How to use MinGW-64 with Qt Creator - qt

I am aware that there are many post about this, but I honestly didn't understood any of it.
So, how do I install a kit for my Qt Creator (open source 5.7)?
I already downloaded and installed MSYS2.... don't know what to do with it.
I already downloaded and installed Qt64 - NG.... no clue what to do next.
I just want to be able to develop in Qt and chose betwen MinGW 32 and MinGW 64.
Thanks in advance!
EDIT: I also checked the wiki page. Most of the commands didn't worked. And I was told that it is outdated.

I know that your question is how do you install a kit for your Qt Creator, but first I think it's needed an introduction (Sorry for your eyes, English it's not my native language)
Introduction
The intention is to use the GCC compiler under Windows, what mean we need MinGW (Minimalist GNU for Windows).
MinGW only works for 32 bits, so we need the 64 bits forks, what means to use the MinGW-w64 or TDM-GCC flavors.
MinGW , GCC compiler for 32bits applications.
MinGW-w64 , GCC compiler for 32 and 64 bits applications.
TDM-GCC , GCC compiler for 32 and 64 bits applications.
With that we can create our applications/programs in Windows. In addition, we have other two different tools:
Qt Framework library, for create GUI's/Interfaces with multi-platform compatibility.
Qt Creator , an C/C++ editor, with additional editing tools for the Qt Framework.
About the binary compatibility chain
When we make an application, we've to follow the chain of libraries compiled with the same compiler version, the same way we've to follow the application binary interface (32 or 64 bits) for those libraries.
This means, if we want to compile an application for 32 and 64 bits with MinGW-w64 5.3, plus the Qt 5.7 Framework, we need:
MinGW-w64 5.3 (with flags 32 bits in the config) and the Qt 5.7 Framwork 32 bits build compiled under MinGW-w64 (MinGW-w64 version 5.3 or lower as long as they maintain binary code compatibility with our compiler).
MinGW-w64 5.3 (with flags 64 bits in the config) and the Qt 5.7 Framwork 64 bits build compiled under MinGW-w64 (MinGW-w64 version 5.3 or lower as long as they maintain binary code compatibility with our compiler).
Now come the weird thing. At Qt official webpage it's only available the 32bits builds for MinGW... I don't know why...
Here is when come the Qt64-NG project, a place where get the Qt Framework 64bits binary packages for MinGW-w64. Unfortunately the project is closed, so only are available until the Qt 5.5 Framework version.
I don't know other place where to get newer 64bits Qt binary packages for MinGW-w64 (Maybe the ones at MSYS2 project? I didn't tried yet). So, if one need it, at this moment must be compiled by oneself (This is for answer your opensource 5.7 comment).
Install and configuration
Now your question. How to install a kit for your Qt Creator. I'm going to answer for 64bit binaries because it's what I use (and latter you just need to do the same thing for 32bits)
For use Qt Creator with MinGW-w64, one just need:
Download Qt Creator and install it. My advice is to download the 4.1 (or upper version) snapshots if one is going to use CMake projects.
Download MinGW-w64 (posix-seh , or your choice flavor) + decompress in one folder.
That's all, with this we can create 32 and 64 bits applications.
By other way, in addition to the above steps, if one want to create applications using the Qt Framework library (a GUI/Interface for our applications), it's needed the binary package, this case 64 bit (The 32bit binary package is available at the Qt official page)
Download Qt64-NG (posix-seh , or your above choose flavor) + decompress in one folder.After that it's needed to execute the qtbinpatcher.exe included in that directory, just a double click.Note: If you change this directory to other path, execute again qtbinpatcher.
