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The C++ Compiler cannot run a simple test program

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  • D Daemonitas

    @J-Hilk
    They look perfectly fine
    abfb2204-f65e-42fa-9f15-e634f251d0ca-image.png

    J.HilkJ Offline
    J.HilkJ Offline
    J.Hilk
    Moderators
    wrote on last edited by
    #6

    @Daemonitas interesting, I did not expect that :D

    what tool tip do you get when you hover over "untitled6" in your project settings

    or when you select "Project" on the left hand menu bar?


    Be aware of the Qt Code of Conduct, when posting : https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct


    Q: What's that?
    A: It's blue light.
    Q: What does it do?
    A: It turns blue.

    D 1 Reply Last reply
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    • J.HilkJ J.Hilk

      @Daemonitas interesting, I did not expect that :D

      what tool tip do you get when you hover over "untitled6" in your project settings

      or when you select "Project" on the left hand menu bar?

      D Offline
      D Offline
      Daemonitas
      wrote on last edited by
      #7

      @J-Hilk
      So i tried with all the kits available
      7dea09a7-ed33-46ee-a0b5-f2f016bfe607-image.png
      Most of them missing build type "Debug"
      and
      f1eac6a4-9ef5-4746-812e-ba984f0ae24c-image.png
      this one missing "RelWithDebInfo"

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • cristian-adamC Offline
        cristian-adamC Offline
        cristian-adam
        wrote on last edited by
        #8

        At first I thought that the whitespace in the project directory path could pose an issue.

        I've tested locally and worked fine.

        Which CMake version are you using?

        The missing build type configuration like Debug or RelWithDebInfo means that CMake didn't export the project configuration in json file format.

        D 1 Reply Last reply
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        • cristian-adamC cristian-adam

          At first I thought that the whitespace in the project directory path could pose an issue.

          I've tested locally and worked fine.

          Which CMake version are you using?

          The missing build type configuration like Debug or RelWithDebInfo means that CMake didn't export the project configuration in json file format.

          D Offline
          D Offline
          Daemonitas
          wrote on last edited by
          #9

          @cristian-adam
          I'm using CMake 3.24.2
          61797464-0232-483d-9369-aa5e7583e26d-image.png

          cristian-adamC 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • D Daemonitas

            @cristian-adam
            I'm using CMake 3.24.2
            61797464-0232-483d-9369-aa5e7583e26d-image.png

            cristian-adamC Offline
            cristian-adamC Offline
            cristian-adam
            wrote on last edited by
            #10

            Everything looks fine! There shouldn't be a reason why ninja would fail.

            I have a similar setup, and the only visible difference is that I use: c:\Projects\C++ as a very short path.

            Do you have LongPathsEnabled under HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\FileSystem ? As per MSDN: Maximum Path Length Limitation.

            Any special antivirus program running?

            My next approach would be to try from a cmd.exe Window the same commands that Qt Creator is doing, for MinGW it should be easier:

            $ set PATH=C:/Qt/Tools/CMake_64/bin;C:/Qt/Tools/mingw1120_64/bin;C:/Qt/Tools/Ninja;C:/Qt/6.5.0/mingw_64/bin;%PATH%
            $ cmake --version
            $ ninja --version
            $ gcc --version
            $ moc --version
            $ cd D:/programm/C++ Homework Sem 2/untitled6
            $ cmake -S . -B build -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=C:/Qt/6.5.0/mingw_64  -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
            $ cmake --build build
            D 1 Reply Last reply
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            • cristian-adamC cristian-adam

              Everything looks fine! There shouldn't be a reason why ninja would fail.

              I have a similar setup, and the only visible difference is that I use: c:\Projects\C++ as a very short path.

              Do you have LongPathsEnabled under HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\FileSystem ? As per MSDN: Maximum Path Length Limitation.

              Any special antivirus program running?

