483 lines
20 KiB
Markdown
483 lines
20 KiB
Markdown
# Build System Changes for Android.mk Writers
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## PRODUCT_STATIC_BOOT_CONTROL_HAL is obsolete {#PRODUCT_STATIC_BOOT_CONTROL_HAL}
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`PRODUCT_STATIC_BOOT_CONTROL_HAL` was the workaround to allow sideloading with
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statically linked boot control HAL, before shared library HALs were supported
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under recovery. Android Q has added such support (HALs will be loaded in
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passthrough mode), and the workarounds are being removed. Targets should build
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and install the recovery variant of boot control HAL modules into recovery
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image, similar to the ones installed for normal boot. See the change to
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crosshatch for example of this:
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* [device/google/crosshatch/bootctrl/Android.bp] for `bootctrl.sdm845` building
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rules
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* [device/google/crosshatch/device.mk] for installing `bootctrl.sdm845.recovery`
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and `android.hardware.boot@1.0-impl.recovery` into recovery image
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[device/google/crosshatch/bootctrl/Android.bp]: https://android.googlesource.com/device/google/crosshatch/+/master/bootctrl/Android.bp
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[device/google/crosshatch/device.mk]: https://android.googlesource.com/device/google/crosshatch/+/master/device.mk
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## Deprecation of `BUILD_*` module types
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See [build/make/Deprecation.md](Deprecation.md) for the current status.
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## `PRODUCT_HOST_PACKAGES` split from `PRODUCT_PACKAGES` {#PRODUCT_HOST_PACKAGES}
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Previously, adding a module to `PRODUCT_PACKAGES` that supported both the host
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and the target (`host_supported` in Android.bp; two modules with the same name
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in Android.mk) would cause both to be built and installed. In many cases you
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only want either the host or target versions to be built/installed by default,
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and would be over-building with both. So `PRODUCT_PACKAGES` will be changing to
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just affect target modules, while `PRODUCT_HOST_PACKAGES` is being added for
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host modules.
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Functional differences between `PRODUCT_PACKAGES` and `PRODUCT_HOST_PACKAGES`:
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* `PRODUCT_HOST_PACKAGES` does not have `_ENG`/`_DEBUG` variants, as that's a
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property of the target, not the host.
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* `PRODUCT_HOST_PACKAGES` does not support `LOCAL_MODULE_OVERRIDES`.
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* `PRODUCT_HOST_PACKAGES` requires listed modules to exist, and be host
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modules. (Unless `ALLOW_MISSING_DEPENDENCIES` is set)
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This is still an active migration, so currently it still uses
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`PRODUCT_PACKAGES` to make installation decisions, but verifies that if we used
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`PRODUCT_HOST_PACKAGES`, it would trigger installation for all of the same host
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packages. This check ignores shared libraries, as those are not normally
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necessary in `PRODUCT_*PACKAGES`, and tended to be over-built (especially the
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32-bit variants).
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Future changes will switch installation decisions to `PRODUCT_HOST_PACKAGES`
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for host modules, error when there's a host-only module in `PRODUCT_PACKAGES`,
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and do some further cleanup where `LOCAL_REQUIRED_MODULES` are still merged
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between host and target modules with the same name.
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## `*.c.arm` / `*.cpp.arm` deprecation {#file_arm}
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In Android.mk files, you used to be able to change LOCAL_ARM_MODE for each
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source file by appending `.arm` to the end of the filename in
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`LOCAL_SRC_FILES`.
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Soong does not support this uncommonly used behavior, instead expecting those
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files to be split out into a separate static library that chooses `arm` over
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`thumb` for the entire library. This must now also be done in Android.mk files.
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## Windows cross-compiles no longer supported in Android.mk
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Modules that build for Windows (our only `HOST_CROSS` OS currently) must now be
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defined in `Android.bp` files.
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## `LOCAL_MODULE_TAGS := eng debug` are obsolete {#LOCAL_MODULE_TAGS}
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`LOCAL_MODULE_TAGS` value `eng` and `debug` are now obsolete. They allowed
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modules to specify that they should always be installed on `-eng`, or `-eng`
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and `-userdebug` builds. This conflicted with the ability for products to
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specify which modules should be installed, effectively making it impossible to
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build a stripped down product configuration that did not include those modules.
