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CMake Port/Porting Guide: Difference between revisions
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This page is related to the qmake to CMake porting effort of Qt itself. | |||
If you're looking for information how to port your project, please see https://www.qt.io/blog/introducing-qmake2cmake | |||
==Porting Notes== | |||
===Building Qt CMake Port=== | |||
Refer to the [https://github.com/qt/qtbase/blob/dev/cmake/README.md README] for build instructions. | |||
==pro2cmake status== | |||
Using pro2cmake.py to convert user projects from qmake to CMake is '''NOT''' officially supported. | |||
The tool is meant '''ONLY''' for porting Qt repositories. | |||
Furthermore there have been changes to certain Qt CMake APIs (especially QML), and pro2cmake was not adapted to those changes. | |||
As such, the generated output of pro2cmake is likely not correct anymore. | |||
===General porting guide=== | |||
There is a python script called '''pro2cmake.py''' in qtbase/util/cmake. | |||
It takes a .pro file as input, and generates a CMakeLists.txt file in the same folder. You need to have python3 ('''3.7+''') installed and a few packages from pip (pyparsing, sympy) to use the script. | |||
It may be easier to create a [https://docs.python.org/3/tutorial/venv.html virtual environment] first, and then install the requirements automatically via requirements.txt: | |||
python -m pip install -r qtbase/util/cmake/requirements.txt | |||
pyparsing requires version 2.4.1.1, later versions may fail to convert the project file. You may need to force install this version with: | |||
python pip install pyparsing==2.4.1.1 | |||
To run the script, pass a .pro file: | |||
python3 qtbase/util/cmake/pro2cmake.py qtbase/src/corelib/corelib.pro | python3 qtbase/util/cmake/pro2cmake.py qtbase/src/corelib/corelib.pro | ||
The script can handle .pro files that add modules, plugins, examples, tests, and partial support for .pro files that just include other .pro files (subdirs). | |||
The script does a good chunk of the conversion process for you, but you'll sometimes need to do manual fixes to the file. Make sure to mark those manual changes with a "# special case" marker. Example: | The script does a good chunk of the conversion process for you, but you'll sometimes need to do manual fixes to the file. Make sure to mark those manual changes with a "# special case" marker. Example: | ||
Line 19: | Line 42: | ||
# special case begin | # special case begin | ||
LIBRARIES | LIBRARIES | ||
<nowiki> </nowiki> Qt::Gui | |||
# special case end | <nowiki>#</nowiki> special case end | ||
When you add a special case, and rerun the script you might notice a new .prev_CMakeLists.txt file is created and staged in your git repo. Make sure to commit that file together with your special case changes in the main file. This prev file is used | |||
by the pro2cmake.py script to correctly reapply any special cases you had before. You can generally just commit and ignore any changes in that file. | |||
There is also another script called run_pro2cmake.py which runs the first script recursively on all .pro files in the given folder. A good place to use it would be on the examples folder, or on the whole repository you are porting: Example: | There is also another script called run_pro2cmake.py which runs the first script recursively on all .pro files in the given folder. A good place to use it would be on the examples folder, or on the whole repository you are porting: Example: | ||
Line 29: | Line 55: | ||
python3 qtbase/util/cmake/configurejson2cmake.py qtbase/src/corelib | python3 qtbase/util/cmake/configurejson2cmake.py qtbase/src/corelib | ||
=== Porting a new repository === | ===Porting a new repository=== | ||
* Request a | |||
* Copy the root CMakeLists.txt file from either qtsvg/CMakeLists.txt or qtimageformats/CMakeLists.txt into the root of your repository | *Request a dev branch for your repository from the wip/qt6 branch, this can be done by filing a task in the QTQAINFRA project (or ping alcroito), Gerrit component https://bugreports.qt.io/browse/QTQAINFRA-3009?jql=project%20%3D%20QTQAINFRA%20AND%20component%20%3D%20Gerrit | ||
* Change the project name and description | *Copy the root CMakeLists.txt file from either qtsvg/CMakeLists.txt or qtimageformats/CMakeLists.txt into the root of your repository | ||
* Adjust the find_package() calls to import the required Qt Components (Core, Gui, Widgets, Test, Network, Xml, etc.) and make sure BuildInternals component is listed as well | *Change the project name and description | ||
