public_key and private_key properties support :module syntax so that the
key pairs can be dynamically created during the build, which is useful
for one-time keys.
Bug: 128960614
Test: m (apex_test amended)
Change-Id: I249b1d29f247784193b0d733a7b6a20274ece105
Notice file for an APEX is created by merging notice files for the
modules included in it (plus the notice file for the APEX itself if
specified).
Notice files having the same content are not duplicated; it is emitted
only once.
Bug: 128701495
Test: m (apex_test is amended)
Test: m and inspect $(PRODUCT_OUT)/obj/NOTICE.txt to check there are
license entries for /system/apex/*.apex files
Change-Id: I169d91038291a6c71615de97cf5b03174afab5d4
apex_key, when with product_specific: true, is installed to
/product/etc/security/apex.
Bug: 128519063
Test: m (apex_test.go amended)
Change-Id: I39e8ac1c486c734dfe0555cd1874468d75e71f34
The manifest and androidManifest properties in the apex module type now
supports ":name" syntax.
Bug: 123857186
Test: m (apex_test amended)
Change-Id: Ic4e5a73cf73260d156ec61d07932ad07b2561413
Some test and other miscallaneous use-cases need apexs that are
installable but will not affect the installation of other artifacts
onto the device. For this purpose we added a test_apex type. These
test_apex targets create apex files and have all the normal attributes
but are not considered the source of any of their contents for the
device by the rest of the build-system.
Test: build and boot
Test: ALLOW_MISSING_DEPENDENCIES=true \
DIST_DIR=$ANDROID_BUILD_TOP/out/dist \
./art/tools/dist_linux_bionic.sh -j72 showcommands com.android.runtime.host
Bug: 123591866
Bug: 123892969
Change-Id: I7f50be0ac0425cd87868145e18bcee6962d472ef
relative_install_path for cc_library is respected by APEX.
relative_install_path for cc_binary is not yet respected because doing
it will break the path to the dynamic linker in the runtime APEX.
That change should be done along with changes in init, bionic, etc.
Bug: 123721777
Test: m (apex_test.go amended)
Change-Id: I855f8eda0d4255d563861ac96d0d3e2c669e9a2a
Some apex targets need to be able to change their contents based on if
they are host or target or what libc they are using. This adds support
for doing this using the standard 'target: {...}' idiom.
Test: m com.android.runtime.host
Test: ./art/tools/build_linux_bionic.sh com.android.runtime.host
Bug: 123591866
Change-Id: If73bee650cdeb277c0e603763aa0b0108656bfdd
Some modules rely on symlink_preferred_arch to have expected files
present. This change makes apexs include these symlinks.
Test: m com.android.runtime.debug
pushd $(mktemp -d)
mkdir mnt
unzip $OUT/apex/system/com.android.runtime.debug.apex
sudo mount -o loop,ro apex_payload.img mnt
Ensure that mnt/bin/dalvikvm and mnt/bin/dex2oatd both exist and
are symlinks to mnt/bin/dalvikvm64 and mnt/bin/dex2oatd32
respectively.
Bug: 119942078
Bug: 122373634
Bug: 123079311
Change-Id: I47868fbedc5bdd3141a836c488f79e91e0a6ddfe
Add a dependency from a stubs lib to headers libs so that the headers
can be re-exported.
Bug: 122717287
Test: m; a test added to apex_test.go
Change-Id: I8d48c072815c6b02d343ef09cb44dfc6d1af8e64
A module can be built multiple times when it is referenced from one
or more APEXes. Sometimes, it is required for the module to behave
differently depending on the context; e.g., do A when built form
APEX M, do B when built for APEX N, and do C when built for platform.
The idea is to have a macro __ANDROID_APEX__ which is set to the
name of the apex that the module is built for. It is undefined when
the module is built for platform.
Bug: 122714993
Test: m (apex_test amended)
Change-Id: I11a89c6a0e799f4810194de7ef9ee472a71ca498
When PRODUCT_DEFAULT_DEV_CERTIFICATE is set to /vendor/foo/devkeys/test,
then the public/private key pairs for an apex_key is searched at
/vendor/foo/devkeys directory.
To be specific,
/system/timezone/Android.bp:
apex_key {
name: "timezone.key",
public_key: "com.android.tzdata.avbpubkey",
private_key: "com.android.tzdata.pem",
}
When PRODUCT_DEFAULT_DEV_CERTIFICATE isn't set, the keys are searched at
/system/timezone, which is the path where Android.bp is located.
