1 | This is Qt version 4.6.3 for OS/2 and eCS.
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2 |
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3 | This document contains a brief information on the OS/2 version of the Qt
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4 | library. Please read it carefully before starting your work. You may also
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5 | visit the project page at
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6 |
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7 | http://svn.netlabs.org/qt4/wiki
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8 |
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9 | to get more information and the latest news and also to report bugs.
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10 |
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11 | To get a brief list of OS/2-specific changes from release to release
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12 | please see the CHANGES.OS2 file included in this distribution.
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13 |
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14 | Please note that this version is binary incompatible with previous versions of
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15 | Qt 4 for OS/2! This is not a behavior of the original Qt library (where versions
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16 | with the same major number are usually binary compatible), but it is due to the
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17 | fact that we continue to add missing features to the OS/2 version ot Qt and this
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18 | cannot be done witout breaking the binary compatibility. On practice, this means
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19 | that you need to recompile your applications with the new version of the Qt
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20 | library in order to make them work with it.
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21 |
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22 |
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23 |
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24 | REQUIREMENTS
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25 |
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26 | In order to compile the Qt library and Qt-based applications, you will need
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27 | the following tools:
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28 |
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29 | - One of the OS/2 Warp 4, OS/2 Warp 4.5 or eComStation operating systems.
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30 |
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31 | - GCC compiler version 4.4.2 for OS/2, patched OpenWatcom linker and
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32 | GNU Make 3.81beta1 or above. The GCC compiler must be set up to use the
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33 | OpenWatcom linker for linking.
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34 |
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35 | If you do not have a working GCC environment with the above requirements, it
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36 | is recommended to download a ready-to-use GCC 4.2.2 distribution from here:
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37 |
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38 | ftp://ftp.netlabs.org/pub/qt4/gcc-4_4_2-complete-20091205.zip
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39 |
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40 | This distribution includes all tools necessary to compile and build the Qt
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41 | library from the source code. Just follow the installation instructions
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42 | contained in the README file inside this ZIP archive to set up the GCC
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43 | environment.
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44 |
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45 | Please note that starting from Qt 4.6.2, support for GCC 3.3.5 and earlier
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46 | versions of the compiler has been dropped and the Qt library will most
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47 | likely not build if you use one of these compilers. Later versions prior to
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48 | GCC 4.4.2 may work but they are not tested and not supported.
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49 |
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50 | - IBM RC (Resource Compiler) Version 5.00.007 (comes with OS/2 Toolkit 4.5)
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51 | or Version 4.00.011 (comes with eCS 2.0). Other versions may not work
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52 | correctly.
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53 |
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54 | There is also a set of optional tools which are necessary to enable the selected
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55 | features of the Qt library. If these tools are missing, the Qt configuration
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56 | script (discussed in section "COMPILING QT" below) will automatically disable
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57 | the corresponding feature:
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58 |
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59 | - Perl 5.8.2 or above. This is required if you want to perform a shadow build
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60 | of the Qt library (which is a recommended way to go). Please refer to
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61 | section "COMPILING QT" for more information about shadow builds. Recent
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62 | builds of Perl for OS/2 are available here:
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63 |
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64 | http://os2ports.smedley.info/index.php?page=perl
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65 |
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66 | - MAPSYM 4.00.000 (Oct 4 2001) to enable generation of symbol (.SYM) files for
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67 | DLLs and executables. This tool comes with OS/2 Toolkit 4.5. Note that other
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68 | versions of this tool may not work correctly.
