| # Soong |
| |
| Soong is one of the build systems used in Android. There are altogether three: |
| * The legacy Make-based build system that is controlled by files called |
| `Android.mk`. |
| * Soong, which is controlled by files called `Android.bp`. |
| * The upcoming Bazel-based build system that is controlled by files called |
| `BUILD.bazel`. |
| |
| `Android.bp` file are JSON-like declarative descriptions of "modules" to build; |
| a "module" is the basic unit of building that Soong understands, similarly to |
| how "target" is the basic unit of building for Bazel (and Make, although the |
| two kinds of "targets" are very different) |
| |
| See [Simple Build |
| Configuration](https://source.android.com/compatibility/tests/development/blueprints) |
| on source.android.com to read how Soong is configured for testing. |
| |
| ### Contributing |
| |
| Code reviews are handled through the usual code review system of Android, |
| available [here](https://android-review.googlesource.com/dashboard/self). |
| |
| For simple changes (fixing typos, obvious optimizations, etc.), sending a code |
| review request is enough. For more substantial changes, file a bug in our |
| [bug tracker](https://issuetracker.google.com/issues/new?component=381517) or |
| or write us at android-building@googlegroups.com . |
| |
| For Googlers, see our [internal documentation](http://go/soong). |
| |
| ## Android.bp file format |
| |
| By design, Android.bp files are very simple. There are no conditionals or |
| control flow statements - any complexity is handled in build logic written in |
| Go. The syntax and semantics of Android.bp files are intentionally similar |
| to [Bazel BUILD files](https://bazel.build/concepts/build-files) when possible. |
| |
| ### Modules |
| |
| A module in an Android.bp file starts with a module type, followed by a set of |
| properties in `name: value,` format: |
| |
| ``` |
| cc_binary { |
| name: "gzip", |
| srcs: ["src/test/minigzip.c"], |
| shared_libs: ["libz"], |
| stl: "none", |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| Every module must have a `name` property, and the value must be unique across |
| all Android.bp files. |
| |
| The list of valid module types and their properties can be generated by calling |
| `m soong_docs`. It will be written to `$OUT_DIR/soong/docs/soong_build.html`. |
| This list for the current version of Soong can be found [here](https://ci.android.com/builds/latest/branches/aosp-build-tools/targets/linux/view/soong_build.html). |
| |
| ### File lists |
| |
| Properties that take a list of files can also take glob patterns and output path |
| expansions. |
| |
| * Glob patterns can contain the normal Unix wildcard `*`, for example `"*.java"`. |
| |
| Glob patterns can also contain a single `**` wildcard as a path element, which |
| will match zero or more path elements. For example, `java/**/*.java` will match |
| `java/Main.java` and `java/com/android/Main.java`. |
| |
| * Output path expansions take the format `:module` or `:module{.tag}`, where |
| `module` is the name of a module that produces output files, and it expands to |
| a list of those output files. With the optional `{.tag}` suffix, the module |
| may produce a different list of outputs according to `tag`. |
| |
| For example, a `droiddoc` module with the name "my-docs" would return its |
| `.stubs.srcjar` output with `":my-docs"`, and its `.doc.zip` file with |
| `":my-docs{.doc.zip}"`. |
| |
| This is commonly used to reference `filegroup` modules, whose output files |
| consist of their `srcs`. |
| |
| ### Variables |
| |
| An Android.bp file may contain top-level variable assignments: |
| ``` |
| gzip_srcs = ["src/test/minigzip.c"], |
| |
| cc_binary { |
| name: "gzip", |
| srcs: gzip_srcs, |
| shared_libs: ["libz"], |
| stl: "none", |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| Variables are scoped to the remainder of the file they are declared in, as well |
| as any child Android.bp files. Variables are immutable with one exception - they |
| can be appended to with a += assignment, but only before they have been |
| referenced. |
| |
| ### Comments |
| |
| Android.bp files can contain C-style multiline `/* */` and C++ style single-line |
| `//` comments. |
| |
| ### Types |
| |
| Variables and properties are strongly typed, variables dynamically based on the |
| first assignment, and properties statically by the module type. The supported |
| types are: |
| * Bool (`true` or `false`) |
| * Integers (`int`) |
