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== Install MeeGo Target == | == Install MeeGo Target == | ||
| - | A ''Target'' is used to build programs using the MeeGo toolchain and libraries (sysroot). It is downloaded as a large (~ | + | A ''Target'' is used to build programs using the MeeGo toolchain and libraries (sysroot). It is downloaded as a large (~250 MB) .bz2 file using the commands below. MADDE (MeeGo Application Develop and Debug Environment ([http://wiki.maemo.org/MADDE background])) is a tool that assists in the download and installation of the Target. "mad-admin" is the MADDE command-line tool. You can install multiple Targets and switch easily between them in Qt Creator (described later). |
=== Determine the target you want to use === | === Determine the target you want to use === | ||
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== Install MeeGo Runtime == | == Install MeeGo Runtime == | ||
| - | A ''Runtime'' is the MeeGo OS image that is run with QEMU when debugging applications on your host system. It is not required if you develop against real hardware running MeeGo. It is downloaded as a large (~ | + | A ''Runtime'' is the MeeGo OS image that is run with QEMU when debugging applications on your host system. It is not required if you develop against real hardware running MeeGo. It is downloaded as a large (~650 MB) .bz2 file using MADDE. The Runtime is not needed until you have finished configuring Qt Creator. However, as this step may take some time, it is recommended to start it now so that it can proceed in the background, while you continue following the steps on this page. |
See [[SDK/Docs/1.1/Configuring_QEMU_runtimes|Downloading a Runtime and Using QEMU]] | See [[SDK/Docs/1.1/Configuring_QEMU_runtimes|Downloading a Runtime and Using QEMU]] | ||
This page describes how to install and configure the MeeGo 1.1 SDK on your Linux development system.
Contents |
Add the following line to /etc/apt/sources.list.d/meego-sdk.list. Replace ${distribution}/${version} with one of the following: "debian/5.0", "ubuntu/09.10", "ubuntu/10.04" or "ubuntu/10.10".
deb http://repo.meego.com/MeeGo/sdk/host/repos/${distribution}/${version}/ /
$ gpg --keyserver pgpkeys.mit.edu --recv 0BC7BEC479FC1F8A $ gpg --export --armor 0BC7BEC479FC1F8A | sudo apt-key add -
Note: The keyserver used above may currently be unresponsive. If that is the case, you may choose to use a different, trusted keyserver. For example:
$ gpg --keyserver pool.sks-keyservers.net --recv 0BC7BEC479FC1F8A $ gpg --export --armor 0BC7BEC479FC1F8A | sudo apt-key add -
$ sudo apt-get update
To check that the MeeGo repository has been correctly added, run the following command. The details of the MADDE package should be printed.
$ apt-cache policy madde
Add the MeeGo SDK yum repository. Replace ${distribution}/${version} with one of the following: "fedora/12" or "fedora/13".
$ cd /etc/yum.repos.d/
$ sudo wget http://repo.meego.com/MeeGo/sdk/host/repos/${distribution}/${version}/meego-sdk.repo
$ sudo rpm --import http://repo.meego.com/MeeGo/sdk/host/repos/${distribution}/${version}/repodata/repomd.xml.key
$ sudo yum update
To add the MeeGo SDK repository on a system running MeeGo, run the following command. Replace ${distribution}/${version} with one of the following values: "meego/1.1" or "meego/trunk".
$ sudo zypper addrepo -f http://repo.meego.com/MeeGo/sdk/host/repos/${distribution}/${version}/meego-sdk.repo
To add the MeeGo repository, run the following command. Replace ${distribution}/${version} with one of the following values: "opensuse/11.2" or "opensuse/11.3".