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For the equivalent functionality, specify the modules in `PRODUCT_PACKAGES_ENG`
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or `PRODUCT_PACKAGES_DEBUG` in the appropriate product makefiles.
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Core android packages like `su` got added to the list in
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`build/make/target/product/base_system.mk`, but for device-specific modules
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there are often better base product makefiles to use instead.
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## `USER` deprecation {#USER}
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`USER` will soon be `nobody` in many cases due to the addition of a sandbox
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around the Android build. Most of the time you shouldn't need to know the
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identity of the user running the build, but if you do, it's available in the
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make variable `BUILD_USERNAME` for now.
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Similarly, the `hostname` tool will also be returning a more consistent value
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of `android-build`. The real value is available as `BUILD_HOSTNAME`.
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## `BUILD_NUMBER` removal from Android.mk {#BUILD_NUMBER}
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`BUILD_NUMBER` should not be used directly in Android.mk files, as it would
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trigger them to be re-read every time the `BUILD_NUMBER` changes (which it does
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on every build server build). If possible, just remove the use so that your
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builds are more reproducible. If you do need it, use `BUILD_NUMBER_FROM_FILE`:
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``` make
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$(LOCAL_BUILT_MODULE):
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mytool --build_number $(BUILD_NUMBER_FROM_FILE) -o $@
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```
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That will expand out to a subshell that will read the current `BUILD_NUMBER`
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whenever it's run. It will not re-run your command if the build number has
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changed, so incremental builds will have the build number from the last time
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the particular output was rebuilt.
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## `DIST_DIR`, `dist_goal`, and `dist-for-goals` {#dist}
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`DIST_DIR` and `dist_goal` are no longer available when reading Android.mk
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files (or other build tasks). Always use `dist-for-goals` instead, which takes
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a PHONY goal, and a list of files to copy to `$DIST_DIR`. Whenever `dist` is
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specified, and the goal would be built (either explicitly on the command line,
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or as a dependency of something on the command line), that file will be copied
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into `$DIST_DIR`. For example,
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``` make
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$(call dist-for-goals,foo,bar/baz)
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```
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will copy `bar/baz` into `$DIST_DIR/baz` when `m foo dist` is run.
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#### Renames during copy
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Instead of specifying just a file, a destination name can be specified,
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including subdirectories:
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``` make
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$(call dist-for-goals,foo,bar/baz:logs/foo.log)
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```
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will copy `bar/baz` into `$DIST_DIR/logs/foo.log` when `m foo dist` is run.
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## `.PHONY` rule enforcement {#phony_targets}
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There are several new warnings/errors meant to ensure the proper use of
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`.PHONY` targets in order to improve the speed and reliability of incremental
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builds.
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`.PHONY`-marked targets are often used as shortcuts to provide "friendly" names
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for real files to be built, but any target marked with `.PHONY` is also always
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considered dirty, needing to be rebuilt every build. This isn't a problem for
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aliases or one-off user-requested operations, but if real builds steps depend
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on a `.PHONY` target, it can get quite expensive for what should be a tiny
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build.
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``` make
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...mk:42: warning: PHONY target "out/.../foo" looks like a real file (contains a "/")
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```
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Between this warning and the next, we're requiring that `.PHONY` targets do not
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have "/" in them, and real file targets do have a "/". This makes it more
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obvious when reading makefiles what is happening, and will help the build
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system differentiate these in the future too.
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``` make
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...mk:42: warning: writing to readonly directory: "kernel-modules"
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```
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This warning will show up for one of two reasons:
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1. The target isn't intended to be a real file, and should be marked with
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`.PHONY`. This would be the case for this example.
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2. The target is a real file, but it's outside the output directories. All
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outputs from the build system should be within the output directory,
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otherwise `m clean` is unable to clean the build, and future builds may not
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work properly.
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``` make
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...mk:42: warning: real file "out/.../foo" depends on PHONY target "buildbins"
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```
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If the first target isn't intended to be a real file, then it should be marked
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with `.PHONY`, which will satisfy this warning. This isn't the case for this
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example, as we require `.PHONY` targets not to have '/' in them.
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If the second (PHONY) target is a real file, it may unnecessarily be marked
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with `.PHONY`.
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### `.PHONY` and calling other build systems
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One common pattern (mostly outside AOSP) that we've seen hit these warning is
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when building with external build systems (firmware, bootloader, kernel, etc).
