FEBRUARY 1, 2011
Usual way of installing Qt for Visual Studio is to download already compiled binaries from Nokia website. However binaries for the latest Visual Studio 2010 are not available (on the moment of the writing).
This post is a step-by-step guide on how to compile Qt 4.7.1(3,4) with MSVC 2010.
September 16, 2011: Qt 4.7.4 has been successfully compiled by this guide.
August 14, 2011: In order to build Qt for 64 bits just use Visual Studio x64 Win64 Command Prompt (2010)
in step 8. Also install Service Pack 1 for Visual Studio 2010 beforehand – it fixes few bugs related to x64 compilation.
July 18 2011: Qt 4.7.3 and Qt 4.8 (beta) has been successfully compiled by this guide. Just replace version number where applicable.
- Visual C++ 2010 contains all necessary SDKs for Qt compilation. However if you plan to use Qt with Phonon you need to install additional software fro st.
- Download and extr
- Copy contents of the folder
qt-everywhere-opensource-src-4.7.1
to the directory where you intend to install Qt. In our case this is C:\Qt\4.7.1
. - Set up environmental variables
QTDIR=C:\Qt\4.7.1
QMAKESPEC=win32-msvc2010 - Update
PATH
variable to include %QTDIR%\bin
- Download the latest version of jom.
- Extract jom files to
C:\Qt\jom
folder - Start Visual Studio 2010 Command Prompt:
Start > Programs > Microsoft Visual Studio 2010 > Visual Studio Tools > Visual Studio Command Prompt
. - Run following commands in it (every line is a different command: type it then press
Enter
):
cd c:\Qt\4.7.1
configure -debug-and-release -opensource -platform win32-msvc2010
..\jom\jom.exe -j N
Where N
is number of CPU cores you want to utilize for Qt compilation. Larger is better.
Download and instal Run Visual Studio 2010. Integrate just compiled Qt to IDE using menu
Qt > Qt Options > Qt Versions > Add
Usually compilation takes about 10 hours, but thanks to jom and Intel SSD drive it took only 2 hours 40 minutes on my machine (Windows 7, 64bits)
Remarks
* Jom is nmake
replacement for Qt compilation on multi-core CPU. Its parameter -j N
allows to setup number of parallel processes for compilation. Number of physical CPU cores is a good choice for N
.
** Do not forget to use /d
switch if you want to change drive in command prompt, e.g: cd /d d:
. Usual cd d:
does not work anymore – a little “surprise” from Microsoft.
Contributions
* As Evon pointed in comments, Qt folder has huge size (approx. 7GB) after compilation. One can safely shrink its size by deleting temporary files created during the process. Once compiled Qt doesn’t depend on these intermediate files – and they can be erased without affecting Qt functionality. Run as last command in step 9:
..\jom\jom.exe clean
Note that PDB files will be deleted too.
** Rob provided his on nmake
with multi-core support.