With PRODUCT_DEFAULT_DEV_CERTIFICATE set to /vendor/foo/devkeys/test,
the keys are searched at /vendor/foo/devkeys.
Bug: 121224311
Test: m (apex_test updated)
Test: m with crosshatch (PRODUCT_DEFAULT_DEV_CERTIFICATE is set to
/vendor/google/...)
Test: m with cheets (PRODUCT_DEFAULT_DEV_CERTIFICATE is set, but there
is no apex key there. The product is with TARGET_FLATTEN_APEX := true)
Change-Id: I213bbb96c433d851f9cc982871459fd7fb4fe47d
If a lib is directly included in an APEX (via native_shared_libs
property) and the lib has stubs (via stubs.versions property), then the
ordinary non-stubs variant of the library is renamed to
<libname>.bootstrap in the makefile. At the same time, the stubs variant
of the lib becomes visible and it's name is <libname>.
This ensures that modules in Android.mk build against the stubs
variant thus preventing them from using private APIs in the lib.
The non-stubs variant, however, is used if the module explicitly has
set the new 'bootstrap' property to true. This is useful for building
some early binaries (such as init and vold) which need to run before
APEXes are activated. Since they can't use the bionic libs from the
runtime APEX, they should use the bionic libs left in the system
partition which is called the boostrap bionic.
Bug: 120266448
Test: m
Test: m with https://android-review.googlesource.com/c/platform/bionic/+/849044
Change-Id: I882b8aeb5b29460f07b4424e4f8eb844d6c9a9b0
This commit renames `_platform` suffix to `` (empty string) so that
non-apex variations are not renamed to `_core_shared_platform` or
`_vendor_shared_platform`.
This commit makes sure that `_core_shared` and `_vendor_shared` is
always under `$OUT_DIR/soong` regardless the usages from apex modules.
Furthermore, this avoids the confusing stale lsdump files (e.g. both
`_core_shared` and `_core_shared_platform exist) while creating
reference ABI dumps for VNDK ABI checks.
Bug: 121986692
Test: lunch aosp_arm64-userdebug; make # no more _platform variants.
Change-Id: Ic02a60ac45f982580349661c22331d114617fd92
This CL fixes the problem that when a lib is defined with stubs, the
stubs variantof the lib is installed to the APEX. This was happening
because the non-stubs variant is the last variant of the 'version'
variants and addFarVariationDependencies selects the first variant when
the 'version' variant isn't specified.
Fixing the problem by making the non-stubs variant (whose name is "")
the first variant.
Test: m (apex_test)
Change-Id: I1505fd2f29a0d70c916bad51000aa06f2b80b137
This change fixes following problem:
1) a native lib having stubs is defined.
2) the lib is included in an APEX.
3) a static binary is linking the lib from outside of the APEX.
4) then, the dependency from the binary to the lib is vanishing.
This is happening because cc.depsToPaths() mistakely does not
distinguish static lib deps from shared lib deps. For shared lib deps,
it creates two dependencies (one for stubs variant and the other for
non-stubs variant) and choose the stubs variant when the lib and the
current module is not in the same APEX (i.e. dependency to the non-stubs
variant is discarded). However, since we don't have stubs variant for
static library, it ends up having no dependency to the library if the
link is static.
Fixing the issue by skipping the variant selection routine when the link
is static.
Test: m (apex_test added)
Test: build with https://android-review.googlesource.com/c/platform/bionic/+/849044
Change-Id: I21102a31cc5c0b105da2affdd035bd5cc571a6ab
use_vendor, when set to true, brings vendor variant of the native
libraries and binaries to the APEX.
Bug: 115707625
Test: m (apex_test updated)
Change-Id: Ib4e996f8652f4ce4645a9c22f6914e2ab35edda6
Now, symbols that are only to be visible to across APEXes can be tagged
as # vndk. Then when generating the stubs library, the tagged symbol
is included. The symbol is NOT included in other cases; build NDK stubs,
etc.
Bug: 120638081
Test: m (apex_test updated.)
