Book Image

Android System Programming

By : Roger Ye, Shen Liu
Book Image

Android System Programming

By: Roger Ye, Shen Liu

Overview of this book

Android system programming involves both hardware and software knowledge to work on system level programming. The developers need to use various techniques to debug the different components in the target devices. With all the challenges, you usually have a deep learning curve to master relevant knowledge in this area. This book will not only give you the key knowledge you need to understand Android system programming, but will also prepare you as you get hands-on with projects and gain debugging skills that you can use in your future projects. You will start by exploring the basic setup of AOSP, and building and testing an emulator image. In the first project, you will learn how to customize and extend the Android emulator. Then you’ll move on to the real challenge—building your own Android system on VirtualBox. You’ll see how to debug the init process, resolve the bootloader issue, and enable various hardware interfaces. When you have a complete system, you will learn how to patch and upgrade it through recovery. Throughout the book, you will get to know useful tips on how to integrate and reuse existing open source projects such as LineageOS (CyanogenMod), Android-x86, Xposed, and GApps in your own system.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)

Creating your own repository mirror

It usually takes a very long time to download the AOSP source code. After you have downloaded the AOSP source code, you have actually downloaded a specific version of the AOSP source code from the remote repository. You may have to test different configurations or versions in your development work. It is a very time-consuming task to switch to a different version or create a new copy of the AOSP source code.

In this book, we will use the AOSP source code as the base for our development. To reuse some of the existing open source projects that are not included in AOSP, we have to modify the repo manifest from time to time. This involves changing the repo configuration. To work more efficiently, we can use a local mirror. It can save a lot of time to create a local mirror instead of downloading source code from remote repositories for all configuration changes. It may take hours...