Hi David, Hi Mario, On 22 Aug 2014, at 09:35 , David Faure <fa...@kde.org> wrote: > On Friday 22 August 2014 09:21:13 Marko Käning wrote: >> 1) files installed by cmake indeed land where the application expects them >> at runtime > You can write a script that checks that, using the "qtpaths" executable.
your suggested approach seems to be feasible, although it covers only a fraction of what I had in mind. Yet, it could be a good start, I guess... But Cristian joins in here and I could imagine the same could be valid for Android: On 22 Aug 2014, at 09:37 , Cristian Oneț <onet.crist...@gmail.com> wrote: > Since the two platforms are in kind of the same situation I would like > to see a similar solution to these problems. Yep, I think so. That is why I voted for a real test *application* which can be build and installed on any system, in order to have a reproducible testing environment independent from OS and whether the test app runs on a regular installation or a CI system. As I’ve never coded a KF5 application myself and since I am swamped acting as a half-manual CI system, I don’t see how I could code such a thingy in a short time. I think this could also act as a good example-application for the KF5 framework… Mario, there were efforts regarding example apps at Randa! Could this perhaps be implemented by that same team? I think it would be worth to get such an app into the examples, as it would demonstrate a lot concerning KF5’s ways of saving all sorts of files for data, configs, apps, read-only, writable, etc. Greets, Marko _______________________________________________ Kde-frameworks-devel mailing list Kde-frameworks-devel@kde.org https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde-frameworks-devel