1If you read this file _as_is_, just ignore the funny characters you 2see. It is written in the POD format (see pod/perlpod.pod) which is 3specially designed to be readable as is. 4 5=head1 NAME 6 7perlandroid - Perl under Android 8 9=head1 SYNOPSIS 10 11The first portions of this documents contains instructions 12to cross-compile Perl for Android 2.0 and later, using the 13binaries provided by Google. The latter portion describes how to build 14perl native using one of the toolchains available on the Play Store. 15 16=head1 DESCRIPTION 17 18This document describes how to set up your host environment when 19attempting to build Perl for Android. 20 21=head1 Cross-compilation 22 23These instructions assume an Unixish build environment on your host system; 24they've been tested on Linux and OS X, and may work on Cygwin and MSYS. 25While Google also provides an NDK for Windows, these steps won't work 26native there, although it may be possible to cross-compile through different 27means. 28 29If your host system's architecture is 32 bits, remember to change the 30C<x86_64>'s below to C<x86>'s. On a similar vein, the examples below 31use the 4.8 toolchain; if you want to use something older or newer (for 32example, the 4.4.3 toolchain included in the 8th revision of the NDK), just 33change those to the relevant version. 34 35=head2 Get the Android Native Development Kit (NDK) 36 37You can download the NDK from L<https://developer.android.com/tools/sdk/ndk/index.html>. 38You'll want the normal, non-legacy version. 39 40=head2 Determine the architecture you'll be cross-compiling for 41 42There's three possible options: arm-linux-androideabi for ARM, 43mipsel-linux-android for MIPS, and simply x86 for x86. 44As of 2014, most Android devices run on ARM, so that is generally a safe bet. 45 46With those two in hand, you should add 47 48$ANDROID_NDK/toolchains/$TARGETARCH-4.8/prebuilt/`uname | tr '[A-Z]' '[a-z]'`-x86_64/bin 49 50to your PATH, where $ANDROID_NDK is the location where you unpacked the 51NDK, and $TARGETARCH is your target's architecture. 52 53=head2 Set up a standalone toolchain 54 55This creates a working sysroot that we can feed to Configure later. 56 57 $ export ANDROID_TOOLCHAIN=/tmp/my-toolchain-$TARGETARCH 58 $ export SYSROOT=$ANDROID_TOOLCHAIN/sysroot 59 $ $ANDROID_NDK/build/tools/make-standalone-toolchain.sh \ 60 --platform=android-9 \ 61 --install-dir=$ANDROID_TOOLCHAIN \ 62 --system=`uname | tr '[A-Z]' '[a-z]'`-x86_64 \ 63 --toolchain=$TARGETARCH-4.8 64 65=head2 adb or ssh? 66 67adb is the Android Debug Bridge. For our purposes, it's basically a way 68of establishing an ssh connection to an Android device without having to 69install anything on the device itself, as long as the device is either on 70the same local network as the host, or it is connected to the host through 71USB. 72Perl can be cross-compiled using either adb or a normal ssh connection; 73in general, if you can connect your device to the host using a USB port, 74or if you don't feel like installing an sshd app on your device, 75you may want to use adb, although you may be forced to switch to ssh if 76your device is not rooted and you're unlucky -- more on that later. 77Alternatively, if you're cross-compiling to an emulator, you'll have to 78use adb. 79 80=head3 adb 81 82To use adb, download the Android SDK from L<https://developer.android.com/sdk/index.html>. 83The "SDK Tools Only" version should suffice -- if you downloaded the ADT 84Bundle, you can find the sdk under $ADT_BUNDLE/sdk/. 85 86Add $ANDROID_SDK/platform-tools to your PATH, which should give you access 87to adb. You'll now have to find your device's name using 'adb devices', 88and later pass that to Configure through '-Dtargethost=$DEVICE'. 