| * Strings (`"string"`) |
| * Lists of strings (`["string1", "string2"]`) |
| * Maps (`{key1: "value1", key2: ["value2"]}`) |
| |
| Maps may values of any type, including nested maps. Lists and maps may have |
| trailing commas after the last value. |
| |
| Strings can contain double quotes using `\"`, for example `"cat \"a b\""`. |
| |
| ### Operators |
| |
| Strings, lists of strings, and maps can be appended using the `+` operator. |
| Integers can be summed up using the `+` operator. Appending a map produces the |
| union of keys in both maps, appending the values of any keys that are present |
| in both maps. |
| |
| ### Defaults modules |
| |
| A defaults module can be used to repeat the same properties in multiple modules. |
| For example: |
| |
| ``` |
| cc_defaults { |
| name: "gzip_defaults", |
| shared_libs: ["libz"], |
| stl: "none", |
| } |
| |
| cc_binary { |
| name: "gzip", |
| defaults: ["gzip_defaults"], |
| srcs: ["src/test/minigzip.c"], |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| ### Packages |
| |
| The build is organized into packages where each package is a collection of related files and a |
| specification of the dependencies among them in the form of modules. |
| |
| A package is defined as a directory containing a file named `Android.bp`, residing beneath the |
| top-level directory in the build and its name is its path relative to the top-level directory. A |
| package includes all files in its directory, plus all subdirectories beneath it, except those which |
| themselves contain an `Android.bp` file. |
| |
| The modules in a package's `Android.bp` and included files are part of the module. |
| |
| For example, in the following directory tree (where `.../android/` is the top-level Android |
| directory) there are two packages, `my/app`, and the subpackage `my/app/tests`. Note that |
| `my/app/data` is not a package, but a directory belonging to package `my/app`. |
| |
| .../android/my/app/Android.bp |
| .../android/my/app/app.cc |
| .../android/my/app/data/input.txt |
| .../android/my/app/tests/Android.bp |
| .../android/my/app/tests/test.cc |
| |
| This is based on the Bazel package concept. |
| |
| The `package` module type allows information to be specified about a package. Only a single |
| `package` module can be specified per package and in the case where there are multiple `.bp` files |
| in the same package directory it is highly recommended that the `package` module (if required) is |
| specified in the `Android.bp` file. |
| |
| Unlike most module type `package` does not have a `name` property. Instead the name is set to the |
| name of the package, e.g. if the package is in `top/intermediate/package` then the package name is |
| `//top/intermediate/package`. |
| |
| E.g. The following will set the default visibility for all the modules defined in the package and |
| any subpackages that do not set their own default visibility (irrespective of whether they are in |
| the same `.bp` file as the `package` module) to be visible to all the subpackages by default. |
| |
| ``` |
| package { |
| default_visibility: [":__subpackages"] |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| ### Referencing Modules |
| |
| A module `libfoo` can be referenced by its name |
| |
| ``` |
| cc_binary { |
| name: "app", |
| shared_libs: ["libfoo"], |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| Obviously, this works only if there is only one `libfoo` module in the source |
| tree. Ensuring such name uniqueness for larger trees may become problematic. We |
| might also want to use the same name in multiple mutually exclusive subtrees |
| (for example, implementing different devices) deliberately in order to describe |
| a functionally equivalent module. Enter Soong namespaces. |
| |
| #### Namespaces |
| |
| The presence of the `soong_namespace {..}` in an Android.bp file defines a |
| **namespace**. For instance, having |
| |
| ``` |
| soong_namespace { |
| ... |
| } |
| ... |
| ``` |
| |
| in `device/google/bonito/Android.bp` informs Soong that within the |
| `device/google/bonito` package the module names are unique, that is, all the |
| modules defined in the Android.bp files in the `device/google/bonito/` tree have |
| unique names. However, there may be modules with the same names outside |
| `device/google/bonito` tree. Indeed, there is a module `"pixelstats-vendor"` |
| both in `device/google/bonito/pixelstats` and in |
| `device/google/coral/pixelstats`. |
| |
