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Linking internal libraries

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  • P Paul Thexton
    4 Dec 2017, 10:50

    Top level .pro file is very simple

    TEMPLATE = subdirs
    
    CONFIG += ordered
    
    SUBDIRS += LibOne \
        LibTwo \
        UnitTests
    
    UnitTests.depends = LibOne LibTwo
    
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    aha_1980
    Lifetime Qt Champion
    wrote on 4 Dec 2017, 12:58 last edited by
    #7

    @Paul-Thexton

    Why do you use CONFIG += ordered? You already specify the dependencies.

    Please see here why this is not recommended: https://blog.rburchell.com/2013/10/every-time-you-configordered-kitten-dies.html

    Qt has to stay free or it will die.

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    • V VRonin
      4 Dec 2017, 12:01

      Last question, what is DESTDIR of each of those projects?

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      Paul Thexton
      wrote on 4 Dec 2017, 13:14 last edited by
      #8

      @VRonin I haven't specified a DESTDIR for this sample project, the outputs are generated in to the current project folder.

      @aha_1980 I think it was supplied by the template when I created the project, you're right that it's superfluous :)

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      • P Paul Thexton
        3 Dec 2017, 22:22

        Thanks @vivaladav & @aha_1980 - I'll definitely go down that route.

        As an aside I have a different issue at the moment whereby suddenly the compiled binary of one of my Qt Unit Tests isn't linked properly to my .so which I'm attempting to unit test. The structure is similar to this (If this is not an appropriate thread for this question, please let me know and I'll find the relevant forum here to post a new thread in!)

        Top Level (template = subdirs)
        --> LibOne (template = lib)
        --> LibTwo (template == lib)
        --> UnitTests (template = subdirs)
        --.--> LibOneTests (template = app, config += testcase)
        --.--> LibTwoTests (template = app, config += testcase)

        The tests projects link against the output from the relevant lib by specifying -L$$absolute_path(../../Lib[One|Two]) and also specify -Wl,-rpath,$$absolute_path(x)

        Unfortunately the Qt internals also specify the rpath to the Qt libs which I think means my rpath definition is invalid.

        I either need to be able to compile the binary with multiple rpaths (which googling around many claim should work, but it doesn't seem to for me) or specify that the generated platform_wrapper.sh to add an extra folder to LD_LIBRARY_PATH

        Unfortunately I can't figure out the best way around either :( I'm not really keen on setting up my project to copy around the generated .so files in to the folder where the test binaries live, that seems a bit of a cheat!

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        vivaladav
        wrote on 5 Dec 2017, 01:25 last edited by vivaladav 12 Jun 2017, 00:15
        #9

        @Paul-Thexton no need to play around with rpath.

        I created an example project that does what you are trying to do:

        |TestingLib (TEMPLATE = subdirs)
        |-->SimpleMath (TEMPLATE = lib)
        |--> UnitTest (TEMPLATE = app)

        This is the UnitTest .pro

        QT += testlib
        QT -= gui
        
        CONFIG += qt console warn_on depend_includepath testcase
        CONFIG -= app_bundle
        
        TEMPLATE = app
        
        SOURCES += \
            TestSimpleMath.cpp
        
        HEADERS += \
            TestSimpleMath.h
        
        DEPENDPATH += \
            ../SimpleMath
        
        INCLUDEPATH += \
            ../SimpleMath
        
        CONFIG(release, debug|release) {
            LIBS += -L../SimpleMath -lSimpleMath
        
            !build_pass:message(Release build!)
            !build_pass:message($$LIBS)
        }
        
        CONFIG(debug, debug|release) {
                LIBS += -L../SimpleMath -lSimpleMath
        
                !build_pass:message(Debug build!)
                !build_pass:message($$LIBS)
            }
        }
        

        The idea is to use LIBS to point to where the shared lib is.

        Davide Coppola
        blog | Linkedin | Twitter

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          Paul Thexton
          wrote on 5 Dec 2017, 11:12 last edited by
          #10

          Hi,

          Thanks for your input on this.

          That's pretty close to what I have in my unit test pro file, certainly the end result of adding "-L{path} -l{lib}" to LIBS is what I am already doing.