$ sudo zypper addrepo -f http://repo.meego.com/MeeGo/sdk/host/repos/${distribution}/${version}/meego-sdk.repo
$ sudo apt-get install meego-sdk
$ sudo yum install meego-sdk
$ sudo zypper install meego-sdk
For ARM only:
$ sudo apt-get install meego-sdk-armv7l
$ sudo yum install meego-sdk-armv7l
$ sudo zypper install meego-sdk-armv7l
For IA32 only:SDK/Docs/1.1/Configuring_QEMU_runtimes
$ sudo apt-get install meego-sdk-ia32
$ sudo yum install meego-sdk-ia32
$ sudo zypper install meego-sdk-ia32
A Target is used to build programs using the MeeGo toolchain and libraries (sysroot). It is downloaded as a large (~250 MB) .bz2 file using the commands below. MADDE (MeeGo Application Develop and Debug Environment (background)) is a tool that assists in the download and installation of the Target. "mad-admin" is the MADDE command-line tool. You can install multiple Targets and switch easily between them in Qt Creator (described later).
Run the command below. The available targets will be listed under the "Targets:" heading.
$ sudo mad-admin list
Some hints about the target prefixes:
Run the command below. Replace <target> with the target you determined in the previous step. Note that the -f flag instructs MADDE to download the Target tarball (bz2) first.
$ sudo mad-admin create -f <target>
If you encounter problems, check the troubleshooting page.
To check that the target has been installed correctly, run the following. Replace <target> with the same value used in the previous step.
$ mad -t <target> pscreate -t qt-simple qthello $ cd qthello $ mad -t <target> qmake $ mad -t <target> make
Note: Running qmake will print "-unix is deprecated". This is not an error with the compilation. You can safely ignore this for now.
To check that the qt-simple application is created for the correct target, run the following command, and verify the output.
$ file build/qthello
A Runtime is the MeeGo OS image that is run with QEMU when debugging applications on your host system. It is not required if you develop against real hardware running MeeGo. It is downloaded as a large (~650 MB) .bz2 file using MADDE. The Runtime is not needed until you have finished configuring Qt Creator. However, as this step may take some time, it is recommended to start it now so that it can proceed in the background, while you continue following the steps on this page.
See Downloading a Runtime and Using QEMU
Start Qt Creator by selecting Applications > Programming > Qt Creator.
Configure Qt Creator to use the MeeGo toolchain(s):
usr/lib/madde/linux-i686/targets/<target>/bin/qmake.
It is also possible to use Qt Creator without a MeeGo toolchain. This option can be useful if you don't need to cross-compile your software: for example, if you are doing QML development with no use of C++.
The steps are the same as above, but the qmake location is set to the qmake installed with the meego-sdk-qt libraries. The usual location for this on Linux is:
$ /opt/meego/meego-sdk-qt/bin/qmake
Note: On Ubuntu 10.10, you may need to install g++ in order for this step to work. If necessary, do this:
$ sudo apt-get install g++
To start developing with the MeeGo SDK, the hello world tutorial is a good starting point.
This tutorial covers how to start a project, package it, and deploy it to a device (either a real device, or a QEMU runtime set up through MADDE).
To remove installed components, run:
$ sudo apt-get remove --purge meego-sdk-qtcreator madde qt-tools arm-2009q1 qemu-arm qemu-gl meego-sdk-i586-toolchain meego-qemu meego-sdk-qt
To remove dependencies related to installed components, run:
$ sudo apt-get autoremove
To remove MADDE directory (it is not automatically removed when "madde" package is uninstalled):
$ sudo rm -rf /usr/lib/madde
To remove the packages from your local repository (/var/cache/apt/archives/), run:
$ sudo apt-get clean
To remove installed components, run:
$ sudo yum remove meego-sdk-qt-creator madde qt-tools arm-2009q1 qemu-arm qemu-gl meego-sdk-i586-toolchain meego-qemu
To remove MADDE directory:
$ sudo rm -rf /usr/lib/madde
To remove installed components, run:
$ sudo zypper remove -u meego-sdk-qt-creator madde qt-tools arm-2009q1 qemu-arm qemu-gl meego-sdk-i586-toolchain meego-qemu
To remove MADDE directory:
$ sudo rm -rf /usr/lib/madde