This gets rid of the 'sources' directory and allows all sources of a given Android application to be in the same directory tree without using a symlink trick. Note that apps/<name>/Application.mk is still required though. A later release of the NDK will get rid of it too, but the change is too drastic for the upcoming release. The change moves various source files from sources into their app/<name>/project/jni directory as well. The whole documentation is updated to reflect the change.
286 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
286 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
Android NDK Overview
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Introduction:
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The Android NDK is a set of tools that allows Android application developers
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to embed native machine code compiled from C and/or C++ source files into
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their application packages.
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IMPORTANT:
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The Android NDK can only be used to target Android system images
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running Cupcake (a.k.a 1.5) or later versions of the platform.
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1.0 and 1.1 system images are specifically *not* supported due to
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subtle ABI and toolchain changes that happened for the 1.5 release.
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I. Android NDK Goals:
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---------------------
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The Android VM allows your application's source code to call methods
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implemented in native code through the JNI. In a nutshell, this means that:
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- Your application's source code will declare one or more methods
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with the 'native' keyword to indicate that they are implemented through
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native code. E.g.:
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native byte[] loadFile(String filePath);
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- You must provide a native shared library that contains the
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implementation of these methods, which will be packaged into your
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application's .apk. This library must be named according to standard
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Unix conventions as lib<something>.so, and shall contain a standard JNI
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entry point (more on this later). For example:
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libFileLoader.so
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- Your application must explicitely load the library. For example, to load
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it at application startup, simply add the following to its source code:
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static {
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System.loadLibrary("FileLoader");
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}
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Note that you should not use the 'lib' prefix and '.so' suffix here.
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The Android NDK is a complement to the Android SDK that helps you to:
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- Generate JNI-compatible shared libraries that can run on the Android
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1.5 platform (and later) running on ARM CPUs.
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- Copy the generated shared libraries to a proper location of your
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application project path, so they will be automatically added to your
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final (and signed) .apks
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- In later revisions of the NDK, we intend to provide tools that help
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debug your native code through a remote gdb connection and as much
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source/symbol information as possible.
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Moreover, the Android NDK provides:
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- A set of cross-toolchains (compilers, linkers, etc..) that can
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generate native ARM binaries on Linux, OS X and Windows (with Cygwin)
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- A set of system headers corresponding to the list of stable native APIs
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supported by the Android platform. This corresponds to definitions that
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are guaranteed to be supported in all later releases of the platform.
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They are documented in the file docs/STABLE-APIS.TXT
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IMPORTANT:
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Keep in mind that most of the native system libraries in Android system
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images are not frozen and might changed drastically, or even deleted,
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in later updates and releases of the platform.
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- A build system that allow developers to only write very short build files
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to describe which sources need to be compiled, and how. The build system
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deals with all the hairy toolchain/platform/CPU/ABI specifics. Moreover,
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later updates of the NDK can add support for more toolchains, platforms,
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system interfaces without requiring changes in the developer's build
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files (more on this later).
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II. Android NDK Non-Goals:
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--------------------------
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The NDK is *not* a good way to write generic native code that runs on Android
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devices. In particular, your applications should still be written in the Java
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programming language, handle Android system events appropriately to avoid the
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"Application Not Responding" dialog or deal with the Android application
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life-cycle.
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Note however that is is possible to write a sophisticated application in
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native code with a small "application wrapper" used to start/stop it
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appropriately.
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A good understanding of JNI is highly recommended, since many operations
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in this environment require specific actions from the developers, that are
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not necessarily common in typical native code. These include:
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- Not being able to directly access the content of VM objects through
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direct native pointers. E.g. you cannot safely get a pointer to a
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String object's 16-bit char array to iterate over it in a loop.
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- Requiring explicit reference management when the native code wants to
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keep handles to VM objects between JNI calls.
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The NDK only provides system headers for a very limited set of native
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APIs and libraries supported by the Android platform. While a typical
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Android system image includes many native shared libraries, these should
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be considered an implementation detail that might change drastically between
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updates and releases of the platform.
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If an Android system library is not explicitely supported by the NDK
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headers, then applications should not depend on it being available, or
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they risk breaking after the next over-the-air system update on various
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devices.
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Selected system libraries will gradually be added to the set of stable NDK
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APIs.
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III. NDK development in practice:
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---------------------------------
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Here's a very rough overview of how you can develop native code with the
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Android NDK:
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1/ Run build/host-setup.sh to configure the NDK
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2/ Place your native sources under $PROJECT/jni/...
