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Rbkit client will be released as executable applications for OSX, Linux and Windows platforms.
The app can be opened simply by double clicking on it. Currently, you can download and try
the OSX build of the latest pre-release version from here.
Click here to watch a video of Hemant demonstrating some of the early Rbkit features at the RockyMountain RubyConf 2014.
Development
Requirements
You need Qt on your system in order to build the project. It's recommended to
install Qt Creator which is an IDE for Qt projects.
Compiling on Linux & OS X
Currently there are 2 ways to compile rbkit-client on mac, with Qt Creator and with cmake:
Using Qt Creator
Assuming you have Qt 5.3.x version installed somewhere on your Linux box, after
cloning the repository you should follow the steps bellow:
Open QtCreator
Click on Open Project
Navigate to the rbkit-client directory
Double-click CMakeLists.txt file
In the wizard choose you build directory
Next enter path to your cmake executable, usually in /usr/local/bin/cmake
Next click on Run Cmake
After configuring click the run icon to start the client
Using cmake
Running a shadow build, i.e building from a separate directory is very
simple. Just create a build directory, say ~/rbkit-build. Lets say
source code is cloned at ~/rbkit-client.
Create a build directory, say ~/rbkit-build
$ mkdir -p ~/rbkit-build &&cd~/rbkit-client
Run cmake and make
$ cmake ../rbkit-client
$ make
And that should give you rbkit-app/RBKitClient executable, which you can go ahead and run:
$ ./rbkit-app/RBKitClient
Testing Framework integration
Right now, QTest framework is integrated. So, if you make a build, then
tests will be built under $BUILD_DIR/tests folder. Those executables
can be run from commandline directly.
NOTE: For running benchmarks, there should be a file called hugedump
under tests/msgpack folder. This file is not checked in, because in
my machine, it is occupying 67mb. So, its better to keep this file
out of source control. For running tests, simply copy the file
tests/msgpack/objectdump to tests/msgpack/hugedump.
$ mkdir -p ~/rbkit-build
$ cd~/rbkit-build
# in build directory, one can invoke qmake and specify cloned directory# as source. This is pretty much shallow build.
$ qmake ~/rbkit-client -r -spec macx-g++ CONFIG+=debug CONFIG+=x86_64
CONFIG+=declarative_debug CONFIG+=qml_debug
# Makefile will be generated by qmake. Just run make
$ make
# run tests by invoking rctests
$ ./tests/rctests
You can debug js applications running inside Qt via simple "inspect element", like we do in Chrome or
other webkit browsers. Dead simple.
Cleaning up build files
If you suspect that there are build files left over in msgpack and zeromq folders,
run this command to clean them up.
$ git clean -dxf msgpack-c zeromq zeromq-4.0.4
Releasing a new version
Create a dmg for OSX platform
Update the VERSION value in RbkitClient.pro file to reflect the new version.
Run macdeployqt RbkitClient.app -dmg where RbKitClient.app is the OSX deployment
created by Qt Creator when you built the project locally. Doing this gives you
a dmg file.
Tag and draft a release
Github allows you to draft releases and attach files along with the releases.
Click here to draft
a release. Releases always happen from the master branch. Tag the commit with
the version to be released. We follow semantic versioning.
Upload the dmg file on the release draft and submit.