          I've created the same structure you just described, and I still get the same issue. When attempting to run the successfully compiled and linked unit test from a console, it cannot find libSimpleMath.so

          When running the unit tests directly from QtCreator these work, printing out the value of $LD_LIBRARY_PATH to stderr from the slot shows that QtCreator determined it needed to add $$absolute_path(../SimpleMath) to LD_LIBRARY_PATH before executing the test, but the produced target_wrapper.sh file only contains

          LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/local/digia/Qt5.8.0/5.8/gcc_64/lib${LD_LIBRARY_PATH:+:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH}
          export LD_LIBRARY_PATH
          

          What I am trying to achieve is to gather the results of unit tests when run on a headless build server when I have executed

          make check TESTARGS="-o result.xml,xml"
          

          Running make check on a terminal fails because LD_LIBRARY_PATH is not correctly set at any location.

          I have put a zip of the project structure matching what you created in your example on filebin

          A V 2 Replies Last reply 5 Dec 2017, 13:17
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          • P Paul Thexton
            5 Dec 2017, 11:12

            Hi,

            Thanks for your input on this.

            That's pretty close to what I have in my unit test pro file, certainly the end result of adding "-L{path} -l{lib}" to LIBS is what I am already doing.

            I've created the same structure you just described, and I still get the same issue. When attempting to run the successfully compiled and linked unit test from a console, it cannot find libSimpleMath.so

            When running the unit tests directly from QtCreator these work, printing out the value of $LD_LIBRARY_PATH to stderr from the slot shows that QtCreator determined it needed to add $$absolute_path(../SimpleMath) to LD_LIBRARY_PATH before executing the test, but the produced target_wrapper.sh file only contains

            LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/local/digia/Qt5.8.0/5.8/gcc_64/lib${LD_LIBRARY_PATH:+:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH}
            export LD_LIBRARY_PATH
            

            What I am trying to achieve is to gather the results of unit tests when run on a headless build server when I have executed

            make check TESTARGS="-o result.xml,xml"
            

            Running make check on a terminal fails because LD_LIBRARY_PATH is not correctly set at any location.

            I have put a zip of the project structure matching what you created in your example on filebin

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            aha_1980
            Lifetime Qt Champion
            wrote on 5 Dec 2017, 13:17 last edited by
            #11

            @Paul-Thexton said in Linking internal libraries:

            When running the unit tests directly from QtCreator these work, printing out the value of $LD_LIBRARY_PATH to stderr from the slot shows that QtCreator determined it needed to add $$absolute_path(../SimpleMath) to LD_LIBRARY_PATH before executing the test

            Yes, that's correct. Creator parses the LIBS += -L lines and adds everything after -L to LD_LIBRARY_PATH.

            I'm not sure where target_wrapper.sh comes from. Is that created by qmake?

            Anyhow, if your structure is somewhat statically, I'd just create my own script to setup the environment as needed.

            Qt has to stay free or it will die.

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              Paul Thexton
              wrote on 5 Dec 2017, 13:46 last edited by
              #12

              target_wrapper.sh is created by qmake yes. There are various "solutions" to this problem around on stackoverflow and so on where people have the exact same problem, but none of the solutions provided actually work (probably due to the internals of the Qt mkspecs changing over the years that breaks those workarounds).

              I've got a way of making it work which I'd prefer not to do (it's one more thing to maintain in a codebase which potentially could get very large over time), but really it feels like there's something missing in qmake as the target_wrapper.sh already accommodates the change required to point to the Qt libs, it feels like it should also have been pointing at any other dependency locations.

              A 1 Reply Last reply 5 Dec 2017, 14:20
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              • P Paul Thexton
                5 Dec 2017, 13:46

                target_wrapper.sh is created by qmake yes. There are various "solutions" to this problem around on stackoverflow and so on where people have the exact same problem, but none of the solutions provided actually work (probably due to the internals of the Qt mkspecs changing over the years that breaks those workarounds).

                I've got a way of making it work which I'd prefer not to do (it's one more thing to maintain in a codebase which potentially could get very large over time), but really it feels like there's something missing in qmake as the target_wrapper.sh already accommodates the change required to point to the Qt libs, it feels like it should also have been pointing at any other dependency locations.

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                aha_1980
                Lifetime Qt Champion
                wrote on 5 Dec 2017, 14:20 last edited by
                #13

                @Paul-Thexton: Well, you can search on bugreports.qt.io if there is already a report for this, if not you can create your own report.

                But if you really want to have this function, you should modify qmake yourself and submit your patch to Gerrit. If that's worth the work, you have to decide yourself.

                Qt has to stay free or it will die.

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                • P Paul Thexton
                  5 Dec 2017, 11:12

                  Hi,

                  Thanks for your input on this.

