates what minimum CMake version should be used for child
repos.
We might still have to bump the versions in child repos at some point.
Task-number: QTBUG-88086
Change-Id: Ida1c0d5d3e0fbb15d2aee9b68abab7a1648774b9
Reviewed-by: Qt CI Bot <qt_ci_bot@qt-project.org>
Reviewed-by: Cristian Adam <cristian.adam@qt.io>
The value is useful for QPA plugins built in repos other than qtbase,
to decide if it should be a default plugin or not.
Currently useful for qtwayland.
Also export a qmake value assignment when doing static builds, just
like src/gui/configure.pri does.
Change-Id: I1253f1a7e178b24b16e2615ba20d1e92b0b87b1a
Reviewed-by: Cristian Adam <cristian.adam@qt.io>
Consider a Qt module with a 3rdparty library target in
PRIVATE_MODULE_INTERFACE, e.g. XKB::XKB in Qt6::GuiPrivate. Consumers of
GuiPrivate automatically depend on XKB::XKB. In order to do that they
must find_package(XKB ...). As all find_package calls for GuiPrivate are
in the same place as the ones for Gui, this package must be marked as
optional. Otherwise all consumers of Qt6::Gui would have to have the
xkbcommon package installed too.
This patch exports find_package calls for every 3rdparty public
dependency of private modules and marks them as optional.
Change-Id: Ia1eeb09c29927fb6634ef08b477684ed6f123267
Reviewed-by: Alexandru Croitor <alexandru.croitor@qt.io>
This reverts commit b0c51f86f4.
The build failure caused by 58c1c6ee5c has
been fixed.
Change-Id: Ic7458d54c7a874588e8b1bfeca61df1842763656
Reviewed-by: Alexandru Croitor <alexandru.croitor@qt.io>
This reverts commit 3685483c4b.
This lead to configuration errors on some machines, blocking
development.
Change-Id: I309cdd55a8ef64899afcbeca54458d1c6d686951
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
Every public dependency of a Qt module results in a find_package call in
the consuming project. But not all public dependencies are mandatory.
For example, vulkan is only needed if the user project actually uses Qt
classes that pull in vulkan headers.
This patch adds the option MARK_OPTIONAL to qt_find_package.
Dependencies that are marked as optional will not produce an error on
find failure.
Task-number: QTBUG-86421
Change-Id: Ia767e7f36991e236582c7509cbd37ea3487bb695
Reviewed-by: Alexandru Croitor <alexandru.croitor@qt.io>
This is needed for qtwayland, where QtWaylandCompositor package should
call find_package(QtWaylandScanner) in the 'Tools' section of the
ModuleDependencies.cmake file, rather than the regular 'Qt' section.
This takes care of handling host path prefixes, to ensure that a host
package is found even when tools have also been cross-compiled via the
QT_BUILD_TOOLS_WHEN_CROSSCOMPILING option.
Task-number: QTBUG-83968
Change-Id: I4725a630214d053105fb6d2a0f7c5ff6128d13f9
Reviewed-by: Joerg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Qt CI Bot <qt_ci_bot@qt-project.org>
Introduce new CMake variables and map
-D to QT_EXTRA_DEFINES,
-I to QT_EXTRA_INCLUDEPATHS,
-L to QT_EXTRA_LIBDIRS,
and -F to QT_EXTRA_FRAMEWORKPATHS.
Those variables only affect the Qt build, not user projects.
Fixes: QTBUG-85878
Change-Id: I229df2eed1505a2619068d0d32975962b052569a
Reviewed-by: Alexandru Croitor <alexandru.croitor@qt.io>
The helpers can now be included manually in a project to call any
required function. There was a use case for that in qttools, which was
not possible because including QtPostProcess early would produce side
effects.
Task-number: QTBUG-86035
Change-Id: I05d5576bbac45d4b9e298b23aa2a33088d64968e
Reviewed-by: Cristian Adam <cristian.adam@qt.io>