source: trunk/README.OS2@ 1165

Last change on this file since 1165 was 1121, checked in by Dmitry A. Kuminov, 12 years ago

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1This is Qt version 4.7.3 for OS/2 and eCS.
2
3This document contains a brief information on the OS/2 version of the Qt
4library. Please read it carefully before starting your work. You may also
5visit the project page at
6
7 http://svn.netlabs.org/qt4/wiki
8
9to get more information and the latest news and also to report bugs.
10
11To get a brief list of OS/2-specific changes from release to release
12please see the CHANGES.OS2 file included in this distribution.
13
14IMPORTANT NOTE:
15
16 Please consider reading section called "USING OFFICIAL BINARY QT ARCHIVES"
17 below before getting into details of the manual compilation of the
18 Qt toolkit -- to learn the easiest way of getting it work.
19
20
21
22REQUIREMENTS
23
24In order to compile the Qt library and Qt-based applications, you will need
25the following tools:
26
27 - One of the OS/2 Warp 4, OS/2 Warp 4.5 or eComStation operating systems.
28
29 - GCC compiler version 4.4.5 for OS/2 or above, patched OpenWatcom linker and
30 GNU Make 3.81beta1 or above. The GCC compiler must be set up to use the
31 OpenWatcom linker for linking.
32
33 If you do not have a working GCC environment with the above requirements, it
34 is recommended to download a ready-to-use GCC 4.4.5 distribution from here:
35
36 ftp://ftp.netlabs.org/pub/qt4/gcc-4_4_5-complete-20110303.zip
37
38 This distribution includes all tools necessary to compile and build the Qt
39 library from the source code. Just follow the installation instructions
40 contained in the README file inside this ZIP archive to set up the GCC
41 environment.
42
43 Please note that starting from Qt 4.6.2, support for GCC 3.3.5 and earlier
44 versions of the compiler has been dropped and the Qt library will most
45 likely not build if you use one of these compilers. Later versions prior to
46 GCC 4.4.2 may work but they are not tested and not supported.
47
48 - IBM RC (Resource Compiler) Version 5.00.007 (comes with OS/2 Toolkit 4.5)
49 or Version 4.00.011 (comes with eCS 2.0). Other versions may not work
50 correctly.
51
52There is also a set of optional tools which are necessary to enable the selected
53features of the Qt library. If these tools are missing, the Qt configuration
54script (discussed in section "COMPILING QT" below) will automatically disable
55the corresponding feature:
56
57 - Perl 5.8.2 or above. This is required if you want to perform a shadow build
58 of the Qt library (which is a recommended way to go). Please refer to
59 section "COMPILING QT" for more information about shadow builds. Recent
60 builds of Perl for OS/2 are available here:
61
62 http://os2ports.smedley.info/index.php?page=perl
63
64 - MAPSYM 4.00.000 (Oct 4 2001) to enable generation of symbol (.SYM) files for
65 DLLs and executables. This tool comes with OS/2 Toolkit 4.5. Note that other
66 versions of this tool may not work correctly.
67
68 - LxLite 1.3.3 or above (not tested) to enable the compression of DLLs and
69 executables (which saves hard disk space and application startup time). If
70 you use a recent version of eComStation (e.g. 2.0 rc6) you will already have
71 LxLite installed. Otherwise, you may take it from here:
72
73 http://www.os2site.com/sw/util/archiver/lxlt133.zip
74
75 - CUPS 1.4.8 or later to support printing in Qt. The CUPS libraries are
76 available at:
77
78 http://sourceforge.net/projects/ecsports/files/CUPS/cups-1.4.8-os2-20110831.zip/download
79 http://svn.netlabs.org/ecups/wiki/CupsPort
80
81 - OpenSSL 0.9.8o or later to support OpenSSL in Qt. The OpenSSL libraries are
82 available at:
83
84 http://bauxite.sakura.ne.jp/tmp/os2/openssl-1.0.0a-os2knix-20100706-runtime.zip
85 http://bauxite.sakura.ne.jp/tmp/os2/openssl-1.0.0a-os2knix-20100706-dev.zip
86
87 - MySQL 5.1 or later for the MySQL Qt plugin. The MySQL libraries are
88 available at:
89
90 http://download.smedley.info/mysql-5.1.51-os2-20101001.zip
91
92 Linking against this MySQL build also requires pthread.lib:
93
94 http://web.os2power.com/download/lib/pthread-20100217-os2.zip
95
96 Note that you will also need the above OpenSSL libraries to be able to use
97 this MySQL build. The MySQL Qt plugin itself will require OpenSSL DLLs in
98 your LIBPATH at runtime.
