/*! \page qtboost Using the Qt booster This section describes how to use the Qt booster. The booster provides the application with the key libraries already present in the process, but no other initialisations are done in the booster. \section intro Prerequisites The launcher can start an application if the following prerequisites are met: \li The application is compiled and linked to a position independent binary (executable or library) \li The application is started with the \c invoker command instead of executing the executable file. \section qtboostcompiling 1. Compiling and linking for launcher If you intend to run a binary with \c applauncherd, compile it with \c -fPIC option to produce position-independent code. It is recommended that you link them either as shared libraries, or, preferably, as position-independent executables, which can be executed both traditionally and with the launcher. The \c -pie and \c -rdynamic linker flags accomplish this. To improve linking and loading times of shared object libraries, it is recommended that you hide any unnecessary symbols from the resulting binary by using \c -fvisibility=hidden and \c -fvisibility-inlines-hidden flags as well. However, \c applauncherd needs to find the entry point for your application, so the symbol \c main needs to be explicitly made visible. This can be done as follows: \code #include Q_DECL_EXPORT int main(int argc, char **argv) { ... } \endcode If your application loads a plugin that needs to access some symbols in the main application, the symbols also need to be exported. In addition, the \c --global-syms invoker parameter needs to use, as described in \ref invokerparameters "Advanced Invoker Command Line Parameters". Normally you should not need to worry about the compiler and linker flags, as the \c applauncherd-dev package provides configuration options for \c qmake, \c CMake, and \c pkg-config. If you are building a Debian package, make your package build-depend on \c applauncherd-dev and your application binary package depend on \c applauncherd. For details on how to get the compiler and linker flags, see \ref usingqmake "Using qmake", \ref usingcmake "Using CMake", or \ref usingpkgconfig "Using pkg-config". \section qtboostexit 2. Adapting application source code No modifications are typically needed when the Qt booster is used. However, if the application has explicit calls to \c exit(), change them to use \c _exit() instead. This prevents cleanup actions related to shared libraries to be performed multiple times. For more details, see \ref limitations "Limitations and known issues". \section qtboostinvoker 3. Launching the application Check that applauncherd package is installed and applancherd daemon is running. You can now run your application as usual as /usr/bin/myApp, or use the qtboosted launching by running: \code invoker --type=q /usr/bin/myApp \endcode \section qtboostfinishingtouch 4. Finishing touches The invoker can also provide single instance behaviour and a splash screen for your application as follows. For more details, see \ref singleinstance "Enabling single instance support for an application" and \ref splash "Enabling a splash screen for an application." \code /usr/bin/invoker --single-instance --splash=/usr/share/myApp/splash.jpg --type=q /usr/bin/myApp \endcode */