* Run either pro2cmake.py individually or run_pro2cmake.py on the whole repo. | *Adjust the find_package() calls to import the required Qt Components (Core, Gui, Widgets, Test, Network, Xml, etc.) and make sure BuildInternals component is listed as well | ||
* Try to build it against an installation of qtbase, for example: | *Run either pro2cmake.py individually or run_pro2cmake.py on the whole repo. | ||
*Try to build it against an installation of qtbase, for example: | |||
cmake ../qtsvg -DQT_USE_CCACHE=1 -GNinja -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/home/foo/qt/qt5_cmake/qtbase_installed && ninja | cmake ../qtsvg -DQT_USE_CCACHE=1 -GNinja -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/home/foo/qt/qt5_cmake/qtbase_installed && ninja | ||
=== General info === | *Fix something in the CMakeLists.txt file and rebuild again | ||
*The structure of the CMakeLists.txt files for the following projects is somewhat special repo/src/src.pro, repo/tests/tests.pro, repo/examples/examples.pro. pro2cmake should be able to handle it, but when in doubt, check qtsvg/qtdeclarative for inspiration. | |||
*Don't forget adding coin/module_config.yaml to enable it in coin side, see [https://github.com/qt/qttools/blob/dev/coin/module_config.yaml coin/module_config.yaml in qttools] and [https://github.com/qt/qtsvg/blob/dev/coin/module_config.yaml coin/module_config.yaml in qtsvg] | |||
*Perhaps your module need a dependencies.yaml, especially when you try to do a status check in CI/COIN, and got a message like: Could not include project: 'qt/qtbase', are you sure that it is a dependency of 'qt/qtquickcontrols2'? . see [https://github.com/qt/qtx11extras/blob/dev/dependencies.yaml dependencies.yaml in qtx11extras]. | |||
===Coin CI / Staging changes=== | |||
The cmake branches don't have Coin staging at the moment. Instead when you push a patch, a custom instance of Coin will automatically schedule a test build for each patch set that you push. | |||
This means that even if you get a +2, wait for the Coin bot to reply with a +1 BEFORE clicking submit. Thanks. | |||
===General info=== | |||
The Qt CMake port uses custom CMake macros and functions that wrap regular functions like add_executable / add_library, etc. You should use them over the CMake provided ones, unless strictly necessary. | |||
Modules like Gui or Widgets are created in CMake with '''add_qt_module'''. | |||
Plugins with '''add_qt_plugin'''. | |||
Tools with '''add_qt_tool'''. | |||
Tests with '''add_qt_test'''. | |||
Examples with '''add_qt_executable''' (consistent, right?). | |||
3rd party packages should be found using qt_find_package() instead of find_package(), and you should specify the targets that the package provides with the PROVIDED_TARGETS option. You can grep that token for examples. | |||
But when specifying Qt specific packages that have to be found when building qtsvg for example, use find_package, not qt_find_package(). | |||
Most of the macros and common CMake functionality are in the files '''QtBuild.cmake''' and '''QtFeature.cmake''' under qtbase/cmake. | |||
There are also custom Find modules that are used by qt_find_package(), for 3rd party projects that do no provide their own Find modules or Config files. | |||
It's very probable you'll have to write many of these by yourself for libraries that are defined in configure.json. | |||
===Tools CMake Packages (used for cross compilation)=== | |||
Tools that we build as part of Qt, like moc, rcc, uic, qfloat16-tables, qmake, are associated with a specific module like Core or Widgets, and we create a Tools CMake package for each module that has tools, so CoreTools, WidgetTools. | |||
This is done to allow CMake only to import tools and not modules when doing cross-compilation. So we find_package(Qt5Tools) to get moc, so we can cross compile to Embedded Linux for example. | |||
The tool <-> module association is done in add_qt_tool via the TOOLS_TARGET option. | |||
===Feature system=== | |||
When building qt5 using the configure script, you can enable or disable features by passing something like -opengl dynamic or -developer-build. | |||
In CMake the equivalent is to pass -DFEATURE_opengl_dynamic=ON or -DFEATURE_developer_build=ON. | |||
An example of disabling a feature: pass -DFEATURE_dlopen=OFF. | |||
The list of features supported in CMake can be found by inspecting the converted configure.cmake files (from configure.json). | |||
Each entry you find there of the form qt_feature("eventfd") means you can pass -DFEATURE_eventfd=ON or -DFEATURE_eventfd=OFF. | |||
If you inspect the generated CMakeCache.txt file in your build directory, among other things, it contains the explicit values you passed for the above features. | |||