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69 |
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70 | - LxLite 1.3.3 or above (not tested) to enable the compression of DLLs and
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71 | executables (which saves hard disk space and application startup time). If
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72 | you use a recent version of eComStation (e.g. 2.0 rc6) you will already have
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73 | LxLite installed. Otherwise, you may take it from here:
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74 |
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75 | http://www.os2site.com/sw/util/archiver/lxlt133.zip
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76 |
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77 | - CUPS 1.3.11 or later to support printing in Qt. The CUPS libraries are
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78 | available at:
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79 |
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80 | http://download.smedley.info/cups-1.3.11-os2-20090807.zip
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81 |
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82 | Linking against eCUPS also requires pthread.lib:
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83 |
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84 | http://web.os2power.com/download/lib/pthread-20100217-os2.zip
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85 |
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86 | - OpenSSL 0.9.8o or later to support OpenSSL in Qt. The OpenSSL libraries are
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87 | available at:
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88 |
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89 | http://bauxite.sakura.ne.jp/tmp/os2/openssl-1.0.0a-os2knix-20100706-runtime.zip
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90 | http://bauxite.sakura.ne.jp/tmp/os2/openssl-1.0.0a-os2knix-20100706-dev.zip
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91 |
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92 | - MySQL 5.1 or later for the MySQL Qt plugin. The MySQL libraries are
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93 | available at:
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94 |
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95 | http://download.smedley.info/mysql-5.1.51-os2-20101001.zip
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96 |
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97 | Note that you will also need the above OpenSSL libraries and pthread.lib to
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98 | be able to use this MySQL build. The MySQL Qt plugin itself will require
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99 | OpenSSL DLLs in your LIBPATH at runtime.
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100 |
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101 | - PostgersSQL 9.0.1 or later to support the PostgresSQL Qt plugin. The
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102 | PostgresSQL libraries are available at:
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103 |
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104 | http://download.smedley.info/postgresql-9.0.1-os2-20101108.zip
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105 |
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106 | Note that you will also need libc064x.dll for this PostgresSQL build:
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107 |
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108 | http://download.smedley.info/libc064x.zip
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109 |
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110 | Note that you will also need the above OpenSSL libraries and pthread.lib to
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111 | be able to use this PostgresSQL build. The PostgresSQL Qt plugin itself will
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112 | require OpenSSL DLLs in your LIBPATH at runtime.
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113 |
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114 |
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115 |
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116 | SETTING UP THE ENVIRONMENT
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117 |
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118 | First of all, make sure that your GCC environment is set up and meets the
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119 | specified requirements. To perform a quick check, you may run the following
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120 | command:
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121 |
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122 | gcc --version && make --version && wl /version
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123 |
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124 | If the setup is done properly, it will print the versions of the key tools
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125 | to the console.
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126 |
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127 | The next step is to set up the Qt environment. If you installed the Qt
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128 | development libraries from the WPI archive (refer to section "USING OFFICIAL
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129 | BINARY QT ARCHIVES" below for more details about existing WPI archives), you
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130 | will only need to run the supplied "QtEnv.cmd" script which will do all the
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131 | setup job for you. The script is located in the directory where you installed
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132 | the developmnent libraries (or in the WPS folder created by the WPI installer).
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133 | Execute this script in a command line session to make it ready for building
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134 | Qt 4 applications (for example, using the "qmake" command follwed by "make"
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135 | for applications based on qmake project files which most of them are). If you
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136 | go that way, you may skip the rest of this section and proceed directly to
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137 | section "USING OFFICIAL BINARY QT ARCHIVES" below.
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138 |
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139 | If you use the full source code ZIP distribution of the Qt library or work
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140 | directly with the Qt SVN tree, you will need to set up the environment yourself
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141 | by performing the following steps:
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142 |
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143 | - Add the "bin" subdirectory of the directory where you unpacked the Qt4
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144 | source tree to PATH and BEGINLIBPATH, like this:
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145 |
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146 | set PATH=D:\Coding\Qt4\bin;%PATH%
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147 | set BEGINLIBPATH=D:\Coding\Qt4\bin;%BEGINLIBPATH%
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148 |
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149 | - Add the system DLLs to the GCC library path with the following command:
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150 |
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151 | set LIBRARY_PATH=C:\OS2\DLL;C:\MPTN\DLL;%LIBRARY_PATH%
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152 |
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153 | where C: is your boot drive.
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154 |
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155 | - Make sure CMD.EXE is your command line processor (the generated makefiles
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156 | will rely on its 'copy', 'if' and other commands). If you have a Unix shell
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157 | (SH.EXE) in your environment, you may need to force GNU make to use CMD.EXE
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158 | by executing the followingn command:
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159 |
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160 | set MAKESHELL=C:\OS2\CMD.EXE
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161 |
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162 | where C: is your boot drive.
