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diff --git a/src/corelib/doc/src/cmake-macros.qdoc b/src/corelib/doc/src/cmake-macros.qdoc deleted file mode 100644 index 9b486712f7..0000000000 --- a/src/corelib/doc/src/cmake-macros.qdoc +++ /dev/null @@ -1,651 +0,0 @@ -/**************************************************************************** -** -** Copyright (C) 2020 The Qt Company Ltd. -** Contact: https://www.qt.io/licensing/ -** -** This file is part of the documentation of the Qt Toolkit. -** -** $QT_BEGIN_LICENSE:FDL$ -** Commercial License Usage -** Licensees holding valid commercial Qt licenses may use this file in -** accordance with the commercial license agreement provided with the -** Software or, alternatively, in accordance with the terms contained in -** a written agreement between you and The Qt Company. For licensing terms -** and conditions see https://www.qt.io/terms-conditions. For further -** information use the contact form at https://www.qt.io/contact-us. -** -** GNU Free Documentation License Usage -** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU Free -** Documentation License version 1.3 as published by the Free Software -** Foundation and appearing in the file included in the packaging of -** this file. 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. -** $QT_END_LICENSE$ -** -****************************************************************************/ - -/*! -\page qt_wrap_cpp.html -\ingroup cmake-macros-qtcore - -\title qt_wrap_cpp -\target qt6_wrap_cpp - -\brief Creates \c{.moc} files from sources. - -\section1 Synopsis - -\badcode -qt_wrap_cpp(<VAR> src_file1 [src_file2 ...] - [TARGET target] - [OPTIONS ...] - [DEPENDS ...]) - -qt6_wrap_cpp(<VAR> src_file1 [src_file2 ...] - [TARGET target] - [OPTIONS ...] - [DEPENDS ...]) -\endcode - -\section1 Description - -Creates rules for calling the \l{moc}{Meta-Object Compiler (moc)} on the given -source files. For each input file, an output file is generated in the build -directory. The paths of the generated files are added to \c{<VAR>}. - -\note This is a low-level macro. See the \l{CMake AUTOMOC Documentation} for a -more convenient way to let source files be processed with \c{moc}. - -\section1 Arguments - -You can set an explicit \c{TARGET}. This will make sure that the target -properties \c{INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES} and \c{COMPILE_DEFINITIONS} are also used -when scanning the source files with \c{moc}. - -You can set additional \c{OPTIONS} that should be added to the \c{moc} calls. -You can find possible options in the \l{moc}{moc documentation}. - -\c{DEPENDS} allows you to add additional dependencies for recreation of the -generated files. This is useful when the sources have implicit dependencies, -like code for a Qt plugin that includes a \c{.json} file using the -Q_PLUGIN_METADATA() macro. - -\section1 Examples - -\snippet cmake-macros/examples.cmake qt_wrap_cpp -*/ - -/*! -\page qt_add_resources.html -\ingroup cmake-macros-qtcore - -\title qt_add_resources -\target qt6_add_resources - -\brief Compiles binary resources into source code. - -\section1 Synopsis - -\badcode -qt_add_resources(<VAR> file1.qrc [file2.qrc ...] - [OPTIONS ...]) - -qt6_add_resources(<VAR> file1.qrc [file2.qrc ...] - [OPTIONS ...]) -\endcode - -Since 6.0: - -\badcode -qt_add_resources(<TARGET> <RESOURCE_NAME> - [PREFIX <PATH>] - [LANG <LANGUAGE>] - [BASE <PATH>] - [FILES ...] [OPTIONS ...]) - -qt6_add_resources(<TARGET> <RESOURCE_NAME> - [PREFIX <PATH>] - [LANG <LANGUAGE>] - [BASE <PATH>] - [FILES ...] [OPTIONS ...]) -\endcode - -\section1 Description - -To add resources, you can pass either a variable name or a target as the first -argument of the command. - -When passing a variable name as first argument, \c qt_add_resources creates -source code from Qt resource files using the \l{Resource Compiler (rcc)}. Paths -to the generated source files are added to \c{<VAR>}. - -When passing a target as first argument, the function creates a resource with -the name \c{RESOURCE_NAME}, containing the specified \c{FILES}. The resource is -automatically linked into \c{TARGET}. - -For embedding bigger resources, see \l qt_add_big_resources. - -See \l{The Qt Resource System} for a general description of Qt resources. - -\section1 Arguments of the target-based variant - -\c