Qt

From NixOS Wiki
Revision as of 20:42, 8 August 2019 by imported>Samueldr (Adds link to the fix... keep this until 20.03 for stragglers on 19.03 and before→‎Cannot mix incompatible Qt library (version 0x_____) with this library (version 0x_____))

Development

If you want to develop qt applications in nixos you have to use nix-shell or direnv. For using nix-shell just run this command in the terminal:

nix-shell -p qt5Full -p qtcreator --run qtcreator

Tip: if it finds no Qt Kits, rm -rf ~/.config/QtProject* and start again.

For using direnv, create a shell.nix file in the root of your project and paste these lines into it:

 
shell.nix
{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> {} }:
  pkgs.mkShell {
    buildInputs = [
                    pkgs.qt5.full
                    pkgs.qtcreator
                  ];
}

Tip: if you want use clang-format, add clang-format to buildinputs list.

Also create .envrc file and paste: use_nix into it.

Happy qt coding :)

Troubleshooting

Cannot mix incompatible Qt library (version 0x_____) with this library (version 0x_____)

This is a known issue, see  #30551 for the current status.

Starting with the 19.09 release, the issue should be fixed by  #65526

This application failed to start because it could not find or load the Qt platform plugin ??? in ""

qt4

Qt4 depends on the environment variable QT_PLUGIN_PATH to find plugins. It is normally already

present in the environment on NixOS at least, but for example systemd user units are launched in a pretty empty environment. A solution is to use the command

systemctl --user import-environment QT_PLUGIN_PATH

from a sane environment. For example add it to the services.xserver.displayManager.sessionCommands option.

qt5

Warning: This recommendation is deprecated for 19.09 and up, see  #65399. Failing packages should be updated to use wrapQtAppsHook.

Qt5 seems (?) to look for plugins in the PATH. This will fail from a systemd user unit for example, because their path is nearly empty by default. As an example, here is a workaround to have usbguard-applet launched from a systemd user unit:

 
/etc/nixos/configuration.nix
  systemd.user.services.usbguard-applet = {
    description = "USBGuard applet";
    partOf = [ "graphical-session.target" ];
    wantedBy = [ "graphical-session.target" ];
    path = [ "/run/current-system/sw/" ]; ### Fix empty PATH to find qt plugins
    serviceConfig = {
      ExecStart = "${pkgs.usbguard}/bin/usbguard-applet-qt";
    };
  };

qt.qpa.plugin: Could not find the Qt platform plugin "xcb" in ""

Here is a concrete example:

qt.qpa.plugin: Could not find the Qt platform plugin "xcb" in ""
This application failed to start because no Qt platform plugin could be initialized. Reinstalling the application may fix this problem.

The package will need to be fixed to use [the new https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/65399 wrapQtAppsHook].

Debugging methods

As a general rule, exporting QT_DEBUG_PLUGINS=1 make qt print where it looks for plugins.

If a plugin exists in a directory but is ignored with a message like QLibraryPrivate::loadPlugin failed on "/nix/store/...-teamspeak-client-3.1.6/lib/teamspeak/platforms/libqxcb.so" : "Cannot load library /nix/store/...-client-3.1.6/lib/teamspeak/platforms/libqxcb.so: " it can be that the library cannot be dlopen()ed because of dependencies/rpath issues and needs patchelfing. Exporting LD_DEBUG=libs may prove helpful in this scenario.