Difference between revisions of "Installing Qt binary packages"

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Note that Geopsy package is developed and tested with Qt 4.5.0 or higher. At the time of writing this documentation, Qt 4.5.0 is not the standard version of most of the distribution listed here below. It will not be the case in a close future.
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Note that Geopsy package (3.5.0) is developed and tested with Qt 5.15.2 and Qt 6.5. Successful builds were reported with Qt 5.11. Error were encountered with Qt 5.9. If a sufficiently recent Qt is not available on your platform you can follow this tutorial to install binaries provided directly from [https://qt.io Qt].
  
== Ubuntu ==
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2026-04-13 For branch 3.6, we recommend at least Qt-6.8.2. More recent releases have not been tested so far and you may expect difficulties during the compilation step.
  
''TODO: graphical presentation''
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== Downloading online installer ==
  
== Gentoo ==
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[https://qt.io qt.io] is a fancy commercial website but not really handy to get access to the open-source Qt package
  
Install Qt:
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* Go to [https://qt.io Qt]
 +
* Click on "Download. Try. Buy" green button in the top right corner
 +
* Scroll down to "Download open source"
 +
* Scroll down to bottom of the page
 +
* Click on "Download the Qt Online Installer" green button
 +
* Select your platform and click on "Qt Online Installer for ..."
  
  emerge -av qt
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Great you have the file. Simple no?
  
You can wait for half an hour or so. Then, you are ready to install geopsy software. At the present time, to get Qt 4.5.1, you have to accept unstable keywords.
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== Change permissions and run the installer ==
  
  ACCEPT_KEYWORDS="~x86" emerge -av qt
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* Change permission to be able to execute it (for Linux). Under Windows, it comes with a ".exe" extension ready to be run.
  
or
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  $ chmod a+x qt-unified-linux-x64-4.11.0-online.run
  
  ACCEPT_KEYWORDS="~amd64" emerge -av qt
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* And start the installer
  
== Fedora ==
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  $ ./qt-unified-linux-x64-4.11.0-online.run
  
''TODO: graphical presentation''
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* Under Windows, double-click on the .exe file
  
Tested on Fedore Core 10 for i386 target.
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* You receive a great "Welcome", nothing to do
 +
* Click on "Next"
 +
* You have to create a Qt account (as simple as breathing, isn't it?), if you have already one enter your credentials.
 +
* Make your choice if you want or not to send pseudonymous,... it is up to you
 +
* Click on "Next"
 +
* Certify that you have read and approve the obligations of using Open Source Qt
 +
* Click on "Next"
 +
* A very important step: select the destination path (e.g. Z:\Qt\6.8.3), choose it carefully. It is better to avoid moving or renaming it later on.
 +
* Select "Custom installation"
 +
* Click on "Next"
 +
* Select at least these components:
 +
  Qt
 +
    Qt 6.8.3 (or higher)
 +
      MinGW 13.1.0 64-bit (or higher, for Windows)
 +
      Desktop (for Linux)
 +
  Build tools
 +
    MinGW 13.1.0 64-bit (or higher)
 +
    CMake 3.30.5 (or higher)
 +
    Ninja 1.12.1 (or higher)
 +
  Qt Creator
 +
    Qt Creator 19.0.0 (or higher)
 +
* Click on "Next"
 +
* Accept the license
 +
* Click on "Next"
 +
* Set location of Qt in Start menu
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* Click on "Next"
 +
* Click on "Install"
  
Package to install:
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Now the real installation starts. It may last a little bit.
  
qt-devel
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== The final touch ==
  
By default, Qt 4 on Fedora comes with suffix ''-qt4'' added to development tools (qmake, lrelease,...)
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Qt and the whole Qt Creator development environment is now installed.
The best option is to define alias in your profile or symbolic links to these binaries
 
  
  cd
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  $ ls /path/you/chose/for/Qt
  test -d bin || mkdir bin
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    6.8.3          dist Examples            installer.dat      Licenses        MaintenanceTool.dat  network.xml  Tools
  cd bin
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    components.xml Docs  InstallationLog.txt  installerResources MaintenanceTool MaintenanceTool.ini QtIcon.png
  ln -s /usr/bin/qmake-qt4 qmake
 
  ln -s /usr/bin/lrelease-qt4 lrelease
 
  
Add ''~/bin'' to you PATH ([[Setting PATH variable|more information]])
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The interesting part of Qt is in folder 6.8.3 (or another version)
  
