tag | 69f48c78b7e36086d20b8f03715f0e5996539e22 | |
---|---|---|
tagger | The Android Open Source Project <initial-contribution@android.com> | Tue Jan 03 21:50:31 2023 -0800 |
object | e66910f5894318fc9ec1623fb0cc7dff50f34f08 |
Android security 12.0.0 release 43
commit | e66910f5894318fc9ec1623fb0cc7dff50f34f08 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Android Build Coastguard Worker <android-build-coastguard-worker@google.com> | Fri Oct 07 02:20:15 2022 +0000 |
committer | Android Build Coastguard Worker <android-build-coastguard-worker@google.com> | Fri Oct 07 02:20:15 2022 +0000 |
tree | 4476e1de0b872e9d18f5c050635f393eb814fe73 | |
parent | 6bc0335c187ccc940059ea9636dafd95df017a33 [diff] | |
parent | 006855670a649bb0483cd94e0f08d3f77919fa86 [diff] |
Merge cherrypicks of [19501976, 19747493, 19748339, 19680241, 19698973] into security-aosp-sc-release. Change-Id: I9536be10989b604ef72525fbaf97f5dc97212202
Just build AOSP - Fluoride is there by default.
Instructions for a Debian based distribution:
You‘ll want to download some pre-requisite packages as well. If you’re currently configured for AOSP development, you should have all required packages. Otherwise, you can use the following apt-get list:
sudo apt-get install repo git-core gnupg flex bison gperf build-essential \ zip curl zlib1g-dev gcc-multilib g++-multilib \ x11proto-core-dev libx11-dev lib32z-dev libncurses5 \ libgl1-mesa-dev libxml2-utils xsltproc unzip liblz4-tool libssl-dev \ libc++-dev libevent-dev \ flatbuffers-compiler libflatbuffers1 \ openssl openssl-dev
You will also need a recent-ish version of Rust and Cargo. Please follow the instructions on Rustup to install a recent version.
mkdir ~/fluoride cd ~/fluoride git clone https://android.googlesource.com/platform/system/bt
Install dependencies (require sudo access). This adds some Ubuntu dependencies and also installs GN (which is the build tool we're using).
cd ~/fluoride/bt build/install_deps.sh
The following third-party dependencies are necessary but currently unavailable via a package manager. You may have to build these from source and install them to your local environment.
We provide a script to produce debian packages for those components, please follow the instructions in build/dpkg/README.txt.
The googletest packages provided by Debian/Ubuntu (libgmock-dev and libgtest-dev) do not provide pkg-config files, so you can build your own googletest using the steps below:
$ git clone https://github.com/google/googletest.git -b release-1.10.0 $ cd googletest # Main directory of the cloned repository. $ mkdir build # Create a directory to hold the build output. $ cd build $ cmake .. # Generate native build scripts for GoogleTest. $ sudo make install -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr
For host build, we depend on a few other repositories:
Clone these all somewhere and create your staging environment.
export STAGING_DIR=path/to/your/staging/dir mkdir ${STAGING_DIR} mkdir -p ${STAGING_DIR}/external ln -s $(readlink -f ${PLATFORM2_DIR}/common-mk) ${STAGING_DIR}/common-mk ln -s $(readlink -f ${PLATFORM2_DIR}/.gn) ${STAGING_DIR}/.gn ln -s $(readlink -f ${RUST_CRATE_DIR}) ${STAGING_DIR}/external/rust ln -s $(readlink -f ${PROTO_LOG_DIR}) ${STAGING_DIR}/external/proto_logging
We provide a build script to automate building assuming you've staged your build environment already as above.
./build.py --output ${OUTPUT_DIR} --platform-dir ${STAGING_DIR} --clang
This will build all targets to the output directory you've given. You can also build each stage separately (if you want to iterate on something specific):
You can choose to run only a specific stage by passing an arg via --target
.
Currently, Rust builds are a separate stage that uses Cargo to build. See gd/rust/README.md for more information.
By default on Linux, we statically link libbluetooth so you can just run the binary directly:
cd ~/fluoride/bt/out/Default ./bluetoothtbd -create-ipc-socket=fluoride