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3/ Write $PROJECT/jni/Android.mk to describe your sources
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to the NDK build system
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4/ Write apps/<myapp>/Application.mk to describe your application
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and the native sources it needs to the NDK build system
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5/ Build your native code by running "make APP=<myapp>"
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in the top-level NDK directory.
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The last step will copy, in case of success, the stripped shared libraries
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your application needs to your application's root project directory. You
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will then need to generate your final .apk through the usual means.
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Now, for a few more details:
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III.1/ Configuring the NDK:
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- - - - - - - - - - - - - -
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After installing the NDK as described in docs/INSTALL.TXT, you should call
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the 'build/host-setup.sh' script to configure your NDK.
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This script is used to probe your host system and verify a few pre-requisites.
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It will then generate a configuration file (e.g. out/host/config-host.mk) that
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is later used during NDK builds.
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In some cases, this might instruct you to download an archive containing
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prebuilt toolchain binaries for your development platform, the unzip it
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to the NDK root directory. The message should contain enough information
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to let you do that.
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If you forget this step, trying to build with the NDK will generate an
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error message telling you what to do.
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III.2/ Placing C and C++ sources:
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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
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You should place your native sources under the following directory:
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$PROJECT/jni/
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Where $PROJECT corresponds to the path of your Android application
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project.
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You are pretty free to organize the content of 'jni' as you want,
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the directory names and structure here will not influence the final
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generated application packages, so you don't have to use pseudo-unique
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names like com.<mycompany>.<myproject> as is the case for application
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package names.
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Note that C and C++ sources are supported. The default C++ file extensions
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supported by the NDK is '.cpp', but other extensions can be handled as well
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(see docs/ANDROID-MK.TXT for details).
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It is possible to store your sources in a different location by adjusting
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your Android.mk file (see below).
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III.3/ Writing an Android.mk build script:
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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
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An Android.mk file is a small build script that you write to describe your
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sources to the NDK build system. Its syntax is described in details in
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the file docs/ANDROID-MK.TXT.
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In a nutshell, the NDK groups your sources into "modules", where each module
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can be one of the following:
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- a static library
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- a shared library
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You can define several modules in a single Android.mk, or you can write
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several Android.mk files, each one defining a single module.
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Note that a single Android.mk might be parsed several times by the build
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system so don't assume that certain variables are not defined in them.
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By default, the NDK will look for the following build script:
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$PROJECT/jni/Android.mk
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If you want to define Android.mk files in sub-directories, you should
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include them explicitely in your top-level Android.mk. There is even
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a helper function to do that, i.e. use:
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include $(call all-subdir-makefiles)
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This will include all Android.mk files in sub-directories of the current
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build file's path.
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III.4/ Writing an Application.mk build file:
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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
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While an Android.mk file describes your modules to the build system, you
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need to write an Application.mk file to describe your application and the
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modules it requires. This file must be located in:
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$NDK/apps/<myapp>/Application.mk
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Where <myapp> is a short descriptive name for your application that will
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be used to invoke the NDK build (and not go into final APKs). The file is
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used to provide the following to the NDK build:
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- The location of your Android application's project path
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- The list of NDK modules that is required by your application.
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This should really be a list of 'shared library' modules.
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- Optional information, like whether you want a release or debug
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build, specific C or C++ compiler flags and others.
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- Planned: the list of specific platforms/CPUs you want to explicitely
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target (currently only one is supported).
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The syntax of an Application.mk file is very simple and is described in
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docs/APPLICATION-MK.TXT
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You can define several Application.mk corresponding to different builds
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of the same application, for example:
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$NDK/apps/release/Application.mk
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$NDK/apps/debug/Application.mk
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III.5/ Invoke the NDK build system:
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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
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On the command-line, go to the top-level NDK directory, then invoke the
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build system with:
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make APP=<myapp>
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Where 'make' refers to GNU Make, and <myapp> is the name of one of the
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subdirectories of '$NDK/apps/'
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This will try to build all modules with relevant options, the final
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shared libraries listed by your Application.mk and, in case of success,
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will copy stripped versions of the shared libraries to your application's
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project path. (Note that unstripped versions are kept for debugging
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purposes, there is no need to copy unstripped binaries to a device).
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IV. Debugging support:
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- - - - - - - - - - - -
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Debugging your native code with this initial release of the NDK is still
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very rough.
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Note that we plan to make this much easier in a later NDK release, all of
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this without changing your sources, Android.mk and Application.mk files.
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