convert shell -> ShellSession
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Qt
Writing Nix expressions for Qt libraries and applications is largely similar as for other C++ software. This section assumes some knowledge of the latter. There are two problems that the Nixpkgs Qt infrastructure addresses, which are not shared by other C++ software:
- There are usually multiple supported versions of Qt in Nixpkgs. All of a package's dependencies must be built with the same version of Qt. This is similar to the version constraints imposed on interpreted languages like Python.
- Qt makes extensive use of runtime dependency detection. Runtime dependencies are made into build dependencies through wrappers.
Nix expression for a Qt package (default.nix)
<programlisting>
{ stdenv, lib, qtbase, wrapQtAppsHook }: <co xml:id='qt-default-nix-co-1' />
stdenv.mkDerivation {
pname = "myapp";
version = "1.0";
buildInputs = [ qtbase ];
nativeBuildInputs = [ wrapQtAppsHook ]; <co xml:id='qt-default-nix-co-2' />
}
</programlisting>
<calloutlist>
<callout arearefs='qt-default-nix-co-1'>
<para>
Import Qt modules directly, that is: <literal>qtbase</literal>, <literal>qtdeclarative</literal>, etc.
<emphasis>Do not</emphasis> import Qt package sets such as <literal>qt5</literal>
because the Qt versions of dependencies may not be coherent, causing build and runtime failures.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='qt-default-nix-co-2'>
<para>
All Qt packages must include <literal>wrapQtAppsHook</literal> in
<literal>nativeBuildInputs</literal>, or you must explicitly set
<literal>dontWrapQtApps</literal>.
</para>
</callout>
</calloutlist>
Locating runtime dependencies
Qt applications must be wrapped to find runtime dependencies.
Include wrapQtAppsHook
in nativeBuildInputs
:
{ stdenv, wrapQtAppsHook }:
stdenv.mkDerivation {
# ...
nativeBuildInputs = [ wrapQtAppsHook ];
}
Add entries to qtWrapperArgs
are to modify the wrappers created by
wrapQtAppsHook
:
{ stdenv, wrapQtAppsHook }:
stdenv.mkDerivation {
# ...
nativeBuildInputs = [ wrapQtAppsHook ];
qtWrapperArgs = [ ''--prefix PATH : /path/to/bin'' ];
}
The entries are passed as arguments to wrapProgram.
Set dontWrapQtApps
to stop applications from being wrapped automatically.
Wrap programs manually with wrapQtApp
, using the syntax of
wrapProgram:
{ stdenv, lib, wrapQtAppsHook }:
stdenv.mkDerivation {
# ...
nativeBuildInputs = [ wrapQtAppsHook ];
dontWrapQtApps = true;
preFixup = ''
wrapQtApp "$out/bin/myapp" --prefix PATH : /path/to/bin
'';
}
::: note
wrapQtAppsHook
ignores files that are non-ELF executables.
This means that scripts won't be automatically wrapped so you'll need to manually wrap them as previously mentioned.
An example of when you'd always need to do this is with Python applications that use PyQt.
:::
Adding a library to Nixpkgs
Add Qt libraries to qt5-packages.nix
to make them available for every
supported Qt version.
Example adding a Qt library
The following represents the contents of qt5-packages.nix
.
{
# ...
mylib = callPackage ../path/to/mylib {};
# ...
}
Libraries are built with every available version of Qt.
Use the meta.broken
attribute to disable the package for unsupported Qt versions:
{ stdenv, lib, qtbase }:
stdenv.mkDerivation {
# ...
# Disable this library with Qt < 5.9.0
meta.broken = lib.versionOlder qtbase.version "5.9.0";
}
Adding an application to Nixpkgs
Add Qt applications to qt5-packages.nix
. Add an alias to all-packages.nix
to select the Qt 5 version used for the application.
Example adding a Qt application
The following represents the contents of qt5-packages.nix
.
{
# ...
myapp = callPackage ../path/to/myapp {};
# ...
}
The following represents the contents of all-packages.nix
.
{
# ...
myapp = libsForQt5.myapp;
# ...
}