99
100 - PostgersSQL 9.0.1 or later to support the PostgresSQL Qt plugin. The
101 PostgresSQL libraries are available at:
102
103 http://download.smedley.info/postgresql-9.0.1-os2-20101108.zip
104
105 Note that you will also need libc064x.dll for this PostgresSQL build:
106
107 http://download.smedley.info/libc064x.zip
108
109 Note that you will also need the above OpenSSL libraries and pthread.lib to
110 be able to use this PostgresSQL build. The PostgresSQL Qt plugin itself will
111 require OpenSSL DLLs in your LIBPATH at runtime.
112
113
114
115SETTING UP THE ENVIRONMENT
116
117First of all, make sure that your GCC environment is set up and meets the
118specified requirements. To perform a quick check, you may run the following
119command:
120
121 gcc --version && make --version && wl /version
122
123If the setup is done properly, it will print the versions of the key tools
124to the console.
125
126The next step is to set up the Qt environment. If you installed the Qt
127development libraries from the WPI archive (refer to section "USING OFFICIAL
128BINARY QT ARCHIVES" below for more details about existing WPI archives), you
129will only need to run the supplied "QtEnv.cmd" script which will do all the
130setup job for you. The script is located in the directory where you installed
131the developmnent libraries (or in the WPS folder created by the WPI installer).
132Execute this script in a command line session to make it ready for building
133Qt 4 applications (for example, using the "qmake" command follwed by "make"
134for applications based on qmake project files which most of them are). If you
135go that way, you may skip the rest of this section and proceed directly to
136section "USING OFFICIAL BINARY QT ARCHIVES" below.
137
138If you use the full source code ZIP distribution of the Qt library or work
139directly with the Qt SVN tree, you will need to set up the environment yourself
140by performing the following steps:
141
142 - Add the "bin" subdirectory of the directory where you unpacked the Qt4
143 source tree to PATH and BEGINLIBPATH, like this:
144
145 set PATH=D:\Coding\Qt4\bin;%PATH%
146 set BEGINLIBPATH=D:\Coding\Qt4\bin;%BEGINLIBPATH%
147
148 - Add the system DLLs to the GCC library path with the following command:
149
150 set LIBRARY_PATH=C:\OS2\DLL;C:\MPTN\DLL;%LIBRARY_PATH%
151
152 where C: is your boot drive.
153
154 - Make sure CMD.EXE is your command line processor (the generated makefiles
155 will rely on its 'copy', 'if' and other commands). If you have a Unix shell
156 (SH.EXE) in your environment, you may need to force GNU make to use CMD.EXE
157 by executing the followingn command:
158
159 set MAKESHELL=C:\OS2\CMD.EXE
160
161 where C: is your boot drive.
162
163Note that the QTDIR environment variable used in previous Qt versions is not
164used in Qt4 anymore. Therefore, there is no need to set this variable
165explicitly.
166
167There is also no need to set the QMAKESPEC variable explicitly. If it is absent,
168qmake will use the specification stored in the <Qt4_Home>/mkspecs/default
169directory, which on OS/2 always refers to the "os2-g++" specification, the only
170one supported at the present time.
171
172NOTE:
173
174 It is especially important to make sure that there are no traces of any
175 other Watcom or OpenWatcom installation in the environment where you build
176 Qt as it will interfere with the patched OpenWatcom linker we use. This
177 basically means removing all environment variables containing "WATCOM" in
178 their names and also removing references to all those Watcom installations
179 from PATH.
