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Qt Contributors Summit 2019 Program
Back to Qt Contributors Summit 2019
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Tuesday, 2019-11-19
First day is reserved for topics that are of interest to the majority, and main location is the Assembly Hall. If you have something to present please coordinate beforehand on IRC or via mail.
Time | Assembly Hall |
---|---|
8:00 - 9:00 | Registration |
9:00 - 9:20 | Introduction and sponsors |
9:20 - 10:30 | Keynote: Towards Qt 6 (Lars Knoll) |
10:30 - 11:00 | Coffee Break |
11:00 - 11:30 | QML Version 3 |
11:30 - 12:00 | CMake Port |
12:00 - 13:30 | Lunch Break |
13:30 - 14:00 | Branch Policy for Qt 6 |
14:00 - 14:30 | Qt Marketplace |
14:30 - 15:00 | KDE experience in attracting and nurturing contributors |
15:00 - 15:30 | Coffee Break |
15:30 - 16:00 | Qt 6 Graphics Overview |
16:00 - 16:30 | Qt for Python in Qt 6 |
16:30 - 17:30 | Agenda Overview |
Wednesday, 2019-11-20
Time | Assembly Hall | 1.3.14 (Zoo, 16 people) | 1.1.9 (Landsberger Allee, 21 people) | 1.1.8 (Greifwalder Str, 17 people) |
---|---|---|---|---|
9:00 - 9:40 | QtCore | Qt Marketplace | Rethinking serialization for Qt6 | |
9:50 - 10:30 | Clang-based cpp parser for lupdate | Remote display of Qt applications in Qt 6 | ||
10:30 - 10:50 | Coffee Break | |||
10:50 - 11:30 | QtQml | Platform-specific APIs in Qt 6 | ||
11:40 - 12:20 | Refurbishing Qt Widget internals | Available, hidden and missing gems on the way of using Qt on embedded devices | ||
12:20 - 13:20 | Lunch Break | |||
13:20 - 14:00 | QtGUI, RHI, and 3D | Qt Wayland Client and extensions | Qt for Python and beyond | Qt 6 Network Overview |
14:10 - 14:50 | Improve the contributor experience of the Qt project | High DPI | ||
14:50 - 15:10 | Coffee Break | |||
15:10 - 15:50 | Releasing | Fate of Qt Solutions? | Future of QStyle for widgets and controls | |
16:00 - 17:00 | Plenary Session |
Thursday, 2019-11-21
Time | Assembly Hall | 1.3.14 (Zoo, 16 people) | 1.1.9 (Landsberger Allee, 21 people) | 1.1.8 (Greifwalder Str, 17 people) |
---|---|---|---|---|
9:00 - 9:40 | Qt CMake Workshop | moc and QMetaObject | ||
9:50 - 10:30 | Qt 6 Migration strategy | |||
10:30 - 10:50 | Coffee Break | |||
10:50 - 11:30 | Qt CMake Workshop | Qt Machine Learning and Math | C++17 language and std library features for Qt 6 | |
11:40 - 12:20 | Qt WebEngine Release Management | Qt for Python Documentation | ||
12:20 - 13:20 | Lunch Break | |||
13:20 - 14:00 | Qt CMake Workshop | BoF: Fuzzing Qt | ||
14:00 - 15:00 | Plenary Session |
Sessions
Agenda Overview
The Qt Contributors Summit is mostly organized as an un-conference. In addition to the sessions already proposed here, we assume that participants will come up with topics that they'd like to discuss or work on. At the end of Day 1, anyone that has a session proposal will have a chance to pitch their session, and all participants can indicate which sessions they'd like to participate in. We'll then create the agenda for days 2 and 3, trying to match the sessions with the biggest interests to the largest rooms. The agenda will be updated here.
QML Version 3
Ulf Hermann
CMake Port
Alexandru Croitor
State of Qt6 port to CMake.
Branch Policy for Qt 6
Volker Hilsheimer
The current flow of changes in which fixes go into a stable branch, and are then up-merged gradually through several branches before they reach dev, can cause significant delays, results in a lot of changes in those stable branches, requires a lot of process work that provides very little enjoyment to the people responsible for it, and clutters the dev branch with merge commits. The approach has some benefits as long as it applies cleanly, i.e. it avoids duplicate commits, but with the dev branch having become Qt 6 with large scale refactoring and incompatible changes, it doesn't apply cleanly anymore anyway.
A simpler workflow where all changes go into the dev branch, and are then cherry-picked into those stable branches where we want them, perhaps supported by some automation, seems to be more common in software projects. It provides different trade-offs, which we should discuss.
