Qt on OSX cross compiler for PI
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@SGaist
Thank-you for the advice on =reflection:I have installed Ubuntu 14.04 LTS (in Parallels).
I installed the QtCreator package which came with it.
I can ssh to my raspberry.But when I tried to set up QtCreator to cross compile (Tools/Options/Devices) it failed to test connect to my Pi - never had this problem before in previous attempts to set up a cross compiler e.g on OSX and Windows! )
OK - so I removed it and went to the Wiki 'Install QTCreator on Ubuntu' - I now find that Ubuntu will not execute .run files, again a google search reveals a large number of 'do this or that' none of which work (for me)!
I feel I am running out of options!
David H
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Might be a silly question but: can you ssh from OS X or from Ubuntu ?
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What error are you getting from Qt Creator when connecting to your Pi ?
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I do apologise, I should have included this before - I get
Setting up QtCreator to cross compile (Tools/Options/Devices) it failed to test connect to my Pi
SSH connection failure: SSH Protocol error: Server and client capabilities don't match. Client list was: aes128-cbc,3des-cbc.
Server list was aes128-ctr,aes192-ctr,aes256-ctr,aes128-gcm@openssh.com,aes256-gcm@openssh.com,chacha20-poly1305@openssh.com.Device test failed.
Thank-you for your interest
David H
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What Linux flavor are you running on the Pi ?
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Ok, sounds right, what about Qt Creator ? Which version is it ?
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Might be a bit old, I'd try with 3.5.1 before anything else.
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Hmmmm.
I am running UBUNTU 14.04LTS in Parallels on a Mac-mini
The Mac Mini CPU is an Intel Core 5 (which I would assume is an i386 and not an AMD)
The files installed for qtcreator as listed in packages.ubuntu.com are for an AMD64 machine (/usr/lib/x86_64_linux_gnu/...).
Also the ubuntu list shows that Qtcreator after 3.0.1 are under development.
This does not look right!
In any case I have just seen (doc.qt.io) that Qt 5.0 no longer includes a Windows Platform, and suggests that I should wait for Wayland
I think all this means that I should go elsewhere, so thank-you for you time and interest, it is much appreciated.
David
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Core i5 is for sure x86_64 and it can execute i386 binaries as well.
Because x86_64 was invented by AMD and later implemented by Intel as well it is often called AMD x86_64.