| The name of a namespace is the path of its directory. The name of the namespace |
| in the example above is thus `device/google/bonito`. |
| |
| An implicit **global namespace** corresponds to the source tree as a whole. It |
| has empty name. |
| |
| A module name's **scope** is the smallest namespace containing it. Suppose a |
| source tree has `device/my` and `device/my/display` namespaces. If `libfoo` |
| module is defined in `device/my/display/lib/Android.bp`, its namespace is |
| `device/my/display`. |
| |
| The name uniqueness thus means that module's name is unique within its scope. In |
| other words, "//_scope_:_name_" is globally unique module reference, e.g, |
| `"//device/google/bonito:pixelstats-vendor"`. _Note_ that the name of the |
| namespace for a module may be different from module's package name: `libfoo` |
| belongs to `device/my/display` namespace but is contained in |
| `device/my/display/lib` package. |
| |
| #### Name Resolution |
| |
| The form of a module reference determines how Soong locates the module. |
| |
| For a **global reference** of the "//_scope_:_name_" form, Soong verifies there |
| is a namespace called "_scope_", then verifies it contains a "_name_" module and |
| uses it. Soong verifies there is only one "_name_" in "_scope_" at the beginning |
| when it parses Android.bp files. |
| |
| A **local reference** has "_name_" form, and resolving it involves looking for a |
| module "_name_" in one or more namespaces. By default only the global namespace |
| is searched for "_name_" (in other words, only the modules not belonging to an |
| explicitly defined scope are considered). The `imports` attribute of the |
| `soong_namespaces` allows to specify where to look for modules . For instance, |
| with `device/google/bonito/Android.bp` containing |
| |
| ``` |
| soong_namespace { |
| imports: [ |
| "hardware/google/interfaces", |
| "hardware/google/pixel", |
| "hardware/qcom/bootctrl", |
| ], |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| a reference to `"libpixelstats"` will resolve to the module defined in |
| `hardware/google/pixel/pixelstats/Android.bp` because this module is in |
| `hardware/google/pixel` namespace. |
| |
| **TODO**: Conventionally, languages with similar concepts provide separate |
| constructs for namespace definition and name resolution (`namespace` and `using` |
| in C++, for instance). Should Soong do that, too? |
| |
| #### Referencing modules in makefiles |
| |
| While we are gradually converting makefiles to Android.bp files, Android build |
| is described by a mixture of Android.bp and Android.mk files, and a module |
| defined in an Android.mk file can reference a module defined in Android.bp file. |
| For instance, a binary still defined in an Android.mk file may have a library |
| defined in already converted Android.bp as a dependency. |
| |
| A module defined in an Android.bp file and belonging to the global namespace can |
| be referenced from a makefile without additional effort. If a module belongs to |
| an explicit namespace, it can be referenced from a makefile only after after the |
| name of the namespace has been added to the value of PRODUCT_SOONG_NAMESPACES |
| variable. |
| |
| Note that makefiles have no notion of namespaces and exposing namespaces with |
| the same modules via PRODUCT_SOONG_NAMESPACES may cause Make failure. For |
| instance, exposing both `device/google/bonito` and `device/google/coral` |
| namespaces will cause Make failure because it will see two targets for the |
| `pixelstats-vendor` module. |
| |
| ### Visibility |
| |
| The `visibility` property on a module controls whether the module can be |
| used by other packages. Modules are always visible to other modules declared |
| in the same package. This is based on the Bazel visibility mechanism. |
| |
| If specified the `visibility` property must contain at least one rule. |
| |
| Each rule in the property must be in one of the following forms: |
| * `["//visibility:public"]`: Anyone can use this module. |
| * `["//visibility:private"]`: Only rules in the module's package (not its |
| subpackages) can use this module. |
| * `["//visibility:override"]`: Discards any rules inherited from defaults or a |
| creating module. Can only be used at the beginning of a list of visibility |
| rules. |
| * `["//some/package:__pkg__", "//other/package:__pkg__"]`: Only modules in |
| `some/package` and `other/package` (defined in `some/package/*.bp` and |
| `other/package/*.bp`) have access to this module. Note that sub-packages do not |
