CMake is great, and so is Android. This is a collection of CMake scripts that may be useful to the Android NDK community. It is based on experience from porting OpenCV library to Android: http://opencv.org/platforms/android.html
Main goal is to share these scripts so that devs that use CMake as their build system may easily compile native code for Android.
cmake -DCMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE=android.toolchain.cmake \
-DANDROID_NDK=<ndk_path> \
-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release \
-DANDROID_ABI="armeabi-v7a with NEON" \
<source_path>
cmake --build .
One-liner:
cmake -DCMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE=android.toolchain.cmake -DANDROID_NDK=<ndk_path> -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release -DANDROID_ABI="armeabi-v7a with NEON" <source_path> && cmake --build .
android-cmake will search for your NDK install in the following order:
ANDROID_NDK CMake variable;ANDROID_NDK environment variable;ANDROID_NDK_SEARCH_PATHS CMake variable;So if you have installed the NDK as ~/android-ndk-r10d then android-cmake will locate it automatically.
To build a cmake-based C/C++ project for Android you need:
The android-cmake is also capable to build with NDK from AOSP or Linaro Android source tree, but you may be required to manually specify path to libm binary to link with.
Folowing the ndk-build the android-cmake supports only two build targets:
-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=DebugSo don‘t even try other targets that can be found in CMake documentation and don’t forget to explicitly specify Release or Debug because CMake builds without a build configuration by default.
Release builds with -O3 instead of -Os;Release builds without debug info (without -g) (because ndk-build always creates a stripped version but cmake delays this for install/strip target);-fsigned-char is added to compiler flags to make char signed by default as it is on x86/x86_64;Debug nor Release configurations;.neon suffix;The following features of ndk-build are not supported by the android-cmake yet:
armeabi-v7a-hard ABIlibc++_static/libc++_shared STL runtimeSimilarly to the NDK build system android-cmake allows to select between several compiler toolchains and target platforms. Most of the options can be set either as cmake arguments: -D<NAME>=<VALUE> or as environment variables:
ANDROID_NDK - path to the Android NDK. If not set then android-cmake will search for the most recent version of supported NDK in commonly used locations;
ANDROID_ABI - specifies the target Application Binary Interface (ABI). This option nearly matches to the APP_ABI variable used by ndk-build tool from Android NDK. If not specified then set to armeabi-v7a. Possible target names are:
armeabi - ARMv5TE based CPU with software floating point operations;armeabi-v7a - ARMv7 based devices with hardware FPU instructions (VFPv3_D16);armeabi-v7a with NEON - same as armeabi-v7a, but sets NEON as floating-point unit;armeabi-v7a with VFPV3 - same as armeabi-v7a, but sets VFPv3_D32 as floating-point unit;armeabi-v6 with VFP - tuned for ARMv6 processors having VFP;x86 - IA-32 instruction setmips - MIPS32 instruction setarm64-v8a - ARMv8 AArch64 instruction set - only for NDK r10 and newerx86_64 - Intel64 instruction set (r1) - only for NDK r10 and newermips64 - MIPS64 instruction set (r6) - only for NDK r10 and newerANDROID_NATIVE_API_LEVEL - level of android API to build for. Can be set either to full name (example: android-8) or a numeric value (example: 17). The default API level depends on the target ABI:
android-8 for ARM;android-9 for x86 and MIPS;android-21 for 64-bit ABIs.Building for android-L is possible only when it is explicitly selected.
ANDROID_TOOLCHAIN_NAME - the name of compiler toolchain to be used. This option allows to select between different GCC and Clang versions. The list of possible values depends on the NDK version and will be printed by toolchain file if an invalid value is set. By default android-cmake selects the most recent version of GCC which can build for specified ANDROID_ABI.
Example values are:
aarch64-linux-android-4.9aarch64-linux-android-clang3.5arm-linux-androideabi-4.8arm-linux-androideabi-4.9arm-linux-androideabi-clang3.5mips64el-linux-android-4.9mipsel-linux-android-4.8x86-4.9x86_64-4.9ANDROID_STL - the name of C++ runtime to use. The default is gnustl_static.
none - do not configure the runtime.system - use the default minimal system C++ runtime library.-fno-rtti -fno-exceptions.system_re - use the default minimal system C++ runtime library.-frtti -fexceptions.gabi++_static - use the GAbi++ runtime as a static library.-frtti -fno-exceptions.gabi++_shared - use the GAbi++ runtime as a shared library.-frtti -fno-exceptions.stlport_static - use the STLport runtime as a static library.-fno-rtti -fno-exceptions for NDK before r7.-frtti -fno-exceptions for NDK r7 and newer.stlport_shared - use the STLport runtime as a shared library.-fno-rtti -fno-exceptions for NDK before r7.-frtti -fno-exceptions for NDK r7 and newer.gnustl_static - use the GNU STL as a static library.-frtti -fexceptions.gnustl_shared - use the GNU STL as a shared library.-frtti -fno-exceptions.gnustl_static if not available.NDK_CCACHE - path to ccache executable. If not set then initialized from NDK_CCACHE environment variable.
