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Zero-configuration build system to very quickly build C/C++ projects.

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Quickbuild (qb)

qb is a zero-configuration build system to very quickly build C/C++ projects on Linux, Windows, and MacOS.

Example

Let's say you have a folder containing some source files:

// main.cpp
#include "test.h"
int main() {
  test();
  return 0;
}

// test.h
void test();

// test.cpp
#include <cstdio>
void test() {
  printf("Hello, world\n");
}

You run qb in this directory:

~/qbtest $ qb
22:30:40.363 | main.cpp
22:30:40.364 | test.cpp
22:30:40.456 | 👏 qbtest
22:30:40.456 | ⏳ compile 53.9738ms, link 39.1138ms

And you run the resulting binary:

~/qbtest $ ./qbtest
Hello, world

Installing

To install qb, you can download a release and make sure it exists in your PATH.

If you have Go installed, you can also install the latest development version of qb by simply running go get github.com/codecat/qb.

Commands

You can pass a number of commands to qb.

qb run

Runs the binary after building it.

qb clean

Cleans all output files that qb could generate.

Optional configuration

Since qb is meant to be a zero configuration tool, you don't have to do any configuration to get going quickly. It will do its best to find appropriate defaults for your setup, you just run qb and it builds.

If you do want a little bit more control over what happens, you can either use command line flags or create a configuration file in your source folder.

Command line options

qb [--name name]
   [--type <exe|dll|lib>]
   [--pkg name]
   [--static]
   [--debug]
   [--verbose]
   [--strict]
   [--exceptions <std|all|min>]
   [--optimize <default|none|size|speed>]
   [--cppstd <latest|20|17|14>]
   [--cstd <latest|17|11>]
   [--include <path>]
   [--define <define>]

--name

Sets the name of the project and controls the output filename. You should not provide any file extension here as it will be added automatically.

If no name is passed, the name of the current directory will be used.

For example, --name foo will produce a binary foo on Linux, and foo.exe on Windows.

--type

Sets the type of the project, which can be an executable or a (dynamic) library. This is specified using the keywords exe, dll, or lib.

For example, to create a dynamic library, you would pass --type dll.

--pkg

Adds a package to link to by its name. qb will try to resolve the package by itself, using a variety of sources. Listed here are the sources, in the order that they will be searched for:

  1. Local configuration: If you have a qb.toml file, this will check for packages defined there.
    [package.sfml]
    includes = [ "D:\\Libs\\SFML-2.5.1\\include\\" ]
    linkdirs = [ "D:\\Libs\\SFML-2.5.1\\lib\\" ]
    links = [
      "sfml-main.lib",
      "sfml-graphics-s.lib",
      "sfml-system-s.lib",
      "sfml-window-s.lib",
      "opengl32.lib",
      "winmm.lib",
      "gdi32.lib",
    ]
    defines = [ "SFML_STATIC" ]
  2. pkgconfig: If you have pkg-config installed on your system, it will be checking for packages from there.
  3. Nothing else yet, but the following is planned: global configuration (like local, but system-wide), and vcpkg (for Windows).

For example, to link with SFML, we can add --pkg sfml, as long as sfml can be resolved by one of the package sources.

Additionally, if Conan is installed, it may be used as a way to manage packages. If a conanfile.txt exists, it will run conan install . (unless conanbuildfile.txt already exists). Then conanbuildfile.txt is used to properly compile & link to any dependencies in the Conanfile.

--static

Links statically in order to create a standalone binary that does not perform any loading of dynamic libraries.

--debug

Produces debug information for the resulting binary. On Windows that means a .pdb file, on Linux that means embedding debug information into the binary itself so that it can be used with gdb, and on Mac that means a .dSYM bundle.

--verbose

Makes it so that all compiler and linker commands will be printed to the log. Useful for debugging qb itself.

--strict

Makes the compiler more strict with its warnings.

--exceptions

Sets the way that the compiler's runtime will handle exceptions. Can either be standard (std), all, or minimal (min). The default is standard.

This only makes a difference on Windows, where setting this to all will allow the runtime to catch certain access violation and other exceptions. When it's minimal or min, the minimal amount of exception handling will be done, which is similar to all, but there is no stack unwinding.

--optimize

Sets whether to use optimization. Can either be default, none, size, or speed. The default is default.

When this option is set to default, whether the binary will be optimized is defined by whether it's a debug build or not. For example, when building with qb --debug, you will get an unoptimized binary, but by building without any options (by just running qb) it will produce an optimized build.

--cppstd

Sets which C++ standard to use. Can either be latest, 20, 17, or 14. The default is latest.

--cstd

Sets which C standard to use. Can either be latest, 17, or 11. The default is latest.

--include

Adds a directory to the include path. For example, to add the folders foo and bar to the include path, you would run qb --include foo --include bar.

--define

Adds a precompiler definition. For example, to define FOO and BAR in the preprocessor when compiling, you would run qb --define FOO --define BAR.

Configuration file

It's possible to create a qb.toml file (in the folder you're running qb) to specify your configuration options as well. This is handy if you build a lot but don't want to pass the command line options every time.

The configuration file works the same as the command line options, except they are in a toml file. Values not defined in the file will remain as their defaults. For example, to make qb always build as a dynamic library with the name libfoo, you would put this in qb.toml:

name = "libfoo"
type = "dll"

To make a statically linked debug binary, you can put this in the configuration file:

static = true
debug = true

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