| have access to the rule; for example, `//some/package/foo:bar` or |
| `//other/package/testing:bla` wouldn't have access. `__pkg__` is a special |
| module and must be used verbatim. It represents all of the modules in the |
| package. |
| * `["//project:__subpackages__", "//other:__subpackages__"]`: Only modules in |
| packages `project` or `other` or in one of their sub-packages have access to |
| this module. For example, `//project:rule`, `//project/library:lib` or |
| `//other/testing/internal:munge` are allowed to depend on this rule (but not |
| `//independent:evil`) |
| * `["//project"]`: This is shorthand for `["//project:__pkg__"]` |
| * `[":__subpackages__"]`: This is shorthand for `["//project:__subpackages__"]` |
| where `//project` is the module's package, e.g. using `[":__subpackages__"]` in |
| `packages/apps/Settings/Android.bp` is equivalent to |
| `//packages/apps/Settings:__subpackages__`. |
| * `["//visibility:legacy_public"]`: The default visibility, behaves as |
| `//visibility:public` for now. It is an error if it is used in a module. |
| |
| The visibility rules of `//visibility:public` and `//visibility:private` cannot |
| be combined with any other visibility specifications, except |
| `//visibility:public` is allowed to override visibility specifications imported |
| through the `defaults` property. |
| |
| Packages outside `vendor/` cannot make themselves visible to specific packages |
| in `vendor/`, e.g. a module in `libcore` cannot declare that it is visible to |
| say `vendor/google`, instead it must make itself visible to all packages within |
| `vendor/` using `//vendor:__subpackages__`. |
| |
| If a module does not specify the `visibility` property then it uses the |
| `default_visibility` property of the `package` module in the module's package. |
| |
| If the `default_visibility` property is not set for the module's package then |
| it will use the `default_visibility` of its closest ancestor package for which |
| a `default_visibility` property is specified. |
| |
| If no `default_visibility` property can be found then the module uses the |
| global default of `//visibility:legacy_public`. |
| |
| The `visibility` property has no effect on a defaults module although it does |
| apply to any non-defaults module that uses it. To set the visibility of a |
| defaults module, use the `defaults_visibility` property on the defaults module; |
| not to be confused with the `default_visibility` property on the package module. |
| |
| Once the build has been completely switched over to soong it is possible that a |
| global refactoring will be done to change this to `//visibility:private` at |
| which point all packages that do not currently specify a `default_visibility` |
| property will be updated to have |
| `default_visibility = [//visibility:legacy_public]` added. It will then be the |
| owner's responsibility to replace that with a more appropriate visibility. |
| |
| ### Formatter |
| |
| Soong includes a canonical formatter for Android.bp files, similar to |
| [gofmt](https://golang.org/cmd/gofmt/). To recursively reformat all Android.bp files |
| in the current directory: |
| ``` |
| bpfmt -w . |
| ``` |
| |
| The canonical format includes 4 space indents, newlines after every element of a |
| multi-element list, and always includes a trailing comma in lists and maps. |
| |
| ### Convert Android.mk files |
| |
| Soong includes a tool perform a first pass at converting Android.mk files |
| to Android.bp files: |
| |
| ``` |
| androidmk Android.mk > Android.bp |
| ``` |
| |
| The tool converts variables, modules, comments, and some conditionals, but any |
| custom Makefile rules, complex conditionals or extra includes must be converted |
| by hand. |
| |
| #### Differences between Android.mk and Android.bp |
| |
| * Android.mk files often have multiple modules with the same name (for example |
| for static and shared version of a library, or for host and device versions). |
| Android.bp files require unique names for every module, but a single module can |
| be built in multiple variants, for example by adding `host_supported: true`. |
| The androidmk converter will produce multiple conflicting modules, which must |
| be resolved by hand to a single module with any differences inside |
| `target: { android: { }, host: { } }` blocks. |
| |
| ### Conditionals |
| |
| Soong deliberately does not support most conditionals in Android.bp files. We |
| suggest removing most conditionals from the build. See |