PREFIX specifies a path prefix under which all files of this resource are -accessible from C++ code. This corresponds to the XML attribute \c prefix of the -\c .qrc file format. If \c PREFIX is not given, the target property -\l{cmake-target-property-QT_RESOURCE_PREFIX}{QT_RESOURCE_PREFIX} is used. - -\c LANG specifies the locale of this resource. This corresponds to the XML -attribute \c lang of the \c .qrc file format. - -\c BASE is a path prefix that denotes the root point of the file's alias. For -example, if \c BASE is \c{"assets"} and \c FILES is -\c{"assets/images/logo.png"}, then the alias of that file is -\c{"images/logo.png"}. - -Alias settings for files need to be set via the \c QT_RESOURCE_ALIAS source file -property. - -\section1 Arguments of both variants - -You can set additional \c{OPTIONS} that should be added to the \c{rcc} calls. -You can find possible options in the \l{rcc}{rcc documentation}. - -\section1 Examples - -Variable variant, using a .qrc file: -\snippet cmake-macros/examples.cmake qt_add_resources - -Target variant, using immediate resources: -\snippet cmake-macros/examples.cmake qt_add_resources_target - -\section1 Caveats - -When adding multiple resources, \c{RESOURCE_NAME} must be unique across all -resources linked into the final target. - -This especially affects static builds. There, the same resource name in -different static libraries conflict in the consuming target. -*/ - -/*! -\page qt_add_bigresources.html -\ingroup cmake-macros-qtcore - -\title qt_add_big_resources -\target qt6_add_big_resources - -\brief Compiles big binary resources into object code. - -\section1 Synopsis - -\badcode -qt_add_big_resources(<VAR> file1.qrc [file2.qrc ...] - [OPTIONS ...]) - -qt6_add_big_resources(<VAR> file1.qrc [file2.qrc ...] - [OPTIONS ...]) -\endcode - -\section1 Description - -Creates compiled object files from Qt resource files using the -\l{Resource Compiler (rcc)}. Paths to the generated files are added to -\c{<VAR>}. - -This is similar to \l qt_add_resources, but directly -generates object files (\c .o, \c .obj) files instead of C++ source code. -This allows to embed bigger resources, where compiling to C++ sources and then -to binaries would be too time consuming or memory intensive. - -\note This macro is only available if using \c{CMake} 3.9 or later. - -\section1 Arguments - -You can set additional \c{OPTIONS} that should be added to the \c{rcc} calls. -You can find possible options in the \l{rcc}{rcc documentation}. - -\section1 Examples - -\snippet cmake-macros/examples.cmake qt_add_big_resources -*/ - -/*! -\page qt_add_binary_resources.html -\ingroup cmake-macros-qtcore - -\title qt_add_binary_resources -\target qt6_add_binary_resources - -\brief Creates an \c{RCC} file from a list of Qt resource files. - -\section1 Synopsis - -\badcode -qt_add_binary_resources(target file1.qrc [file2.qrc ...] - [DESTINATION ...] - [OPTIONS ...]) - -qt6_add_binary_resources(target file1.qrc [file2.qrc ...] - [DESTINATION ...] - [OPTIONS ...]) -\endcode - -\section1 Description - -Adds a custom \c target that compiles Qt resource files into a binary \c{.rcc} -file. - -\section1 Arguments - -\c{DESTINATION} sets the path of the generated \c{.rcc} file. The default is -\c{${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/${target}.rcc}. - -You can set additional \c{OPTIONS} that should be added to the \c{rcc} calls. -You can find possible options in the \l{rcc}{rcc documentation}. - -\section1 Examples - -\snippet cmake-macros/examples.cmake qt_add_binary_resources -*/ - -/*! -\page qt_generate_moc.html -\ingroup cmake-macros-qtcore - -\title qt_generate_moc -\target qt6_generate_moc - -\brief Calls moc on an input file. - -\section1 Synopsis - -\badcode -qt_generate_moc(src_file dest_file - [TARGET target]) - -qt6_generate_moc(src_file dest_file - [TARGET target]) -\endcode - -\section1 Description - -Creates a rule to call the \l{moc}{Meta-Object Compiler (moc)} on \c src_file -and store the output in \c dest_file. - -\note This is a low-level macro. See the \l{CMake AUTOMOC Documentation} for a -more convenient way to let source files be processed with \c{moc}. -\l qt_wrap_cpp is also similar, but automatically generates a temporary file -path for you. - -\section1 Arguments - -You can set an explicit \c{TARGET}. This will make sure that