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Those are often marked as `.PHONY` because the Android build system doesn't
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have enough dependencies to know when to run the other build system again
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during an incremental build.
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We recommend to build these outside of Android, and deliver prebuilts into the
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Android tree instead of decreasing the speed and reliability of the incremental
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Android build.
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In cases where that's not desired, to preserve the speed of Android
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incrementals, over-specifying dependencies is likely a better option than
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marking it with `.PHONY`:
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``` make
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out/target/.../zImage: $(sort $(shell find -L $(KERNEL_SRCDIR)))
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...
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```
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For reliability, many of these other build systems do not guarantee the same
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level of incremental build assurances as the Android Build is attempting to do
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-- without custom checks, Make doesn't rebuild objects when CFLAGS change, etc.
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In order to fix this, our recommendation is to do clean builds for each of
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these external build systems every time anything they rely on changes. For
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relatively smaller builds (like the kernel), this may be reasonable as long as
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you're not trying to actively debug the kernel.
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## `export` and `unexport` deprecation {#export_keyword}
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The `export` and `unexport` keywords are obsolete, and will throw errors when
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used.
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Device specific configuration should not be able to affect common core build
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steps -- we're looking at triggering build steps to be invalidated if the set
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of environment variables they can access changes. If device specific
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configuration is allowed to change those, switching devices with the same
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output directory could become significantly more expensive than it already can
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be.
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If used during Android.mk files, and later tasks, it is increasingly likely
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that they are being used incorrectly. Attempting to change the environment for
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a single build step, and instead setting it for hundreds of thousands.
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It is not recommended to just move the environment variable setting outside of
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the build (in vendorsetup.sh, or some other configuration script or wrapper).
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We expect to limit the environment variables that the build respects in the
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future, others will be cleared. (There will be methods to get custom variables
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into the build, just not to every build step)
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Instead, write the export commands into the rule command lines themselves:
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``` make
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$(intermediates)/generated_output.img:
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rm -rf $@
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export MY_ENV_A="$(MY_A)"; make ...
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```
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If you want to set many environment variables, and/or use them many times,
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write them out to a script and source the script:
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``` make
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envsh := $(intermediates)/env.sh
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$(envsh):
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rm -rf $@
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echo 'export MY_ENV_A="$(MY_A)"' >$@
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echo 'export MY_ENV_B="$(MY_B)"' >>$@
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$(intermediates)/generated_output.img: PRIVATE_ENV := $(envsh)
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$(intermediates)/generated_output.img: $(envsh) a/b/c/package.sh
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rm -rf $@
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source $(PRIVATE_ENV); make ...
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source $(PRIVATE_ENV); a/b/c/package.sh ...
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```
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## Implicit make rules are obsolete {#implicit_rules}
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Implicit rules look something like the following:
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``` make
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$(TARGET_OUT_SHARED_LIBRARIES)/%_vendor.so: $(TARGET_OUT_SHARED_LIBRARIES)/%.so
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...
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%.o : %.foo
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...
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```
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These can have wide ranging effects across unrelated modules, so they're now obsolete. Instead, use static pattern rules, which are similar, but explicitly match the specified outputs:
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``` make
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libs := $(foreach lib,libfoo libbar,$(TARGET_OUT_SHARED_LIBRARIES)/$(lib)_vendor.so)
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$(libs): %_vendor.so: %.so
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...
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files := $(wildcard $(LOCAL_PATH)/*.foo)
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gen := $(patsubst $(LOCAL_PATH)/%.foo,$(intermediates)/%.o,$(files))
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$(gen): %.o : %.foo
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...
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```
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## Removing '/' from Valid Module Names {#name_slash}
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The build system uses module names in path names in many places. Having an
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extra '/' or '../' being inserted can cause problems -- and not just build
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breaks, but stranger invalid behavior.
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In every case we've seen, the fix is relatively simple: move the directory into
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`LOCAL_MODULE_RELATIVE_PATH` (or `LOCAL_MODULE_PATH` if you're still using it).
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If this causes multiple modules to be named the same, use unique module names
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and `LOCAL_MODULE_STEM` to change the installed file name:
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``` make
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include $(CLEAR_VARS)
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LOCAL_MODULE := ver1/code.bin
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LOCAL_MODULE_PATH := $(TARGET_OUT_ETC)/firmware
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...