For each FEATURE_foo, the cache file will also contain a QT_FEATURE_foo. | |||
This is used for the internal implementation, so you can mostly ignore those values. | |||
The internal implementation uses those to discern if something was passed explicitly on the command line or not. | |||
If you wish to reconfigure qtbase or some other repository with a different set of enabled features: | |||
- make sure to remove the CMakeCache.txt file before calling cmake with the different feature parameters | |||
- remove all generated moc_foo.cpp files. | |||
There is currently a limitation in upstream CMake (https://bugreports.qt.io/browse/QTBUG-74521) regarding automoc not noticing updated define values in dependent headers. This can happen when you reconfigure with a feature being suddenly disabled. | |||
===Developer builds=== | |||
When porting a new repo, it might be a hassle to constantly have to run make install in qtbase. | |||
For example you modify the qtbase/cmake/QtBuild.cmake file, and you need that updated file to be used while building qtsvg. You would have to run make install in qtbase before the file is picked up by qsvg. | |||
You can configure your qtbase build with -DFEATURE_developer_build=ON, and then you don't have to install anything, only run make / ninja. | You can configure your qtbase build with -DFEATURE_developer_build=ON, and then you don't have to install anything, only run make / ninja. | ||
To build another repo against such a qtbase, pass the build directory of qtbase as the CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX, e.g.: | To build another repo against such a qtbase, pass the build directory of qtbase as the CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX, e.g.: | ||
cmake ../qtsvg -DQT_USE_CCACHE=1 -GNinja -DFEATURE_developer_build=ON -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/home/foo/qt/qt5_cmake/qtbase_built && ninja | cmake ../qtsvg -DQT_USE_CCACHE=1 -GNinja -DFEATURE_developer_build=ON -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/home/foo/qt/qt5_cmake/qtbase_built && ninja | ||
=== Common qmake <-> CMake constructs === | ===Handling 3rd party libraries=== | ||
In Qt5, configure.json lists many 3rd party libraries that can be used by Qt when building Qt. For example: system-zlib, zstd, system-pcre2, double-conversion etc. | |||
These are listed in the ''libraries'' section of configure.json. | |||
There a few ways of specifying where to find these libraries and how to test that they exist: | |||
#just passing -lfoo, and hoping it's found in the linker search path | |||
#using pkg-config | |||
#using qmake makeSpec, e.g. QMAKE_LIBDIR_FOO, QMAKE_LIBS_FOO and QMAKE_INCDIR_FOO | |||
#using some own custom qmake function. | |||
In CMake, finding 3rd party libraries is handled with '''find_package'''(). find_package operates on two different file types: '''Find modules''' ('''FindZLIB'''.cmake) and '''Config package files''' ('''ZLIBConfig'''.cmake). | |||
Usually if a library is built with CMake, it exports a Config file (the latter option described above), and then find_package would find and use that Config file. | |||
In case if a library is built with some other build tool, the Find module approach allows finding and using such libraries. The find modules have to be written manually for every third party library / package. | |||
General documentation on writing Find modules can be found here https://gitlab.kitware.com/cmake/community/wikis/doc/tutorials/How-To-Find-Libraries . | |||
CMake already ships many Find modules (see https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/manual/cmake-modules.7.html ). | |||
For libraries that Qt uses, and don't have Find modules, we ship our own custom written Find modules in qtbase/cmake. You can use them as a template for writing your own Find modules. | |||
Once the Find module is written, or you confirmed that a 3rd party library you want to use ships its own Config file, you need to update qtbase/cmake/utils/helper.py to let the conversion script know about that library. | |||
You want to add a new entry to _library_map = {}. | |||
#The first key is the qmake library name / soname, for example: "'''libjpeg'''". | |||
#The second key is the package name CMake will look for in a find_package call. For example '''JPEG'''. That means CMake will look for either a '''FindJPEG'''.cmake file or a '''JPEGConfig'''.cmake file. | |||
#The third key is the CMake target exported by that package, e.g. '''JPEG::JPEG'''. This means that a Qt Gui plugin can link against JPEG::JPEG, which informs CMake both about the library location and the library include directory. | |||
