I have this one, strange problem with QWebSocketServer that is driving me
insane.
My project is a very simple, websocket-based online game server. It uses Qt SQL
modules and makes use of some light QEvent'ing.
Up until recently I used uWebSockets to drive my wss communications. To make
matters
parameter value:
m_wsServer->listen(QHostAddress::Any, m_port)
No proxy is used.
No other custom, network oriented software is running on this box. Only vanilla
stuff that came post VPS provisioning.
From: Jason H
Sent: 03 April 2019 18:23
To: Jakub Narolewski
Cc: interest@qt-project.org
Subject:
I just found this old report:
https://bugreports.qt.io/browse/QTBUG-57026
which sounds suspiciously similar to what I am observing. Hmm, I wonder if you
hit the jackpot writing earlier to use QTcpServer to initialize connections.
If I could still use SSL with
or will try to
use QTcpServer to hack around it.
From: Jason H
Sent: 04 April 2019 19:07
To: Jakub Narolewski
Cc: interest@qt-project.org
Subject: Re: RE: [Interest] QWebSocketServer - server randomly
stopsacceptingconnections
Wow, a P1 that was abandoned. https://codereview.qt-project.org/#/c/179030
Hello :]
My question is essentially something I already asked about on Qt's forums
sometime in 2018:
https://forum.qt.io/topic/89775/registering-pragma-singleton-libraries-in-custom-plugins
We set the requirements such as:
- project is an application which usues a bunch of my custom QML
Stansvik
Sent: 25 August 2019 09:09
To: Thiago Macieira
Cc: interest@qt-project.org Interest
Subject: Re: [Interest] Static build of Qt - debug mode and plugins
Den sön 25 aug. 2019 kl 02:56 skrev Thiago Macieira :
>
> On Saturday, 24 August 2019 10:53:45 PDT Jakub Narolewski wrote:
&g
Hello :]
I'm having a bit of a problem compiling my application in debug build mode
under Linux.
Generally, under *nixes, I'm using self build, static Qt version. To configure
Qt I'm using this simple one-liner:
// CONFIGURE START
./configure \
-opensource \
-confirm-license \
-static \
ypto
Narolewski Jakub
From: Thiago Macieira
Sent: 25 August 2019 17:46
To: interest@qt-project.org
Subject: Re: [Interest] Static build of Qt - debug mode and plugins
On Sunday, 25 August 2019 00:25:50 PDT Jakub Narolewski wrote:
> /usr/local/Qt-5.13.0/lib/libQt5Core.a
> /usr/local/Qt-5.13.0/
makes a difference to me.
Jakub Narolewski
From: Thiago Macieira
Sent: 26 August 2019 07:40
To: interest@qt-project.org
Subject: Re: [Interest] Static build of Qt - debug mode and plugins
On Sunday, 25 August 2019 08:59:23 PDT Jakub Narolewski wrote:
> # small hack to properly set LZ4 libr
Sound really awesome – the less steps the better. Does this feature already
exist on the dev branch of qt? Can check it out by compiling Qt directly from
git?
Narolewski Jakub
From: Alexandru Croitor
Sent: 25 August 2019 20:07
To: Jakub Narolewski; Thiago Macieira; interest@qt-project.org
Ah yes, mystery solved. As usual – the butler did it. I suppose I should read
my own code more carefully.
In case of Release builds I’m adding “-flto” switch to the resulting object
using this line of code:
if (NOT CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE STREQUAL "Debug")
if (WIN32)
Correct! Somewhat. I’m using VS under Windows configured to use ‘Unix
Makefiles’ as generator when I’m connected to remote Linux boxes.
Under Windows I use Ninja.
Narolewski Jakub
From: Elvis Stansvik
Sent: 26 August 2019 18:54
To: Matthew Woehlke
Cc: interest@qt-project.org Interest; Jakub
I believe that QtCore5’s broken sig is due to the funky patching windeployqt does to paths hardcoded in it.I never had problems with it though. It seems like a maybe QML related problem.If you don’t redirect qWarnings / qInfos somewhere you could always use SysInternal’s DebugView to ‘spy’ on
I have this pet project of mine in which I'm testing the possibility of integrating libuv's event loop cleanly with Qt.After some research I come to conclusion that custom class based on QAbstractEventDispatcher will be perfect for this. Some prototyping later and - give or take few bugs - it
Commercial developers Maybe I misunderstood something so just correct me.If I use – commercially – QtCreator as my daily IDE without using Qt library or attached modules, I still need to pay for full Qt license? Cheers,Jakub Narolewski From: Jérôme GodboutSent: 27 March 2020 14:22To: Tuukka Turunen
Maybe I misunderstood something so just correct me.If I use – commercially – QtCreator as my daily IDE without using Qt library or attached modules, I still need to pay for full Qt license? Cheers,Jakub Narolewski From: Jérôme GodboutSent: 27 March 2020 14:22To: Tuukka Turunen; Vyacheslav Lanovets
Lately, mostly for fame and glory, I decided to port some of my stuff from Qt5 to Qt6.
Most of it went ok'ish - after some CMakeLists.txt hacking and 'modernizing' the code I
was able to compile two of my dynamic libraries under Qt6.
Problems started with my custom QML plugin. Here after
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