| [Best Practices](docs/best_practices.md#removing-conditionals) for some |
| examples on how to remove conditionals. |
| |
| Most conditionals supported natively by Soong are converted to a map |
| property. When building the module one of the properties in the map will be |
| selected, and its values appended to the property with the same name at the |
| top level of the module. |
| |
| For example, to support architecture specific files: |
| ``` |
| cc_library { |
| ... |
| srcs: ["generic.cpp"], |
| arch: { |
| arm: { |
| srcs: ["arm.cpp"], |
| }, |
| x86: { |
| srcs: ["x86.cpp"], |
| }, |
| }, |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| When building the module for arm the `generic.cpp` and `arm.cpp` sources will |
| be built. When building for x86 the `generic.cpp` and 'x86.cpp' sources will |
| be built. |
| |
| #### Soong Config Variables |
| |
| When converting vendor modules that contain conditionals, simple conditionals |
| can be supported through Soong config variables using `soong_config_*` |
| modules that describe the module types, variables and possible values: |
| |
| ``` |
| soong_config_module_type { |
| name: "acme_cc_defaults", |
| module_type: "cc_defaults", |
| config_namespace: "acme", |
| variables: ["board"], |
| bool_variables: ["feature"], |
| value_variables: ["width"], |
| properties: ["cflags", "srcs"], |
| } |
| |
| soong_config_string_variable { |
| name: "board", |
| values: ["soc_a", "soc_b", "soc_c"], |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| This example describes a new `acme_cc_defaults` module type that extends the |
| `cc_defaults` module type, with three additional conditionals based on |
| variables `board`, `feature` and `width`, which can affect properties `cflags` |
| and `srcs`. Additionally, each conditional will contain a `conditions_default` |
| property can affect `cflags` and `srcs` in the following conditions: |
| |
| * bool variable (e.g. `feature`): the variable is unspecified or not set to a true value |
| * value variable (e.g. `width`): the variable is unspecified |
| * string variable (e.g. `board`): the variable is unspecified or the variable is set to a string unused in the |
| given module. For example, with `board`, if the `board` |
| conditional contains the properties `soc_a` and `conditions_default`, when |
| board=soc_b, the `cflags` and `srcs` values under `conditions_default` will be |
| used. To specify that no properties should be amended for `soc_b`, you can set |
| `soc_b: {},`. |
| |
| The values of the variables can be set from a product's `BoardConfig.mk` file: |
| ``` |
| $(call soong_config_set,acme,board,soc_a) |
| $(call soong_config_set,acme,feature,true) |
| $(call soong_config_set,acme,width,200) |
| ``` |
| |
| The `acme_cc_defaults` module type can be used anywhere after the definition in |
| the file where it is defined, or can be imported into another file with: |
| ``` |
| soong_config_module_type_import { |
| from: "device/acme/Android.bp", |
| module_types: ["acme_cc_defaults"], |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| It can used like any other module type: |
| ``` |
| acme_cc_defaults { |
| name: "acme_defaults", |
| cflags: ["-DGENERIC"], |
| soong_config_variables: { |
| board: { |
| soc_a: { |
| cflags: ["-DSOC_A"], |
| }, |
| soc_b: { |
| cflags: ["-DSOC_B"], |
| }, |
| conditions_default: { |
| cflags: ["-DSOC_DEFAULT"], |
| }, |
| }, |
| feature: { |
| cflags: ["-DFEATURE"], |
| conditions_default: { |
| cflags: ["-DFEATURE_DEFAULT"], |
| }, |
| }, |
| width: { |
| cflags: ["-DWIDTH=%s"], |
| conditions_default: { |
| cflags: ["-DWIDTH=DEFAULT"], |
| }, |
| }, |
| }, |
| } |
| |
| cc_library { |
| name: "libacme_foo", |
| defaults: ["acme_defaults"], |
| srcs: ["*.cpp"], |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| With the `BoardConfig.mk` snippet above, `libacme_foo` would build with |
| `cflags: "-DGENERIC -DSOC_A -DFEATURE -DWIDTH=200"`. |
| |
| Alternatively, with `DefaultBoardConfig.mk`: |
| |
| ``` |
| SOONG_CONFIG_NAMESPACES += acme |
| SOONG_CONFIG_acme += \ |
| board \ |
| feature \ |
| width \ |
| |
| SOONG_CONFIG_acme_feature := false |
| ``` |
| |
| then `libacme_foo` would build with `cflags: "-DGENERIC -DSOC_DEFAULT -DFEATURE_DEFAULT -DSIZE=DEFAULT"`. |
| |
| Alternatively, with `DefaultBoardConfig.mk`: |
| |
| ``` |
| SOONG_CONFIG_NAMESPACES += acme |
| SOONG_CONFIG_acme += \ |
| board \ |
| feature \ |
| width \ |
| |
| SOONG_CONFIG_acme_board := soc_c |
| ``` |
| |
