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Issues compiling c files in Qt creator

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  • B Offline
    B Offline
    benardmens
    wrote on last edited by
    #21

    [quote author="GordonSchumacher" date="1291831448"]Actually, there's an even better way:

    Top-level .pro file:
    @
    TEMPLATE = subdirs

    someLib.subdir = someLib
    someLib.makefile = someLib.mak # This may not be named "Makefile"!
    someLib.target = $${QMAKE_PREFIX_SHLIB}someLib.${QMAKE_EXTENSION_SHLIB}

    SUBDIRS = someLib someApp
    @

    someLib/someLib.mak:
    @
    libsomeLib.so:
    gcc foo.c -o libsomeLib.so

    clean:
    rm -f libsomeLib.so

    distclean: clean

    .PHONY: clean distclean
    @

    Note that it will create a bogus, non-functional "someLib/Makefile", but you may simply ignore it.

    I don't believe this is documented, but it's been in qmake for quite a long time (I want to say at least since 4.3.x, but don't quote me on that).[/quote]

    [quote author="Volker" date="1291641995"]Not quite true.

    @
    HEADERS += plain.h base64.h
    SOURCES += main.cpp base64.c
    @

    This calls g++ (GCC in C++ mode) on main.cpp and gcc (GCC in C mode) on base64.c. The decision is made on the file extension (.cpp or .c). One can tweak that with setting QMAKE_EXT_CPP. The default is .cpp .cc .cxx .C[/quote]

    Thanks for all the suggestions, I was unable to go back to the project because of work but I will try the suggestions right away and get back to you.

    Thanks everyone!

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • B Offline
      B Offline
      benardmens
      wrote on last edited by
      #22

      Hi all,

      I've tried the options without success so I've uploaded the project if some one could kindly help me out with where I'm going wrong. The link is below

      http://www.wikiupload.com/3XHWP6JG2GXMU1D

      Thanks again everyone for the help so far

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • G Offline
        G Offline
        GordonSchumacher
        wrote on last edited by
        #23

        Is that really all of libhaggle? There is no Makefile in that directory, but there is Makefile.in/.ac, which would certainly suggest that it's an Autotools project... but there is no Autoconf.in/.ac, so I can't run automake at all (or at least, mine complains about the lack of those files).

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • B Offline
          B Offline
          benardmens
          wrote on last edited by
          #24

          [quote author="GordonSchumacher" date="1292083276"]Is that really all of libhaggle? There is no Makefile in that directory, but there is Makefile.in/.ac, which would certainly suggest that it's an Autotools project... but there is no Autoconf.in/.ac, so I can't run automake at all (or at least, mine complains about the lack of those files).[/quote]

          Hi Gordon, thanks for the quick reply, I actually didn't include them because in my naivety i though they weren't needed. Please find the full haggle folder included. By the way this is being compiled for Maemo (N900). Don't know if that helps. The links are below. They are both the same thing just uploaded to different places for convenience.

          http://www.wikiupload.com/QIPLU200EX9PHGS
          http://rapidshare.com/files/436368610/Policy.zip

          Thanks again every one, really appreciate the help

          1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • G Offline
            G Offline
            GordonSchumacher
            wrote on last edited by
            #25

            Okay, that was way harder than it should have been, and my solution unquestionably qualifies as abusing qmake... but it works!

            I created a "main.pro" in the top-level directory with the following contents:
            @TEMPLATE = subdirs

            haggle_build.subdir = haggle_build
            haggle_build.makefile = Makefile.haggle_build

            PolicyMobile.subdir = PolicyMobile
            PolicyMobile.depends = haggle_build

            SUBDIRS = haggle_build PolicyMobile@

            The "haggle_build.makefile = haggle_build" will cause the top-level Makefile to call "make -f Makefile.haggle_build" in that subdirectory. We need to change the name of the makefile because configure would otherwise clobber it. Note that this will not actually change the name of the file qmake generates there... we'll take care of that in a bit.