After modifying helper.py, just rerun configurejson2cmake.py on the configure.json file that uses the third party library you just added, and then rerun pro2cmake.py on any .pro file that uses that library. | |||
====WrapFind modules==== | |||
Sometimes there's no standard package name / target name for a particular library. | |||
See https://gitlab.kitware.com/cmake/cmake/issues/19287 for detailed discussion. | |||
For example upstream CMake has a Find module called "FindZLIB.cmake" which exports a ZLIB::ZLIB target. | |||
Whereas vcpkg might export a Zlib::Zlib target, and Conan exports an all lower case zlib::zlib target. | |||
Target names are case sensitive in CMake, so if we want to support both vcpkg and Conan as 3rd party library sources, we have a small problem. | |||
The solution is to write a '''WrapFind''' module. You can look at qtbase/cmake/FindWrapFreetype.cmake for an example. | |||
The WrapFind module looks for all the different combinations, and makes a new custom WrapFindFoo::WrapFindFoo target which links against any actual Foo library it found. | |||
So make sure to do a couple of things: | |||
#Write a correct WrapFindFoo.cmake file that handles looking for all the different package names and target names | |||
#Modify helper.py library_map to map foo to WrapFoo. | |||
#Rerun configurejson2cmake.py and pro2cmake.py where the library is used. | |||
===Debugging qmake parser in pro2cmake.py=== | |||
It might happen that when you run the pro2cmake.py script on a .pro file, the script can fail with a parsing exception. | |||
This is most likely because there is some qmake syntax quirk that isn't handled by the python parser at the moment. | |||
The script uses the pyparsing library to define a grammar with which to parse .pro files. | |||
You can pass --debug to the script, to get debug output about the token matching done by the parser. | |||
You should then try to bisect your .pro file by removing half of the code, and again and again, until you find the specific qmake construct that makes the parser fail. | |||
The token matching output should then be short enough that you can manually trace what is being matched and correlate that with the grammar described in _generate_grammar() method. | |||
Figure out what's missing, and amend the grammar to properly handle that case. After that you should add a test to qtbase/util/cmake/tests which checks for that specific qmake syntax. | |||
You can run the the tests by going into the qtbase/util/cmake/tests and running "pytest". To execute a specific test, run "pytest -k test_foo". To get print output from the test, pass "-s". | |||
===Common qmake <-> CMake constructs=== | |||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
|- | |- | ||
! qmake !! CMake | !qmake!!CMake | ||
|- | |||
|include(util.pri)||add_subdirectory(util) | |||
|- | |||
|win32: print()||if(WIN32) message() endif() | |||
|- | |||
|darwin: print()||if(APPLE) message() endif() | |||
|- | |||
|linux: print()||if(LINUX) message() endif() | |||
|- | |||
|unix: print()||if(UNIX) message() endif() | |||
|- | |||
|qtHaveModule(foo)||if(TARGET Qt::foo) | |||
|- | |||
|qtConfig(foo)||if (QT_FEATURE_foo) | |||
|- | |||
|QT += widgets||find_package(Qt5 COMPONENTS Widgets) target_link_libraries(my_lib PUBLIC Qt::Widgets) | |||
|- | |||
|QT += core-private||target_link_libraries(my_lib PUBLIC Qt::CorePrivate) | |||
|- | |||
|LIBS += -luser32||target_link_libraries(my_target PUBLIC user32) | |||
|- | |||
|LIBS_PRIVATE += -framework AppKit||target_link_libraries(my_target PRIVATE "${FWAppKit}") | |||
|- | |- | ||
| | |QMAKE_USE += zlib||target_link_libraries(my_target PUBLIC ZLIB::ZLIB) | ||
|- | |- | ||
| | |QMAKE_USE_PRIVATE += zlib||target_link_libraries(my_target PRIVATE ZLIB::ZLIB) | ||
|- | |- | ||
| | |INSTALLS += some_files|| | ||
qt_copy_or_install(FILES | |||
file1.txt | |||
file2.txt | |||
DESTINATION "${some_dir}" | |||
|- | |- | ||
| find a 3rdparty package || qt_find_package(Cups REQUIRED PROVIDED_TARGETS Cups::Cups) | |find a 3rdparty package||qt_find_package(Cups REQUIRED PROVIDED_TARGETS Cups::Cups) | ||
|} | |} |
Latest revision as of 08:16, 29 June 2022
This page is related to the qmake to CMake porting effort of Qt itself.
If you're looking for information how to port your project, please see https://www.qt.io/blog/introducing-qmake2cmake
Porting Notes
Building Qt CMake Port
Refer to the README for build instructions.
pro2cmake status
Using pro2cmake.py to convert user projects from qmake to CMake is NOT officially supported.