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include $(BUILD_PREBUILT)
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include $(CLEAR_VARS)
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LOCAL_MODULE := ver2/code.bin
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LOCAL_MODULE_PATH := $(TARGET_OUT_ETC)/firmware
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...
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include $(BUILD_PREBUILT)
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```
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Can be rewritten as:
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```
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include $(CLEAR_VARS)
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LOCAL_MODULE := ver1_code.bin
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LOCAL_MODULE_STEM := code.bin
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LOCAL_MODULE_PATH := $(TARGET_OUT_VENDOR)/firmware/ver1
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...
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include $(BUILD_PREBUILT)
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include $(CLEAR_VARS)
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LOCAL_MODULE := ver2_code.bin
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LOCAL_MODULE_STEM := code.bin
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LOCAL_MODULE_PATH := $(TARGET_OUT_VENDOR)/firmware/ver2
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...
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include $(BUILD_PREBUILT)
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```
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You just need to make sure that any other references (`PRODUCT_PACKAGES`,
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`LOCAL_REQUIRED_MODULES`, etc) are converted to the new names.
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## Valid Module Names {#name}
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We've adopted lexical requirements very similar to [Bazel's
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requirements](https://docs.bazel.build/versions/master/build-ref.html#name) for
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target names. Valid characters are `a-z`, `A-Z`, `0-9`, and the special
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characters `_.+-=,@~`. This currently applies to `LOCAL_PACKAGE_NAME`,
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`LOCAL_MODULE`, and `LOCAL_MODULE_SUFFIX`, and `LOCAL_MODULE_STEM*`.
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Many other characters already caused problems if you used them, so we don't
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expect this to have a large effect.
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## PATH Tools {#PATH_Tools}
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The build has started restricting the external host tools usable inside the
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build. This will help ensure that build results are reproducible across
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different machines, and catch mistakes before they become larger issues.
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To start with, this includes replacing the $PATH with our own directory of
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tools, mirroring that of the host PATH. The only difference so far is the
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removal of the host GCC tools. Anything that is not explicitly in the
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configuration as allowed will continue functioning, but will generate a log
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message. This is expected to become more restrictive over time.
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The configuration is located in build/soong/ui/build/paths/config.go, and
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contains all the common tools in use in many builds. Anything not in that list
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will currently print a warning in the `$OUT_DIR/soong.log` file, including the
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command and arguments used, and the process tree in order to help locate the
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usage.
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In order to fix any issues brought up by these checks, the best way to fix them
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is to use tools checked into the tree -- either as prebuilts, or building them
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as host tools during the build.
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As a temporary measure, you can set `TEMPORARY_DISABLE_PATH_RESTRICTIONS=true`
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in your environment to temporarily turn off the error checks and allow any tool
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to be used (with logging). Beware that GCC didn't work well with the interposer
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used for logging, so this may not help in all cases.
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## Deprecating / obsoleting envsetup.sh variables in Makefiles
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It is not required to source envsetup.sh before running a build. Many scripts,
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including a majority of our automated build systems, do not do so. Make will
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transparently make every environment variable available as a make variable.
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This means that relying on environment variables only set up in envsetup.sh will
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produce different output for local users and scripted users.
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Many of these variables also include absolute path names, which we'd like to
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keep out of the generated files, so that you don't need to do a full rebuild if
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you move the source tree.
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To fix this, we're marking the variables that are set in envsetup.sh as
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deprecated in the makefiles. This will trigger a warning every time one is read
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(or written) inside Kati. Once all the warnings have been removed for a
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particular variable, we'll switch it to obsolete, and any references will become
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errors.
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### envsetup.sh variables with make equivalents
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| instead of | use |
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|--------------------------------------------------------------|----------------------|
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| OUT {#OUT} | PRODUCT_OUT |
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| ANDROID_HOST_OUT {#ANDROID_HOST_OUT} | HOST_OUT |
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| ANDROID_PRODUCT_OUT {#ANDROID_PRODUCT_OUT} | PRODUCT_OUT |
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| ANDROID_HOST_OUT_TESTCASES {#ANDROID_HOST_OUT_TESTCASES} | HOST_OUT_TESTCASES |
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| ANDROID_TARGET_OUT_TESTCASES {#ANDROID_TARGET_OUT_TESTCASES} | TARGET_OUT_TESTCASES |
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All of the make variables may be relative paths from the current directory, or
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absolute paths if the output directory was specified as an absolute path. If you
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need an absolute variable, convert it to absolute during a rule, so that it's
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not expanded into the generated ninja file:
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``` make
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$(PRODUCT_OUT)/gen.img: my/src/path/gen.sh
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export PRODUCT_OUT=$$(cd $(PRODUCT_OUT); pwd); cd my/src/path; ./gen.sh -o $${PRODUCT_OUT}/gen.img
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```
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### ANDROID_BUILD_TOP {#ANDROID_BUILD_TOP}
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In Android.mk files, you can always assume that the current directory is the
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root of the source tree, so this can just be replaced with '.' (which is what
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$TOP is hardcoded to), or removed entirely. If you need an absolute path, see
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the instructions above.
