First, make sure you have a working toolchain and can build and run SerenityOS. Go here for instructions for setting that up.
- Install Qt Creator. You don't need the entire Qt setup, just click 'Qt Creator' on the left side, and install that.
- Open Qt Creator, select
File -> New File or Project...
- Select
Import Existing Project
- Give it a name (some tools assume lower-case
serenity
), and navigate to the root of your SerenityOS project checkout. Click Next. - Wait for the file list to generate. This can take a minute or two!
- Ignore the file list, we will overwrite it later. Click Next.
- Set
Add to version control
to<None>
. Click Finish. - In your shell, go to your SerenityOS project directory, and invoke the
Meta/refresh-serenity-qtcreator.sh
script to regenerate theserenity.files
file. You will also have to do this every time you delete or add a new file to the project. - Edit the
serenity.config
file (In Qt Creator, hit ^K or CMD+K on a Mac to open the search dialog, type the name of the file and hit return to open it) - Add the following
#define
s to the file:DEBUG
,SANITIZE_PTRS
, andKERNEL
. Depending on what you are working on, you need to have that last define commented out. If you're planning on working in the userland, comment out#define KERNEL
. If you're working on the Kernel, then uncomment#define KERNEL
. - Edit the
serenity.cxxflags
file to say-std=c++2a -m32
- Edit the
serenity.includes
file, add the following lines:
.
..
../..
Userland/Services/
Userland/Libraries/
Userland/Libraries/LibC/
Userland/Libraries/LibM/
Userland/Libraries/LibPthread/
Userland/Libraries/LibSystem/
Toolchain/Local/i686/i686-pc-serenity/include/c++/10.2.0
Build/
Build/Userland/
Build/Userland/Services/
Build/Userland/Libraries/
AK/
Finally, search in the options for "BOM" (Text Editor > Behavior > File Encodings > UTF-8 BOM), and switch to "Always delete".
Qt Creator should be set up correctly now, go ahead and explore the project and try making changes. Have fun! :^)
You can use clang-format
to help you with the style guide. Before you proceed, check that you're actually using clang-format version 11, as some OSes still ship clang-format version 9 or 10 by default.
- In QtCreator, go to "Help > About Plugins…"
- Find the
Beautifier (experimental)
row (for example, by typingbeau
into the search) - Put a checkmark into the box
- Restart QtCreator if it asks you
- In QtCreator, go to "Tools > Options…"
- Type "beau" in the search box, go to "Beautifier > Clang Format"
- Select the "customized" style, click "edit"
- Paste the entire content of the file
.clang-format
into the "value" box, and click "OK" - In the "Beautifier > General" tab, check "Enable auto format on file save"
- Select the tool "ClangFormat" if not already selected, and click "OK"
Note that not the entire project is clang-format-clean (yet), so sometimes you will see large diffs. Use your own judgement whether you want to include such changes. Generally speaking, if it's a few lines then it's a good idea; if it's the entire file then maybe there's a better way to do it, like doing a separate commit, or just ignoring the clang-format changes.
You may want to read up what git add -p
does (or git checkout -p
, to undo).
You may have noticed how Andreas just types lic
and the license appears.
In order to so, create a new file anywhere, for example license-template.creator
, with the standard license:
/*
* Copyright (c) 2021, the SerenityOS developers.
*
* SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-2-Clause
*/
In QtCreator, select the menu "Tools", item "Options", section "C++", tab
"File Naming" (don't ask me why it's here). At the bottom there should be the
option "License template:". Click "Browse…", select your file (i.e.,
license-template.creator
). Click "OK", and you're done! :)
You can slightly improve how well Qt interprets the code by adding and setting up an appropriate "compiler kit".
For that you will need to reference the compilers at Toolchain/Local/i686/bin/i686-pc-serenity-gcc
and Toolchain/Local/i686/bin/i686-pc-serenity-g++
.