The tool is meant ONLY for porting Qt repositories.
Furthermore there have been changes to certain Qt CMake APIs (especially QML), and pro2cmake was not adapted to those changes.
As such, the generated output of pro2cmake is likely not correct anymore.
General porting guide
There is a python script called pro2cmake.py in qtbase/util/cmake.
It takes a .pro file as input, and generates a CMakeLists.txt file in the same folder. You need to have python3 (3.7+) installed and a few packages from pip (pyparsing, sympy) to use the script.
It may be easier to create a virtual environment first, and then install the requirements automatically via requirements.txt:
python -m pip install -r qtbase/util/cmake/requirements.txt
pyparsing requires version 2.4.1.1, later versions may fail to convert the project file. You may need to force install this version with:
python pip install pyparsing==2.4.1.1
To run the script, pass a .pro file:
python3 qtbase/util/cmake/pro2cmake.py qtbase/src/corelib/corelib.pro
The script can handle .pro files that add modules, plugins, examples, tests, and partial support for .pro files that just include other .pro files (subdirs).
The script does a good chunk of the conversion process for you, but you'll sometimes need to do manual fixes to the file. Make sure to mark those manual changes with a "# special case" marker. Example:
SOURCES foo.cpp bar.cpp # special case
This way when you re-run the script, you won't lose your manual modifications. You can also use block special case markers:
# special case begin LIBRARIES Qt::Gui # special case end
When you add a special case, and rerun the script you might notice a new .prev_CMakeLists.txt file is created and staged in your git repo. Make sure to commit that file together with your special case changes in the main file. This prev file is used by the pro2cmake.py script to correctly reapply any special cases you had before. You can generally just commit and ignore any changes in that file.
There is also another script called run_pro2cmake.py which runs the first script recursively on all .pro files in the given folder. A good place to use it would be on the examples folder, or on the whole repository you are porting: Example:
python3 qtbase/util/cmake/run_pro2cmake.py qtbase/examples python3 qtbase/util/cmake/run_pro2cmake.py qtsvg
If a directory has a configure.json, you'll want to run a script called configurejson2cmake.py to generate a configure.cmake file. These files should not be modified manually, but rather the script should be fixed to handle your specific case.
python3 qtbase/util/cmake/configurejson2cmake.py qtbase/src/corelib
Porting a new repository
- Request a dev branch for your repository from the wip/qt6 branch, this can be done by filing a task in the QTQAINFRA project (or ping alcroito), Gerrit component https://bugreports.qt.io/browse/QTQAINFRA-3009?jql=project%20%3D%20QTQAINFRA%20AND%20component%20%3D%20Gerrit
- Copy the root CMakeLists.txt file from either qtsvg/CMakeLists.txt or qtimageformats/CMakeLists.txt into the root of your repository
- Change the project name and description
- Adjust the find_package() calls to import the required Qt Components (Core, Gui, Widgets, Test, Network, Xml, etc.) and make sure BuildInternals component is listed as well
- Run either pro2cmake.py individually or run_pro2cmake.py on the whole repo.
- Try to build it against an installation of qtbase, for example:
cmake ../qtsvg -DQT_USE_CCACHE=1 -GNinja -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/home/foo/qt/qt5_cmake/qtbase_installed && ninja
- Fix something in the CMakeLists.txt file and rebuild again
- The structure of the CMakeLists.txt files for the following projects is somewhat special repo/src/src.pro, repo/tests/tests.pro, repo/examples/examples.pro. pro2cmake should be able to handle it, but when in doubt, check qtsvg/qtdeclarative for inspiration.
- Don't forget adding coin/module_config.yaml to enable it in coin side, see coin/module_config.yaml in qttools and coin/module_config.yaml in qtsvg
- Perhaps your module need a dependencies.yaml, especially when you try to do a status check in CI/COIN, and got a message like: Could not include project: 'qt/qtbase', are you sure that it is a dependency of 'qt/qtquickcontrols2'? . see dependencies.yaml in qtx11extras.
Coin CI / Staging changes
The cmake branches don't have Coin staging at the moment. Instead when you push a patch, a custom instance of Coin will automatically schedule a test build for each patch set that you push.
This means that even if you get a +2, wait for the Coin bot to reply with a +1 BEFORE clicking submit. Thanks.
General info
The Qt CMake port uses custom CMake macros and functions that wrap regular functions like add_executable / add_library, etc. You should use them over the CMake provided ones, unless strictly necessary.
