Adding -pie to LOCAL_LDFLAGS for host linking leaves it around
when doing the host cross Windows linking, resulting in a warning:
clang-7: warning: argument unused during compilation: '-pie' [-Wunused-command-line-argument]
Add it later in binary.mk after the flags have been copied to the
single-use my_ldflags.
Bug: 115776263
Test: m checkbuild
Change-Id: I70d71fa1ec6445631dc7e89ef61927a3304375e2
HOST_PREFER_32_BIT was used during the switch to 64-bit host tools to
keep the SDK building as 32-bit, but is never set any more.
Change-Id: I874f89c7d1e9cd8c9d4c879048d81a4362ce4dce
Creates a build_system_stats.txt build artifact that contains statistics
on how many BUILD_* modules are defined in a build. Also writes out
information about the Soong module types sent from the Soong build.
Merged-In: Iaf0c7062f542dc6942b5349854f3d49267cac4a5
Change-Id: Iaf0c7062f542dc6942b5349854f3d49267cac4a5
Host native tests have been getting installed into
out/host/linux-x86/bin/..., but this pollutes the bin directory with a
lot of poorly named tests. Also, to support 32-bit and 64-bit tests, we
need to have different names with different suffixes. This causes
problems when tests expect to be named something specific (like gtest).
It's also convenient to store test data next to the test itself.
So with this change, native tests will be installed in
out/host/linux-x86/nativetest[64]/$(LOCAL_MODULE)/$(LOCAL_MODULE_STEM)
just like target tests get installed into /data/nativetest[64].
Implement this using a new NATIVE_TESTS class, which is like
EXECUTABLES, but sets up the install path differently, and configures
the rpath to load shared libraries with the proper relative path.
LOCAL_MODULE_RELATIVE_PATH can be used to control the directory name, it
will default to $(LOCAL_MODULE). This way multiple related tests can be
grouped together.
Target native tests also use NATIVE_TESTS now, but nothing should change
other than LOCAL_MODULE_RELATIVE_PATH can be used.
Change-Id: I535e42b1a6b21c5b8d6a580aa2f944d2be35e27d
This is mostly the same as the existing 2ND_HOST / HOST_CROSS support.
The interesting thing I did here was make x86 the 'first' architecture,
and x86_64 the second. This way LOCAL_MULTILIB := first defaults to
32-bit windows modules.
windows-x86/bin <- defaults to 32-bit executables
windows-x86/lib <- 32-bit libraries, like before
windows-x86/lib64 <- 64-bit libraries
windows-x86/obj <- 32-bit intermediates
windows-x86/obj64 <- 64-bit intermediates
Then modules are registered with the names:
host_cross_liblog <- 32-bit, like before
host_cross_liblog_64 <- 64-bit
Bug: 26957718
Change-Id: I9f119411acb43e973ec1e6bca3c1dc291c91556c
Instead of using recursive make to change the HOST_OS when building the
windows SDK under linux, add the concept of cross-building to another
host os.
Bug: 23566667
Change-Id: I6dc525b601b6251d458d197c30bf4660d7485502
Otherwise we may end up conflict between LOCAL_MODULE_HOST_ARCH and the
default multilib mode.
Also removed the unneeded variants of LOCAL_MODULE_HOST_ARCH.
Change-Id: I9e5a0144da3cb6310be0ddf098738987e51305de
We already support pure 32-bit and 64-bit-by-default multilib build.
With HOST_PREFER_32_BIT we can build 32-bit-by-default multilib build.
This will be lest disruptive during the period we transition to
64-bit-by-default.
Bug: 13751317
Change-Id: I0d56ce4abbe4afeaacfd70d709f6a349791c0722
This change basically ported our target multilib to the host side.
It supports 2 host build modes: x86 and x86_64 multilib build.
For now you need to set "BUILD_HOST_64bit=true" to switch to x86_64
multilib build. Later we'll default to x86_64 build and have a flag
to force 32-bit only build, which may be needed by SDK build.
In host module definition, like in target ones, you can use the
following
LOCAL variables to set up multilib configuration:
LOCAL_MULTILIB: can be "both", "first", "32" or "64".
It also supports the same set of arch or 32-vs-64 specific LOCAL
variables.
By default, it builds only for the first arch.
To keep path compatibility, in x86_64 build files are still output to
out/host/linux-x86; Both 32-bit and 64-bit executables are in
out/host/linux-86/bin;
In x86_64 build 32-bit shared libraries are installed to
out/host/linux-x86/lib32
and 64-bit shared libraries are installed to out/host/linux-x86/lib;
32-bit object files are output to out/host/linux-x86/obj32 and 64-bit
object files
are output to out/host/linux-x86/obj.
Bug: 13751317
Change-Id: I6044f83b7db369a33e05209e8c588eb6dc83409f
Also we don't need to include module_arch_supported.mk again, if we are
currently substituting the source build with LOCAL_PREBUILT_MODULE_FILE.
Change-Id: I444b0397d74c3153b398a050b762e49418062a86
With this change, you can easily switch between building from source
code and prebuilt.
Set LOCAL_PREBUILT_MODULE_FILE to the path of the prebuilt file,
relative to the top of the source tree, in the usual module definition.
The prebuilt will be used unless any of the followings satisfied:
1) ANDROID_BUILD_FROM_SOURCE is "true", which disable prebuilt globally;
2) The module name is in ANDROID_NO_PREBUILT_MODULES;
3) The LOCAL_PATH is prefixed by any of ANDROID_NO_PREBUILT_PATHS.
A developer can set ANDROID_NO_PREBUILT_MODULES or
ANDROID_NO_PREBUILT_PATHS to build only his own module(s) from source,
while build other modules from prebuilts.
You can set ANDROID_BUILD_FROM_SOURCE to true to build everything from
source.
Those variables can be set with shell environmental variable or in your
buildspec.mk.
Sometimes module B is able to be built from source only if module A is
also
built from source, for example, if B is the test apk of A.
In that case, you can use the macro include-if-build-from-source to
include B's Android.mk only if A is built from source too, or
if-build-from-source to conditionally include the definition of module
B,
if their module definitions are in the same Android.mk.
Support host-executable-hook and host-shared-library-hook.
Change-Id: Icab7cf028c87eaba0dd7efc2a7749fd6f32b44e4