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Building android AOSP on Mac OS X Mountain Lion

时间:2015-05-26 12:01:22      阅读:257      评论:0      收藏:0      [点我收藏+]

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I have been working with the Android AOSP source code for some time now and spent endless hours searching the internet for problems that arose on different occasions. Today I decided to note them down, on the one hand it is convenient for me to just look it up on my own blog, on the other hand you might find some of these notes useful.

What I ran into today was upgrading from Android 4.0.3 to 4.2.2. I didn‘t expect any difficulties in compiling the new source as compiling Android 4.0.3 on my Mac OS X (Mountain Lion) worked like a charm for me. But of course I discovered something disturbing - when I ran lunch 12, I got an error:

xcrun: Error: failed to exec real xcrun. (No such file or directory)
build/core/combo/HOST_darwin-x86.mk:62: *****************************************************
build/core/combo/HOST_darwin-x86.mk:63: * Cannot find SDK 10.6 at /Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.6.sdk
build/core/combo/HOST_darwin-x86.mk:65: * If you wish to build using higher version of SDK, 
build/core/combo/HOST_darwin-x86.mk:66: * try setting BUILD_MAC_SDK_EXPERIMENTAL=1 before 
build/core/combo/HOST_darwin-x86.mk:67: * rerunning this command 
build/core/combo/HOST_darwin-x86.mk:69: *****************************************************
build/core/combo/HOST_darwin-x86.mk:70: *** Stop..  Stop.

** Dont have a product spec for: full_maguro** Do you have the right repo manifest?

What the hell is it complaining about?

Quickly looking up what xcrun is doing I discovered it‘s some helper program do select the correct XCode version/sdk etc. It didn‘t suprise me that it failed as I don‘t have XCode installed. But why would it want somthing from XCode?

I don‘t really have an answer to that, but I discovered that some genius decided that everyone building on Mac OS X has XCode installed. There‘s no option nor flag nor anything else to disable the use of these XCode specific tools - at least I didn‘t find them. However, I don‘t want to complain about it (too much) so without further ado I‘ll tell you how to compile Android 4.2.2 on Mac OS X Mountain Lion. I‘ll even try to do it in a way that you can do it when starting from scratch. Please keep in mind that I had my system running for a long time so I might have missed some steps when trying to backtrack the essentials.

Setting up the build environment

At this point I should point out that there is an excellent documentation for setting up the environment here and if anything goes wrong you should check it and it might solve your problem.

Homebrew and Prequesites

I am using brew to install packages that are not shipped with the os and will setup the build environment using it. Of course you are free to use whatever you prefer, but I can highly recommend brew. After your system is ready to brew (check it with brew doctor), execute the following commands:

brew install automake
brew tap homebrew/dupes
brew install apple-gcc42

Moreover you have to install Java 1.6, for that just open the Terminal and type java -version. If you haven‘t installed it the system will prompt you whether you want to install it.

Prepare a virtual disk to hold the android source

The default file system on Mac OS X is case-insensitive, meaning that Test and test would refer to the same file or directory. For some reason there are files in the linux kernel that differ only in the case of a letter - this is something you‘d probably do after 72 hours of not sleeping and having a few drinks, at least that‘s the situation I imagine when trying to grasp why someone would do that... Anyhow, either you have a disk with a case-sensitive filesystem or you create a virtual disk and mount it. To create the virtual disk, mount it and enter the directory run:

hdiutil create -type SPARSE -fs Case-sensitive Journaled HFS+ -size 40g ~/android.dmg
hdiutil attach ~/android.dmg.sparseimage -mountpoint /Volumes/android
cd /Volumes/android

Downloading the source

First we need to install repo which is a program that helps to organize the git repositories.

mkdir ~/bin
PATH=~/bin:$PATH
curl https://dl-ssl.google.com/dl/googlesource/git-repo/repo > ~/bin/repo
chmod a+x ~/bin/repo

If you have followed along, you‘re still in the root directory of the mounted disk. If not you‘ll have to cd /Volumes/android. Finally to download the code run:

repo init -u https://android.googlesource.com/platform/manifest -b android-4.2.2_r1.2 --config-name
repo sync

This will take a while, go do something else until it finishes.

Building for a device

These steps depend on the device you‘re building for, I will give you the steps for Galaxy Nexus (maguro) and you have to adapt them accordingly. First download the necessary drivers from the nexus driver page and extract them to /Volumes/android. Now you should have a directory listing similar to this one:

$ cd /Volumes/android
$ ls
Makefile            external            libcore
abi                extract-broadcom-maguro.sh    libnativehelper
bionic                extract-imgtec-maguro.sh    ndk
bootable            extract-invensense-maguro.sh    out
build                extract-nxp-maguro.sh        packages
cts                extract-samsung-maguro.sh    pdk
dalvik                extract-widevine-maguro.sh    prebuilts
development            frameworks            sdk
device                gdk                system
docs                hardware            vendor

Now run each of the extract-... shell scripts. You will be asked to accept its license and you should (well, otherwise the drivers won‘t be extracted). Also you might have to unlock your bootloader etc. but I‘ll leave that to you; it‘s a well documented procedure.

Building the source code

Just to be on the safe side, the android build scripts depend on being executed by bash therefore run it if you don‘t already. Moreover I had problems withperlbrew, if you have it installed it‘d be wise to switch to the perl version that is shipped with Mac OS X now.

Now there comes the time for the hack, download this file ( android-4.2.2_r1.2 only !!! ) and overwrite the file in build/core/combos/HOST_darwin-x86.mk. I changed the file to allow for manually overriding the host compilers HOST_CC and HOST_CXX and skip the xcode test if they are both present. I don‘t use makefiles at all so there might be a more elegant solution to the problem but this works. After you have replaced the files you can execute:

. build/envsetup.sh
HOST_CC=gcc-4.2 HOST_CXX=g++-4.2 lunch 
make HOST_CC=gcc-4.2 HOST_CXX=g++-4.2 -j8

This will again take a while and if you followed all the steps the compilation succeeds.

Final Notes

Most of the steps I presented here are from the official android documentation and I recommend reading these docs for further information or troubleshooting. I hope I could help some of you :)

Building android AOSP on Mac OS X Mountain Lion

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原文地址:http://www.cnblogs.com/solo-heart/p/4529983.html

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