                  That's pretty close to what I have in my unit test pro file, certainly the end result of adding "-L{path} -l{lib}" to LIBS is what I am already doing.

                  I've created the same structure you just described, and I still get the same issue. When attempting to run the successfully compiled and linked unit test from a console, it cannot find libSimpleMath.so

                  When running the unit tests directly from QtCreator these work, printing out the value of $LD_LIBRARY_PATH to stderr from the slot shows that QtCreator determined it needed to add $$absolute_path(../SimpleMath) to LD_LIBRARY_PATH before executing the test, but the produced target_wrapper.sh file only contains

                  LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/local/digia/Qt5.8.0/5.8/gcc_64/lib${LD_LIBRARY_PATH:+:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH}
                  export LD_LIBRARY_PATH
                  

                  What I am trying to achieve is to gather the results of unit tests when run on a headless build server when I have executed

                  make check TESTARGS="-o result.xml,xml"
                  

                  Running make check on a terminal fails because LD_LIBRARY_PATH is not correctly set at any location.

                  I have put a zip of the project structure matching what you created in your example on filebin

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                  vivaladav
                  wrote on 6 Dec 2017, 10:20 last edited by
                  #14

                  @Paul-Thexton sorry, when I wrote you last time it was pretty late and I missed testing the executable from the command line.

                  You are right, it does't work and target_wrapper.sh is completely useless.

                  I will look into this as I need to sort it out too, but let us know if you manage to find a proper solution :)

                  Davide Coppola
                  blog | Linkedin | Twitter

                  P 1 Reply Last reply 6 Dec 2017, 11:50
                  0
                  • V vivaladav
                    6 Dec 2017, 10:20

                    @Paul-Thexton sorry, when I wrote you last time it was pretty late and I missed testing the executable from the command line.

                    You are right, it does't work and target_wrapper.sh is completely useless.

                    I will look into this as I need to sort it out too, but let us know if you manage to find a proper solution :)

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                    Paul Thexton
                    wrote on 6 Dec 2017, 11:50 last edited by
                    #15

                    Thanks @vivaladav - the way I've worked around this for the time being (on Linux platform) is to explicitly build a LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment to force in to the make system.

                    Obviously this is dependent on the following

                    • All folders required for inclusion are at the same level
                    • There are no name clashes with libraries (there never should be of course, but it's not impossible with poorly structured projects)

                    If anybody finds this post who has similar problems, this is what I do to force LD_LIBRARY_PATH to contain all folders at the project top level so that "make check" works.

                    export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=`find . -mindepth 1 -maxdepth 1 \! -name ".*" -type d | xargs realpath | awk '{if(NR != 1){printf ":"}printf "%s", $0} END{print ""}'`
                    export TESTARGS="-o TEST.xml,xml"
                    make check
                    
                    V 1 Reply Last reply 6 Dec 2017, 12:03
                    2
                    • P Paul Thexton
                      6 Dec 2017, 11:50

                      Thanks @vivaladav - the way I've worked around this for the time being (on Linux platform) is to explicitly build a LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment to force in to the make system.

                      Obviously this is dependent on the following

                      • All folders required for inclusion are at the same level
                      • There are no name clashes with libraries (there never should be of course, but it's not impossible with poorly structured projects)

                      If anybody finds this post who has similar problems, this is what I do to force LD_LIBRARY_PATH to contain all folders at the project top level so that "make check" works.

                      export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=`find . -mindepth 1 -maxdepth 1 \! -name ".*" -type d | xargs realpath | awk '{if(NR != 1){printf ":"}printf "%s", $0} END{print ""}'`
                      export TESTARGS="-o TEST.xml,xml"
                      make check
                      
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                      vivaladav
                      wrote on 6 Dec 2017, 12:03 last edited by
                      #16

                      @Paul-Thexton nice one, even if I would recommend you to fill a bug report as things should be handled better by qmake.

                      An alternative and simpler solution would be to build and link the library as static. I appreciate this might not be always what wanted, but it can be ok in many cases.

                      Davide Coppola
                      blog | Linkedin | Twitter

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                        vivaladav
                        wrote on 19 Dec 2017, 01:04 last edited by
                        #17

                        hey @Paul-Thexton, I just noticed that Qt Creator 4.5 is not creating target_wrapper.sh any more. Can you confirm this?

                        Davide Coppola
                        blog | Linkedin | Twitter

                        P 1 Reply Last reply 21 Dec 2017, 13:18
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                        • V vivaladav
                          19 Dec 2017, 01:04

                          hey @Paul-Thexton, I just noticed that Qt Creator 4.5 is not creating target_wrapper.sh any more. Can you confirm this?

