If a step is for a specific Qt version, that is mentioned. Here is a video of boot2qt booting straight in to my custom Qt app: The default apps of boot2qt 5.15 on my Raspberry Pi 4. The default app of boot2qt 6.2 running on the Raspberry Pi 4. With this referral link you'll get $100 credit for 60 days. You can also sponsor me by getting a Digital Ocean VPS. It means the world to me if you show your appreciation and you'll help pay the server costs. Go check it out!Ĭonsider sponsoring me on Github. I'm developing an open source monitoring app called Leaf Node Monitoring, for windows, linux & android. Please, if you found this content useful, consider a small donation using any of the options below: Recently I removed all Google Ads from this site due to their invasive tracking, as well as Google Analytics. Here, but it works just as fine with less RAM. We end up with a boot2qt image for the Raspberry Pi 4. The guide also covers changing the default startup app to your own app and Qt Creator integration. The 5.15 build process is a bit convoluted due to a few upstream issues. This guide covers both Qt 5.15 and Qt 6.2. You can run your own Qt application on the Pi, full screen, it will boot right into it. This boot2qt image can be written to an SD card and when booted up, the Raspberry Pi runs a software stack that integrates nicely with Qt Creator (the Qt IDE), for example, one click deployment to the device. In this guide we'll build a linux distribution for Raspberry Pi 4, using the Yocto project and the boot2qt stack provided by Qt.
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