The configure script you talk about looks like the same one you get from the source distribution,
AFTER you supposedly have installed everything.
Therefore the procedure you seem to recommend is, to be complete:
- install using the binary distribution by running qt-sdk-linux-x86_64-opensource-2010.01.bin
(for documentation, run qt-sdk-linux-x86_64-opensource-2010.01.bin --help)
(there are no options that let you install any SQL drivers)
- go to the installed directory tree, find the ..sdk-2010.01/qt directory
- do ./configure --help (as root, won't work as user), pick out the appropriate options
- re-build what was installed in the first step with the usual configure/make/make install sequence
Whereas installing from source is:
- unpack the file qt-everywhere-opensource-src-4.6.1.tar.gz
- do ./configure --help as plain user, pick out the appropriate options
- build using the usual configure/make/make install sequence
From configure --help, the options on the configure script relating to the sql drivers are these:
-no-sql-<driver> ... Disable SQL <driver> entirely.
-qt-sql-<driver> ... Enable a SQL <driver> in the QtSql library, by default
none are turned on.
-plugin-sql-<driver> Enable SQL <driver> as a plugin to be linked to
at run time.
Possible values for <driver>:
[ db2 ibase mysql oci odbc psql sqlite sqlite2 sqlite_symbian tds ]
-system-sqlite ..... Use sqlite from the operating system.
-no-sql-<driver> ... Disable SQL <driver> entirely.
-qt-sql-<driver> ... Enable a SQL <driver> in the QtSql library, by default
none are turned on.
-plugin-sql-<driver> Enable SQL <driver> as a plugin to be linked to
at run time.
Possible values for <driver>:
[ db2 ibase mysql oci odbc psql sqlite sqlite2 sqlite_symbian tds ]
-system-sqlite ..... Use sqlite from the operating system.
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A lot of people on these forums seem to have a mental disorder that causes them to say, without apparent reason, that everything is in the docs
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