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                          Paul Thexton
                          wrote on 21 Dec 2017, 13:18 last edited by
                          #18

                          @vivaladav I've just tried with Creator 4.5 and the file is still created, however I've installed it as a standalone and still using the Qt5.8.0 Kit

                          I will download Qt5.10.0 later and confirm what happens, and whether my solution above is still valid - I suspect it'll be something in qmake for 5.10 that has changed.

                          V 1 Reply Last reply 2 Jan 2018, 12:43
                          0
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                            karlheinzreichel
                            wrote on 21 Dec 2017, 13:33 last edited by
                            #19

                            Did you set your rpath dependencies with QMAKE_LFLAGS ?

                            e.g.

                            QMAKE_LFLAGS += '-Wl,-rpath,\'\$$ORIGIN/libs\''
                            QMAKE_LFLAGS += '-Wl,-rpath,\'$${QMAKE_LIBDIR_QT}\''
                            
                            P 1 Reply Last reply 21 Dec 2017, 14:49
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                            • K karlheinzreichel
                              21 Dec 2017, 13:33

                              Did you set your rpath dependencies with QMAKE_LFLAGS ?

                              e.g.

                              QMAKE_LFLAGS += '-Wl,-rpath,\'\$$ORIGIN/libs\''
                              QMAKE_LFLAGS += '-Wl,-rpath,\'$${QMAKE_LIBDIR_QT}\''
                              
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                              Paul Thexton
                              wrote on 21 Dec 2017, 14:49 last edited by
                              #20

                              @karlheinzreichel yes. The problem is that qmake internally also sets the rpath for the location of the Qt libs (which can be seen in the compile output) and compilers don't seem to like two rpaths being set, I don't know the internals of linux Elf format well enough to say for certain, but it could well be that only one rpath is supported.

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                              • P Paul Thexton
                                21 Dec 2017, 13:18

                                @vivaladav I've just tried with Creator 4.5 and the file is still created, however I've installed it as a standalone and still using the Qt5.8.0 Kit

                                I will download Qt5.10.0 later and confirm what happens, and whether my solution above is still valid - I suspect it'll be something in qmake for 5.10 that has changed.

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                                vivaladav
                                wrote on 2 Jan 2018, 12:43 last edited by
                                #21

                                @Paul-Thexton it happens with Qt 5.10 yes, but it happened only in a project with 1 app, 1 lib and 1 unit test app.

                                I will need to investigate this further, but it seems the whole target_wrapper thing is a mess at the moment.

                                Davide Coppola
                                blog | Linkedin | Twitter

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                                  Paul Thexton
                                  wrote on 3 Feb 2018, 15:39 last edited by Paul Thexton 2 Mar 2018, 15:40
                                  #22

                                  In case anybody else finds this post looking for a solution to the problem, I had a real dig around all of the Qt mkspec stuff and found the variable that needs setting to do this properly...

                                  QMAKE_RPATHDIR

                                  i.e.: QMAKE_RPATHDIR += $$RELATIVE_PATH_TO_SHLIB_BUILD

                                  Pretty straightforward in the end, but if that answer's in the documentation anywhere then it's hidden deep :)

                                  V 1 Reply Last reply 6 Feb 2018, 11:14
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                                    SGaist
                                    Lifetime Qt Champion
                                    wrote on 3 Feb 2018, 21:57 last edited by
                                    #23

                                    Hi,

                                    Some more information about it QMAKE_RPATHDIR here.

                                    Interested in AI ? www.idiap.ch
                                    Please read the Qt Code of Conduct - https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

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                                    • P Paul Thexton
                                      3 Feb 2018, 15:39

                                      In case anybody else finds this post looking for a solution to the problem, I had a real dig around all of the Qt mkspec stuff and found the variable that needs setting to do this properly...

                                      QMAKE_RPATHDIR

                                      i.e.: QMAKE_RPATHDIR += $$RELATIVE_PATH_TO_SHLIB_BUILD

                                      Pretty straightforward in the end, but if that answer's in the documentation anywhere then it's hidden deep :)

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                                      vivaladav
                                      wrote on 6 Feb 2018, 11:14 last edited by
                                      #24

                                      @Paul-Thexton it's always easy when you know the solution... ;-)

                                      Thanks for sharing it!

                                      Davide Coppola
                                      blog | Linkedin | Twitter

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