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QT学习笔记(四):在不同平台上部署QT程序概述

2013年10月07日 ⁄ 综合 ⁄ 共 3861字 ⁄ 字号 评论关闭

JUST FOR QT 4.6

Deploying Qt Applications

Deploying an Qt application does not require any C++ programming. All you need to do is to build Qt and your application in release mode, following the procedures described in this documentation. We will demonstrate the procedures in terms of deploying the Plug
& Paint
application that is provided in Qt's examples directory.

Static vs. Shared Libraries

There are two ways of deploying an application:

  • Static Linking
  • Shared Libraries (Frameworks on Mac)

Static linking results in a stand-alone executable. The advantage is that you will only have a few files to deploy. The disadvantages are that the executables are large and with no flexibility (i.e a new version of the application, or of Qt, will require that
the deployment process is repeated), and that you cannot deploy plugins.

To deploy plugin-based applications, you can use the shared library approach. Shared libraries also provide smaller, more flexible executables. For example, using the shared library approach, the user is able to independently upgrade the Qt library used by
the application.

Another reason why you might want to use the shared library approach, is if you want to use the same Qt libraries for a family of applications. In fact, if you download the binary installation of Qt, you get Qt as a shared library.

The disadvantage with the shared library approach is that you will get more files to deploy. For more information, see Creating Shared Libraries.

Deploying Qt's Libraries

Qt's Libraries
QtAssistant QAxContainer QAxServer QtCore
QtDBus QtDesigner QtGui QtHelp
QtNetwork QtOpenGL QtScript QtScriptTools
QtSql QtSvg QtWebKit QtXml
QtXmlPatterns Phonon Qt3Support  

Since Qt is not a system library, it has to be redistributed along with your application; the minimum is to redistribute the run-time of the libraries used by the application. Using static linking, however, the Qt run-time is compiled into the executable.

In general, you should deploy all plugins that your build of Qt uses, excluding only those that you have identified as being unnecessary for your application and its users.

For instance, you may need to deploy plugins for JPEG support and SQL drivers, but you should also deploy plugins that your users may require, including those for accessibility. For more information about plugins, see the How
to Create Qt Plugins
 documentation.

When deploying an application using the shared library approach you must ensure that the Qt libraries will use the correct path to find the Qt plugins, documentation, translation etc. To do this you can use a qt.conf file. For more information, see
the Using qt.conf documentation.

Depending on configuration, compiler specific libraries must be redistributed as well. For more information, see the platform specific Application Dependencies sections: X11WindowsMac.

Licensing

Some of Qt's libraries are based on third party libraries that are not licensed using the same dual-license model as Qt. As a result, care must be taken when deploying applications that use these libraries, particularly when the application is statically linked
to them.

The following table contains an inexhaustive summary of the issues you should be aware of.

Qt Library Dependency Licensing Issue
QtHelp CLucene The version of clucene distributed with Qt is licensed under the GNU LGPL version 2.1 or later. This has implications for developers of closed source applications. Please see the
QtHelp module documentation
 for more information.
QtNetwork OpenSSL Some configurations of QtNetwork use OpenSSL at run-time. Deployment of OpenSSL libraries
is subject to both licensing and export restrictions. More information can be found in the Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) Classesdocumentation.
QtWebKit WebKit WebKit is licensed under the GNU LGPL version 2 or later. This has implications for
developers of closed source applications. Please see the QtWebKit module documentation for more information.
Phonon Phonon Phonon relies on the native multimedia engines on different platforms. Phonon itself is licensed under the GNU LGPL version 2. Please see the
Phonon module documentation
 for more information on licensing and the Phonon Overview for details of the backends in use on different
platforms.

Platform-Specific Notes

The procedure of deploying Qt applications is different for the various platforms:

See also Installation and Platform-Specific
Documentation
.

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