qt_add_protobuf
Generates Qt-based C++ source code using a protobuf schema
Note: This command is in technology preview and may change in future releases.
This command was introduced in Qt 6.5.
Use qt_add_protobuf to invoke qtprotobufgen
in your CMake scripts and generate the code from the .proto schemes for your projects.qtprotobufgen
would be invoked through CMake using the qt_add_protobuf
command.
qt_add_protobuf(<target> PROTO_FILES <file> ... [PROTO_INCLUDES <path> ...] [QML [QML_URI <uri>]] [OUTPUT_DIRECTORY <dir>] [GENERATE_PACKAGE_SUBFOLDERS] [COPY_COMMENTS] [EXPORT_MACRO <infix>] [OUTPUT_HEADERS <var>] [OUTPUT_TARGETS <var>] )
The source files generated by qtprotobufgen
are then added to the target. If the target already exists, the generated files are added to the target source list. If the target doesn't exist, it is created as a library to which you must link.
Arguments
PROTO_FILES
specifies the list of .proto files used by the code generation procedure.PROTO_INCLUDES
specifies the list of directories to be searched for protobuf dependencies.Note: The location of the
PROTO_FILES
is implicitly considered part of the protobuf include path.QML
enables the generation of QML-compatible message types from protobuf definitions and registers them as a QML module. Ifqt_add_protobuf
is called on a non-existent target or a target that is not a QML module, a new QML module will be created implicitly.qt_add_executable(target ... ) // creates a new QML module qt_add_protobuf(target QML ... )
If target is an existing QML module,
qt_add_protobuf
will attach the generated protobuf types to that module.qt_add_qml_module(target ... ) // adds to existing QML module qt_add_protobuf(target QML ... )
QML_URI
defines theURI
used for the QML module.Every QML module must define a
URI
, which is used in import statements to expose its protobuf types to QML.qt_add_protobuf(target QML QML_URI proto.uri.example )
If
QML_URI
is omitted, the protobuf package name will be used as the module'sURI
.Note: If the
QML_URI
is omitted, all .proto files specified in thePROTO_FILES
section must share the same protobuf package name, as it will be used as the defaultURI
for the resulting QML module.Note: You should avoid creating several protobuf QML modules with the same
QML_URI
or proto package name, because it leads to import error in the QML context.Note: If
QML_URI
is passed to theqt_add_protobuf
function but the target already exists, theQML_URI
argument will be ignored.Read Identified Modules for further in-depth discussion of the
URI
.OUTPUT_DIRECTORY
defines the directory where the generated files will be placed. By default, the current build directory is used.GENERATE_PACKAGE_SUBFOLDERS
uses the package name specifier from the.proto
files to create the folder structure for the generated files. For example, if the package is defined as:package io.qt.test
, the generated files will be placed in OUTPUT_DIRECTORY/io/qt/test/.COPY_COMMENTS
copies comments from the.proto
files into the generated code.EXPORT_MACRO
applies only when creating a new shared library from the <target>. This option specifies the base name for the export macro used in the generated code. The final macro name is constructed asQPB_<EXPORT_MACRO>_EXPORT
. If this option is not set, the target name is used asEXPORT_MACRO
.Read Creating Shared Libraries for further in-depth information.
OUTPUT_HEADERS
specifies a variable that will store the list of generated headers. This list can be useful for defining custom project install rules.OUTPUT_TARGETS
specifies a variable that will store the list of generated targets. This list can be useful for defining custom project install rules.
Resolving dependencies between protobuf targets
The qt_add_protobuf
command doesn't consider the dependencies between .proto
files that are used to generate code for different targets.
The project may have two or more .proto
files with dependencies:
// test_messages.proto syntax = "proto3"; package test.messages; message MyMessage { int32 myField = 1; }
// test_extensions.proto syntax = "proto3"; import "test_messages.proto"; package test.extensions; message MyExtension { test.messages.MyMessage baseMessage = 1; int32 extension = 2; }
The above .proto
files can be used to generate the standalone libraries:
qt_add_protobuf(test_messages PROTO_FILES test_messages.proto ) ... qt_add_protobuf(test_extensions PROTO_FILES test_extensions.proto ) ...