the target -properties \c{INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES} and \c{COMPILE_DEFINITIONS} are also used -when scanning the source files with \c{moc}. - -\section1 Examples - -\snippet cmake-macros/examples.cmake qt_generate_moc -*/ - -/*! -\page qt_import_plugins.html -\ingroup cmake-macros-qtcore - -\title qt_import_plugins -\target qt6_import_plugins - -\brief Specifies a custom set of plugins to import for a static Qt build. - -\section1 Synopsis - -\badcode -qt_import_plugins(target - [INCLUDE plugin ...] - [EXCLUDE plugin ...] - [INCLUDE_BY_TYPE plugin_type plugin ...] - [EXCLUDE_BY_TYPE plugin_type]) - -qt6_import_plugins(target - [INCLUDE plugin ...] - [EXCLUDE plugin ...] - [INCLUDE_BY_TYPE plugin_type plugin ...] - [EXCLUDE_BY_TYPE plugin_type]) -\endcode - -\section1 Description - -Specifies a custom set of plugins to import. The optional arguments: -\c INCLUDE, \c EXCLUDE, \c INCLUDE_BY_TYPE, and \c EXCLUDE_BY_TYPE, -can be used more than once. - -\list -\li \c INCLUDE -- can be used to specify a list of plugins to import. -\li \c EXCLUDE -- can be used to specify a list of plugins to exclude. -\li \c INCLUDE_BY_TYPE -- can be used to override the list of plugins to - import for a certain plugin type. -\li \c EXCLUDE_BY_TYPE -- can be used to specify a plugin type to exclude; - then no plugins of that type are imported. -\endlist - -Qt provides plugin types such as \c imageformats, \c platforms, -and \c sqldrivers. - -If the command isn't used the target automatically links against -a sane set of default plugins, for each Qt module that the target is linked -against. For more information, see -\l{CMake target_link_libraries Documentation}{target_link_libraries}. - -Each plugin comes with a C++ stub file that automatically -initializes the plugin. Consequently, any target that links against a plugin -has this C++ file added to its \c SOURCES. - -\note This command imports plugins from static Qt builds only. -On shared builds, it does nothing. - -\section1 Examples - -\snippet cmake-macros/examples.cmake qt_import_plugins - -In the snippet above, the following occurs with the executable \c myapp: - -\list -\li The \c Qt6::QCocoaIntegrationPlugin is imported into myapp. -\li The \c Qt6::QMinimalIntegrationPlugin plugin is - excluded from being automatically imported into myapp. -\li The default list of plugins for \c imageformats is - overridden to only include Qt6::QGifPlugin and Qt6::QJpegPlugin. -\li All \c sqldrivers plugins are excluded from automatic importing. -\endlist -*/ - -/*! -\page qt_add_executable.html -\ingroup cmake-macros-qtcore - -\title qt_add_executable -\target qt6_add_executable - -\brief Creates and finalizes an application target of a platform-specific type. - -\preliminarycmakecommand - -\section1 Synopsis - -\badcode -qt_add_executable(target - [WIN32] [MACOSX_BUNDLE] - [MANUAL_FINALIZATION] - sources...) - -qt6_add_executable(target - [WIN32] [MACOSX_BUNDLE] - [MANUAL_FINALIZATION] - sources...) -\endcode - -\section1 Description - -This command performs the following tasks: - -\list -\li Create a CMake target of the appropriate type for the target platform. -\li Link the target to the \c{Qt::Core} library. -\li Handle finalization of the CMake target. -\endlist - -\section2 Target Creation - -On all platforms except Android, an executable target will be created. -All arguments will be passed through to the standard CMake \c{add_executable()} -command, except \c{MANUAL_FINALIZATION} (if present). On Android, a \c{MODULE} -library will be created and any \c{WIN32} or \c{MACOSX_BUNDLE} options will be -ignored. Some target properties will also be set for Android: - -\list -\li The \c{SUFFIX} target property will be set to give the library file name an - architecture-specific suffix. -\li Various \c{<lang>_VISIBILITY_PRESET} target properties will be set to - \c{default} to ensure that the \c{main()} function is visible in the - resultant binary. -\endlist - -\section2 Linking Qt::Core - -Since all Qt applications need to link to the \c{Qt::Core} library, this is done -for you as a convenience. - -\section2 Finalization - -After a target is created, further processing or \e{finalization} steps are -commonly needed. The steps to perform depend on the platform and on various -properties of the target. The finalization