89 90However, before calling Configure, you need to check if using adb is a 91viable choice in the first place. Because Android doesn't have a /tmp, 92nor does it allow executables in the sdcard, we need to find somewhere in 93the device for Configure to put some files in, as well as for the tests 94to run in. If your device is rooted, then you're good. Try running these: 95 96 $ export TARGETDIR=/mnt/asec/perl 97 $ adb -s $DEVICE shell "echo sh -c '\"mkdir $TARGETDIR\"' | su --" 98 99Which will create the directory we need, and you can move on to the next 100step. /mnt/asec is mounted as a tmpfs in Android, but it's only 101accessible to root. 102 103If your device is not rooted, you may still be in luck. Try running this: 104 105 $ export TARGETDIR=/data/local/tmp/perl 106 $ adb -s $DEVICE shell "mkdir $TARGETDIR" 107 108If the command works, you can move to the next step, but beware: 109B<You'll have to remove the directory from the device once you are done! 110Unlike /mnt/asec, /data/local/tmp may not get automatically garbage 111collected once you shut off the phone>. 112 113If neither of those work, then you can't use adb to cross-compile to your 114device. Either try rooting it, or go for the ssh route. 115 116=head3 ssh 117 118To use ssh, you'll need to install and run a sshd app and set it up 119properly. There are several paid and free apps that do this rather 120easily, so you should be able to spot one on the store. 121Remember that Perl requires a passwordless connection, so set up a 122public key. 123 124Note that several apps spew crap to stderr every time you 125connect, which can throw off Configure. You may need to monkeypatch 126the part of Configure that creates 'run-ssh' to have it discard stderr. 127 128Since you're using ssh, you'll have to pass some extra arguments to 129Configure: -Dtargetrun=ssh -Dtargethost=$TARGETHOST -Dtargetuser=$TARGETUSER -Dtargetport=$TARGETPORT 130 131=head2 Configure and beyond 132 133With all of the previous done, you're now ready to call Configure. 134 135If using adb, a "basic" Configure line will look like this: 136 137$ ./Configure -des -Dusedevel -Dusecrosscompile -Dtargetrun=adb \ 138 -Dcc=$TARGETARCH-gcc \ 139 -Dsysroot=$SYSROOT \ 140 -Dtargetdir=$TARGETDIR \ 141 -Dtargethost=$DEVICE 142 143If using ssh, it's not too different -- we just change targetrun to ssh, 144and pass in targetuser and targetport. It ends up looking like this: 145 146$ ./Configure -des -Dusedevel -Dusecrosscompile -Dtargetrun=ssh \ 147 -Dcc=$TARGETARCH-gcc \ 148 -Dsysroot=$SYSROOT \ 149 -Dtargetdir=$TARGETDIR \ 150 -Dtargethost="$TARGETHOST" \ 151 -Dtargetuser=$TARGETUSER \ 152 -Dtargetport=$TARGETPORT 153 154Now you're ready to run make and make test! 155 156As a final word of warning, if you're using adb, make test may appear to 157hang; this is because it doesn't output anything until it finishes 158running all tests. You can check its progress by logging into the 159device, moving to $TARGETDIR, and looking at the file output.stdout. 160 161=head3 Notes 162 163=over 164 165=item * 166 167If you are targetting x86 Android, you will have to change $TARGETARCH-gcc 168to i686-linux-android-gcc. 169 170=item * 171 172On some older low-end devices -- think early 2.2 era -- some tests, 173particularly t/re/uniprops, may crash the phone, causing it to turn 174itself off once, and then back on again. 175 176=back 177 178=head1 Native Builds 179 180While Google doesn't provide a native toolchain for Android, 181you can still get one from the Play Store; for example, there's the CCTools 182app which you can get for free. 183Keep in mind that you want a full 184toolchain; some apps tend to default to installing only a barebones 185version without some important utilities, like ar or nm. 186 187Once you have the toolchain set up properly, the only 188remaining hurdle is actually locating where in the device it was installed 189in. For example, CCTools installs its toolchain in 190/data/data/com.pdaxrom.cctools/root/cctools. With the path in hand, 191compiling perl is little more than: 192 193 export SYSROOT=<location of the native toolchain> 194 export LD_LIBRARY_PATH="$SYSROOT/lib:`pwd`:`pwd`/lib:`pwd`/lib/auto:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH" 195 sh Configure -des -Dsysroot=$SYSROOT -Alibpth="/system/lib /vendor/lib" 196 197=head1 AUTHOR 198 199Brian Fraser <fraserbn@gmail.com> 200 201=cut 202