qt5base-lts/cmake
Alexandru Croitor e9672c747c Set a default value for CMAKE_OSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET
This replicates the behavior of QMAKE_MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET in
qmake.

Change-Id: I273cd26994f2edfc52dc7b6278252c37b65b2356
Reviewed-by: Cristian Adam <cristian.adam@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Joerg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@qt.io>
2020-02-18 21:22:35 +01:00
..
3rdparty
QtBuildInternals CMake: Use correct C++ standard flag when building standalone tests 2020-02-18 21:22:34 +01:00
tests
3rdpartyConfig.cmake.in
FindAtomic.cmake
FindATSPI2.cmake
FindCups.cmake
FindDB2.cmake
FindDirectFB.cmake
Finddouble-conversion.cmake
FindGLESv2.cmake
FindGSSAPI.cmake
FindGTK3.cmake
FindLibproxy.cmake
FindLibsystemd.cmake
FindLibudev.cmake
FindMtdev.cmake
FindMySQL.cmake
FindOracle.cmake
FindPPS.cmake
FindSlog2.cmake
FindTslib.cmake
FindWrapDBus1.cmake
FindWrapDoubleConversion.cmake
FindWrapFreetype.cmake
FindWrapHarfbuzz.cmake
FindWrapPCRE2.cmake
FindWrapRt.cmake
FindXKB_COMMON_X11.cmake
FindXRender.cmake
FindZSTD.cmake
ModuleDescription.json.in
Qt3rdPartyLibraryConfig.cmake.in
qt.toolchain.cmake.in
QtAutoDetect.cmake Set a default value for CMAKE_OSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET 2020-02-18 21:22:35 +01:00
QtBaseCMakeTesting.cmake
QtBaseConfigureTests.cmake
QtBaseGlobalTargets.cmake CMake: Fix c++ standard config tests with MSVC 2020-02-18 14:44:57 +01:00
QtBuild.cmake cmake: C++17 is mandatory 2020-02-18 14:44:58 +01:00
QtBuildInformation.cmake
QtBuildInternalsExtra.cmake.in
QtCompilerFlags.cmake
QtCompilerOptimization.cmake
QtConfig.cmake.in
QtFeature.cmake CMake: Fix c++ standard config tests with MSVC 2020-02-18 14:44:57 +01:00
QtInternalTargets.cmake
QtModuleConfig.cmake.in
QtModuleDependencies.cmake.in
QtModuleToolsConfig.cmake.in
QtModuleToolsDependencies.cmake.in
QtModuleToolsVersionlessTargets.cmake.in
QtPlatformAndroid.cmake
QtPlatformSupport.cmake
QtPluginConfig.cmake.in
QtPluginDependencies.cmake.in
QtPlugins.cmake.in
QtPostProcess.cmake
QtProperties.cmake
QtResource.cmake.in
QtSetup.cmake
QtStandaloneTestsConfig.cmake.in
QtToolsConfig.cmake.in
README.md

Status

Initial port is on-going. Some modules of QtBase are ported, incl. some of the platform modules. Many libraries, tests and examples are still missing.

Basic functionality is there (moc, uic, etc.), but documentation, translations, etc. are missing.

NOTE: YOU NEED CMAKE 3.15 or later.

Intro

The CMake update offers an opportunity to revisit some topics that came up during the last few years.

  • The Qt build system does not support building host tools during a cross-compilation run. You need to build a Qt for your host machine first and then use the platform tools from that version. The decision to do this was reached independent of cmake: This does save resources on build machines as the host tools will only get built once.

  • 3rd-party dependencies are no longer built as part of Qt. zlib, libpng, etc. from src/3rdparty need to be supplied from the outside to the build now. You may find apt-get/brew/etc. useful for this. Otherwise you may consider using vcpkg as in the next section. The decision to remove 3rd party dependencies from Qt repositories was reached independent of the decision to use cmake, we just use the opportunity to implement this decision.