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### Stop using PATH directly {#PATH}
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This isn't only set by envsetup.sh, but it is modified by it. Due to that it's
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rather easy for this to change between different shells, and it's not ideal to
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reread the makefiles every time this changes.
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In most cases, you shouldn't need to touch PATH at all. When you need to have a
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rule reference a particular binary that's part of the source tree or outputs,
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it's preferrable to just use the path to the file itself (since you should
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already be adding that as a dependency).
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Depending on the rule, passing the file path itself may not be feasible due to
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layers of unchangable scripts/binaries. In that case, be sure to add the
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dependency, but modify the PATH within the rule itself:
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``` make
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$(TARGET): myscript my/path/binary
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PATH=my/path:$$PATH myscript -o $@
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```
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### Stop using PYTHONPATH directly {#PYTHONPATH}
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Like PATH, this isn't only set by envsetup.sh, but it is modified by it. Due to
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that it's rather easy for this to change between different shells, and it's not
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ideal to reread the makefiles every time.
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The best solution here is to start switching to Soong's python building support,
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which packages the python interpreter, libraries, and script all into one file
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that no longer needs PYTHONPATH. See fontchain_lint for examples of this:
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* [external/fonttools/Lib/fontTools/Android.bp] for python_library_host
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* [frameworks/base/Android.bp] for python_binary_host
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* [frameworks/base/data/fonts/Android.mk] to execute the python binary
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If you still need to use PYTHONPATH, do so within the rule itself, just like
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path:
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``` make
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$(TARGET): myscript.py $(sort $(shell find my/python/lib -name '*.py'))
|
|
PYTHONPATH=my/python/lib:$$PYTHONPATH myscript.py -o $@
|
|
```
|
|
### Stop using PRODUCT_COMPATIBILITY_MATRIX_LEVEL_OVERRIDE directly {#PRODUCT_COMPATIBILITY_MATRIX_LEVEL_OVERRIDE}
|
|
|
|
Specify Framework Compatibility Matrix Version in device manifest by adding a `target-level`
|
|
attribute to the root element `<manifest>`. If `PRODUCT_COMPATIBILITY_MATRIX_LEVEL_OVERRIDE`
|
|
is 26 or 27, you can add `"target-level"="1"` to your device manifest instead.
|
|
|
|
### Stop using USE_CLANG_PLATFORM_BUILD {#USE_CLANG_PLATFORM_BUILD}
|
|
|
|
Clang is the default and only supported Android compiler, so there is no reason
|
|
for this option to exist.
|
|
|
|
### Other envsetup.sh variables {#other_envsetup_variables}
|
|
|
|
* ANDROID_TOOLCHAIN
|
|
* ANDROID_TOOLCHAIN_2ND_ARCH
|
|
* ANDROID_DEV_SCRIPTS
|
|
* ANDROID_EMULATOR_PREBUILTS
|
|
* ANDROID_PRE_BUILD_PATHS
|
|
|
|
These are all exported from envsetup.sh, but don't have clear equivalents within
|
|
the makefile system. If you need one of them, you'll have to set up your own
|
|
version.
|
|
|
|
|
|
[build/soong/Changes.md]: https://android.googlesource.com/platform/build/soong/+/master/Changes.md
|
|
[external/fonttools/Lib/fontTools/Android.bp]: https://android.googlesource.com/platform/external/fonttools/+/master/Lib/fontTools/Android.bp
|
|
[frameworks/base/Android.bp]: https://android.googlesource.com/platform/frameworks/base/+/master/Android.bp
|
|
[frameworks/base/data/fonts/Android.mk]: https://android.googlesource.com/platform/frameworks/base/+/master/data/fonts/Android.mk
|