Change-Id: Idb2b552badddfc26af113cc8d4b984788f478813
Otherwise, the force included headers might cause conflicting types
error with the symbols in the generated stubs source code. e.g.
double acos(double); // in header
void acos() {} // in the generated source code
Bug: 120266448
Test: m (apex_test also updated, and passing)
Change-Id: I717df990959d1b24ec515f0f52a4e28b94e92f32
This change fixes a problem that APEX variations are created for the
modules that actually shouldn't built for any APEX. For example,
consider this case.
apex { name: "myapex", native_shared_libs: ["mylib"],}
cc_library { name: "mylib", shared_libs: ["libfoo#10"],}
cc_library { name: "libfoo",
shared_libs: ["libbar"],
stubs: { versions: ["10"], }, }
cc_library { name: "libbar", ...}
Before this change, both the stubs and non-stubs variations of libfoo
were mutated with apexMuator, which is incorrect for the non-stubs
varia; there is no dependency chain from the apex "myapex" to the
non-stubs variation, but to the stubs variation due to the #10 syntax.
This was happening becauses we used the name of the module to determine
whether it should be built for APEX or not. Both stubs and non-stubs
variations have the same module name "libfoo".
Fixing this issue by recording the list of APEX variations required
directly on the module. So, the stubs variation of libfoo has myapex in
its apex variations list, but the non-stubs variation doesn't, and thus
apexMutator does not pick up the non-stubs variation.
Test: m (apex_test updated and passing)
Test: cherry-pick ag/5747464 and m
Change-Id: I31e618626809a828a55fff513ef5f81f79637afa
apex { name: "foo", native_shared_libs: ["mylib"] }
cc_library { name: "mylib", shared_libs: ["other_lib"],
stubs: { versions: ["1"]}, }
This is causing build error due to missing variant for other_lib.
This is happening because the stubs variant of mylib is added to apex
foo instead of the non-stubs variant. Because stubs variant does not
have any further dependencies, other_lib is not included to the APEX and
is not built for it.
Fixing this issue by specifying the version variant when adding a lib to
the dependency of an APEX, so that non-stub variant of the lib is
depended on.
Test: m (apex_test updated)
Change-Id: I972b6dcbce11942f83a76212715ba915534ec3df
This change fixes the bug that when a module is defined with sub_dir,
then build breaks when the module is included in an APEX.
This was happening because, for example when we have a prebuilt_etc
module having sub_dir set to "foo/bar", then only etc/foo/bar is added
to the canned_fs_config file and other intermediate directories (etc,
etc/foo) are not added. e2fsdroid however expects that every directories
to be listed.
Fixing the problem by adding parent directories when adding a directory
to canned_fs_config.
Bug: 120600179
Test: m (a new test case added to apex_test)
Change-Id: If712ff65761a7e1e3216371bb2eb7acf9cb5dc9e
Art needs to be able to create an ApexBundle with a LoadHook to
support art testing using the HOST_PREFER_32_BIT=true hack.
Bug: 120617876
Test: HOST_PREFER_32_BIT=true m nothing
Change-Id: Ia11e61a92094dfbc013c6c53a6edff33371ed8e1
This adds support for an apex-like file where the payload is a zip
file instead of a FS image. This makes it easier to examine and use
without root. These can also be built for the host.
This can be controlled using the 'type' modifier in the apex build
rule. 'type' may be "image" to build an apex file called {name}.apex
with an FS image payload, "zip" to build an apex with called
{name}.zipapex with a zip-file payload or "both" to build both. By
default we will use "image".
This also adds support for setting apex rules to
"host_supported: true".
Test: cd art/build/apex; mma; examine the com.android.runtime.host.zipapex
artifact.
Test: go test android/soong/apex -v
Bug: 120436895
Change-Id: I534d330672211ac5ccc3bd5a0c89b9fc507bf51e
When a native module is built for an APEX and is depending on a native
library having stubs (i.e. stubs.versions property is set), the stubs
variant is used unless the dependent lib is directly included in the
same APEX with the depending module.
Example:
apex {
name: "myapex",
native_shared_libs: ["libX", "libY"],
}
cc_library {
name: "libX",
shared_libs: ["libY", "libZ"],
}
cc_library {
name: "libY",
stubs: { versions: ["1", "2"], },
}
cc_library {
name: "libZ",
stubs: { versions: ["1", "2"], },
}
In this case, libX is linking to the impl variant of libY (that provides
private APIs) while libY is linking to the version 2 stubs of libZ. This is
because libY is directly included in the same apex via
native_shared_libs property, but libZ isn't.
Bug: 112672359
Test: apex_test added
Change-Id: If9871b70dc74a06bd828dd4cd1aeebd2e68b837c