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163 |
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164 | Note that the QTDIR environment variable used in previous Qt versions is not
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165 | used in Qt4 anymore. Therefore, there is no need to set this variable
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166 | explicitly.
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167 |
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168 | There is also no need to set the QMAKESPEC variable explicitly. If it is absent,
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169 | qmake will use the specification stored in the <Qt4_Home>/mkspecs/default
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170 | directory, which on OS/2 always refers to the "os2-g++" specification, the only
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171 | one supported at the present time.
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172 |
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173 | NOTE:
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174 |
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175 | It is especially important to make sure that there are no traces of any
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176 | other Watcom or OpenWatcom installation in the environment where you build
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177 | Qt as it will interfere with the patched OpenWatcom linker we use. This
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178 | basically means removing all environment variables containing "WATCOM" in
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179 | their names and also removing references to all those Watcom installations
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180 | from PATH.
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181 |
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182 |
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183 |
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184 | SETTING UP OPTIONAL TOOLS
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185 |
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186 | The following list describes the steps necessary to set up the optional tools
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187 | that the Qt library depends on:
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188 |
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189 | - Unzip the CUPS libraries to some directory and set the following environment
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190 | variables to tell the Qt configure script its location:
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191 |
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192 | set CUPS_INCLUDEPATH=<path_to_CUPS>\include
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193 | set CUPS_LIBS=-L<path_to_CUPS>\lib -llibcups.a -L<path_to_pthread> -lpthread.lib
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194 |
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195 | - Unzip the OpenSSL libraries to some directory and set the following
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196 | environment variables to tell the Qt configure script its location:
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197 |
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198 | set OPENSSL_INCLUDEPATH=<path_to_OpenSSL>\include
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199 | set OPENSSL_LIBS=
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200 |
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201 | Note that you will also need to place OpenSSL DLLs to BEGINLIBPATH (if they
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202 | are not already in your LIBPATH) so that Qt applications can find them at
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203 | runtime:
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204 |
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205 | set BEGINLIBPATH=<path_to_OpenSSL>\dll;%BEGINLIBPATH%
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206 |
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207 | - Unzip the MySQL archive to some directory and set the following environment
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208 | variables to tell the Qt configure script the library location:
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209 |
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210 | set MYSQL_INCLUDEPATH=<path_to_MySQL>\include'
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211 | set MYSQL_LIBS=-L<path_to_MySQL>\lib -lmysqlclient_r -L<path_to_OpenSSL>\lib -llibssl -llibcrypto -L<path_to_pthread> -lpthread
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212 |
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213 | Note that you will also need to place OpenSSL DLLs to BEGINLIBPATH (as
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214 | described above) because the MySQL plugin links statically to them and Qt
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215 | will not be able to load it otherwise.
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216 |
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217 | - Unzip the PostgresSQL archive to some directory and set the following
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218 | environment variables to tell the Qt configure script the library location:
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219 |
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220 | set PSQL_INCLUDEPATH=<path_to_PostgresSQL>\include'
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221 | set PSQL_LIBS=-L<path_to_PostgresSQL>\lib -llibpq -L<path_to_OpenSSL>\lib -llibssl -llibcrypto -L<path_to_pthread> -lpthread
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222 |
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223 | Note that you will also need to place OpenSSL DLLs to BEGINLIBPATH (as
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224 | described above) because the PostgresSQL plugin links statically to them and
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225 | Qt will not be able to load it otherwise.
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226 |
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227 | Note that you need to make sure that OpenSSL DLLs are in BEGINLIBPATH or in
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228 | LIBPATH before Qt attempts to load the SQL plugins for the first time. If it
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229 | fails to load them, it will cache a failure and will not retry even if the
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230 | plugins can be loaded later. To fix that, you need to delete the file
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231 | %HOME%\.config\Trolltech.ini where this cache is stored.
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232 |
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233 |
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234 |
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235 | COMPILING QT
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236 |
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237 | You should skip this section if you installed the Qt development libraries using
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238 | the WPI archive (that already contains compiled release versions of the
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239 | libraries) and proceed directly to the next section.
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240 |
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241 | When the environment is set up as described above, you may build the Qt library.