Here is where end the installation process. In my case, I have all under the same folder. Example:
D:\Programacion\mingw64_5.3.0rev0\
D:\Programacion\qt64-ng\qt-5.5.0-x64-mingw510r0-seh\
Now you just need to configure QtCreator, in this case:
Tools > Options > C++ , Compilers, Add > MinGW
In name put the compiler version, MinGW-5.3 x64 It's the name that will be shown in Kits
In Compiler path browse for the C++ compiler path, in this case D:\Programacion\mingw64_5.3.0rev0\bin\g++.exeTake note in ABI it's selected to use 64 bits flags in the compiler. That's why we put in name x64. For 32 bits, just duplicate and change the selection.
Tools > Options > C++ , Debuggers, Add
In Path browse to the debugger path, in this case D:\Programacion\mingw64_5.3.0rev0\bin\gdb.exe
In name put the name showed at version, GDB 7.10.1 in this case.It's the name that will be shown in Kits
And, if one want to create 64bits programs using Qt Framework, in addition to the above:
Tools > Options > C++ , Qt versions, Add, and select the qmake.exe placed at the qt64-ng bin directory.
In this case is, D:\Programacion\qt64-ng\qt-5.5.0-x64-mingw510r0-seh\bin\qmake.exe
In name put Qt %{Qt:Version} (qt-5.5.0-x64-mingw510r0-seh)It's the name that will be shown in Kits tab
Now you just need to specify the Kit:
Tools > Options > C++ , Kits, Add
In name MinGW-5.3 x64 (Qt-5.5)
In compiler select MinGW-5.3 x64
In debugger select GDB 7.10.1
In Qt Version select Qt 5.5.0 (qt-5.5.0-x64-mingw510r0-seh)
And in CMake goes the CMake path if one is going to use it (I use it with Ninja ).
Note: For install Ninja just copy ninja.exe to the mingw-w64\bin directory, and at the Kit, in Cmake generator push change to generator->ninja , and Extra generator->CodeBlocks. Ninja launch several make commands at same time, what decreases compilation times.
Long text for 1 minute of configuration. The Kit is what we select for compile the project, and one can have as many Kits as one wish (CompilerA x32 + Qt5.x , CompilerB x64 + Qt5.x , CompilerX x64 + Qt4.8, etc, etc).
Now, before to finish, an important thing. After we create a project (and the project it's open), at the Projects selector (Ctrl+5) we've to take care of the Build Environment variables.
Those are the variables that are going to be added at the command who launch our Runs/Builds for testing and debug.
In PATH it's needed to put the paths to MinGW-w64 and to Qt64-NG. And under my humble opinion, I recommend to put it in that order because of dll's. Following our example:
PATH D:\Programacion\mingw64_5.3.0rev0\bin;D:\Programacion\qt64-ng\qt-5.5.0-x64-mingw510r0-seh\bin;the_other_paths
At QtCreator snapshots branch I don't need to check it, it's done automatically
Most of the C/C++ editors works that way. To install editor, specify compiler&debugger path, and specify Build Environment variables for launch from the editor (overriding those environment variable that we've in Windows).
Note: I recommend to compile Qt Creator with 64 bits, due as happen with the Framework, for Windows it's only available in 32 bit at the official Qt website
Alternative way
By other side, we have:
MSYS2 , a Linux like tools environment.
There is all the same, just we download/install the packages with the pacman command, and are available the 32 and 64 bit versions. Those applications need to be launched from MSYS2 shell. It's not a binary compatibility thing but a paths matter.
The libraries available at MSYS2 project can be used in the first tool chain I described (due are build under MinGW-w64 also).
EDIT: Corrected namings, the last explanation, and added Ninja's url and installation note.