              My next approach would be to try from a cmd.exe Window the same commands that Qt Creator is doing, for MinGW it should be easier:

              $ set PATH=C:/Qt/Tools/CMake_64/bin;C:/Qt/Tools/mingw1120_64/bin;C:/Qt/Tools/Ninja;C:/Qt/6.5.0/mingw_64/bin;%PATH%
              $ cmake --version
              $ ninja --version
              $ gcc --version
              $ moc --version
              $ cd D:/programm/C++ Homework Sem 2/untitled6
              $ cmake -S . -B build -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=C:/Qt/6.5.0/mingw_64  -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
              $ cmake --build build
              D Offline
              D Offline
              Daemonitas
              wrote on last edited by
              #11

              @cristian-adam said in The C++ Compiler cannot run a simple test program:

              Do you have LongPathsEnabled under HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\FileSystem ? As per MSDN: Maximum Path Length Limitation.

              I just enabled it in Registry editor

              @cristian-adam said in The C++ Compiler cannot run a simple test program:

              Any special antivirus program running?

              Just windows defender

              @cristian-adam said in The C++ Compiler cannot run a simple test program:

              moc --version

              Tried to run this in cmd but it appears that i don't have it on my laptop since it said that it is not recognized as an internal or external command

              @cristian-adam said in The C++ Compiler cannot run a simple test program:

              cmake -S . -B build -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=C:/Qt/6.5.0/mingw_64 -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release

              apparently I do not have this "CMakeList.txt." its looking for

              78cba11e-1a6e-4353-9e31-919c35be1c98-image.png

              @cristian-adam said in The C++ Compiler cannot run a simple test program:

              $ cmake --build build

              and this one resulted in an error too

              493597fe-a99c-474f-a975-b01e5f9d1036-image.png

              cristian-adamC 1 Reply Last reply
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              • D Daemonitas

                @cristian-adam said in The C++ Compiler cannot run a simple test program:

                Do you have LongPathsEnabled under HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\FileSystem ? As per MSDN: Maximum Path Length Limitation.

                I just enabled it in Registry editor

                @cristian-adam said in The C++ Compiler cannot run a simple test program:

                Any special antivirus program running?

                Just windows defender

                @cristian-adam said in The C++ Compiler cannot run a simple test program:

                moc --version

                Tried to run this in cmd but it appears that i don't have it on my laptop since it said that it is not recognized as an internal or external command

                @cristian-adam said in The C++ Compiler cannot run a simple test program:

                cmake -S . -B build -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=C:/Qt/6.5.0/mingw_64 -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release

                apparently I do not have this "CMakeList.txt." its looking for

                78cba11e-1a6e-4353-9e31-919c35be1c98-image.png

                @cristian-adam said in The C++ Compiler cannot run a simple test program:

                $ cmake --build build

                and this one resulted in an error too

                493597fe-a99c-474f-a975-b01e5f9d1036-image.png

                cristian-adamC Offline
                cristian-adamC Offline
                cristian-adam
                wrote on last edited by
                #12

                CMakeLists.txtis the project file for your CMake project.

                You tried to configure the untitled6 in the wrong directory, your home directory C:\Users\-redacted-.

                Make sure you go to the project:

                $ d: 
                $ cd "D:/programm/C++ Homework Sem 2/untitled6"
                $ dir 
                $ cmake -S . -B build -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=C:/Qt/6.5.0/mingw_64  -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
                

                cmake -S . means that CMake should look in the current directory for the CMakeLists.txt.

                I assume that you have the untitled6 CMake Qt project at D:/programm/C++ Homework Sem 2/untitled6, but you can use any other project.

                Regarding moc --version, where do you have Qt 6.5.0 for MinGW installed? It should be under C:/Qt/6.5.0/mingw_64/bin

                The whole exercise here is to get extra information by doing things manually, step by step.

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                • cristian-adamC cristian-adam

                  CMakeLists.txtis the project file for your CMake project.

                  You tried to configure the untitled6 in the wrong directory, your home directory C:\Users\-redacted-.

                  Make sure you go to the project:

                  $ d: 
                  $ cd "D:/programm/C++ Homework Sem 2/untitled6"
                  $ dir 
                  $ cmake -S . -B build -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=C:/Qt/6.5.0/mingw_64  -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
                  

                  cmake -S . means that CMake should look in the current directory for the CMakeLists.txt.

                  I assume that you have the untitled6 CMake Qt project at D:/programm/C++ Homework Sem 2/untitled6, but you can use any other project.

                  Regarding moc --version, where do you have Qt 6.5.0 for MinGW installed? It should be under C:/Qt/6.5.0/mingw_64/bin

                  The whole exercise here is to get extra information by doing things manually, step by step.

