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This doesn't make all these modules actually work with Qt6 yet, but it
prevents them from unconditionally pulling in Qt5 in a Qt6 build.
This is useful in order to even be able to pass a CMake run to the
point one can port, test and debug the rest.
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CMake >= 3.0 supports bracket comments, and the reStructuredText
integration code in sphinx/ext/ecm.py already supports extracting
the docs from a bracket comment instead.
Editing documentation without leading line comment markers is more simple,
e,g. when reflowing text over lines.
With ECM meanwhile requiring CMake 3.5 now it is possible to switch
(and thus follow also the approach used by cmake itself).
NO_CHANGELOG
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Summary:
The Qt5Help CMake modules contain the Qt5::qhelpgenerator target, so
look for that instead of Qt5Core. Otherwise, the Qt5::qhelpgenerator
is available only if Qt5Help was searched previously (which does not
happen often).
Using the Qt5::qhelpgenerator is more reliable than the search for the
qhelpgenerator executable based on the qmake path.
Test Plan:
build some framework with -DBUILD_QCH=ON, and notice that
the right path of qhelpgenerator is found directly with the
Qt5::qhelpgenerator target.
Reviewers: kossebau
Reviewed By: kossebau
Subscribers: kde-frameworks-devel, kde-buildsystem
Tags: #frameworks, #build_system
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D16938
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Summary:
Passing NO_DEFAULT_PATH ignores $PATH and ensures that we use the
previously-detected Qt5 binary path.
Test Plan:
qhelpgenerator is now picked up from the same location as Qt5::qmake. Before,
anything in $PATH was preferred even if it was the Qt 4 version.
Reviewers: #frameworks, kossebau, kfunk
Reviewed By: kossebau, kfunk
Subscribers: alexeymin, asturmlechner, #build_system
Tags: #frameworks, #build_system
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D6249
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Summary:
Enables generation of QCH files during a normal build,
for documenting the public API of a library.
These macros are especially done with release builds in mind,
so distributed packages (like from Linux distributions) can
include QCH files matching the version of the library and will be
also automatically updated on new versions of the libary.
Next to that these macros also support linking between different
QCH files, so a subclass from another library for which there also
is a QCH file installed will be linked to the entry in that other
QCH file.
This inter-QCH linking is especially useful for libraries extending Qt,
where many of the used types are from Qt libraries. The macros
come with the needed information for Qt libraries prepared, so the
used Qt libraries just need to be listed in the LINK_QCHS argument
by target names, like Qt5Core_QCH or Qt5Widgets_QCH.
This should be a nice supplement to online services like api.kde.org,
like Qt's own QCH files are to doc.qt.io,
While QCH files from an abstract POV could be seen similar to code
libraries, being components with links to lookup symbols/entries in
other QCH files, so the rules and code should be done with similar
concepts, currently CMake's target system seems bound to executable
code creation. So things like "file(EXPORT ...)" could sadly not be
reused, as custom targets are not supported with that.
Thus a custom macro had to be created for now. Also could I not find
a way to use namespaces like KF5::, for more consistent target naming.
The patch also adds two variables to KDEInstallDirs.cmake for
controlling where the QCH (and respective doxygen tag files) are
installed. The QTQCHDIR variant allows to install QCH files for
Qt-extending libraries into the same folder where Qt's own QCH
files are, so Qt Assistant & other QCH viewer pick up them automatically
to add them to the default help file collection.
The QCHDIR variant would provide a neutral, but central installation
location. Neutral, as it never "pollutes" the Qt system dirs with files
possibly unrelated to Qt-based development (e.g. when simply using qthelp
tools for documentation), and central, to help with finding available QCH
files for manually adding/loading them into a viewer, given there is no
official way currently to register the availability of QCH files on
installing.
Open questions:
a) target system for exporting/importing done in a sane way?
Better name pattern for the QCH targets than xxx_QCH
(see the targets created for Qt, like Qt5Core_QCH)?
b) sharing metadata with kapidox
Initially I placed these macros into the kapidox module, as this seems the
logic place. And would match what kdoctools does for user manuals.
Just, that would create a build dependency on kapidox which complicates usage
a little. Having these macros in ECM delivers them with no extra effort
needed.
The data in metainfo.yaml is partially duplicated with the data feed into
the macros. How to deduplicate that is still open. Especially with the need
to not depend on external data sources like identify.kde.org.
Issues:
* doxygen versions before 1.8.13 are broken and miss to include some files
with generated QCH (https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=773693)
* Qt Assistant often only built with QTextBrowser, while doxygen uses lots
of HTML5 (incl. hardcoded JavaScript)
(https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=773715),
needs e.g. distributions to use QtWebKit to work, upcoming Qt versions
might soon also have QtWebEngine based help viewer
(https://codereview.qt-project.org/#/c/111559/)
* inter-QCH links do not work in KDevelop currently
(see https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=372747) if installed as
separate QCH files
More details/background info at
https://frinring.wordpress.com/2016/09/27/adding-api-dox-generation-to-the-build-by-cmake-macros/
Tags: #frameworks, #build_system
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D2854
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