  • There is less need for bootstrapping. Only moc and rcc (plus the lesser known tracegen and qfloat16-tables) are linking against the bootstrap Qt library. Everything else can link against the full QtCore. This will include qmake, which is currently missing from a cmake build. This will change: Qmake is supported as a build system for applications using Qt going forward and will not go away anytime soon.

  • For the time being we try to keep qmake working so that we do not interfere too much with ongoing development.

Building against VCPKG on Windows

You may use vcpkg to install dependencies needed to build QtBase.

  • git clone -b qt https://github.com/tronical/vcpkg
  • Run bootstrap-vcpkg.bat or bootstrap-vcpkg.sh
  • Set the VCPKG_DEFAULT_TRIPLET environment variable to qt-x64-windows-static or qt-x86-windows-static
  • Set the VCPKG_ROOT environment variable to the path where you cloned vcpkg
  • Build Qt dependencies: vcpkg install @qt-packages-windows.txt
  • When running cmake in qtbase, support for vcpkg will be picked up automatically when the VCPKG_ROOT/VCPKG_DEFAULT_TRIPLET environment variable is set.

Building against homebrew on macOS

You may use brew to install dependencies needed to build QtBase.

  • Install homebrew: /usr/bin/ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)"
  • Build Qt dependencies: brew install pcre2 harfbuzz freetype
  • Install cmake: brew install cmake
  • When running cmake in qtbase, pass -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=/usr/local

Building

The basic way of building with cmake is as follows:

    cd {build directory}
    cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/path/where/to/install {path to source directory}
    cmake --build .
    cmake --install .

You need one build directory per Qt module. The build directory can be a sub-directory inside the module qtbase/build or an independent directory qtbase_build. The installation prefix is chosen when running cmake by passing -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX. To build more than one Qt module, make sure to pass the same install prefix.

cmake --build and cmake --install are simple wrappers around the basic build tool that CMake generated a build system for. It works with any supported build backend supported by cmake, but you can also use the backend build tool directly, e.g. by running make.

CMake has a ninja backend that works quite well and is noticeably faster than make, so you may want to use that:

    cd {build directory}
    cmake -GNinja -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/path/where/to/install {path to source directory}
    cmake --build .
    cmake --install .

You can look into the generated build.ninja file if you're curious and you can also build targets directory such as ninja lib/libQt6Core.so.

Make sure to remove CMakeCache.txt if you forgot to set the CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX on the first configuration, otherwise a second re-configuration will not pick up the new install prefix.

You can use cmake-gui {path to build directory} or ccmake {path to build directory} to configure the values of individual cmake variables or Qt features. After changing a value, you need to choose the configure step (usually several times:-/), followed by the generate step (to generate makefiles/ninja files).

Developer Build

When working on Qt itself, it can be tedious to wait for the install step. In that case you want to use the developer build option, to get as many auto tests enabled and no longer be required to make install:

    cd {build directory}
    cmake -GNinja -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/path/to/qtbase_build -DFEATURE_developer_build=ON {path to source directory}
    cmake --build .
    # do NOT make install

Specifying configure.json features on the command line

QMake defines most features in configure.json files, like -developer-build or -no-opengl.

In CMake land, we currently generate configure.cmake files from the configure.json files into the source directory next to them using the helper script path_to_qtbase_source/util/cmake/configurejson2cmake.py. They are checked into the repository. If the feature in configure.json has the name "dlopen", you can specify whether to enable or disable that feature in CMake with a -D flag on the CMake command line. So for example -DFEATURE_dlopen=ON or -DFEATURE_sql_mysql=OFF. At the moment, if you change a FEATURE flag's value, you have to remove the CMakeCache.txt file and reconfigure with CMake. And even then you might stumble on some issues when reusing an existing build, because of an automoc bug in upstream CMake.

Ninja reconfiguration bug

If you use the Ninja generator, there's a bug that after the first CMake configuration, if you run ninja, it will do the reconfiguration step again. This is quite annoying and time consuming.