                  D Offline
                  D Offline
                  Daemonitas
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #13

                  @cristian-adam
                  alright now it shows
                  75bd019f-44dd-424f-a396-e2514ecd5150-image.png
                  looks like I'm missing some packages (?)

                  goldenhawkingG cristian-adamC 2 Replies Last reply
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                  • D Daemonitas

                    @cristian-adam
                    alright now it shows
                    75bd019f-44dd-424f-a396-e2514ecd5150-image.png
                    looks like I'm missing some packages (?)

                    goldenhawkingG Offline
                    goldenhawkingG Offline
                    goldenhawking
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #14

                    @Daemonitas Have you installed MSVC compiler together with MINGW? This picture shows that cmake try to config a MINGW Qt with MSVC 19.35.

                    Try to remove MSVC options from PATH, or run full-path CMAKE from Qt directory.

                    Qt is the best C++ framework I've ever met.

                    1 Reply Last reply
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                    • D Daemonitas

                      @cristian-adam
                      alright now it shows
                      75bd019f-44dd-424f-a396-e2514ecd5150-image.png
                      looks like I'm missing some packages (?)

                      cristian-adamC Offline
                      cristian-adamC Offline
                      cristian-adam
                      wrote on last edited by cristian-adam
                      #15

                      @Daemonitas you got the part with the project directory but skipped the other steps that I've provided:

                      $ set PATH=C:/Qt/Tools/CMake_64/bin;C:/Qt/Tools/mingw1120_64/bin;C:/Qt/Tools/Ninja;C:/Qt/6.5.0/mingw_64/bin;%PATH%
                      $ cmake --version
                      $ ninja --version
                      $ gcc --version
                      $ moc --version
                      

                      Here I'm adding CMake, MinGW GCC, Ninja and Qt 6.5.0 build for MinGW to the PATH environment variable.

                      Then I call the executables to make sure that they are available.

                      All of them should be available and provide the expected version numbers.

                      If you don't have moc then the path to your Qt MinGW installation is not correct, and you would need to adjust it.

                      When this is OK, then you can go to the project directory and issue the CMake command and build the project.

                      Edit: Oh, right. The CMake command had one important part missing, the Generator. Sorry about that:

                      $ cmake -S . -B build -G Ninja -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=C:/Qt/6.5.0/mingw_64  -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
                      

                      By default CMake would pick the Visual Studio generator and that one ignores any MinGW compiler paths 🙂

                      D 1 Reply Last reply
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                      • cristian-adamC cristian-adam

                        @Daemonitas you got the part with the project directory but skipped the other steps that I've provided:

                        $ set PATH=C:/Qt/Tools/CMake_64/bin;C:/Qt/Tools/mingw1120_64/bin;C:/Qt/Tools/Ninja;C:/Qt/6.5.0/mingw_64/bin;%PATH%
                        $ cmake --version
                        $ ninja --version
                        $ gcc --version
                        $ moc --version
                        

                        Here I'm adding CMake, MinGW GCC, Ninja and Qt 6.5.0 build for MinGW to the PATH environment variable.

                        Then I call the executables to make sure that they are available.

                        All of them should be available and provide the expected version numbers.

                        If you don't have moc then the path to your Qt MinGW installation is not correct, and you would need to adjust it.

                        When this is OK, then you can go to the project directory and issue the CMake command and build the project.

                        Edit: Oh, right. The CMake command had one important part missing, the Generator. Sorry about that:

                        $ cmake -S . -B build -G Ninja -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=C:/Qt/6.5.0/mingw_64  -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
                        

                        By default CMake would pick the Visual Studio generator and that one ignores any MinGW compiler paths 🙂

                        D Offline
                        D Offline
                        Daemonitas
                        wrote on last edited by Daemonitas
                        #16

                        @cristian-adam
                        ccfe27d3-427a-43fa-9659-a92f5070b16f-image.png

                        Here is the entire thing
                        (I downloaded Qt Version 6.4.3)
                        Beforehand I downloaded Version 6.5.0 but I thought downgrading would do something

                        cristian-adamC 1 Reply Last reply
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                        • D Daemonitas

                          @cristian-adam
                          ccfe27d3-427a-43fa-9659-a92f5070b16f-image.png

                          Here is the entire thing
                          (I downloaded Qt Version 6.4.3)
                          Beforehand I downloaded Version 6.5.0 but I thought downgrading would do something

                          cristian-adamC Offline
                          cristian-adamC Offline
                          cristian-adam
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #17

                          @Daemonitas This should have worked! The tools are present, can be started, have the right versions.