Modules like Gui or Widgets are created in CMake with add_qt_module.
Plugins with add_qt_plugin.
Tools with add_qt_tool.
Tests with add_qt_test.
Examples with add_qt_executable (consistent, right?).
3rd party packages should be found using qt_find_package() instead of find_package(), and you should specify the targets that the package provides with the PROVIDED_TARGETS option. You can grep that token for examples. But when specifying Qt specific packages that have to be found when building qtsvg for example, use find_package, not qt_find_package().
Most of the macros and common CMake functionality are in the files QtBuild.cmake and QtFeature.cmake under qtbase/cmake.
There are also custom Find modules that are used by qt_find_package(), for 3rd party projects that do no provide their own Find modules or Config files. It's very probable you'll have to write many of these by yourself for libraries that are defined in configure.json.
Tools CMake Packages (used for cross compilation)
Tools that we build as part of Qt, like moc, rcc, uic, qfloat16-tables, qmake, are associated with a specific module like Core or Widgets, and we create a Tools CMake package for each module that has tools, so CoreTools, WidgetTools.
This is done to allow CMake only to import tools and not modules when doing cross-compilation. So we find_package(Qt5Tools) to get moc, so we can cross compile to Embedded Linux for example.
The tool <-> module association is done in add_qt_tool via the TOOLS_TARGET option.
Feature system
When building qt5 using the configure script, you can enable or disable features by passing something like -opengl dynamic or -developer-build.
In CMake the equivalent is to pass -DFEATURE_opengl_dynamic=ON or -DFEATURE_developer_build=ON. An example of disabling a feature: pass -DFEATURE_dlopen=OFF.
The list of features supported in CMake can be found by inspecting the converted configure.cmake files (from configure.json).
Each entry you find there of the form qt_feature("eventfd") means you can pass -DFEATURE_eventfd=ON or -DFEATURE_eventfd=OFF.
If you inspect the generated CMakeCache.txt file in your build directory, among other things, it contains the explicit values you passed for the above features.
For each FEATURE_foo, the cache file will also contain a QT_FEATURE_foo. This is used for the internal implementation, so you can mostly ignore those values. The internal implementation uses those to discern if something was passed explicitly on the command line or not.
If you wish to reconfigure qtbase or some other repository with a different set of enabled features: - make sure to remove the CMakeCache.txt file before calling cmake with the different feature parameters - remove all generated moc_foo.cpp files.
There is currently a limitation in upstream CMake (https://bugreports.qt.io/browse/QTBUG-74521) regarding automoc not noticing updated define values in dependent headers. This can happen when you reconfigure with a feature being suddenly disabled.
Developer builds
When porting a new repo, it might be a hassle to constantly have to run make install in qtbase.
For example you modify the qtbase/cmake/QtBuild.cmake file, and you need that updated file to be used while building qtsvg. You would have to run make install in qtbase before the file is picked up by qsvg.
You can configure your qtbase build with -DFEATURE_developer_build=ON, and then you don't have to install anything, only run make / ninja.
To build another repo against such a qtbase, pass the build directory of qtbase as the CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX, e.g.:
cmake ../qtsvg -DQT_USE_CCACHE=1 -GNinja -DFEATURE_developer_build=ON -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/home/foo/qt/qt5_cmake/qtbase_built && ninja
Handling 3rd party libraries
In Qt5, configure.json lists many 3rd party libraries that can be used by Qt when building Qt. For example: system-zlib, zstd, system-pcre2, double-conversion etc. These are listed in the libraries section of configure.json.
There a few ways of specifying where to find these libraries and how to test that they exist:
- just passing -lfoo, and hoping it's found in the linker search path
- using pkg-config
- using qmake makeSpec, e.g. QMAKE_LIBDIR_FOO, QMAKE_LIBS_FOO and QMAKE_INCDIR_FOO
- using some own custom qmake function.
In CMake, finding 3rd party libraries is handled with find_package(). find_package operates on two different file types: Find modules (FindZLIB.cmake) and Config package files (ZLIBConfig.cmake).
Usually if a library is built with CMake, it exports a Config file (the latter option described above), and then find_package would find and use that Config file.
In case if a library is built with some other build tool, the Find module approach allows finding and using such libraries. The find modules have to be written manually for every third party library / package. General documentation on writing Find modules can be found here https://gitlab.kitware.com/cmake/community/wikis/doc/tutorials/How-To-Find-Libraries .