KDE experience in attracting and nurturing contributors
David Edmundson
KDE has been a primarily volunteer driven project for its 20+ year lifespan. Attracting and keeping volunteers can be a difficult process, but there are many easy steps that can have a positive return. By sharing what we do successfully in KDE, we hope to kickstart a discussion of what steps we can emulate in Qt to improve the number of contributor contributions.
Qt Marketplace
Tino Pyssysalo and Marko Finnig
Qt Marketplace status, existing and planned features, launch schedule, content publishing process, and content usage.
Qt 6 Graphics Overview
Laszlo & co.
Let's have an overview of graphics related changes in Qt 6. The keynote will probably mention some of these, the goal in this session is to expand on them a bit. There can then be deeper individual discussions on specific topics during the next two days, if there is interest.
C++17 language and std library features for Qt 6
Ville Voutilainen
With Qt 6 we want to be able to use some C++ 17 language and std library features. Not all compilers and platforms we are going to care about by the time Qt 6 comes around will support evertyhing, so this needs a balanced discussion of up- and down-sides, leading to a pragmatic subset that we can rely on. See https://bugreports.qt.io/browse/QTBUG-77477 for details.
Code Review: Sharing the load
Sometimes we wait and wait for anyone to review our changes. Sometimes we struggle to keep up with all the reviews we're asked to look at. How can we organise this so that no-one waits too long but all of us still have time to hack on code ? Time To Be Arranged.
API Review Process
Volker Hilsheimer
As experienced during Qt 5.13 and Qt 5.14 releases, some changes to APIs were getting feedback only very late in the release process, when the header diff was uploaded for sanity review. This seems a bit late. I'd like to see if we can find a more effective way of integrating API reviews into the general code review process. Perhaps changes that change public headers require a slightly different process than fixes and changes that touch only the implementation.
Evolving the Qt Project Security Policy
Volker Hilsheimer
During summer, the Qt Project Security Policy was moved from a wiki page into QUIP-15, and during that review process, some changes and additions were proposed to strengthen the project's capability to respond to security issues. Those changes were not taken into the QUIP as part of the move, since for the moment we only wanted to move the content. Suggestions included a clearer statement how security fixes are applied to LTS releases; the integration of CVE handling when disclosing vulnerabilities; the documentation of processes established by the Qt Company; and a general review of the way the "core team of developers" is organized, and operating.
Discussing these (and additional) proposals, and agreeing on what should become part of the policy (and thus the responsibility of the Qt project) is the purpose of this session. A proposal is available here: https://codereview.qt-project.org/c/meta/quips/+/278819
Qt for Python and beyond
Cristián Maureira-Fredes
After one year since the official release of Qt for Python we have been getting many new ideas for features to include in the next releases. Most of the features are explained in the latest blog post we wrote, but nevertheless we should try to build the next versions in favor of the Qt ecosystem, this means not only improving the Qt for Python project, but more like answering the question "How Qt for Python can improve the Qt project?". Please join us in this session to discuss how we can make Qt for Python a first-class citizen in the project by giving it more responsibility.
Improve the contributor experience of the Qt project
Cristián Maureira-Fredes
After the following steps:
- Creating Qt account,
- Creating Gerrit account,
- Agreeing with the CLA,
- Configure gerrit locally.
You are ready to start contributing.
If you think that it is too much, you should join this discussion. We aim to focus on having a welcoming and easy-to-do process for getting more people involved in contributing to Qt. Check the related task on JIRA
Platform-specific APIs in Qt 6
Tor Arne Vestbø, Johan Helsing, Paul Olav Tvete
There are currently multiple different ways of exposing platform-specific APIs in Qt (Qt Platform Headers, Qt Platform Native Interface, Qt Platform Support, and Qt Foo Extras among others). Qt 6 is a good time to take a look at how this can be improved and coordinated better.
Refurbishing Qt Widgets internals
Tor Arne Vestbø, Johan Helsing, Paul Olav Tvete
This is a session to discuss changes to the underlying architecture in Qt Widgets, such as the backing store and parent/child hierarchy.
Future of QStyle for widgets and controls
Shawn Rutledge, Richard Gustavsen, Uwe Rathman
This is a session to discuss a potential architecture for styles that can be used to render both widgets and Qt Quick Controls, making the scene graph available for use in styles, perhaps using techniques similar to QSkinny, perhaps enabling Qt widgets and controls to be backed by native platform widgets (at least on some platforms where it's most necessary), etc.
Qt Wayland Client and extensions
Johan Helsing, Paul Olav Tvete
What existing extensions should we support, and should we propose any new extensions for wayland-protocols? What functionality is missing from Qt Wayland Client, and how can we improve cooperation with KDE and other stakeholders? (note that there is a separate session about the general approach to platform-specific APIs in future Qt versions.)
