fdaf82f96b
Use the .clang-format-2 found in system/core instead of this which is not actually being used. Also, enable clang-format running by default. All upstream directories are marked as ignoring formatting so that their source files are not modified. Test: NA Change-Id: Icee6030f373fa5f072df162f97e6f34320e3d89a |
||
---|---|---|
.. | ||
android | ||
tools | ||
uapi | ||
.clang-format | ||
README.md |
Bionic Kernel Header Files
Bionic comes with a processed set of all of the uapi Linux kernel headers that can safely be included by userland applications and libraries.
These clean headers are automatically generated by several scripts located
in the tools/
directory. The tools process the original
unmodified kernel headers in order to get rid of many annoying
declarations and constructs that usually result in compilation failure.
The 'clean headers' only contain type and macro definitions, with the exception of a couple static inline functions used for performance reason (e.g. optimized CPU-specific byte-swapping routines).
They can be included from C++, or when compiling code in strict ANSI mode. They can be also included before or after any Bionic C library header.
Description of the directories involved in generating the parsed kernel headers:
-
external/kernel-headers/original/
Contains the uapi kernel headers found in the android kernel. Note this also includes the header files that are generated by building the kernel sources. -
bionic/libc/kernel/uapi/
Contains the cleaned kernel headers and mirrors the directory structure inexternal/kernel-headers/original/uapi/
. -
bionic/libc/kernel/tools/
Contains various Python and shell scripts used to get and re-generate the headers.
The tools to get/parse the headers:
-
tools/generate_uapi_headers.sh
Checks out the android kernel and generates all uapi header files. copies all the changed files into external/kernel-headers. -
tools/clean_header.py
Prints the clean version of a given kernel header. With the -u option, this will also update the corresponding clean header file if its content has changed. You can also process more than one file with -u. -
tools/update_all.py
Automatically update all clean headers from the content ofexternal/kernel-headers/original/
.
How To Update The Headers
IMPORTANT IMPORTANT:
WHEN UPDATING THE HEADERS, ALWAYS CHECK THAT THE NEW CLEAN HEADERS DO NOT BREAK THE KERNEL <-> USER ABI, FOR EXAMPLE BY CHANGING THE SIZE OF A GIVEN TYPE. THIS TASK CANNOT BE EASILY AUTOMATED AT THE MOMENT.
Download the Android mainline kernel source code:
> mkdir kernel_src
> cd kernel_src
kernel_src> git clone https://android.googlesource.com/kernel/common/ -b android-mainline
For now, there are no tags, take the top of tree version. To find the version of the linux stable kernel headers the mainline source code is tracking, read the uapi/linux/version.h that is generated.
kernel_src> cd linux-stable
kernel_src/linux-stable> git checkout tags/vXXX
Before running the command to import the headers, make sure that you have done a lunch TARGET. The script uses a variable set by the lunch command to determine which directory to use as the destination directory.
After running lunch, run this command to import the headers into the android source tree if there is a kernel source tree already checked out:
bionic/libc/kernel/tools/generate_uapi_headers.sh --use-kernel-dir kernel_src
Run this command to automatically download the latest version of the headers and import them if there is no checked out kernel source tree:
bionic/libc/kernel/tools/generate_uapi_headers.sh --download-kernel
Next, run this command to copy the parsed files to bionic/libc/kernel/uapi:
bionic/libc/kernel/tools/update_all.py
After this, you will need to build/test the tree to make sure that these changes do not introduce any errors.