180
181
182
183SETTING UP OPTIONAL TOOLS
184
185The following list describes the steps necessary to set up the optional tools
186that the Qt library depends on:
187
188 - Unzip the CUPS libraries to some directory and set the following environment
189 variables to tell the Qt configure script its location:
190
191 set CUPS_INCLUDEPATH=<path_to_CUPS>\include
192 set CUPS_LIBS=
193
194 Note that you will also need to add the location of cups.dll to BEGINLIBPATH
195 (if it is not already in your LIBPATH) so that Qt applications can find it
196 at runtime:
197
198 set BEGINLIBPATH=<path_to_CUPS>\sbin;%BEGINLIBPATH%
199
200 - Unzip the OpenSSL libraries to some directory and set the following
201 environment variables to tell the Qt configure script its location:
202
203 set OPENSSL_INCLUDEPATH=<path_to_OpenSSL>\include
204 set OPENSSL_LIBS=
205
206 Note that you will also need to add the location of OpenSSL DLLs to
207 BEGINLIBPATH (if they are not already in your LIBPATH) so that Qt
208 applications can find them at runtime:
209
210 set BEGINLIBPATH=<path_to_OpenSSL>\dll;%BEGINLIBPATH%
211
212 - Unzip the MySQL archive to some directory and set the following environment
213 variables to tell the Qt configure script the library location:
214
215 set MYSQL_INCLUDEPATH=<path_to_MySQL>\include'
216 set MYSQL_LIBS=-L<path_to_MySQL>\lib -lmysqlclient_r -L<path_to_OpenSSL>\lib -llibssl -llibcrypto -L<path_to_pthread> -lpthread
217
218 Note that you will also need to place OpenSSL DLLs to BEGINLIBPATH (as
219 described above) because the MySQL plugin links statically to them and Qt
220 will not be able to load it otherwise.
221
222 - Unzip the PostgresSQL archive to some directory and set the following
223 environment variables to tell the Qt configure script the library location:
224
225 set PSQL_INCLUDEPATH=<path_to_PostgresSQL>\include'
226 set PSQL_LIBS=-L<path_to_PostgresSQL>\lib -llibpq -L<path_to_OpenSSL>\lib -llibssl -llibcrypto -L<path_to_pthread> -lpthread
227
228 Note that you will also need to place OpenSSL DLLs to BEGINLIBPATH (as
229 described above) because the PostgresSQL plugin links statically to them and
230 Qt will not be able to load it otherwise.
231
232Note that you need to make sure that OpenSSL DLLs are in BEGINLIBPATH or in
233LIBPATH before Qt attempts to load the SQL plugins for the first time. If it
234fails to load them, it will cache a failure and will not retry even if the
235plugins can be loaded later. To fix that, you need to delete the file
236%HOME%\.config\Trolltech.ini where this cache is stored.
237
238
239
240COMPILING QT
241
242When the environment is set up as described above, you may build the Qt library.
243There are two distinct ways of doing this: in the source tree or in a separate
244directory of your choice. In the first case, all results of the build process
245(intermediate object files as well as final executables and DLLs) will be placed
246right in the source tree. In the second case, they will be placed in the
247separate directory -- this is called a shadow build.
248
249Shadow builds are the recommended way to go because they keep the source
250directories clean and also allow to use the same source tree for creating any
251number of builds, each with its own build options.
252
253To perform a shadow build, do the following steps:
254
255 1. Create a directory outside the Qt4 source tree.
256
257 2. Go to that directory.
258
259 3. Type:
260
261 <source_tree>\configure.cmd
262
263 where <source_tree> is the directory containing the Qt4 source tree. This
264 will create all necessary configuration files, headers, Makefiles and will
265 also build the qmake tool which is necessary to control the rest of the
266 build process (note that building qmake will take some time).
