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5.9 KiB
5.9 KiB
Requirements for building for Android
- At least 10-15 GiB of free disk space.
- First follow the general instructions for setting up https://github.com/ddnet/ddnet for building on Linux. This guide has only been tested on Linux.
- Note: Use a stable version of Rust. Using the nightly version results in linking errors.
- Install the Android NDK (version 26) in the same location
where Android Studio would unpack it (
~/Android/Sdk/ndk/
):mkdir ~/Android cd ~/Android mkdir Sdk cd Sdk mkdir ndk cd ndk wget https://dl.google.com/android/repository/android-ndk-r26d-linux.zip unzip android-ndk-r26d-linux.zip unlink android-ndk-r26d-linux.zip
- Install the Android SDK build tools (version 30.0.3) in the same location
where Android Studio would unpack them (
~/Android/Sdk/build-tools/
):# Assuming you already created the Android/Sdk folders in the previous step cd ~/Android/Sdk mkdir build-tools cd build-tools wget https://dl.google.com/android/repository/build-tools_r30.0.3-linux.zip unzip build-tools_r30.0.3-linux.zip unlink build-tools_r30.0.3-linux.zip mv android-11 30.0.3
- Install the Android command-line tools and accept the licenses using the SDK manager,
otherwise the Gradle build will fail if the licenses have not been accepted:
# Assuming you already created the Android/Sdk folders in the previous step cd ~/Android/Sdk mkdir cmdline-tools cd cmdline-tools wget https://dl.google.com/android/repository/commandlinetools-linux-11076708_latest.zip unzip commandlinetools-linux-11076708_latest.zip unlink commandlinetools-linux-11076708_latest.zip mv cmdline-tools latest yes | latest/bin/sdkmanager --licenses
- Install cargo-ndk and add Android targets to rustup to build Rust with the Android NDK:
cargo install cargo-ndk rustup target add armv7-linux-androideabi rustup target add i686-linux-android rustup target add aarch64-linux-android rustup target add x86_64-linux-android
- Install OpenJDK 21:
sudo apt install openjdk-21-jdk
- Install 7zip for building
ddnet-libs
:sudo apt install p7zip-full
- Install ninja:
sudo apt install ninja-build
- Install curl:
sudo apt install curl
- (macOS only) Install coreutils so
nproc
is available:brew install coreutils
- Build the
ddnet-libs
for Android (see below). Follow all above steps first.
How to build the ddnet-libs
for Android
- There is a script to automatically download and build all repositories,
this requires an active internet connection and can take around 30 minutes:
Warning: Do not choose a directory inside themkdir build-android-libs scripts/compile_libs/gen_libs.sh build-android-libs android
src
folder! - If you see several red error messages in the first few minutes, abort the compilation with repeated Ctrl+C presses. Examine the output and ensure that you installed the NDK to the correct location.
- After the script finished executing, it should have created a
ddnet-libs
directory in your selected output folder, which contains all libraries in the correct directory format and can be merged with theddnet-libs
folder in the source directory:cp -r build-android-libs/ddnet-libs/. ddnet-libs/
How to build the DDNet client for Android
- Open a terminal inside the
ddnet
project root directory and run the following:scripts/android/cmake_android.sh <x86/x86_64/arm/arm64/all> <Game name> <Package name> <Debug/Release> <Build folder>
- The first parameter denotes the architecture.
Use
all
to compile for all architectures. Note that all architectures will be compiled in parallel. For testing, only compile for one architecture initially to get readable output. - The second parameter denotes the APK name, which must be equal to the library name. If you want to rename the APK, do it after the build.
- The third parameter denotes the package name of the APK.
- The fourth parameter denotes the build type.
- The fifth parameter denotes the build folder.
- The first parameter denotes the architecture.
Use
- Example to build only for
x86_64
architecture in debug mode:scripts/android/cmake_android.sh x86_64 DDNet org.ddnet.client Debug build-android-debug
- To build a signed APK, generate a signing key and export environment variables before running the build script:
keytool -genkey -v -keystore my-release-key.jks -keyalg RSA -keysize 2048 -validity 10000 -alias my-alias export TW_KEY_NAME=<key name> export TW_KEY_PW=<key password> export TW_KEY_ALIAS=<key alias>
- By default, the version code and name of the APK will be determined automatically
based on the definitions in
src/game/version.h
. You can also specify the build version code and name manually before running the build script, e.g.:
The version code must increase for newer version in order for users to automatically update to them. The version name is the string that will be displayed to the user, e.g.export TW_VERSION_CODE=20210819 export TW_VERSION_NAME="1.0"
1.2.3-snapshot4
. - Example to build a signed APK in release mode for all architectures:
keytool -genkey -v -keystore Teeworlds.jks -keyalg RSA -keysize 2048 -validity 10000 -alias Teeworlds-Key # It will prompt for the password, input for example "mypassword" export TW_KEY_NAME=Teeworlds.jks export TW_KEY_PW=mypassword export TW_KEY_ALIAS=Teeworlds-Key # Version code and name will be determined automatically scripts/android/cmake_android.sh all DDNet org.ddnet.client Release build-android-release
- Note that you should only generate a signing key once (and make backups). Users can only update apps automatically if the same package name and signing key have been used, else they must manually uninstall the old app.