The androiddeployqt Tool
Building an application package is complex, so Qt comes with a tool which handles the work for you. The steps described in Deploying an Application on Android are handled by the androiddeployqt tool.
Prerequisites Before Running androiddeployqt
Before running the tool manually, you need to run qmake
or CMake
on your project to generate Makefiles
and a JSON
file (i.e. android-project-deployment-settings.json
) containing important settings used by androiddeployqt
.
Note: It is not recommended to modify the androiddeployqt JSON file.
To prepare the build for androiddeployqt, it is recommended to build your project in a separate directory. Run the following commands:
mkdir build-project cd build-project
Followed by:
For qmake:
qmake ../project/project.pro make -j$(nproc) make -j$(nproc) apk_install_target
For CMake:
cmake --build
Command Line Arguments
The only required command line argument when running the tool is --output
. Other command line arguments are optional but useful. The list below is available by passing the --help
argument to androiddeployqt.
Syntax: androiddeployqt --output <destination> [options] Creates an Android package in the build directory <destination> and builds it into an .apk file. Optional arguments: --input <inputfile>: Reads <inputfile> for options generated by qmake. A default file name based on the current working directory will be used if nothing else is specified. --deployment <mechanism>: Supported deployment mechanisms: bundled (default): Includes Qt files in stand-alone package. unbundled: Assumes native libraries are present on the device and does not include them in the APK. --aab: Build an Android App Bundle. --no-build: Do not build the package, it is useful to just install a package previously built. --install: Installs apk to device/emulator. By default this step is not taken. If the application has previously been installed on the device, it will be uninstalled first. --reinstall: Installs apk to device/emulator. By default this step is not taken. If the application has previously been installed on the device, it will be overwritten, but its data will be left intact. --device [device ID]: Use specified device for deployment. Default is the device selected by default by adb. --android-platform <platform>: Builds against the given android platform. By default, the highest available version will be used. --release: Builds a package ready for release. By default, the package will be signed with a debug key. --sign <url/to/keystore> <alias>: Signs the package with the specified keystore, alias and store password. Optional arguments for use with signing: --storepass <password>: Keystore password. --storetype <type>: Keystore type. --keypass <password>: Password for private key (if different from keystore password.) --sigfile <file>: Name of .SF/.DSA file. --digestalg <name>: Name of digest algorithm. Default is "SHA-256". --sigalg <name>: Name of signature algorithm. Default is "SHA256withRSA". --tsa <url>: Location of the Time Stamping Authority. --tsacert <alias>: Public key certificate for TSA. --internalsf: Include the .SF file inside the signature block. --sectionsonly: Don't compute hash of entire manifest. --protected: Keystore has protected authentication path. --jarsigner: Deprecated, ignored. NOTE: To conceal the keystore information, the environment variables QT_ANDROID_KEYSTORE_PATH, and QT_ANDROID_KEYSTORE_ALIAS are used to set the values keysotore and alias respectively. Also the environment variables QT_ANDROID_KEYSTORE_STORE_PASS, and QT_ANDROID_KEYSTORE_KEY_PASS are used to set the store and key passwords respectively. This option needs only the --sign parameter. --jdk <path/to/jdk>: Used to find the jarsigner tool when used in combination with the --release argument. By default, an attempt is made to detect the tool using the JAVA_HOME and PATH environment variables, in that order. --qml-import-paths: Specify additional search paths for QML imports. --verbose: Prints out information during processing. --no-generated-assets-cache: Do not pregenerate the entry list for the assets file engine. --aux-mode: Operate in auxiliary mode. This will only copy the dependencies into the build directory and update the XML templates. The project will not be built or installed. --apk <path/where/to/copy/the/apk>: Path where to copy the built apk. --qml-importscanner-binary <path/to/qmlimportscanner>: Override the default qmlimportscanner binary path. By default the qmlimportscanner binary is located using the Qt directory specified in the input file. --depfile <path/to/depfile>: Output a dependency file. --builddir <path/to/build/directory>: build directory. Necessary when generating a depfile because ninja requires relative paths. --no-rcc-bundle-cleanup: skip cleaning rcc bundle directory after running androiddeployqt. This option simplifies debugging of the resource bundle content, but it should not be used when deploying a project, since it litters the 'assets' directory. --copy-dependencies-only: resolve application dependencies and stop deploying process after all libraries and resources that the application depends on have been copied. --help: Displays this information.
With a project named project
, to directly build the application package with androiddeployqt
without deploying it the device, run the following:
.androiddeployqt --input $BUILD_DIR/android-project-deployment-settings.json --output $ANDROID_BUILD_DIR
To deploy the built package to the device:
androiddeployqt --verbose --output $ANDROID_BUILD_DIR --no-build --input $BUILD_DIR/android-project-deployment-settings.json --gradle --reinstall --device <adb_device_id>
Dependencies Detection
Qt comes with a number of plugins which are loaded at run-time when they are needed. These can handle anything from connecting to SQL databases to loading specific image formats. Detecting plugin dependencies is impossible as the plugins are loaded at run-time, but androiddeployqt tries to guess such dependencies based on the Qt dependencies of your application. If the plugin has any Qt dependencies which are not also dependencies of your application, it will not be included by default. For instance, in order to ensure that the SVG image format plugin is included, you will need to add Qt SVG module to your project for it to become a dependency of your application:
QT += svg
If you are wondering why a particular plugin is not included automatically, you can run androiddeployqt with the --verbose
option to get the list of missing dependencies for each excluded plugin. You can achieve the same in Qt Creator by ticking the Verbose output check box in the Projects > Build Steps > Build Android APK > Advanced Actions.
It's also possible to manually specify the dependencies of your application. For more information, see ANDROID_DEPLOYMENT_DEPENDENCIES qmake variable.
Note: androiddeployqt scans the QML files of the project to collect the QML imports. However, if you are loading QML code as a QString from C++ at runtime, that might not work properly because androiddeployqt won't be aware of it at deploy time. To remedy that, you can add a dummy QML file that imports such QML modules that are referenced at runtime.
Android-specific qmake Variables
Unless the project has special requirements such as third party libraries, it should be possible to run androiddeployqt on it with no modifications and get a working Qt for Android application.
There are two important environment variables used by Qt:
ANDROID_SDK_ROOT
: specifies the path to the Android SDK used for building the application. The Android SDK contains the build-tools, Android NDK, and Android toolchains.ANDROID_NDK_ROOT
: specifies the path to the Android NDK used to build the application. It is not recommended to hard-code this path, since different Qt for Android versions can depend on different Android NDK versions.
Note: Qt Creator sets these variables by default.
There are a set of qmake
or CMake
variables that can be used to tailor your package. At some point during development, you will most likely want to look into these variables to customize your application.
Here is a list of some variables that are particularly interesting when making Android applications:
- ANDROID_PACKAGE_SOURCE_DIR
- ANDROID_VERSION_CODE
- ANDROID_VERSION_NAME
- ANDROID_EXTRA_LIBS
- ANDROID_EXTRA_PLUGINS
- ANDROID_ABIS
- ANDROID_API_VERSION
- ANDROID_DEPLOYMENT_DEPENDENCIES
- ANDROID_MIN_SDK_VERSION
- ANDROID_TARGET_SDK_VERSION
- JAVA_HOME
Also, the following qmake
variables are primarily useful when writing a Qt module, and not normal applications:
Note: This list of variables can also be used with CMake.
Deployment in Qt Creator
Qt Creator runs androiddeployqt
by default, and provides easy and intuitive user interfaces to specify many of the options. For more information, see Qt Creator: Deploying Applications to Android Devices.
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