                          What happens if you disable the real-time checking of Windows Defender?

                          You could try with -G "MinGW Makefiles" instead of -G Ninja as CMake generator. But this should fail in a similar way.

                          I assume the installation of MinGW was not corrupted, or that the system has disk failures. Something prevents the compiler to work properly.

                          What happens if you try it out with a hello.cpp ?

                          #include <iostream>
                          
                          int main() 
                          {
                             std::cout << "Hello C++ World\n";
                          }
                          

                          with:

                          $ g++ hello.cpp -o hello
                          $ hello
                          

                          If this works then the compiler is fine.

                          D 1 Reply Last reply
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                          • cristian-adamC cristian-adam

                            @Daemonitas This should have worked! The tools are present, can be started, have the right versions.

                            What happens if you disable the real-time checking of Windows Defender?

                            You could try with -G "MinGW Makefiles" instead of -G Ninja as CMake generator. But this should fail in a similar way.

                            I assume the installation of MinGW was not corrupted, or that the system has disk failures. Something prevents the compiler to work properly.

                            What happens if you try it out with a hello.cpp ?

                            #include <iostream>
                            
                            int main() 
                            {
                               std::cout << "Hello C++ World\n";
                            }
                            

                            with:

                            $ g++ hello.cpp -o hello
                            $ hello
                            

                            If this works then the compiler is fine.

                            D Offline
                            D Offline
                            Daemonitas
                            wrote on last edited by Daemonitas
                            #18

                            @cristian-adam
                            f7408a02-0917-46c3-8219-3f40dc271cca-image.png
                            Compiler is working as intended

                            @cristian-adam said in The C++ Compiler cannot run a simple test program:

                            You could try with -G "MinGW Makefiles" instead of -G Ninja as CMake generator. But this should fail in a similar way.

                            as for this yeah it results in an error

                            and disabling windows defender also didn't solve it

                            JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
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                            • D Daemonitas

                              @cristian-adam
                              f7408a02-0917-46c3-8219-3f40dc271cca-image.png
                              Compiler is working as intended

                              @cristian-adam said in The C++ Compiler cannot run a simple test program:

                              You could try with -G "MinGW Makefiles" instead of -G Ninja as CMake generator. But this should fail in a similar way.

                              as for this yeah it results in an error

                              and disabling windows defender also didn't solve it

                              JonBJ Offline
                              JonBJ Offline
                              JonB
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #19

                              @Daemonitas
                              I am dropping in on this thread rather late, so I may be missing something. But in the example you show works you use g++ as command, why are you using c++.exe in the stuff which fails?

                              D 1 Reply Last reply
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                              • JonBJ JonB

                                @Daemonitas
                                I am dropping in on this thread rather late, so I may be missing something. But in the example you show works you use g++ as command, why are you using c++.exe in the stuff which fails?

                                D Offline
                                D Offline
                                Daemonitas
                                wrote on last edited by Daemonitas
                                #20

                                @JonB
                                for the example that works I just copied what @cristian-adam told me to try out

                                ill try using "c++"

                                edit:
                                1b8160ef-e275-4ab4-8163-5fcb2fe6c0d7-image.png
                                it also works

                                cristian-adamC JonBJ 2 Replies Last reply
                                0
                                • D Daemonitas

                                  @JonB
                                  for the example that works I just copied what @cristian-adam told me to try out

                                  ill try using "c++"

                                  edit:
                                  1b8160ef-e275-4ab4-8163-5fcb2fe6c0d7-image.png
                                  it also works

                                  cristian-adamC Offline
                                  cristian-adamC Offline
                                  cristian-adam
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #21

                                  @Daemonitas This means that the compiler is fine. Then I guess it's a CMake problem! 🤯

                                  Qt delivers CMake 3.24.2 from Kitware, you can get a newer version from https://github.com/Kitware/CMake/tags

                                  Unpack https://github.com/Kitware/CMake/releases/download/v3.26.3/cmake-3.26.3-windows-x86_64.zip somewhere on your disk, and use this new path for the PATH environment variable and try again from command line.