There is an open pull request that fixes the issue at https://github.com/ninja-build/ninja/pull/1527. You can build your own Ninja executable until the request is merged.

    cd {some directory}
    git clone https://github.com/ninja-build/ninja.git
    cd ninja && mkdir build && cd build
    git remote add fix git@github.com:mathstuf/ninja.git && git fetch --all
    git cherry-pick 29a565f18e01ce83ca14801f4684cd2acaf00d4c
    ../configure.py --bootstrap
    cp ninja /usr/local/bin/ninja

Building with CCache

You can pass -DQT_USE_CCACHE=ON to make the build system look for ccache in your PATH and prepend it to all C/C++/Objective-C compiler calls. At the moment this is only supported for the Ninja and the Makefile generators.

Cross Compiling

Compiling for a target architecture that's different than the host requires one build of Qt for the host. This "host build" is needed because the process of building Qt involves the compilation of intermediate code generator tools, that in turn are called to produce source code that needs to be compiled into the final libraries. These tools are built using Qt itself and they need to run on the machine you're building on, regardless of the architecure you are targeting.

Build Qt regularly for your host system and install it into a directory of your choice using the CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX variable. You are free to disable the build of tests and examples by passing -DBUILD_EXAMPLES=OFF and -DBUILD_TESTING=OFF.

With this installation of Qt in place, which contains all tools needed, we can proceed to create a new build of Qt that is cross-compiled to the target architecture of choice. You may proceed by setting up your environment. The CMake wiki has further information how to do that at

https://gitlab.kitware.com/cmake/community/wikis/doc/cmake/CrossCompiling

Yocto based device SDKs come with an environment setup script that needs to be sourced in your shell and takes care of setting up environment variables and a cmake alias with a toolchain file, so that you can call cmake as you always do.

In order to make sure that Qt picks up the code generator tools from the host build, you need to pass an extra parameter to cmake:

    -DQT_HOST_PATH=/path/to/your/host_build

The specified path needs to point to a directory that contains an installed host build of Qt.

Cross Compiling for Android

In order to cross-compile Qt to Android, you need a host build (see instructions above) and an Android build. In addition, it is necessary to install the Android NDK as well as vcpkg. Vcpkg is needed to supply third-party libraries that Qt requires but that are not part of the Android NDK.

Vcpkg for Android can be set up using the following steps:

  • git clone -b qt https://github.com/tronical/vcpkg
  • Run bootstrap-vcpkg.bat or bootstrap-vcpkg.sh
  • Set the VCPKG_DEFAULT_TRIPLET environment variable to one of the following values:
    • arm-android (armeabi-v7a)
    • arm64-android (arm64v8)
    • x86-android (x86)
    • x64-android (x86_64)
  • Set the VCPKG_ROOT environment variable to the path where you cloned vcpkg
  • Set the ANDROID_NDK_HOME environment variable to the path where you have installed the Android NDK.
  • Set the ANDROID_SDK_HOME environment variable to the path where you have installed the Android SDK.
  • Build Qt dependencies: vcpkg install @qt-packages-android.txt

When running cmake in qtbase, pass -DCMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE=$ANDROID_NDK_HOME/build/cmake/android.toolchain.cmake -DQT_HOST_PATH=/path/to/your/host/build -DANDROID_SDK_ROOT=$ANDROID_SDK_HOME -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=$INSTALL_PATH

If you don't supply the configuration argument -DANDROID_ABI=..., it will default to armeabi-v7a. To target other architectures, use one of the following values:

  • arm64: -DANDROID_ABI=arm64-v8
  • x86: -DANDROID_ABI=x86
  • x86_64: -DANDROID_ABI=x86_64

By default we set the android API level to 21. Should you need to change this supply the following configuration argument to the above CMake call: -DANDROID_NATIVE_API_LEVEL=${API_LEVEL}

Cross compiling for iOS

In order to cross-compile Qt to iOS, you need a host macOS build. In addition, it is necessary to install a custom version of vcpkg. Vcpkg is needed to supply third-party libraries that Qt requires, but that are not part of the iOS SDK.