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242 | There are two distinct ways of doing this: in the source tree or in a separate
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243 | directory of your choice. In the first case, all results of the build process
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244 | (intermediate object files as well as final executables and DLLs) will be placed
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245 | right in the source tree. In the second case, they will be placed in the
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246 | separate directory -- this is called a shadow build.
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247 |
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248 | Shadow builds are the recommended way to go because they keep the source
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249 | directories clean and also allow to use the same source tree for creating any
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250 | number of builds, each with its own build options.
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251 |
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252 | To perform a shadow build, do the following steps:
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253 |
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254 | 1. Create a directory outside the Qt4 source tree.
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255 |
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256 | 2. Go to that directory.
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257 |
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258 | 3. Type:
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259 |
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260 | <source_tree>\configure.cmd
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261 |
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262 | where <source_tree> is the directory containing the Qt4 source tree. This
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263 | will create all necessary configuration files, headers, Makefiles and will
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264 | also build the qmake tool which is necessary to control the rest of the
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265 | build process (note that building qmake will take some time).
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266 |
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267 | 4. Once the configure process is finished, type:
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268 |
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269 | make
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270 |
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271 | Note that by the default the shadow build will produce the release version of
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272 | the Qt library. This may be changed by passing command line options to
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273 | configure.cmd at step 3. For example, the debug build can be requested using
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274 | the '-debug' option. For a full list of options supported by configure.cmd,
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275 | type:
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276 |
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277 | configure.cmd -h
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278 |
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279 | To perform a normal build, you execute 'configure.cmd' followed by 'make' right
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280 | in the directory containing the Qt4 source tree. The default in this case is to
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281 | build both the debug and release versions of the Qt library.
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282 |
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283 | Please keep in mind that in case of the dual debug and release build (where both
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284 | flavors are stored in the same build directory), only DLL and LIB files will be
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285 | separated (because the debug versions of them will have the 'd' suffix in the
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286 | file name). Executable files are normally taken from the release build but,
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287 | since the file names are identical, sometimes they may be overwritten by the
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288 | debug versions (e.g. when you rebuild parts of the library later). For this
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289 | reason, performing dual builds is not recommended.
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290 |
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291 | The Qt library is huge so the build process will take several hours (or even
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292 | several dozen of hours) depending on your hardware and configure options.
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293 |
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294 | Once the library is successfully built, you may try to compile the demos and
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295 | examples by visiting the individual example subdirectories in the source tree
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296 | and typing 'qmake' followed by 'make'.
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297 |
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298 | NOTE:
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299 |
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300 | This version of Qt for OS/2 includes the Extended system tray plugin for
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301 | XCenter/eCenter which is necessary to enable Qt support for the special
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302 | notification area on the XCenter/eCenter panel (called the "system tray")
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303 | which is used by many long-running applications to display their status.
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304 | In order to activate this support, you need to install this plugin to your
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305 | XCenter or eCenter. The plugin is built during the normal Qt build process
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306 | and can be found in the file \plugins\xcenter\xsystray.dll in the Qt source
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307 | tree. In order to install the plugin, do the following:
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308 |
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309 | a. Copy xsystray.dll to <XWorkplace installation folder>\plugins\xcenter\
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310 | (on eComStation, this will be C:\ecs\system\ewps\plugins\xcenter\ where
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311 | C: is your boot drive).
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312 |
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313 | b. Restart WPS.
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314 |
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315 | c. Add the "Extended system tray" widget to the XCenter/eCenter panel using
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316 | the XCenter context menu ('Create new widget').
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317 |
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318 | Note that if you upgrade from the previous version of the plugin then
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319 | please unlock xsystray.dll in the target folder using the UNLOCK.EXE
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320 | utility (which you can find in the LxLite package, for example) before
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321 | performing step a., otherwise the copy operation will fail.