                                  Same thing with cmake --version to make sure you have the right version.

                                  🤞

                                  D 1 Reply Last reply
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                                  • D Daemonitas

                                    @JonB
                                    for the example that works I just copied what @cristian-adam told me to try out

                                    ill try using "c++"

                                    edit:
                                    1b8160ef-e275-4ab4-8163-5fcb2fe6c0d7-image.png
                                    it also works

                                    JonBJ Offline
                                    JonBJ Offline
                                    JonB
                                    wrote on last edited by JonB
                                    #22

                                    @Daemonitas
                                    Google for: detecting c++ compiler abi info failed (your first error message). There are quite a few hits. For example https://stackoverflow.com/questions/64438728/detecting-compiler-abi-failed-by-cmake has:

                                    There is a CMake project simple enough but not compiling at all with Visual Studio Code.

                                    Not same as you since you are MinGW, and that one is on Linux not Windows. But maybe there is a clue in the various hits?

                                    What about https://stackoverflow.com/questions/48141492/cmake-with-mingw-on-windows-10-detecting-cxx-compiler-abi-info-failed, that's MinGW?

                                    1 Reply Last reply
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                                    • cristian-adamC cristian-adam

                                      @Daemonitas This means that the compiler is fine. Then I guess it's a CMake problem! 🤯

                                      Qt delivers CMake 3.24.2 from Kitware, you can get a newer version from https://github.com/Kitware/CMake/tags

                                      Unpack https://github.com/Kitware/CMake/releases/download/v3.26.3/cmake-3.26.3-windows-x86_64.zip somewhere on your disk, and use this new path for the PATH environment variable and try again from command line.

                                      Same thing with cmake --version to make sure you have the right version.

                                      🤞

                                      D Offline
                                      D Offline
                                      Daemonitas
                                      wrote on last edited by Daemonitas
                                      #23

                                      @cristian-adam
                                      So I do this right?
                                      c298d862-11f9-4609-9dee-a6642e07f74b-image.png

                                      And this is after I disabled windows defender

                                      f7b2b3f0-3b86-40cc-84a3-0728392df105-image.png

                                      cristian-adamC O 2 Replies Last reply
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                                      • D Daemonitas

                                        @cristian-adam
                                        So I do this right?
                                        c298d862-11f9-4609-9dee-a6642e07f74b-image.png

                                        And this is after I disabled windows defender

                                        f7b2b3f0-3b86-40cc-84a3-0728392df105-image.png

                                        cristian-adamC Offline
                                        cristian-adamC Offline
                                        cristian-adam
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #24

                                        Rename the build directory to build-ninja and then try with -G "MinGW Makefiles".

                                        How does it fail, similar with ABI checks?

                                        This is bad enough to have it reported upstream at CMake https://gitlab.kitware.com/groups/cmake/-/issues

                                        With the content of those error logs 😔

                                        1 Reply Last reply
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                                        • cristian-adamC Offline
                                          cristian-adamC Offline
                                          cristian-adam
                                          wrote on last edited by cristian-adam
                                          #25

                                          As an alternative, you could open a cmd.exe and this time trying it out with Visual C++.

                                          For this you need to to have Qt for MSVC installed at c:\Qt\6.5.0\msvc2019_64.

                                          Then:

                                          set PATH=C:/Qt/Tools/CMake_64/bin;C:/Qt/6.5.0/msvc2019_64/bin;%PATH%
                                          $ cmake -S . -B build -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=C:/Qt/6.5.0/msvc2019_64 
                                          $ cmake --build build --config Release
                                          

                                          This time no -G was passed, CMake will pick up the Visual Studio generator using msbuild.

                                          If this works, then you'll have to change the Generator in Qt Creator's Kits configuration for the Visual C++ kit.

                                          Edit: new cmd.exe window, so that no MinGW bits are preset in the PATH variable, CMake should pick cl.exe as before when it complained about the missing QT package.

                                          D 1 Reply Last reply
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