Managing Qt Versions
Introduction
If your environment has the right qmake
binary in its PATH
and is also set up properly for a matching toolchain, then you do not necessarily need a profile to build projects with a Qt dependency. Otherwise, you should create one:
qbs setup-qt /usr/bin/qmake myqt
This will create the myqt
profile which can then be used on the command line:
qbs profile:myqt
Note: If the setup-toolchains
command has found more than one toolchain, you will need to manually link your Qt profile to one of them, like this:
qbs config profiles.myqt.baseProfile <profile name>
Multiple Qt Builds
To support multiple Qt builds, or in fact any combination of related settings, you need to create several profiles. The following example illustrates how to set up three different profiles, each for a different Qt build:
qbs setup-qt ~/dev/qt/4.7/bin/qmake qt47 qbs setup-qt ~/dev/qt/4.8/bin/qmake qt48 qbs setup-qt ~/dev/qt/5.0/qtbase/bin/qmake qt5
You can set the default Qt build like this:
qbs config defaultProfile qt5
To choose a Qt build that is different from the default, use:
qbs build profile:qt48
You can set other properties in a profile (not just Qt ones), in the same way you override them from the command line. For example:
qbs setup-qt C:\Qt\5.0.0\qtbase\bin\qmake.exe qt5 qbs config profiles.qt5.qbs.architecture x86_64 qbs config profiles.qt5.baseProfile msvc2010
The last example uses the inheritance feature of profiles. All settings in the profile set as baseProfile
are known in the derived profile as well. They can of course be overridden there.