| Android |
| ======= |
| |
| Mesa hardware drivers can be built for Android one of two ways: built |
| into the Android OS using the Android.mk build system on older versions |
| of Android, or out-of-tree using the Meson build system and the |
| Android NDK. |
| |
| The Android.mk build system has proven to be hard to maintain, as one |
| needs a built Android tree to build against, and it has never been |
| tested in CI. The meson build system flow is frequently used by |
| Chrome OS developers for building and testing Android drivers. |
| |
| Building using the Android NDK |
| ------------------------------ |
| |
| Download and install the NDK using whatever method you normally would. |
| Then, create your meson cross file to use it, something like this |
| ``~/.local/share/meson/cross/android-aarch64`` file:: |
| |
| [binaries] |
| ar = 'NDKDIR/toolchains/llvm/prebuilt/linux-x86_64/bin/aarch64-linux-android-ar' |
| c = ['ccache', 'NDKDIR/toolchains/llvm/prebuilt/linux-x86_64/bin/aarch64-linux-android29-clang'] |
| cpp = ['ccache', 'NDKDIR/toolchains/llvm/prebuilt/linux-x86_64/bin/aarch64-linux-android29-clang++', '-fno-exceptions', '-fno-unwind-tables', '-fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables', '-static-libstdc++'] |
| c_ld = 'lld' |
| cpp_ld = 'lld' |
| strip = 'NDKDIR/toolchains/llvm/prebuilt/linux-x86_64/bin/aarch64-linux-android-strip' |
| # Android doesn't come with a pkg-config, but we need one for meson to be happy not |
| # finding all the optional deps it looks for. Use system pkg-config pointing at a |
| # directory we get to populate with any .pc files we want to add for Android |
| pkgconfig = ['env', 'PKG_CONFIG_LIBDIR=NDKDIR/pkgconfig', '/usr/bin/pkg-config'] |
| |
| [host_machine] |
| system = 'linux' |
| cpu_family = 'arm' |
| cpu = 'armv8' |
| endian = 'little' |
| |
| Now, use that cross file for your Android build directory (as in this |
| one cross-compiling the turnip driver for a stock Pixel phone) |
| |
| .. code-block:: console |
| |
| meson build-android-aarch64 \ |
| --cross-file android-aarch64 \ |
| -Dplatforms=android \ |
| -Dplatform-sdk-version=26 \ |
| -Dandroid-stub=true \ |
| -Dgallium-drivers= \ |
| -Dvulkan-drivers=freedreno \ |
| -Dfreedreno-kgsl=true |
| ninja -C build-android-aarch64 |
| |
| Replacing Android drivers on stock Android |
| ------------------------------------------ |
| |
| The vendor partition with the drivers is normally mounted from a |
| read-only disk image on ``/vendor``. To be able to replace them for |
| driver development, we need to unlock the device and remount |
| ``/vendor`` read/write. |
| |
| .. code-block:: console |
| |
| adb disable-verity |
| adb reboot |
| adb remount -R |
| |
| Now you can replace drivers as in: |
| |
| .. code-block:: console |
| |
| adb push build-android-aarch64/src/freedreno/vulkan/libvulkan_freedreno.so /vendor/lib64/hw/vulkan.sdm710.so |
| |
| Note this command doesn't quite work because libvulkan wants the |
| SONAME to match. For now, in turnip we have been using a hack to the |
| meson.build to change the SONAME. |
| |
| Replacing Android drivers on Chrome OS |
| -------------------------------------- |
| |
| Chrome OS's ARC++ is an Android container with hardware drivers inside |
| of it. The vendor partition with the drivers is normally mounted from |
| a read-only squashfs image on disk. For doing rapid driver |
| development, you don't want to regenerate that image. So, we'll take |
| the existing squashfs image, copy it out on the host, and then use a |
| bind mount instead of a loopback mount so we can update our drivers |
| using scp from outside the container. |
| |
| On your device, you'll want to make ``/`` read-write. ssh in as root |
| and run: |
| |
| .. code-block:: console |
| |
| crossystem dev_boot_signed_only=0 |
| /usr/share/vboot/bin/make_dev_ssd.sh --remove_rootfs_verification --partitions 4 |
| reboot |
| |
| Then, we'll switch Android from using an image for ``/vendor`` to using a |
| bind-mount from a directory we control. |
| |
| .. code-block:: console |
| |
| cd /opt/google/containers/android/ |
| mkdir vendor-ro |
| mount -o loop vendor.raw.img vendor-ro |
| cp -a vendor-ro vendor-rw |
| emacs config.json |
| |
| In the ``config.json``, you want to find the block for ``/vendor`` and |
| change it to:: |
| |
| { |
| "destination": "/vendor", |
| "type": "bind", |
| "source": "/opt/google/containers/android/vendor-rw", |
| "options": [ |
| "bind", |
| "rw" |
| ] |
| }, |
| |
| Now, restart the UI to do a full reload: |
| |
| .. code-block:: console |
| |
| restart ui |
| |
| At this point, your android container is restarted with your new |
| bind-mount ``/vendor``, and if you use ``android-sh`` to shell into it |
| then the ``mount`` command should show:: |
| |
| /dev/root on /vendor type ext2 (rw,seclabel,relatime) |
| |
| Now, replacing your DRI driver with a new one built for Android should |
| be a matter of: |
| |
| .. code-block:: console |
| |
| scp msm_dri.so $HOST:/opt/google/containers/android/vendor-rw/lib64/dri/ |
| |
| You can do your build of your DRI driver using ``emerge-$BOARD |
| arc-mesa-freedreno`` (for example) if you have a source tree with |
| ARC++, but it should also be possible to build using the NDK as |
| described above. There are currently rough edges with this, for |
| example the build will require that you have your arc-libdrm build |
| available to the NDK, assuming you're building anything but the |
| freedreno Vulkan driver for KGSL. You can mostly put things in place |
| with: |
| |
| .. code-block:: console |
| |
| scp $HOST:/opt/google/containers/android/vendor-rw/lib64/libdrm.so \ |
| NDKDIR/sysroot/usr/lib/aarch64-linux-android/lib/ |
| |
| ln -s \ |
| /usr/include/xf86drm.h \ |
| /usr/include/libsync.h \ |
| /usr/include/libdrm \ |
| NDKDIR/sysroot/usr/include/ |
| |
| It seems that new invocations of an application will often reload the |
| DRI driver, but depending on the component you're working on you may |
| find you need to reload the whole Android container. To do so without |
| having to log in to Chrome again every time, you can just kill the |
| container and let it restart: |
| |
| .. code-block:: console |
| |
| kill $(cat /run/containers/android-run_oci/container.pid ) |