You should decide if you are going to use the MSYS2 ecosystem or not. If you want to use MSYS2, you should uninstall the Qt software that you downloaded separately to avoid confusion. For the rest of this answer, I'll assume you are using MSYS2.
You can install these MSYS2 packages using pacman:
mingw-w64-i686-qt
mingw-w64-i686-qt-creator
mingw-w64-x86_64-qt
mingw-w64-x86_64-qt-creator
Then open up a MinGW-w64 32-bit or 64-bit shell using the appropriate shortcut in your Start Menu, and run "qtcreator" at the command line.
You can also use other build systems to build your software. I have used CMake successfully for building Qt applications in MSYS2, instead of Qt Creator.

Directly launching from explorer will also work, unless you need to use qtcreator's Autotools plugin in which case launching it from an msys2 shell is necessary (so that various environment variables are set correctly).

Related

Run Binary With Specific QT Version - Cannot mix incompatible Qt library

I'm trying to replicate an application that we currently have running on a physical Ubuntu server using an Ubuntu machine in Virtual Box. It is a QT application but on the server we are running it using pm2 from NPM. After installing QT, and installing drivers needed for the application i've tried to run it but keep coming across this error:
Cannot mix incompatible Qt library (version 0x50701) with this library (version 0x50905)
I've inherited the code from someone else and don't want to change the project to QT5.9.5, so i'm trying to run with 5.7.1, I've followed instructions on other questions in order to change the QT version to 5.7.1 but still get the same error when running it.
I followed the instructions here:
https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/116254/how-do-i-change-which-version-of-qt-is-used-for-qmake
When checking the QT version using "qmake -v" in the console I get the following output:
QMake version 3.0 Using Qt version 5.7.1 in /home/sam/Qt5.7.1/5.7/gcc_64/lib
So although it looks to me like i'm using the desired version of Qt (5.7.1), i'm still getting the incompatible library issue, i'm very new to all of this so apologies if this is a stupid question. If anyone could tell me what to do in order to use the compatible library that'd be great, thanks.
I will try to explain this in steps!
Each complete set of Qt libraries is called a Qt "distribution". You can get Qt distributions from a variety of sources:
Installed from the package manager of your OS (.deb/.rpm).
From a downloaded zip file on http://qt.io
As a cloned repo from git
etc..
Some of the available Qt distributions will come pre-built, and some will need to be built from sources. In either case they will all have a qmake program that is specific to that particular Qt distribution. This program is responsible for building programs so that they link to the particular Qt distribution that the qmake is part of. qmake is also used when building with QtCreator.
If you have a binary built with one qmake and you try to run it on another computer, it might find the wrong Qt libraries during dynamic linking and spit out errors of "incompatible version of Qt".
There are many solutions to this problem;
Collect all the Qt libraries (Mine are in /home/myusername/Qt/5.version/gcc_64/lib/*.so) in the same folder as your program executable. This will make sure they are prefered to any other version of Qt that may be in your dynamic linker's path.
Uninstall the OS supplied Qt version(s). This may not be advisable especially if other programs use them.
Rebuilt your program from source using the correct qmake.

Qt Creator - setting up a kit with a cross-compiler

I'm attempting to use Qt creator to cross-compile a project, but have an issue matching the Qt version and my specified compiler toolchain.
I have created a Kit setting up a Device, selecting my toolchain as the compiler (GCC ARM Linux in this case), but I only have a locally installed system Qt (5.0.2 on Mint x86).
Qt Creator understandably tells me the compiler cannot produce code for the Qt version; all the guides I have found suggest using a Qt compiled for the target platform. This doesn't make sense though - it attempts to run qmake compiled for a different architecture and fails
How do I install or configure/compile a Qt version to work with the cross compiler? Maybe I can modify my existing one to understand this setup?
Thanks
This makes absolutely sense. The advice to use a Qt, which is compiled for your target platform is correct. But this does not mean that you use a Qt that was compiled natively on that target platform. You need to use a Qt, which was compiled with a special cross compiler on your host platform for your target platform. This way qmake and other build tools remain executable on your host, but create configurations for your target.
So, if you have a compiler, which can create ARM code, use it to build your Qt. Then you can create a kit in QtCreator out of this compiler/Qt pair.
Greenflow is right. I would like to add some information. I have cross compiled Qt 5.4.1 on Windows having an ARM Linux as target platform. You just need to configure the build properly. Here's what I did:
./configure -platform win32-g++ -xplatform linux-arm-gnueabihf-g++ .....
So Qt tools (qmake,moc,etc...) were built as Windows binaries and all the libraries were built as Linux binaries. Check for the available platforms in qtbase/mkspecs.