            Then I created a subdirectory called "haggle_build". In that directory I placed a file named haggle_build.pro which contains:
            @MAKEFILE = Makefile.haggle_build

            HAGGLE_SRCDIR = ../haggle-0.3

            autoreconf.target = $${HAGGLE_SRCDIR}/configure
            autoreconf.commands = cd $${HAGGLE_SRCDIR} && autoreconf

            aclocal.target = $${HAGGLE_SRCDIR}/aclocal.m4
            aclocal.depends = autoreconf

            automake.target = $${HAGGLE_SRCDIR}/Makefile.in
            automake.depends = autoreconf

            autoheader.target = $${HAGGLE_SRCDIR}/Makefile.in
            autoheader.depends = autoreconf

            libtoolize.target = $${HAGGLE_SRCDIR}/ltmain.sh
            libtoolize.depends = autoreconf

            Makefile.target = Makefile
            Makefile.commands = $${HAGGLE_SRCDIR}/configure
            Makefile.depends = autoreconf aclocal automake autoheader libtoolize

            all.CONFIG = phony
            all.commands = make
            all.depends = Makefile

            TARGET = \\

            QMAKE_EXTRA_TARGETS += autoreconf aclocal automake autoheader libtoolize Makefile all@

            So the MAKEFILE variable changes the name of the makefile to match main.pro's. Most of the rest of the .pro is writing custom targets to ensure that all the Autotools file are up-to-date. The last target, "all", is one which qmake always generates, and is the default build target. I have not found a way to get qmake not to output a section which looks something like:
            @all: $(TARGET)
            $(LINK) $(LFLAGS) -o $(TARGET) $(OBJECTS) $(OBJCOMP) $(LIBS)@

            Since we defined a custom rule named "all" as well and made it depend on "Makefile", qmake will later on write another rule in the makefile. So we can successfully get the "all" target to invoke make for us; our remaining challenge is to get it not to call the linker!

            So my tactic was to abuse qmake and define TARGET to simply a space. This means that the first "all" rule depends on nothing, and thus will never be run!

            Hope this works for you and helps; I am planning to transfer this nugget to a wiki page...

            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • B Offline
              B Offline
              benardmens
              wrote on last edited by
              #26

              [quote author="GordonSchumacher" date="1292254708"]Okay, that was way harder than it should have been, and my solution unquestionably qualifies as abusing qmake... but it works!

              I created a "main.pro" in the top-level directory with the following contents:
              @TEMPLATE = subdirs

              haggle_build.subdir = haggle_build
              haggle_build.makefile = Makefile.haggle_build

              PolicyMobile.subdir = PolicyMobile
              PolicyMobile.depends = haggle_build

              SUBDIRS = haggle_build PolicyMobile@

              The "haggle_build.makefile = haggle_build" will cause the top-level Makefile to call "make -f Makefile.haggle_build" in that subdirectory. We need to change the name of the makefile because configure would otherwise clobber it. Note that this will not actually change the name of the file qmake generates there... we'll take care of that in a bit.

              Then I created a subdirectory called "haggle_build". In that directory I placed a file named haggle_build.pro which contains:
              @MAKEFILE = Makefile.haggle_build

              HAGGLE_SRCDIR = ../haggle-0.3

              autoreconf.target = $${HAGGLE_SRCDIR}/configure
              autoreconf.commands = cd $${HAGGLE_SRCDIR} && autoreconf

              aclocal.target = $${HAGGLE_SRCDIR}/aclocal.m4
              aclocal.depends = autoreconf

              automake.target = $${HAGGLE_SRCDIR}/Makefile.in
              automake.depends = autoreconf

              autoheader.target = $${HAGGLE_SRCDIR}/Makefile.in
              autoheader.depends = autoreconf

              libtoolize.target = $${HAGGLE_SRCDIR}/ltmain.sh
              libtoolize.depends = autoreconf

              Makefile.target = Makefile
              Makefile.commands = $${HAGGLE_SRCDIR}/configure
              Makefile.depends = autoreconf aclocal automake autoheader libtoolize

              all.CONFIG = phony
              all.commands = make
              all.depends = Makefile

              TARGET = \\

              QMAKE_EXTRA_TARGETS += autoreconf aclocal automake autoheader libtoolize Makefile all@

              So the MAKEFILE variable changes the name of the makefile to match main.pro's. Most of the rest of the .pro is writing custom targets to ensure that all the Autotools file are up-to-date. The last target, "all", is one which qmake always generates, and is the default build target. I have not found a way to get qmake not to output a section which looks something like:
              @all: $(TARGET)
              $(LINK) $(LFLAGS) -o $(TARGET) $(OBJECTS) $(OBJCOMP) $(LIBS)@

              Since we defined a custom rule named "all" as well and made it depend on "Makefile", qmake will later on write another rule in the makefile. So we can successfully get the "all" target to invoke make for us; our remaining challenge is to get it not to call the linker!