Vcpkg for iOS can be set up using the following steps:

  • git clone -b qt https://github.com/alcroito/vcpkg
  • Run bootstrap-vcpkg.sh
  • Set the VCPKG_DEFAULT_TRIPLET environment variable to one of the following values:
    • x64-ios (simulator x86_64)
    • x86-ios (simulator i386)
    • arm64-ios (device arm64)
    • arm-ios (device armv7)
    • fat-ios (simulator_and_device x86_64 and arm64* - special considedrations)
  • Set the VCPKG_ROOT environment variable to the path where you cloned vcpkg
  • Build Qt dependencies: vcpkg install @qt-packages-ios.txt

When running cmake in qtbase, pass -DCMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME=iOS -DQT_HOST_PATH=/path/to/your/host/build -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=$INSTALL_PATH

If you don't supply the configuration argument -DQT_UIKIT_SDK=..., it will default to iphonesimulator. To target another SDK / device type, use one of the following values:

  • iphonesimulator: -DQT_UIKIT_SDK=iphonesimulator
  • iphoneos: -DQT_UIKIT_SDK=iphoneos
  • simulator_and_device: -DQT_FORCE_SIMULATOR_AND_DEVICE=ON -DQT_UIKIT_SDK=

Depending on what value you pass to -DQT_UIKIT_SDK= a list of target architectures is chosen by default:

  • iphonesimulator: x86_64
  • iphoneos: arm64
  • simulator_and_device: arm64;x86_64

You can try choosing a different list of architectures by passing -DCMAKE_OSX_ARCHITECTURES=x86_64;i386. Note that if you choose different architectures compared to the default ones, the build might fail. Only do it if you know what you are doing.

simulator_and_device special considerations

To do a simulator_and_device build, a custom version of CMake is required in addition to the vcpkg fork. The merge request can be found here: https://gitlab.kitware.com/cmake/cmake/merge_requests/3617

After you build your own copy of CMake using this merge request, you need to use it for both vcpkg and Qt.

Note that vcpkg prefers its own version of CMake when building packages. Make sure to put your custom built CMake in PATH, and force vcpkg to use this CMake by running export VCPKG_FORCE_SYSTEM_BINARIES=1 in your shell.

Debugging CMake files

CMake allows specifying the --trace and --trace-expand options, which work like qmake -d -d: As the cmake code is evaluated, the values of parameters and variables is shown. This can be a lot of output, so you may want to redirect it to a file.

Porting Help

We have some python scripts to help with the conversion from qmake to cmake. These scripts can be found in utils/cmake.

configurejson2cmake.py

This script converts all configure.json in the Qt repository to configure.cmake files for use with CMake. We want to generate configure.cmake files for the foreseeable future, so if you need to tweak the generated configure.cmake files, please tweak the generation script instead.

configurejson2cmake.py is run like this: util/cmake/configurejson2cmake.py . in the top-level source directory of a Qt repository.

pro2cmake.py

pro2cmake.py generates a skeleton CMakeLists.txt file from a .pro-file. You will need to polish the resulting CMakeLists.txt file, but e.g. the list of files, etc. should be extracted for you.

pro2cmake.py is run like this: path_to_qtbase_source/util/cmake/pro2cmake.py some.pro.

run_pro2cmake.py

`` A small helper script to run pro2cmake.py on all .pro-files in a directory. Very useful to e.g. convert all the unit tests for a Qt module over to cmake;-)

run_pro2cmake.py is run like this: path_to_qtbase_source/util/cmake/run_pro2cmake.py some_dir.

How to convert certain constructs

qmake CMake
qtHaveModule(foo) if(TARGET Qt::foo)
qtConfig(foo) if (QT_FEATURE_foo)