forked from qt-creator/qt-creator
Change-Id: I2b72b34c0cfeafc8bdbaf49b83ff723544f2b6e2 Reviewed-by: Daniel Teske <daniel.teske@nokia.com>
101 lines
3.9 KiB
Plaintext
101 lines
3.9 KiB
Plaintext
/****************************************************************************
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**
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** This file is part of Qt Creator
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**
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** Copyright (c) 2012 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies).
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**
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** Contact: Nokia Corporation (info@qt.nokia.com)
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**
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**
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** GNU Free Documentation License
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**
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** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU Free
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** Documentation License version 1.3 as published by the Free Software
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** Foundation and appearing in the file included in the packaging of this
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** file.
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**
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** If you have questions regarding the use of this file, please contact
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** Nokia at info@qt.nokia.com.
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**
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****************************************************************************/
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/*!
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\page getting-and-building.html
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\title Getting and Building Qt Creator
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\code
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TODO: This should be extended.
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* How to avoid building Qt
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* Windows specific hassle, see README in \QC sources
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\endcode
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There are several reasons why you might want to do your own build of \QC,
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like using the most current development version and being able to tweak
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\QC at one or the other place. It is also necessary if you want to
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create your own \QC plugin.
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\section1 Getting and Building Qt
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\QC usually uses the latest stable release of Qt,
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you can see the exact minimum requirement at the top of \QC's qtcreator.pro.
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(You can find the current version in our source repository here:
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\l{https://qt.gitorious.org/qt-creator/qt-creator/blobs/master/qtcreator.pro}.)
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You find the sources for the different Qt versions for example on our gitorious repository
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\l{http://qt.gitorious.org/qt}.
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\QC requires private headers of Qt, which are unfortunately not installed
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by the Qt binary packages, and also are not copied to the installation directory when
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using \c{make install} on a self-compiled Qt. To solve this problem
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configure Qt with the \c{-developer-build} option, which sets the install
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directory to the build directory itself (you are not required to run
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\c{make install} in that case).
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In Linux and Mac terminals, enter the following commands:
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\code
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cd <QtSources>
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./configure -developer-build
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make
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\endcode
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On Windows, open a command prompt where your developer tools are set up, and enter
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the following commands for MSVC builds
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\code
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cd <QtSources>
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configure -developer-build
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nmake
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\endcode
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If you really need to use a Qt build that does not have private headers in its
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installation directory, you can set the \c{QT_PRIVATE_HEADERS} qmake variable
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to the include path which contains them, when running qmake on the \QC
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sources (see below).
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\section1 Getting and Building \QC
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You can get the \QC sources for a specific version either by using one of the
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released source bundles, or from the Gitorious repository
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\l{http://qt.gitorious.org/qt-creator}. If you intend to contribute to \QC
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itself, you should use the repository from our Gerrit review tool as described
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in the developer wiki here: \l{http://wiki.qt-project.org/Setting_up_Gerrit}.
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We strongly encourage you to do out-of-source builds of \QC (also called
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shadow-builds).
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After you put the \QC sources somewhere (lets call the path \c{<QtCreatorSources>})
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you build it on Linux and Mac with
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\code
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cd <QtCreatorSources>/..
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mkdir qtcreator-build
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cd qtcreator-build
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<QtInstall>/bin/qmake -r <QtCreatorSources>
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make
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\endcode
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or the corresponding commands on Windows systems.
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If your Qt installation does not contain private headers (see above), you can point \QC
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to the private headers by setting the \c{QT_PRIVATE_HEADERS} qmake variable
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to the include directory that contains them. On Linux and Mac, enter the following command
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instead of the qmake call above:
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\code
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<QtInstall>/bin/qmake -r QT_PRIVATE_HEADERS=<QtSources>/include <QtCreatorSources>
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\endcode
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*/
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