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322 |
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323 | IMPORTANT NOTE:
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324 |
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325 | Please take into account that the Qt library you build on your own as
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326 | described above is NOT intended for wide distribution with Qt applications
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327 | you port or create. Such private Qt builds help you develop Qt applications
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328 | (because you can easily debug your program and parts of the Qt framework at
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329 | the source level) but being widely distributed they will create a so-called
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330 | DLL hell when a program running on a user computer crashes because it picks
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331 | up a wrong build of the Qt library. This will happen because even a single
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332 | change to Qt configuration options may make your build binary incompatible
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333 | with another build. And even if you convince the user to isolate different
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334 | DLLs (using LIBPATHSTRICT and BEGINLIBPATH) it will create another major
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335 | problem: two different Qt applications will load two different copies of Qt
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336 | into memory which will create an unnecessary overhead by doubling the
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337 | amount of used system resources.
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338 |
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339 | In order to nicely solve this problem, netlabs.org provides the official
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340 | binary builds of the Qt library distributed as WPI archives which are
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341 | described in the next section.
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342 |
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343 |
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344 |
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345 | USING OFFICIAL BINARY QT ARCHIVES
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346 |
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347 | For your convenience, netlabs.org provides the following binary distributions
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348 | of the Qt library (where X_Y_Z is the Qt version number) distributed as WPI
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349 | archives:
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350 |
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351 | qt-lib-X_Y_Z.wpi - Runtime DLLs and binaries ("lib" archive)
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352 | qt-dev-X_Y_Z.wpi - Development libraries, tools and headers ("dev" archive)
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353 |
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354 | These archives are called the official binary archives of the Qt library for
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355 | OS/2. An official binary archive contains the most complete Qt build that
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356 | enables all features of the Qt library and includes all standard Qt plugins
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357 | implemented for the OS/2 platform at the time of the release.
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358 |
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359 | The "lib" archive contains the release versions of DLLs (and may contain a few
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360 | helper binaries) necessary to run applications created using the Qt framework.
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361 | This package is usually installed by end users together with Qt applications
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362 | they want to use.
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363 |
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364 | The "dev" archive contains pre-built release versions of import libraries and
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365 | a complete set of C++ include headers of the Qt framework. This package is used
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366 | by developers and porters of Qt applications to build release versions of the
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367 | applications that are binary compatibie with the Qt runtime provided by the
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368 | official "lib" archive described above. Using the "dev" package requires the
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369 | same environment as described in section "SETTING UP THE ENVIRONMET" above.
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370 |
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371 | Please note again that the "dev" archive is intended to make a final release
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372 | build of the Qt application which you do when you decide to ship a new version
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373 | to the end users -- makes sure that the deployed application will share the same
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374 | Qt runtime with other Qt applications. However, for daily work it is highly
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375 | recommended that you build the debug version of the Qt library yourself (using
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376 | the full source code ZIP archive or directly from SVN) as described in section
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377 | "COMPILING QT").
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378 |
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379 | Besides the "lib" and the "dev" archives, the following official archives exist
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380 | that you may also find useful:
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381 |
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382 | qt-examples-X_Y_Z.wpi - Demo and example sources ("examples")
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383 |
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384 | The "examples" archive contains the source code and compiled binaries of the
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385 | demo and example applications shipped with Qt. They serve as a good
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386 | demonstration of the Qt library features and it is recommended to look at them.
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387 | The binaries are compiled using the official "lib" archive. Please note that
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388 | some demos and examples may miss from the arcvhice since not all features have
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389 | been implemented in the OS/2 version of Qt yet.
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390 |
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391 | NOTE:
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392 |
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393 | All .DLL and .EXE files of the official binary build contain a DESCRIPTION
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394 | string with the vendor field set to "netlabs.org" (by contrast, all custom
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395 | Qt builds will set the vendor field to what the USER environment variable
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396 | contains or to "anonymous" if USER is not set). Please note that you must
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397 | NOT set vendor to "netlabs.org" when creating your own builds of the Qt
|
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398 | library because it will make it difficult to identify various distributions
|
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399 | and track possible problems with the builds.
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400 |
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401 |
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402 |
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403 | QMAKE CONFIG OPTIONS
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404 |
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405 | The following CONFIG options of the qmake tool have a special meaning in OS/2:
|
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406 |
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407 | windows Turns on generation of PM (WINDOWAPI) executables. By
|
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408 | default, this option is set for release builds that link
|
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409 | to the Qt GUI library.
|
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410 |
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411 | console Turns on generation of text mode (WINDOWCOMPAT) executables.