              So my tactic was to abuse qmake and define TARGET to simply a space. This means that the first "all" rule depends on nothing, and thus will never be run!

              Hope this works for you and helps; I am planning to transfer this nugget to a wiki page...[/quote]

              Thanks a lot, there is no way I could have figured that out, I will try that right away and let you know how it goes,

              Thanks again everyone

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • J Offline
                J Offline
                jdbastardy
                wrote on last edited by
                #27

                I am also using qmake for my TicTacToe University Project which is coded in C and ncurses. I have no problems compiling C files.

                http://mattias-cibien.co.cc

                • Prepare for Qt consequences.
                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • B Offline
                  B Offline
                  benardmens
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #28

                  [quote author="GordonSchumacher" date="1292254708"]Okay, that was way harder than it should have been, and my solution unquestionably qualifies as abusing qmake... but it works!

                  I created a "main.pro" in the top-level directory with the following contents:
                  @TEMPLATE = subdirs

                  haggle_build.subdir = haggle_build
                  haggle_build.makefile = Makefile.haggle_build

                  PolicyMobile.subdir = PolicyMobile
                  PolicyMobile.depends = haggle_build

                  SUBDIRS = haggle_build PolicyMobile@

                  The "haggle_build.makefile = haggle_build" will cause the top-level Makefile to call "make -f Makefile.haggle_build" in that subdirectory. We need to change the name of the makefile because configure would otherwise clobber it. Note that this will not actually change the name of the file qmake generates there... we'll take care of that in a bit.

                  Then I created a subdirectory called "haggle_build". In that directory I placed a file named haggle_build.pro which contains:
                  @MAKEFILE = Makefile.haggle_build

                  HAGGLE_SRCDIR = ../haggle-0.3

                  autoreconf.target = $${HAGGLE_SRCDIR}/configure
                  autoreconf.commands = cd $${HAGGLE_SRCDIR} && autoreconf

                  aclocal.target = $${HAGGLE_SRCDIR}/aclocal.m4
                  aclocal.depends = autoreconf

                  automake.target = $${HAGGLE_SRCDIR}/Makefile.in
                  automake.depends = autoreconf

                  autoheader.target = $${HAGGLE_SRCDIR}/Makefile.in
                  autoheader.depends = autoreconf

                  libtoolize.target = $${HAGGLE_SRCDIR}/ltmain.sh
                  libtoolize.depends = autoreconf

                  Makefile.target = Makefile
                  Makefile.commands = $${HAGGLE_SRCDIR}/configure
                  Makefile.depends = autoreconf aclocal automake autoheader libtoolize

                  all.CONFIG = phony
                  all.commands = make
                  all.depends = Makefile

                  TARGET = \\

                  QMAKE_EXTRA_TARGETS += autoreconf aclocal automake autoheader libtoolize Makefile all@

                  So the MAKEFILE variable changes the name of the makefile to match main.pro's. Most of the rest of the .pro is writing custom targets to ensure that all the Autotools file are up-to-date. The last target, "all", is one which qmake always generates, and is the default build target. I have not found a way to get qmake not to output a section which looks something like:
                  @all: $(TARGET)
                  $(LINK) $(LFLAGS) -o $(TARGET) $(OBJECTS) $(OBJCOMP) $(LIBS)@

                  Since we defined a custom rule named "all" as well and made it depend on "Makefile", qmake will later on write another rule in the makefile. So we can successfully get the "all" target to invoke make for us; our remaining challenge is to get it not to call the linker!

                  So my tactic was to abuse qmake and define TARGET to simply a space. This means that the first "all" rule depends on nothing, and thus will never be run!

                  Hope this works for you and helps; I am planning to transfer this nugget to a wiki page...[/quote]

                  Hi Gordon,

                  I've been trying to replicate your solution for the past two weeks with varying levels of success, sometimes it compiles the files and then proceeds to fail. I was wondering if your solution is working for maemo as thats the target platform I'm trying to build for using the MADDE tools. Could you upload your solution so that I can go through it as I dont seem to be making much more headway.

                  Thanks a bunch

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0

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