ladybird/Documentation/CLionConfiguration.md
Andrew Kaster c6e9f0e7b5 Meta+Documentation: Switch default build dir to Build/Ladybird
Also prefer using the new top-level CMakeLists.txt
2024-06-04 13:44:22 -06:00

3.4 KiB

CLion Project Configuration

CLion can integrate with CMake to provide code comprehension features.

After opening the ladybird repository in CLion as a new project, the "Open Project Wizard" window will open, from here set the following fields:

(Assuming you use Ninja as the build system and configured the CMake build directory to Build/ladybird)

CMake Options:

-DSERENITY_CACHE_DIR=$CMakeProjectDir$/Build/caches
-GNinja

Build Directory: Build/ladybird

If you already have the project open, you can go to File -> Settings -> Build, Execution, Deployment -> CMake to find these options.

Excluding Build Artifacts

Source files are copied to the Build directory during the build, if you do not exclude them from CLion indexing they will show up in search results. This is often confusing, unintuitive, and can result in you losing changes you have made to files. To exclude these files navigate to the Project tool window, right-click the Build folder and select Mark Directory as | Excluded.

Include headers and source files for code insight

To get proper code insight mark the folders AK and Userland by right-clicking on them and selecting Mark Directory as | Project Sources and Headers.

A symptom of this not being configured correctly is CLion giving a warning for every single file:

The file does not belong to any project target, code insight features might not work properly.

Code Generation Settings

To make code generated by CLion match the SerenityOS coding style, import the CLionCodeStyleSettings.xml from this directory as code style scheme via Settings -> Editor -> Code Style -> C/C++ -> Scheme -> Cog icon -> Import Scheme...

Notes for WSL Users

Toolchain

If the ladybird directory is on the WSL filesystem you need to configure the CLion toolchain to be WSL. To set that up go to File->Settings->Build, Execution, Deployment->Toolchains and click on the + icon, then select WSL. In Toolset select the distribution you have the ladybird directory on.

Terminal

It is possible to set the embedded terminal in CLion to the one that your WSL distribution provides. This way you can build and run ladybird without leaving the IDE. Note that following will only help if you don't use an X-window server to access qemu. It is possible to install qemu natively on Windows and allow WSL to use it instead of installing qemu first on (wsl) linux and then use X server to launch ladybird inside of it. Check the updated manual here.

  • Locate the terminal emulator for your linux distribution. Open CMD with elevated privileges and cd to C:/Program Files/WindowsApps/. The directory is usually hidden and requires additional privileges. You should be able to cd as administrator. dir and look for your distribution in directory names. In case of Ubuntu, it starts with CanonicalGroupLimited.Ubuntu20.04onWindows_2004.2020.424.0_x64. cd to it. The directory should contain the shell executable. In my case it's named ubuntu2004.exe. Copy absolute/path/to/ubuntu2004.exe.

  • Go to your IDE settings: File->Settings->Tools->Terminal and paste the path you just copied to shell path. Click OK.

  • Close CLion and restart.

The default IDE terminal should now be changed to WSL, and now you can run CLion/run.sh. You may also want to copy ladybird/Meta/CLion/run.sh to your project directory and run it from there, so that you don't have to fight with git every time you modify the script.