267
268 4. Once the configure process is finished, type:
269
270 make
271
272 Note that by the default the shadow build will produce the release version of
273 the Qt library. This may be changed by passing command line options to
274 configure.cmd at step 3. For example, the debug build can be requested using
275 the '-debug' option. For a full list of options supported by configure.cmd,
276 type:
277
278 configure.cmd -h
279
280To perform a normal build, you execute 'configure.cmd' followed by 'make' right
281in the directory containing the Qt4 source tree. The default in this case is to
282build both the debug and release versions of the Qt library.
283
284Please keep in mind that in case of the dual debug and release build (where both
285flavors are stored in the same build directory), only DLL and LIB files will be
286separated (because the debug versions of them will have the 'd' suffix in the
287file name). Executable files are normally taken from the release build but,
288since the file names are identical, sometimes they may be overwritten by the
289debug versions (e.g. when you rebuild parts of the library later). For this
290reason, performing dual builds is not recommended.
291
292The Qt library is huge so the build process will take several hours (or even
293several dozen of hours) depending on your hardware and configure options.
294
295Once the library is successfully built, you may try to compile the demos and
296examples by visiting the individual example subdirectories in the source tree
297and typing 'qmake' followed by 'make'.
298
299NOTE:
300
301 This version of Qt for OS/2 includes the Extended system tray plugin for
302 XCenter/eCenter which is necessary to enable Qt support for the special
303 notification area on the XCenter/eCenter panel (called the "system tray")
304 which is used by many long-running applications to display their status.
305 In order to activate this support, you need to install this plugin to your
306 XCenter or eCenter. The plugin is split in two DLLs, the plugin DLL and
307 the API DLL. Both are built as part of the normal build process and can be
308 found in the "src\3rdparty\os2\xsystray\tmp\dist" subdirectory of the Qt
309 build tree. In order to install them, do the following:
310
311 a. Copy "plugin\xsystray.dll" to "<XWorkplace_install>\plugins\xcenter\"
312 (on eComStation, this will be "C:\ecs\system\ewps\plugins\xcenter\"
313 where C: is your boot drive).
314
315 b. Copy "apilib\xsystray.dll" to a directory listed in LIBPATH.
316
317 b. Restart WPS.
318
319 c. Add the "Extended system tray" widget to the XCenter/eCenter panel using
320 the XCenter context menu ('Create new widget').
321
322 Note that if you upgrade from the previous version of the plugin then
323 please unlock xsystray.dll in the target folder using the UNLOCK.EXE
324 utility (which you can find in the LxLite package, for example) before
325 performing step a., otherwise the copy operation will fail.
326
327IMPORTANT NOTE:
328
329 Please take into account that the Qt library you build on your own as
330 described above is NOT intended for wide distribution with Qt applications
331 you port or create. Such private Qt builds help you develop Qt applications
332 (because you can easily debug your program and parts of the Qt framework at
333 the source level) but being widely distributed they will create a so-called
334 DLL hell when a program running on a user computer crashes because it picks
335 up a wrong build of the Qt library. This will happen because even a single
336 change to Qt configuration options may make your build binary incompatible
337 with another build. And even if you convince the user to isolate different
338 DLLs (using LIBPATHSTRICT and BEGINLIBPATH) it will create another major
339 problem: two different Qt applications will load two different copies of Qt
340 into memory which will create an unnecessary overhead by doubling the
341 amount of used system resources.
342
343 In order to nicely solve this problem, netlabs.org provides the official
344 binary builds of the Qt library distributed as RPM packages which are
345 described in the next section.
346
347
348
349USING OFFICIAL BINARY QT ARCHIVES
350
351For your convenience, netlabs.org provides all components of the Qt toolkit in
352the form of RPM packages. You may install latest versions of these packages
353from the netlabs.org RPM repositories using the YUM tool. For example, this
354command:
355
356 yum install qt4-devel-kit
357
358will install the complete Qt development environment, including headers,
359libraries, tools, examples and the Qt API documentaiton.
360
361This environment is also a proper way to build Qt applications you want to
362distribute because it guarantees that a proper version of the Qt runtime will
363be used by your applications when they are installed on the end user's machine.
364
365Buiding applications using this development environment is similar to using
366your own build of Qt but it is simpler in many ways because you don't need to
367set up paths to Qt tools and libraries and so on -- the RPM installation
368procedure will do this for you.