| then `libacme_foo` would build with `cflags: "-DGENERIC -DSOC_DEFAULT |
| -DFEATURE_DEFAULT -DSIZE=DEFAULT"`. |
| |
| `soong_config_module_type` modules will work best when used to wrap defaults |
| modules (`cc_defaults`, `java_defaults`, etc.), which can then be referenced |
| by all of the vendor's other modules using the normal namespace and visibility |
| rules. |
| |
| ## Build logic |
| |
| The build logic is written in Go using the |
| [blueprint](http://godoc.org/github.com/google/blueprint) framework. Build |
| logic receives module definitions parsed into Go structures using reflection |
| and produces build rules. The build rules are collected by blueprint and |
| written to a [ninja](http://ninja-build.org) build file. |
| |
| ## Environment Variables Config File |
| |
| Soong can optionally load environment variables from a pre-specified |
| configuration file during startup. These environment variables can be used |
| to control the behavior of the build. For example, these variables can determine |
| whether remote-execution should be used for the build or not. |
| |
| The `ANDROID_BUILD_ENVIRONMENT_CONFIG_DIR` environment variable specifies the |
| directory in which the config file should be searched for. The |
| `ANDROID_BUILD_ENVIRONMENT_CONFIG` variable determines the name of the config |
| file to be searched for within the config directory. For example, the following |
| build comand will load `ENV_VAR_1` and `ENV_VAR_2` environment variables from |
| the `example_config.json` file inside the `build/soong` directory. |
| |
| ``` |
| ANDROID_BUILD_ENVIRONMENT_CONFIG_DIR=build/soong \ |
| ANDROID_BUILD_ENVIRONMENT_CONFIG=example_config \ |
| build/soong/soong_ui.bash |
| ``` |
| |
| ## Other documentation |
| |
| * [Best Practices](docs/best_practices.md) |
| * [Build Performance](docs/perf.md) |
| * [Generating CLion Projects](docs/clion.md) |
| * [Generating YouCompleteMe/VSCode compile\_commands.json file](docs/compdb.md) |
| * Make-specific documentation: [build/make/README.md](https://android.googlesource.com/platform/build/+/master/README.md) |
| |
| ## Developing for Soong |
| |
| To load the code of Soong in IntelliJ: |
| |
| * File -> Open, open the `build/soong` directory. It will be opened as a new |
| project. |
| * File -> Settings, then Languages & Frameworks -> Go -> GOROOT, then set it to |
| `prebuilts/go/linux-x86` |
| * File -> Project Structure, then, Project Settings -> Modules, then Add |
| Content Root, then add the `build/blueprint` directory. |
| * Optional: also add the `external/golang-protobuf` directory. In practice, |
| IntelliJ seems to work well enough without this, too. |
| ### Running Soong in a debugger |
| |
| To make `soong_build` wait for a debugger connection, install `dlv` and then |
| start the build with `SOONG_DELVE=<listen addr>` in the environment. |
| For example: |
| ```bash |
| SOONG_DELVE=5006 m nothing |
| ``` |
| |
| To make `soong_ui` wait for a debugger connection, use the `SOONG_UI_DELVE` |
| variable: |
| |
| ``` |
| SOONG_UI_DELVE=5006 m nothing |
| ``` |
| |
| |
| setting or unsetting `SOONG_DELVE` causes a recompilation of `soong_build`. This |
| is because in order to debug the binary, it needs to be built with debug |
| symbols. |
| |
| To test the debugger connection, run this command: |
| |
| ``` |
| dlv connect :5006 |
| ``` |
| |
| If you see an error: |
| ``` |
| Could not attach to pid 593: this could be caused by a kernel |
| security setting, try writing "0" to /proc/sys/kernel/yama/ptrace_scope |
| ``` |
| you can temporarily disable |
| [Yama's ptrace protection](https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/security/Yama.txt) |
| using: |
| ```bash |
| sudo sysctl -w kernel.yama.ptrace_scope=0 |
| ``` |
| |
| To connect to the process using IntelliJ: |
| |
| * Run -> Edit Configurations... |
| * Choose "Go Remote" on the left |
| * Click on the "+" buttion on the top-left |
| * Give it a nice name and set "Host" to localhost and "Port" to the port in the |
| environment variable |
| |
| Debugging works far worse than debugging Java, but is sometimes useful. |
| |
| Sometimes the `dlv` process hangs on connection. A symptom of this is `dlv` |
| spinning a core or two. In that case, `kill -9` `dlv` and try again. |
| Anecdotally, it _feels_ like waiting a minute after the start of `soong_build` |
| helps. |
| |
| ## Contact |
| |
| Email android-building@googlegroups.com (external) for any questions, or see |
| [go/soong](http://go/soong) (internal). |