High DPI
Friedemann Kleint
Recap of High DPI, future plans
Fate of Qt Solutions
Friedemann Kleint
There are some gems in the current solutions (Singleton, property editor, etc), should they live on in Qt 6 and how?
Clang-based cpp parser for lupdate
Lucie Gerard
Introduction to the new cpp parser for lupdate, based on clang-tooling.
Topics:
- How to build a clang-tool?
- What are the requirement to use the new cpp parser?
- Why a new cpp parser (what is gained, what is lost)?
- How can cmake facilitate the use of the new clang-based parser?
moc and QMetaObject
Olivier Goffart
- What future do the Qt project wants for moc?
- Many changes are talked about for QMetaObject in Qt6: automatic QMetaType registration, hash-table based lookups, merging with the property cache, ...
- moc currently hasn't still fully be ported to support C++11 yet. Features such as raw literals, trailing returns and other will confuse moc. Should moc be updated for these features, or:
- Should we make a clang port of moc. clang tools are already used by qt creator/qdoc, maybe lupdate, so this wouldn't be a new dependency, but it would become a mandatory dependency. This would allow moc to be much better at handling "advanced" C++ features. But clang would probably be much slower at parsing than moc currently is.
- While moc has to stay to keep source compatibility with Qt5, should we allow users not to need to rely on moc using something similar to https://github.com/woboq/verdigris , or even encourage it? Recent change with QML3 which will force the use of a moc-json generated file goes against it.
Qt 6 Migration strategy
Friedemann Kleint
- How can we migration to Qt 6 as easy as possible and start already in Qt 5?
- For example, a unified string theory would be a relevant topic
Fuzzing Qt
Robert Löhning
Fuzzing could already find a couple of crashes in Qt, including security related. Let's have a birds of a feather session on how to make the most of it.
- How to try it locally?
- Which code needs fuzz testing the most?
I think of functions that handle input from possibly untrusted sources. Please propose such or let me know about other criteria. - What's missing to test Qt in oss-fuzz?
Qt CMake Workshop
Alexandru Croitor
Help out with building Qt6 with CMake. Provide feedback on things that are important to you.
Qt Machine Learning and Math
Cristián Maureira-Fredes
What C++ and more precisely, Qt, can provide to the Machine Learning community? What about simple Math? Python has shown us how a simple API can transform a whole language, just by providing the proper tools. The C++ performance could be a game-changer regarding Data Science, and it has been used in frameworks like PyTorch.
Qt for Python Documentation
Cristián Maureira-Fredes
Currently, there are many issues with the documentation of the project: C++ snippets, Toolchain, Not optimal structure, unclear flow, mix of tutorials, missing examples, etc. The idea of this session is to define both the design, and content of the Qt for Python documentation for future releases.
Rethinking serialization for Qt6
Arnaud Clère
Serialization is an old problem, still, we keep writing code to serialize C++ data in specific ways again and again. With Qt5 for instance, you may have to code: QDebug << to debug it, QDataStream << and >> to marshal it to another Qt application, use QSettings to make it persistent, QJson* or QXml* to convey it on the web, QCbor* for the IoT, and QAbstractModelItem for the DB/GUI. Even though such code needs to be customized here and there, it is mostly boilerplate code. So, can we make this simpler for Qt6?
Indeed, I will present a solution that enables to read/write C++ data from/to any of those APIs by defining a single function which can be easily customized to specific needs. Its runtime overhead being almost negligible, I will go on talking about many data formats from QDataStream to XML since that is where the actual performance/safety/interoperability tradeoffs are made. That should trigger an interesting discussion on the tradeoffs made by the only broadly implemented serialization for Qt types: QDataStream.
Finally, I hope to trigger enough interest from the community to review and polish this proposal, and to enable more serialization choices for most Qt6 types.
In this talk I would like to review how Qt as whole helps in making embedded devices. There is a variety of offerings, solutions and even real Qt modules dedicated to or just relevant for embedded devices for one or another use case. I think, the total is currently almost unbeatable and at the same time, it is very hard to find. What is that total and how can we make it more accessible? Should we? Is this something contributors should care? Is there an actual interest in the field? I wish to find out. Do you?
Releasing
Jani Heikkinen
Remote display of Qt applications in Qt 6
Jan Arne Petersen, Christoph Sterz
Discussion about API changes which makes it easier to provide remote display of Qt applications. Besides the transfer of the images/textures also input handling (multi-seat?) is relevant.
Qt 6 Network Overview
Timur Pocheptsov / Mårten Nordheim
Let's have an overview of network related changes in Qt 6. The idea is to iterate through the existing list and verify nothing is missing and/or should be adapted.