369
370If you don't have YUM or RPM installed, please visit the following page to
371learn how to do that:
372
373 http://svn.netlabs.org/rpm
374
375
376
377
378QMAKE CONFIG OPTIONS
379
380The following CONFIG options of the qmake tool have a special meaning in OS/2:
381
382 windows Turns on generation of PM (WINDOWAPI) executables. By
383 default, this option is set for release builds that link
384 to the Qt GUI library.
385
386 console Turns on generation of text mode (WINDOWCOMPAT) executables.
387 By default, this option is set when setting the "windows"
388 option is not appropriate (see above).
389
390In addition, qmake recognizes the following OS/2-specific CONFIG options:
391
392 map Turns on generation of the .map files for executables and
393 DLLs. Note that this option is not set by default.
394
395 sym Turns on generation of the .sym files for executables and
396 DLLs. The option is turned on by default if configure.cmd
397 is able to find the MAPSYM tool in PATH.
398
399 exepack Turns on compression for executables and DLLs. The option is
400 turned on by default for release builds if configure.cmd
401 is able to find a compression tool (LxLite) in PATH.
402
403 highmem Turns on high memory usage for dynamically allocated memory
404 in DLLs and executables. When this option is set, a special
405 compiler flag (-Zhigh-mem for GCC) is used to enable high
406 memory support in the C library (LIBC). This option is set
407 by default so that all Qt DLLs and Qt applications built
408 with qmake are enabled for high memory. Note that high
409 memory support must be enabled for all LIBC-based DLLs
410 linked to the executable as well as for the executable
411 itself: high memory usage will be disabled if one of them
412 votes against it.
413
414 export_all Cause the linker to export all public symbols in a generated
415 DLL. By default (when this option is absent), only the
416 symbols marked with the __declspec(dllexport) compiler
417 directive in the source files.
418
419
420
421PRINTING SUPPORT
422
423Starting with version 4.6.2, Qt for OS/2 supports printing through the CUPS
424framework (provided that this support is enabled when building Qt, see the
425respective sections in the beginning of this document). The OS/2 implementation
426of the CUPS framework is provided by the eCUPS package available at
427http://svn.netlabs.org/ecups/.
428
429The Qt Runtime detects the presence of eCUPS in the system on the fly and talks
430to the CUPS daemon directly, bypassing the standard OS/2 printing subsystem.
431This means that in order to print from Qt applications, you don't need to create
432and configure printer objects using the standard OS/2 system printer setup
433procedure -- you only need to install eCUPS and configure your printers in
434there. Please refer to the eCUPS user manual to obtain the detailed instructions
435on how to configure CUPS printers.
436
437
438
439FILE WATCHING FUNCTION
440
441Qt supports a mechanism of notifying Qt applications about changes to the file
442system, such as creating files or directories, changing their attributes or
443deleting them, even if these changes are performed outside Qt applications. In
444particular, this is used in standard Qt open file dialogs where you can
445instantly observe changes made to the directory contents by third-party
446applications running in the background.
447
448In order to support this functionality on OS/2, Qt relies on the file watching
449mechanism provided by the Presentation Manager. This mechanism is a global
450system resource so that only one process may use it at a time. In a standard
451installation of OS/2 or eComStation this resource is exclusively used by the
452Workplace Shell and is not available to other applications. In order to overcome
453this limitation, a respective function was included to xWorkplace, the famous
454WPS extension (which lives inside the WPS process), starting with version 1.0.8.
455This function allows any number of other processes to receive notifications
456about file system changes and it gets utilized by Qt as well.
457
458If an earlier version of xWorkplace is installed on the user system, or if no
459xWorkplace extension is present at all, Qt uses its own method of detecting
460file system changes which is based on polling the directory contents in regular
461intervals. While this method works well for a small number of watched
462directories with just few files in them, it may significantly slow down the
463system if you work with a directory containing thousands of files.
464
465Therefore, is strongly recommended to install or upgrade to xWorkplace version
4661.0.8 or above to make sure that you will not suffer from the described problem.