CMake already ships many Find modules (see https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/manual/cmake-modules.7.html ).
For libraries that Qt uses, and don't have Find modules, we ship our own custom written Find modules in qtbase/cmake. You can use them as a template for writing your own Find modules.
Once the Find module is written, or you confirmed that a 3rd party library you want to use ships its own Config file, you need to update qtbase/cmake/utils/helper.py to let the conversion script know about that library.
You want to add a new entry to _library_map = {}.
- The first key is the qmake library name / soname, for example: "libjpeg".
- The second key is the package name CMake will look for in a find_package call. For example JPEG. That means CMake will look for either a FindJPEG.cmake file or a JPEGConfig.cmake file.
- The third key is the CMake target exported by that package, e.g. JPEG::JPEG. This means that a Qt Gui plugin can link against JPEG::JPEG, which informs CMake both about the library location and the library include directory.
After modifying helper.py, just rerun configurejson2cmake.py on the configure.json file that uses the third party library you just added, and then rerun pro2cmake.py on any .pro file that uses that library.
WrapFind modules
Sometimes there's no standard package name / target name for a particular library. See https://gitlab.kitware.com/cmake/cmake/issues/19287 for detailed discussion.
For example upstream CMake has a Find module called "FindZLIB.cmake" which exports a ZLIB::ZLIB target. Whereas vcpkg might export a Zlib::Zlib target, and Conan exports an all lower case zlib::zlib target.
Target names are case sensitive in CMake, so if we want to support both vcpkg and Conan as 3rd party library sources, we have a small problem.
The solution is to write a WrapFind module. You can look at qtbase/cmake/FindWrapFreetype.cmake for an example.
The WrapFind module looks for all the different combinations, and makes a new custom WrapFindFoo::WrapFindFoo target which links against any actual Foo library it found. So make sure to do a couple of things:
- Write a correct WrapFindFoo.cmake file that handles looking for all the different package names and target names
- Modify helper.py library_map to map foo to WrapFoo.
- Rerun configurejson2cmake.py and pro2cmake.py where the library is used.
Debugging qmake parser in pro2cmake.py
It might happen that when you run the pro2cmake.py script on a .pro file, the script can fail with a parsing exception. This is most likely because there is some qmake syntax quirk that isn't handled by the python parser at the moment.
The script uses the pyparsing library to define a grammar with which to parse .pro files. You can pass --debug to the script, to get debug output about the token matching done by the parser.
You should then try to bisect your .pro file by removing half of the code, and again and again, until you find the specific qmake construct that makes the parser fail. The token matching output should then be short enough that you can manually trace what is being matched and correlate that with the grammar described in _generate_grammar() method.
Figure out what's missing, and amend the grammar to properly handle that case. After that you should add a test to qtbase/util/cmake/tests which checks for that specific qmake syntax.
You can run the the tests by going into the qtbase/util/cmake/tests and running "pytest". To execute a specific test, run "pytest -k test_foo". To get print output from the test, pass "-s".
Common qmake <-> CMake constructs
qmake | CMake |
---|---|
include(util.pri) | add_subdirectory(util) |
win32: print() | if(WIN32) message() endif() |
darwin: print() | if(APPLE) message() endif() |
linux: print() | if(LINUX) message() endif() |
unix: print() | if(UNIX) message() endif() |
qtHaveModule(foo) | if(TARGET Qt::foo) |
qtConfig(foo) | if (QT_FEATURE_foo) |
QT += widgets | find_package(Qt5 COMPONENTS Widgets) target_link_libraries(my_lib PUBLIC Qt::Widgets) |
QT += core-private | target_link_libraries(my_lib PUBLIC Qt::CorePrivate) |
LIBS += -luser32 | target_link_libraries(my_target PUBLIC user32) |
LIBS_PRIVATE += -framework AppKit | target_link_libraries(my_target PRIVATE "${FWAppKit}") |
QMAKE_USE += zlib | target_link_libraries(my_target PUBLIC ZLIB::ZLIB) |
QMAKE_USE_PRIVATE += zlib | target_link_libraries(my_target PRIVATE ZLIB::ZLIB) |
INSTALLS += some_files |
qt_copy_or_install(FILES file1.txt file2.txt DESTINATION "${some_dir}" |
find a 3rdparty package | qt_find_package(Cups REQUIRED PROVIDED_TARGETS Cups::Cups) |