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412 | By default, this option is set when setting the "windows"
|
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413 | option is not appropriate (see above).
|
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414 |
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415 | In addition, qmake recognizes the following OS/2-specific CONFIG options:
|
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416 |
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417 | map Turns on generation of the .map files for executables and
|
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418 | DLLs. Note that this option is not set by default.
|
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419 |
|
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420 | sym Turns on generation of the .sym files for executables and
|
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421 | DLLs. The option is turned on by default if configure.cmd
|
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422 | is able to find the MAPSYM tool in PATH.
|
---|
423 |
|
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424 | exepack Turns on compression for executables and DLLs. The option is
|
---|
425 | turned on by default for release builds if configure.cmd
|
---|
426 | is able to find a compression tool (LxLite) in PATH.
|
---|
427 |
|
---|
428 | highmem Turns on high memory usage for dynamically allocated memory
|
---|
429 | in DLLs and executables. When this option is set, a special
|
---|
430 | compiler flag (-Zhigh-mem for GCC) is used to enable high
|
---|
431 | memory support in the C library (LIBC). This option is set
|
---|
432 | by default so that all Qt DLLs and Qt applications built
|
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433 | with qmake are enabled for high memory. Note that high
|
---|
434 | memory support must be enabled for all LIBC-based DLLs
|
---|
435 | linked to the executable as well as for the executable
|
---|
436 | itself: high memory usage will be disabled if one of them
|
---|
437 | votes against it.
|
---|
438 |
|
---|
439 | export_all Cause the linker to export all public symbols in a generated
|
---|
440 | DLL. By default (when this option is absent), only the
|
---|
441 | symbols marked with the __declspec(dllexport) compiler
|
---|
442 | directive in the source files.
|
---|
443 |
|
---|
444 |
|
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445 |
|
---|
446 | PRINTING SUPPORT
|
---|
447 |
|
---|
448 | Starting with version 4.6.2, Qt for OS/2 supports printing through the CUPS
|
---|
449 | framework (provided that this support is enabled when building Qt, see the
|
---|
450 | respective sections in the beginning of this document). The OS/2 implementation
|
---|
451 | of the CUPS framework is provided by the eCUPS package available at
|
---|
452 | http://svn.netlabs.org/ecups/.
|
---|
453 |
|
---|
454 | The Qt Runtime detects the presence of eCUPS in the system on the fly and talks
|
---|
455 | to the CUPS daemon directly, bypassing the standard OS/2 printing subsystem.
|
---|
456 | This means that in order to print from Qt applications, you don't need to create
|
---|
457 | and configure printer objects using the standard OS/2 system printer setup
|
---|
458 | procedure -- you only need to install eCUPS and configure your printers in
|
---|
459 | there. Please refer to the eCUPS user manual to obtain the detailed instructions
|
---|
460 | on how to configure CUPS printers.
|
---|
461 |
|
---|
462 |
|
---|
463 |
|
---|
464 | FILE WATCHING FUNCTION
|
---|
465 |
|
---|
466 | Qt supports a mechanism of notifying Qt applications about changes to the file
|
---|
467 | system, such as creating files or directories, changing their attributes or
|
---|
468 | deleting them, even if these changes are performed outside Qt applications. In
|
---|
469 | particular, this is used in standard Qt open file dialogs where you can
|
---|
470 | instantly observe changes made to the directory contents by third-party
|
---|
471 | applications running in the background.
|
---|
472 |
|
---|
473 | In order to support this functionality on OS/2, Qt relies on the file watching
|
---|
474 | mechanism provided by the Presentation Manager. This mechanism is a global
|
---|
475 | system resource so that only one process may use it at a time. In a standard
|
---|
476 | installation of OS/2 or eComStation this resource is exclusively used by the
|
---|
477 | Workplace Shell and is not available to other applications. In order to overcome
|
---|
478 | this limitation, a respective function was included to xWorkplace, the famous
|
---|
479 | WPS extension (which lives inside the WPS process), starting with version 1.0.8.
|
---|
480 | This function allows any number of other processes to receive notifications
|
---|
|
---|