467You will also need to make sure that the "Enable folder auto-refresh" check box
468located on the "Folder Views" page in the Workplace Shell settings notebook is
469turned on in order to enable the notification mechanism (note that you may need
470to reboot after changing its state).
471
472
473
474ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
475
476The Qt library recognizes a number of OS/2-specific environment variables that
477affect its functionality at runtime. The table below lists these variables and
478their meaning:
479
480 QT_PM_NO_DIVE If set, Qt will not use DIVE (direct interface video
481 extensions) for painting widgets even if DIVE (which
482 provides a much faster painting speed than the
483 regular GPI approach) is available. Currently, this
484 is the default setting if the Panorama video driver
485 is detected because its DIVE implementation contains
486 a number of bugs.
487
488 QT_PM_DIVE=<mode> Enables using DIVE for painting widgets. <mode> is
489 one of:
490
491 - FB (direct framebuffer access, which is the
492 fastest mode but causes the curruption of the
493 screen under the software mouse pointer due to
494 the limitation of DIVE). If this mode is not
495 available, BLIT will be used (see below).
496
497 - FBSWM (the same FB but hides the mouse pointer
498 before painting which introduces mouse flicker
499 and may be a bit slower than the raw FB).
500
501 - BLIT (slower than both FB and FBSWM but prevents
502 screen corruption under the mouse pointer and
503 does not produce the mouse pointer flicker
504 effect).
505
506 This variable is ignored if QT_PM_NO_DIVE is set. If
507 neither this nor the QT_PM_NO_DIVE variable is set,
508 the FBSWM mode is used by default (unless the
509 current video driver is Panorama, see above).
510
511 QT_PM_NO_SOUND_SHARE If set, Qt will open the audio device in exclusive
512 only one sound may be played on the computer at a
513 time. This mode is necessary for some sound cards
514 when using the Uniaud audio driver as it is known to
515 have problems with simultaneous playback.
516 Qt builds,
517
518 QT_PM_SOUND_SHARE The opposite to the above. If set, Qt will open the
519 audio device in shared mode. This is the default
520 behavior if neither this nor the
521 QT_PM_NO_SOUND_SHARE variable is set. This variable
522 is ignored if QT_PM_NO_SOUND_SHARE is set.
523
524 QT_PM_NO_REGISTRY If set, Qt will not use the Open32 registry to store
525 application settings with QSettings. Instead, plain
526 text INI files will be used for both NativeFormat
527 and IniFormat. Due to a number of problems in the
528 Open32 registry implementation (that may easily lead
529 to registry corruption), this is the default
530 behavior if neither this nor the QT_PM_REGISTRY
531 variable is set.
532
533 QT_PM_REGISTRY The opposite to the above. If set, Qt will use the
534 Open32 registry to store application settings. This
535 variable is ignored if QT_PM_NO_REGISTRY is set.
536
537 QT_PM_NO_SYSTEM_LOCALE If set, Qt will ignore the regional settings from
538 the system locale object found in the Country
539 Palette located in the System Setup folder and will
540 take them from the internal Qt locale database
541 according to the current country and language
542 settings. Due to the fact that this internal Qt
543 database usually has a better representation of the
544 regional settings, this is the default behavior if
545 neither this nor the QT_PM_SYSTEM_LOCALE variable is
546 set.
547
548 QT_PM_SYSTEM_LOCALE The opposite to the above. If set, Qt will use the
549 regional settings as found in the default locale
550 object set the Country Palette. This variable is
551 ignored if QT_PM_NO_SYSTEM_LOCALE is set.
552
553 LANG This variable can be used to override the default
554 country and language used in the Qt application both
555 for regional settings and for translations. The
556 format of the value is "ll_CC" where <ll> is the
557 two-letter ISO language code and <CC> is the two-
558 letter ISO country code. Note that if this variable
559 is not set, Qt will derive the language and country
560 from the system country code specified in the
561 COUNTRY statement of CONFIG.SYS.
562
563
564
565COMMAND LINE OPTIONS
566
567Any Qt executable recognizes a number of command line options that may change
568the behavior of the Qt application. Here are the most interesting ones:
569
570 -style <name> Changes the default Qt widget style (theme) to a
571 style with the given name. The buiil-in styles which
572 are always available in the official build include:
573 "windows" (currently, the default on OS/2), "motif",
574 "cde", "plastique" and "cleanlooks". Other styles
575 may be also provided by the style plugins.