Since the test_extensions
target depends on messages from the test_messages
target, you need to link to such targets manually in your CMake
scripts:
target_link_libraries(test_extensions PUBLIC test_messages)
Note: Messages from test_messages
target are used in header files that belong to the test_extensions
target, so targets that link to test_extensions
should have the test_messages
target as a transitive dependency. It's recommended to use the PUBLIC
linking scope, to have the proper INTERFACE_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES
and INTERFACE_LINK_LIBRARIES
properties for protobuf library targets.
Example
Using qt_add_protobuf
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.16...3.22) project(MyThings) find_package(Qt6 REQUIRED COMPONENTS Protobuf) qt_standard_project_setup() qt_add_protobuf(MyMessages GENERATE_PACKAGE_SUBFOLDERS PROTO_FILES path/to/message.proto path/to/other_message.proto PROTO_INCLUDES /path/to/proto/include ) qt_add_executable(MyApp main.cpp) target_link_libraries(MyApp PRIVATE MyMessages)
In the example above, we generate a library called MyMessages
, which contains the message types defined in the paths passed to the PROTO_FILES
option. The GENERATE_PACKAGE_SUBFOLDERS
option to generate a folder structure for the generated files. And the PROTO_INCLUDES
option tells protoc to look for dependencies or imports in the specified directories. We create a target for an executable called MyApp
, which we link to the MyMessages
library.
QML extended protobuf example
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.16...3.22) project(MyThings) find_package(Qt6 REQUIRED COMPONENTS Protobuf Quick) qt_standard_project_setup() qt_add_protobuf(MyMessagesPlugin QML QML_URI my.messages.module.uri PROTO_FILES path/to/message.proto path/to/other_message.proto PROTO_INCLUDES /path/to/proto/include ) qt_add_protobuf(MyApp QML PROTO_FILES path/to/internal_message.proto PROTO_INCLUDES /path/to/proto/include ) qt_add_qml_module(MyApp URI example.uri VERSION 1.0 QML_FILES qml/main.qml ) qt_add_executable(MyApp main.cpp) target_link_libraries(MyApp PRIVATE Quick)
In the QML extended example above, by the first qt_add_protobuf
call, we generate a QML module called MyMessagesPlugin
, which contains the message types defined in the paths passed to the PROTO_FILES
option. We use the QML
option, that enables proto message types registration in the QML
context. The registered types will be available in QML
by importing a path that is set by the QML_URI
. By second qt_add_protobuf
call we add auto-generated code into the existing MyApp
QML module. The QML_URI
is not required in such cases. Finally, we create a target for an executable called MyApp
, which has a QML module for the graphical part and loads MyMessagesPlugin
into the main.qml file via the my.messages.module.uri
import.
Installing standalone Qt Protobuf library
The qt_add_protobuf command also produces lists of artifacts for further installation. You can read these artifacts by specifying OUTPUT_HEADERS
, and OUTPUT_TARGETS
arguments as follows:
qt_add_protobuf(MyProtoLib PROTO_FILES mylib.proto OUTPUT_HEADERS public_headers OUTPUT_TARGETS generated_targets )
The command stores the list of the header files and targets produced by the qt_add_protobuf
command to the public_headers
and generated_targets
variables accordingly.
Use the standard CMake install
command to install the artifacts and generate the config
files for your library:
include(GNUInstallDirs) set_target_properties(MyProtoLib PROPERTIES PUBLIC_HEADER "${public_headers}" INTERFACE_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES "$<INSTALL_INTERFACE:${CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX}/${CMAKE_INSTALL_INCLUDEDIR}>" ) install(TARGETS ${generated_targets} EXPORT MyProtoLibTargets PUBLIC_HEADER DESTINATION "${CMAKE_INSTALL_INCLUDEDIR}" ) install(EXPORT MyProtoLibTargets NAMESPACE MyProtoLib:: DESTINATION lib/cmake/MyProtoLib)
Then use the generated MyProtoLibTargets
config in the package config file. You can read more about the package creation process in the official CMake documentation.
After installation the library is available as the standalone CMake package:
find_package(Qt6 COMPONENTS Protobuf) find_package(MyProtoLib CONFIG) add_executable(MyApp main.cpp) target_link_libraries(MyApp PRIVATE MyProtoLib::MyProtoLib Qt6::Protobuf)
Note: qt_add_protobuf doesn't implicitly add Qt Protobuf
module as the transitive dependency, neither for the MyProtoLib
target nor for the MyProtoLib
CMake package. Therefore, the Qt Protobuf
module lookup and the explicit linking of MyApp
to Qt6::Protobuf
are mandatory.
See also The qtprotobufgen Tool.