commit | 16caa44298f13e119e0f282de070d0dbbd2c80ac | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Elliott Hughes <enh@google.com> | Tue Sep 05 21:37:01 2023 +0000 |
committer | Elliott Hughes <enh@google.com> | Tue Sep 05 21:37:01 2023 +0000 |
tree | 2d0ba0cf7e192900cd965d4d93b1ef18609ffef6 | |
parent | aea0819fc7e528b0bf419f8b2159a11d1bcd5c66 [diff] |
Use localtime_r() on Windows too. I don't know why I didn't clean these up when I learned about this trick. Test: treehugger Change-Id: I16e7d92fd79c2dfc006612442bbb924b35a5f213
This is the Makefile-based portion of the Android Build System.
For documentation on how to run a build, see Usage.txt
For a list of behavioral changes useful for Android.mk writers see Changes.md
For an outdated reference on Android.mk files, see build-system.html. Our Android.mk files look similar, but are entirely different from the Android.mk files used by the NDK build system. When searching for documentation elsewhere, ensure that it is for the platform build system -- most are not.
This Makefile-based system is in the process of being replaced with Soong, a new build system written in Go. During the transition, all of these makefiles are read by Kati, and generate a ninja file instead of being executed directly. That's combined with a ninja file read by Soong so that the build graph of the two systems can be combined and run as one.