Qt 5: shared and static libraries

From this documentation it is not clear whether it is possible to build an executable that uses shared libraries once Qt (> 5.0) has been rebuilt in static mode.
I need to build both executables that use shared libraries and executables which are usable without them. Do I need to have two separate installations of Qt for that, or is it possible to use a flag to specify the desired behaviour?
Is it possible to configure QtCreator for this purpose?
Platform: Windows 7, MinGW32/GCC 4.8
I am currently using Qt on Windows 7 in the (almost) exact configuration as you described. Only thing is that you will have to create 2 different compilation Kits for each purpose.
For static compile I have mingw32 compiler and for shared compile I have MSVC2010 32 bit SDK.
EDIT:
Yes I have a statically built version of Qt 4.8.4 (qmake) and I have a Qt 5.0.0 MSVC2010 32bit (SDK) (normally built). I have created 2 separate 'Kits' using these two versions and having different compilers as mentioned. You need to include the following line to the .pro file. It gets ignored during shared build.
#CONFIG += staticlib

Qt Creator 4.8.4. windows 7 - 64bit installation

I have some difficulties with QT, which I need for school for some GUI applications.
I have recently done these steps:
1) mingw-get-inst-20120426.exefrom SourceForge installed to C:\MinGW\ with default settings.
2) Qt libraries 4.8.4 for Windows (minGW 4.4, 317 MB) from QT Project installed to C:\Qt\ with default settings. Here an error occurs:
!!!There is a problem with your MinQW instalation
!!!g++ not found in c:\MinGW\bin\
!!!Do you still want to continue? Yes
I checked c:\MinGW\bin\ there is no such file
3) Qt Creator 2.6.0 for Windows (51 MB)also from QT installed to C:\Qt\gtcreator-2.6.0 with default settings
4) Run the QT IDE
5) Open project or create new project. Another error occurs here
!!!No valid kits fond.
Qt Creator uses the invalid kit Desktop to parse the project.
6) Open Options->Build & Run->Kits (But I don't know how should I set Kits and where to find them).
7) Can you also help me, how to set Qt version
(Options->Buid&Run->Qt Version)? Where do I find qmake.exe?
I also didn't find how to create GUI Application. There is no such option in New File or Project...
Thanks for help.
That is quite tricky ;)
Precompiled Qt (MinGW) is only win32 (not win64).
Precompiled Qt is compiled with MinGW-g++ 4.4 and won't work with other.
You have to download this one:
http://get.qt.nokia.com/misc/MinGW-gcc440_1.zip
//// Edit: With this version of MinGW, gdb won't work (it's not python-enabled). Although QtSDK is depracted (and you won't find it on qt-project.org), I highly recommend downloading this online installer and, during the selection of components mark only MinGW. It will come with folder named "pythongdb".
http://www.developer.nokia.com/info/sw.nokia.com/id/da8df288-e615-443d-be5c-00c8a72435f8/Qt_SDK.html
(You may need to register. It's free.)
////
Add "Compiler" by g++.exe
Add "Qt Version" by qmake.exe.
Add "Kit" with Compiler and Qt Version configured above. You can try to change debugger from CDB to GDB.
When you installed mingw, did you select the C++ compiler? It is not selected by default but you need it. Re-run the wizard and select that.
The kit is not valid because the C++ compiler cannot be found: try to install it first. If you still cannot setup this read the manual: http://doc-snapshot.qt-project.org/qtcreator-2.6/creator-targets.html. It is very complete.
qmake.exe is in *qt_directory*/bin/qmake.exe.
Try this out:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/mingw-w64/ (Since the mingw-w64 project on sourceforge.net is moving to mingw-w64.org i suggest to use mingw-w64.org)
It works for me.

QtCreator on linux: 32-bits vs. 64-bits

My laptop is 64-bits, so when I start to use Qt, I chose 64-bit QtCreator.
Now I'm facing a problem, I wish that the executable files I generated are runnnable on 32-bit linux system.
Can I set QtCreator to generate 32-bit executable files? So that I can decide I want to generate 32-bit ones or 64-bit ones.
I don't want to install another 32-bit QtCreator ><.
You will need to install a 32-bit Qt, at least. You shouldn't need to install a 32-bit Qt Creator, though.
Once you install a 32-bit Qt, you should be able to add that version to Qt Creator and have it work without much trouble. You may need to force Creator to use the linux-g++-32 mkspec while compiling. If you build the 32-bit Qt yourself, you can do this by configuring with -platform linux-g++-32. If you install it from a package, hopefully the package builder has already done this.
I've figure out how to generate 32-bit codes.
from the "project" tab in QtCreator:
Build Settings
Build Steps
QMake -> show detail
put following arguments in "Additional arguments":
-spec linux-g++-32 -r

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