Normally android-cmake users are not supposed to touch these variables but they might be useful to workaround some build issues:
OFF - generate 32-bit ARM instructions instead of Thumb. Applicable only for arm ABIs and is forced to be ON for armeabi-v6 with VFP;ON - show all undefined symbols as linker errors;OFF - allow undefined symbols in shared libraries;ON by default for NDK older than r7ON - automatically configure rtti and exceptions support based on C++ runtime;RELEASE - inner layout of Android NDK, should be detected automatically. Possible values are:RELEASE - public releases from Google;LINARO - NDK from Linaro project;ANDROID - NDK from AOSP.ON - enables saparate putting each function and data items into separate sections and enable garbage collection of unused input sections at link time (-fdata-sections -ffunction-sections -Wl,--gc-sections);ON - use gold linker with GCC 4.6 for NDK r8b and newer (only for ARM and x86);ON - enables or disables stack execution protection code (-Wl,-z,noexecstack);ON - Enables RELRO - a memory corruption mitigation technique (-Wl,-z,relro -Wl,-z,now);libm.so (set to something like $(TOP)/out/target/product/<product_name>/obj/lib/libm.so) to workaround unresolved sincos.CMakeLists.txt for android-cmakeandroid-cmake defines ANDROID CMake variable which can be used to add Android-specific stuff:
if (ANDROID)
message(STATUS "Hello from Android build!")
endif()
The recommended way to identify ARM/MIPS/x86 architecture is examining CMAKE_SYSTEM_PROCESSOR which is set to the appropriate value:
armv5te - for armeabi ABIarmv6 - for armeabi-v6 with VFP ABIarmv7-a - for armeabi-v7a, armeabi-v7a with VFPV3 and armeabi-v7a with NEON ABIsaarch64 - for arm64-v8a ABIi686 - for x86 ABIx86_64 - for x86_64 ABImips - for mips ABImips64 - for mips64 ABIOther variables that are set by android-cmake and can be used for the fine-grained build configuration are:
NEON - set if target ABI supports Neon;ANDROID_NATIVE_API_LEVEL - native Android API level we are building for (note: Java part of Andoid application can be built for another API level)ANDROID_NDK_RELEASE - version of the Android NDKANDROID_NDK_HOST_SYSTEM_NAME - “windows”, “linux-x86” or “darwin-x86” depending on the host platformANDROID_RTTI - set if rtti is enabled by the runtimeANDROID_EXCEPTIONS - set if exceptions are enabled by the runtimeWhen crosscompiling CMake find_* commands are normally expected to find libraries and packages belonging to the same build target. So android-cmake configures CMake to search in Android-specific paths only and ignore your host system locations. So
find_package(ZLIB)
will surely find libz.so within the Android NDK.
However sometimes you need to locate a host package even when cross-compiling. For example you can be searching for your documentation generator. The android-cmake recommends you to use find_host_package and find_host_program macro defined in the android.toolchain.cmake:
find_host_package(Doxygen) find_host_program(PDFLATEX pdflatex)
However this will break regular builds so instead of wrapping package search into platform-specific logic you can copy the following snippet into your project (put it after your top-level project() command):
# Search packages for host system instead of packages for target system
# in case of cross compilation these macro should be defined by toolchain file
if(NOT COMMAND find_host_package)
macro(find_host_package)
find_package(${ARGN})
endmacro()
endif()
if(NOT COMMAND find_host_program)
macro(find_host_program)
find_program(${ARGN})
endmacro()
endif()
Make sure to do the following in your scripts:
set(CMAKE_C_FLAGS "${CMAKE_C_FLAGS} ${my_cxx_flags}")
set(CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS "${CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS} ${my_cxx_flags}")
The flags will be prepopulated with critical flags, so don't loose them. Also be aware that android-cmake also sets configuration-specific compiler and linker flags.
First of all cygwin builds are NOT supported and will not be supported by android-cmake. To build natively on Windows you need a port of make but I recommend http://martine.github.io/ninja/ instead.
To build with Ninja you need:
ninja.exe into your PATH (or add path to ninja.exe to your PATH environment variable);-GNinja to cmake alongside with other arguments (or choose Ninja generator in cmake-gui).But if you still want to stick to old make then:
make.exe on board;mingw-make should work as fine;make.exe to system PATH or always use full path;-G"MinGW Makefiles" and -DCMAKE_MAKE_PROGRAM="<full/path/to/>make.exe"MinGW Makefiles and not Unix Makefiles even if your make.exe is not a MinGW's make.make.exe or cmake --build . for single-threaded build.The android-cmake should correctly handle projects with assembler sources (*.s or *.S). But if you still facing problems with assembler then try to upgrade your CMake to version newer than 2.8.5
android-cmake is distributed under the terms of BSD 3-Clause License