576
577 -graphicssystem <name> Changes the graphics system used to paint widgets.
578 On OS/2, only two values are supported: "native"
579 (the default one) and "raster". The "native" system
580 uses DIVE (direct interface video extensions) when
581 it is available. If DIVE is not available or if it
582 is disabled (see the QT_PM_NO_DIVE environment
583 variable description for details), the "raster"
584 system will be automatically selected as a fallback.
585
586
587
588CURRENT LIMITATIONS
589
590 1. configure.cmd does not understand all command line options understood by
591 configure scripts on other platforms. If you want to customize your build
592 of the Qt library (which is normally not recommended and not supported),
593 you may try to modify configure.cmd itself.
594
595 2. OS/2 bitmap fonts are not supported. Use TTF or Type1 (PFB) fonts with Qt.
596
597 3. No support for widget masks and trapsparency in top-level widgets and in
598 child widgets with native window IDs (Presentation Manager limitation).
599
600 4. No native PM style, but Qt will use fonts and colors from the current
601 OS/2 theme. Hint: if your default OS/2 font is "WarpSans", install the
602 "Workplace Sans" TTF font from Alex Taylor to get more native look & feel.
603 It is recommended to install version 0.7 of the Normal face and version 0.3
604 of the Bold face which you can find here:
605
606 http://users.socis.ca/~ataylo00/creative/fonts/workplace/
607
608 5. QProcess: when starting PM applications from text-mode applications, the
609 returned PID is a PID of the intermediate cmd.exe process, not the target
610 application.
611
612 6. The following classes are not available due to their rare usage or low
613 importance on the OS/2 platform: QSharedMemory, QSystemSemaphore,
614 QInputContext. On the source level, a number of macros is defined to
615 reflect this, respectively: QT_NO_SYSTEMSEMAPHORE, QT_NO_SHAREDMEMORY,
616 QT_NO_IM. Normally, Qt applications use these macros in the form of
617 "#fndef QT_NO_SOMEFEATURE" to isolate the relevant parts of the code that
618 uses these classes so that the application still builds when the
619 corresponding feature is missing.
620
621 7. No qt3support module. This functionality is rarely necessary in mature
622 real life Qt applications and has low priority. In the code, it is
623 reflected by the absense of the QT3_SUPPORT macro.
624
625 8. The following features are missing (either because of the lack of the
626 required support from the system side or because of the rare usage):
627
628 - IPV6 support in the network module (QT_NO_IPV6 is defined).
629 - phonon module (QT_NO_PHONON is defined).
630 - multimedia module (QT_NO_MULTIMEDIA is defined).
631 - OpenGL module (QT_NO_OPENGL is defined).
632 - tablet support (QT_NO_TABLET is defined).
633
634 See the project roadmap for more information on the current progress and
635 future plans:
636
637 http://svn.netlabs.org/qt4/roadmap
638
639 Feel free to request new features and report bugs using the project bug
640 tracker abaialble at:
641
642 http://svn.netlabs.org/qt4/report
643
644
645
646CREDITS
647
648Dmitriy Kuminov (development)
649Silvan Scherrer (management)
650
651netlabs.org (hosting & support)
652
653Nokia Corporation (original Qt library)
654
655We also want to THANK all individuals and organizations who made the donations
656to this project and helped to make it happen. Please visit
657
658 http://qt.netlabs.org/en/site/index.xml
659
660to get the full list of sponsors and to find information on how you can support
661the project.
662
663
664Qt is a trademark of Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies).
665OS/2 and OS/2 Warp are trademarks of the IBM Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies).
666eComStation is a trademark of Serenity Systems International and/or its subsidiary(-ies).
667Etc.
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