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Please review the following information to ensure ** the GNU Free Documentation License version 1.3 requirements ** will be met: https://www.gnu.org/licenses/fdl-1.3.html. ** $QT_END_LICENSE$ ** ****************************************************************************/ /*! \previouspage JobLimit \nextpage ModuleProvider \qmltype Module \inqmlmodule QbsLanguageItems \ingroup list-of-items \keyword QML.Module \brief Represents a collection of properties and items that can be loaded into a product. A Module item is a collection of properties and language items. It contributes to building a product if the product has a \l{Depends}{dependency} on the module. Modules may contain the following items: \list \li \l{Depends} \li \l{FileTagger} \li \l{Group} \li \l{JobLimit} \li \l{Parameter} \li \l{Probe} \li \l{PropertyOptions} \li \l{Rule} \li \l{Scanner} \endlist When a product expresses a dependency on a module, \QBS will create an instance of the module item in the scope of the product. The product can then read and write properties from and to the loaded module, respectively. Modules in different products are isolated from each other, just as products cannot access each other's properties. However, products can use the \l{Export} item to pass dependencies and properties of modules to other dependent products. The following (somewhat artificial) module pre-processes text files by removing certain characters from them. The module's name is \c{txt_processor}. \qml import qbs.FileInfo import qbs.TextFile Module { property stringList unwantedCharacters: [] FileTagger { patterns: ["*.raw"] fileTags: ["raw-txt"] } Rule { inputs: ["raw-txt"] Artifact { filePath: FileInfo.relativePath(input.filePath, product.sourceDirectory) + "/" + input.fileName + ".processed" fileTags: ["processed-txt"] } prepare: { var cmd = new JavaScriptCommand(); cmd.description = "Processing " + input.fileName; cmd.sourceCode = function() { var inFile = new TextFile(input.filePath, TextFile.ReadOnly); var content = inFile.readAll(); inFile.close(); var unwantedChars = input.txt_processor.unwantedCharacters; for (var c in unwantedChars) content = content.replace(unwantedChars[c], ""); var outFile = new TextFile(output.filePath, TextFile.WriteOnly); outFile.write(content); outFile.close(); }; return cmd; } } } \endqml And this is how a \l{Product} would use the module: \qml Product { type: "processed-txt" Depends { name: "txt_processor" } txt_processor.unwantedCharacters: ["\r"] files: [ "file1.raw", "file2.raw" ] } \endqml The resulting files are tagged with \c{processed-txt} and might be consumed by a rule in another module. That is possible if another rule has \c{processed-txt} in its \l{Rule::inputs}{inputs} property. For more information about how you make your own modules available to \QBS, see \l{Custom Modules and Items}. \section1 Accessing Product and Module Properties When defining a property in a module item, the right-hand side expression is a binding. Bindings may reference other properties of: \list \li the current module \li other modules that this module depends on \li the dependent product \endlist Please note that this applies to bindings in modules only. Property access in rules and other nested items is different. \section2 Accessing Properties of the Current Module Sibling properties in the same module can be accessed directly by their name: \qml Module { property stringList windowsDefaults: ["\r"] property stringList unwantedCharacters: windowsDefaults } \endqml \section2 Properties of the Dependent Modules When a module loads another module through a \l{Depends} element, it can access properties of the other module through its name. Assuming there was a module \c OtherModule with a property \c otherProperty, such an access would look like this: \qml Module { Depends { name: "OtherModule" } property string myProperty: "something-" + OtherModule.otherProperty } \endqml \section2 Accessing Properties of the Dependent Product \qml Module { property bool featureEnabled: (product.type.contains("application")) ? true : false } \endqml \section1 Special Property Values For every property defined in a module, \QBS provides the following special built-in values: \list \li \l base \li \l original \li \l outer \endlist \section2 \c base This value is useful when making use of inheritance. It stands for the value of the respective property in the item one level up in the inheritance chain. For instance: \code Product { // defined in MyProduct.qbs Depends { name: "mymodule" } mymodule.someProperty: ["value1"] } ------ some other file ------ MyProduct { mymodule.someProperty: base.concat(["value2"]) // => ["value1", "value2"] } \endcode \section2 \c original This is the value of the property in the module itself (possibly overridden from a profile or the command line). Use it to set a module property conditionally: \code Module { // This is mymodule property string aProperty: "z" } ---------- Product { Depends { name: "mymodule" } Depends { name: "myothermodule" } mymodule.aProperty: myothermodule.anotherProperty === "x" ? "y" : original // => "y" if myothermodule.anotherProperty is "x", "z" otherwise \endcode \section2 \c outer This value is used in nested items, where it refers to the value of the respective property in the surrounding item. It is only valid in \l{Group} and \l{Properties} items: \code Product { Depends { name: "mymodule" } mymodule.someProperty: ["value1"] Group { name: "special files" files: ["somefile1", "somefile2"] mymodule.someProperty: outer.concat(["value"]) // => ["value1", "value2"] } } \endcode \section1 Dependency Parameters Modules can declare dependency parameters. Those parameters can be set within \l{Depends} items. \l{Rule}{Rules} of the module can read the parameters of dependencies and act accordingly. In the following example, the module \e{foo} declares the parameter \c{ignore}. A dependency to \c{bar} then sets the parameter \c{foo.ignore} to \c{true}. A rule in \c{foo} ignores all dependencies that have \c{foo.ignore} set to true. \code Module { // Definition of module 'foo'. Parameter { property bool ignore } Rule { ... prepare: { for (i in product.dependencies) { var dep = product.dependencies[i]; if (dep.foo.ignore) continue; // Do something with the dependency. } } } ... } ---------- Product { Depends { name: "foo" } Depends { name: "bar"; foo.ignore: true } } \endcode */ /*! \qmlproperty stringList Module::additionalProductTypes A list of elements that will be added to the \l{Product::type}{type} property of a product that has a dependency on the module. \defaultvalue \c [] */ /*! \qmlproperty bool Module::condition Whether the module is enabled. If this property is \c false, the surrounding Module item will not be considered in the module look-up. \defaultvalue \c true */ /*! \qmlproperty bool Module::present \readonly This property is \c false if and only if the respective \l{Depends} item had its \l{Depends::required}{required} property set to \c false and the module was not found. \defaultvalue \c true */ /*! \qmlproperty int Module::priority The priority of this module instance. If there is more than one module instance available for a module name, the module with the highest priority is chosen. \defaultvalue 0 */ /*! \qmlproperty script Module::setupBuildEnvironment A script for setting up the environment in which a product is built. The code in this script is treated as a function with the signature \c{function(project, product)}. Use the \l{Environment Service}{Environment} functions to alter the environment. The return value of this script is ignored. \nodefaultvalue */ /*! \qmlproperty script Module::setupRunEnvironment A script for setting up the environment in which a product is run. The code in this script is treated as a function with the signature \c{function(project, product, config)}. The \c config parameter is a list of arbitrary strings that can be passed via the \l{run} command. The values supported by specific modules are listed in their respective documentation. Use the \l{Environment Service}{Environment} functions to alter the environment. The return value of this script is ignored. \nodefaultvalue */ /*! \qmlproperty script Module::validate A script that is run after the module is loaded. It can be used to check property values and throw errors in unexpected cases. The return value is ignored. \nodefaultvalue */ /*! \qmlproperty string Module::version The module's version. It consists of integer values separated by dots. You can check for specific values of this property in a \l{Depends} item. */