processing is implemented by the -\l{qt6_finalize_target}{qt_finalize_target()} command. - -Finalization can occur either as part of this call or be deferred to sometime -after this command returns (but it should still be in the same directory scope). -When using CMake 3.19 or later, finalization is automatically deferred to the -end of the current directory scope. This gives the caller an opportunity to -modify properties of the created target before it is finalized. When using -CMake versions earlier than 3.19, automatic deferral isn't supported. In that -case, finalization is performed immediately before this command returns. - -Regardless of the CMake version, the \c{MANUAL_FINALIZATION} keyword can be given to -indicate that you will explicitly call \l{qt6_finalize_target}{qt_finalize_target()} -yourself instead at some later time. In general, \c MANUAL_FINALIZATION should -not be needed unless the project has to support CMake 3.18 or earlier. - -\sa {qt6_finalize_target}{qt_finalize_target()} - -\section1 Examples - -In the following simple case, finalization is handled automatically. If using a -CMake version earlier than 3.19, finalization will be performed immediately as -part of the call. When using CMake 3.19 or later, finalization will occur at the -end of the current directory scope. - -\snippet cmake-macros/examples.cmake qt_add_executable_simple - -The following example shows a scenario where finalization must be deferred. -The \c OUTPUT_NAME target property affects deployment settings on Android, but -those settings are written out as part of finalizing the target. In order to -support using CMake versions earlier than 3.19, we take over responsibility -for finalizing the target by adding the \c{MANUAL_FINALIZATION} keyword. - -\snippet cmake-macros/examples.cmake qt_add_executable_deferred -*/ - -/*! -\page qt_finalize_target.html -\ingroup cmake-macros-qtcore - -\title qt_finalize_target -\target qt6_finalize_target - -\brief Handles various common platform-specific tasks associated with Qt targets. - -\preliminarycmakecommand - -\section1 Synopsis - -\badcode -qt_finalize_target(target) - -qt6_finalize_target(target) -\endcode - -\section1 Description - -After a target is created, further processing or \e{finalization} steps are -commonly needed. The steps to perform depend on the platform and on various -properties of the target. These steps are expected to be performed within the -same directory scope as the one in which the \c{target} was created, so this -command should also be called from that same directory scope. - -This command implements the following, as appropriate for the platform and -target provided: - -\list -\li When targeting Android, generate a deployment settings file for the target. -\li Create a build target for generating an APK if building for Android. -\endlist - -This command is ordinarily invoked as part of a call to -\l{qt6_add_executable}{qt_add_executable()}. The timing of when that call takes -place and when it might need to be called explicitly by a project is discussed -in the documentation of that command. -*/ - -/*! -\page qt_android_apply_arch_suffix.html -\ingroup cmake-macros-qtcore - -\title qt_android_apply_arch_suffix -\target qt6_android_apply_arch_suffix - -\brief Configures the target binary's name to include an architecture-specific suffix. - -\preliminarycmakecommand -\cmakecommandandroidonly - -\section1 Synopsis - -\badcode -qt_android_apply_arch_suffix(target) - -qt6_android_apply_arch_suffix(target) -\endcode - -\section1 Description - -The CMake \c{SUFFIX} target property controls the suffix used on the file name -of the target's built binary. This command is a convenience for setting that -property to an architecture-specific value. This is useful when installing -multiple builds for different Android architectures into the same install -location, as it prevents the libraries for different architectures from -overwriting each other. -*/ - -/*! -\page qt_android_generate_deployment_settings.html -\ingroup cmake-macros-qtcore - -\title qt_android_generate_deployment_settings -\target qt6_android_generate_deployment_settings - -\brief Generates the deployment settings file needed by androiddeployqt. - -\preliminarycmakecommand -\cmakecommandandroidonly - -\section1 Synopsis - -\badcode -qt_android_generate_deployment_settings(target) - -qt6_android_generate_deployment_settings(target) -\endcode - -\section1 Description - -The \c{androiddeployqt} tool expects a deployment settings file as input. This -command reads CMake variables and properties of the \c{target} to generate such -a file in the target's binary directory. Upon return, the full path to this file -is available in the target's \c{QT_ANDROID_DEPLOYMENT_SETTINGS_FILE} property. - -\section2 CMake Variables - -A number of variables are used while generating the deployment settings file. -Some are provided by Qt, others by CMake or the Android NDK. - -\list -\li \l{cmake-variable-ANDROID_NDK_HOST_SYSTEM_NAME}{ANDROID_NDK_HOST_SYSTEM_NAME} -\li \l{cmake-variable-ANDROID_SDK_ROOT}{ANDROID_SDK_ROOT} -\li \c{CMAKE_ANDROID_ARCH_ABI} -\li \c{CMAKE_ANDROID_NDK} -\li \c{CMAKE_SYSROOT} -\li \l{cmake-variable-QT_ANDROID_APPLICATION_ARGUMENTS}{QT_ANDROID_APPLICATION_ARGUMENTS} -\li \l{cmake-variable-QT_HOST_PATH}{QT_HOST_PATH} -\endlist - -\section2 Target Properties - -The properties below will be read from the specified \c{target}. Note that this -command is called as part of target finalization (see -\l{qt6_finalize_target}{qt_finalize_target()}). If you are using -\l{qt6_add_executable}{qt_add_executable()} to create the target and you need to -modify some of these target properties, you need to ensure that target -finalization is deferred. See \l{qt6_add_executable}{qt_add_executable()} for -how to accomplish this. - -\list -\li \l{cmake-target-property-QT_ANDROID_DEPLOYMENT_DEPENDENCIES}{QT_ANDROID_DEPLOYMENT_DEPENDENCIES} -\li \l{cmake-target-property-QT_ANDROID_EXTRA_LIBS}{QT_ANDROID_EXTRA_LIBS} -\li \l{cmake-target-property-QT_ANDROID_EXTRA_PLUGINS}{QT_ANDROID_EXTRA_PLUGINS} -\li \l{cmake-target-property-QT_ANDROID_MIN_SDK_VERSION}{QT_ANDROID_MIN_SDK_VERSION} -\li \l{cmake-target-property-QT_ANDROID_PACKAGE_SOURCE_DIR}{QT_ANDROID_PACKAGE_SOURCE_DIR} -\li \l{cmake-target-property-QT_ANDROID_TARGET_SDK_VERSION}{QT_ANDROID_TARGET_SDK_VERSION} -\li \l{cmake-target-property-QT_ANDROID_VERSION_NAME}{QT_ANDROID_VERSION_NAME} -\li \l{cmake-target-property-QT_ANDROID_VERSION_CODE}{QT_ANDROID_VERSION_CODE} -\li \l{cmake-target-property-QT_QML_IMPORT_PATH}{QT_QML_IMPORT_PATH} -\li \l{cmake-target-property-QT_QML_ROOT_PATH}{QT_QML_ROOT_PATH} -\li \l{cmake-target-property-qt_no_entrypoint}{qt_no_entrypoint} -\endlist - -Upon return, the \c{QT_ANDROID_DEPLOYMENT_SETTINGS_FILE} target property will -contain the location of the generated deployment settings file. - -\sa {qt6_android_add_apk_target}{qt_android_add_apk_target()}, - {qt6_finalize_target}{qt_finalize_target()} - -\section1 Example - -\snippet cmake-macros/examples.cmake qt_android_deploy_basic -*/ - -/*! -\page qt_android_add_apk_target.html -\ingroup cmake-macros-qtcore - -\title qt_android_add_apk_target -\target qt6_android_add_apk_target - -\brief Defines a build target that runs androiddeployqt to produce an APK. - -\preliminarycmakecommand -\cmakecommandandroidonly - -\section1 Synopsis - -\badcode -qt_android_add_apk_target(target) - -qt6_android_add_apk_target(target) -\endcode - -\section1 Description - -The \c{<target>_make_apk} custom target created by this command takes an Android -deployment settings file and generates an APK by running \c{androiddeployqt}. -The location of the settings file is taken from the \c{target}'s -\c{QT_ANDROID_DEPLOYMENT_SETTINGS_FILE} property. This file is typically created by -\l{qt6_android_generate_deployment_settings}{qt_android_generate_deployment_settings()}. -The \c{.apk} file will be generated in an \c{android-build} subdirectory below -the CMake build directory of the \c{target}. - -The \c{<target>_make_apk} target will be automatically added as a dependency of -the \c{apk} build target, which will be created if it doesn't already exist. -This can be disabled by setting the \c{QT_NO_GLOBAL_APK_TARGET} variable to true. - -\sa {qt6_android_generate_deployment_settings}{qt_android_generate_deployment_settings()}, - {qt6_finalize_target}{qt_finalize_target()} - -\section1 Example - -\snippet cmake-macros/examples.cmake qt_android_deploy_basic - -The above commands define the build targets \c{myapp_make_apk} and \c{apk}, -which can be used to generate just the \c{myapp} APK or all APKs in the project -respectively. -*/ |