Check that ''qmake'' is available.
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  $ ls /path/you/chose/for/Qt/6.8.3/
 +
    bin/          include/      mkspecs/      plugins/      translations/
 +
    doc/          lib/          phrasebooks/  qml/
  
qmake -v
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'qmake' building tool is in 'bin'. Add this path to your PATH
  
== open SUSE ==
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  export PATH=/path/you/chose/for/Qt/6.8.3/gcc_64/bin:$PATH
  
''TODO: graphical presentation''
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Or for Windows
 +
 
 +
  export PATH=/path/you/chose/for/Qt/6.8.3/mingw_64/bin:$PATH
 +
 
 +
If you do not want to pollute your .bashrc or your .profile, create a file "env" where you intend to build geopsypack:
 +
 
 +
  #!/bin/bash
 +
  export PATH=/path/you/chose/for/Qt/6.8.3/gcc_64/bin:$PATH
 +
 
 +
Whenever you want to start building geopsypack, source this file.
 +
 
 +
  source ./env

Latest revision as of 12:09, 14 April 2026

Note that Geopsy package (3.5.0) is developed and tested with Qt 5.15.2 and Qt 6.5. Successful builds were reported with Qt 5.11. Error were encountered with Qt 5.9. If a sufficiently recent Qt is not available on your platform you can follow this tutorial to install binaries provided directly from Qt.

2026-04-13 For branch 3.6, we recommend at least Qt-6.8.2. More recent releases have not been tested so far and you may expect difficulties during the compilation step.

Downloading online installer

qt.io is a fancy commercial website but not really handy to get access to the open-source Qt package

  • Go to Qt
  • Click on "Download. Try. Buy" green button in the top right corner
  • Scroll down to "Download open source"
  • Scroll down to bottom of the page
  • Click on "Download the Qt Online Installer" green button
  • Select your platform and click on "Qt Online Installer for ..."

Great you have the file. Simple no?

Change permissions and run the installer

  • Change permission to be able to execute it (for Linux). Under Windows, it comes with a ".exe" extension ready to be run.
 $ chmod a+x qt-unified-linux-x64-4.11.0-online.run
  • And start the installer
 $ ./qt-unified-linux-x64-4.11.0-online.run
  • Under Windows, double-click on the .exe file
  • You receive a great "Welcome", nothing to do
  • Click on "Next"
  • You have to create a Qt account (as simple as breathing, isn't it?), if you have already one enter your credentials.
  • Make your choice if you want or not to send pseudonymous,... it is up to you
  • Click on "Next"
  • Certify that you have read and approve the obligations of using Open Source Qt
  • Click on "Next"
  • A very important step: select the destination path (e.g. Z:\Qt\6.8.3), choose it carefully. It is better to avoid moving or renaming it later on.
  • Select "Custom installation"
  • Click on "Next"
  • Select at least these components:
 Qt
   Qt 6.8.3 (or higher)
     MinGW 13.1.0 64-bit (or higher, for Windows)
     Desktop (for Linux)
 Build tools
   MinGW 13.1.0 64-bit (or higher)
   CMake 3.30.5 (or higher)
   Ninja 1.12.1 (or higher)
 Qt Creator
   Qt Creator 19.0.0 (or higher)
  • Click on "Next"
  • Accept the license
  • Click on "Next"
  • Set location of Qt in Start menu
  • Click on "Next"
  • Click on "Install"

Now the real installation starts. It may last a little bit.

The final touch

Qt and the whole Qt Creator development environment is now installed.

 $ ls /path/you/chose/for/Qt
   6.8.3           dist  Examples             installer.dat       Licenses         MaintenanceTool.dat  network.xml  Tools
   components.xml  Docs  InstallationLog.txt  installerResources  MaintenanceTool  MaintenanceTool.ini  QtIcon.png

The interesting part of Qt is in folder 6.8.3 (or another version)

 $ ls /path/you/chose/for/Qt/6.8.3/
    bin/          include/      mkspecs/      plugins/      translations/ 
    doc/          lib/          phrasebooks/  qml/ 

'qmake' building tool is in 'bin'. Add this path to your PATH

 export PATH=/path/you/chose/for/Qt/6.8.3/gcc_64/bin:$PATH

Or for Windows

 export PATH=/path/you/chose/for/Qt/6.8.3/mingw_64/bin:$PATH

If you do not want to pollute your .bashrc or your .profile, create a file "env" where you intend to build geopsypack:

 #!/bin/bash
 export PATH=/path/you/chose/for/Qt/6.8.3/gcc_64/bin:$PATH

Whenever you want to start building geopsypack, source this file.

 source ./env