The last known NDK is automatically downloaded, if not specified otherwise.
As indicated in the main README, Android support is still DRAFT.
Basically, LIBZMQ build for Android, relies on exported variables.
Provided build scripts can mainly be used like
export XXX=xxx
export YYY=yyy
...
cd <libzmq>/builds/android
./<build_script>
LIBZMQ is tested against Android NDK versions r19 to r25.
By default, LIBZMQ uses NDK android-ndk-r25
, but you can specify
a different one:
export NDK_VERSION=android-ndk-r23c
If you already have installed your favorite NDK somewhere, all you have to do is to export and set NDK_VERSION and ANDROID_NDK_ROOT environment variables, e.g:
export NDK_VERSION="android-ndk-r23b"
export ANDROID_NDK_ROOT=$HOME/${NDK_VERSION}
Important: ANDROID_NDK_ROOT must be an absolute path !
If you specify only NDK_VERSION, ANDROID_NDK_ROOT will be automatically set to its default:
export ANDROID_NDK_ROOT=/tmp/${NDK_VERSION}
To specify the minimum SDK version set the environment variable below:
export MIN_SDK_VERSION=21 # Default value if unset
To specify the build directory set the environment variable below:
export ANDROID_BUILD_DIR=${HOME}/android_build
Important: ANDROID_BUILD_ROOT must be an absolute path !
All Android libraries will be generated under:
${ANDROID_BUILD_DIR}/prefix/<arch>/lib
where is one of arm
, arm64
, x86
or x86_64
.
Build and Dependency storage folders are automatically cleaned, by ci_build.sh. This can be avoided with the help of
ANDROID_BUILD_DIR="no"
If you turn this to "no", make sure to clean what has to be, before
calling build.sh
or ci_build.sh
.
Android prebuilt libraries have to be stored under
ANDROID_BUILD_DIR/prefix/<arch>/lib
Do not forget to disable Android cleanup.
By default, build.sh
download dependencies under /tmp/tmp-deps
.
You can specify another folder with the help of ANDROID_DEPENDENCIES_DIR:
ANDROID_DEPENDENCIES_DIR=${HOME}/my_dependencies
If you place your own dependency source trees there, do not forget to disable Android cleanup.
The variable CURVE accepts 2 different values:
"" : LIBZMQ is built without any encryption support.
"libsodium" : LIBZMQ is built with LIBSODIUM encryption support (see below).
You can also check configuration variables in build.sh
itself, in its
"Configuration & tuning options" comment block.
LIBSODIUM is built along with LIBZMQ, when CURVE="libsodium".
- If you have your own clone of LIBSODIUM, set LIBSODIUM_ROOT to point to its folder.
- If the variable LIBSODIUM_ROOT is not set, LIBZMQ will look for a folder 'libsodium' close to his own one.
- If no folder 'libsodium' exists, then LIBZMQ will clone LIBSODIUM from its official STABLE branch.
See chapter Configuration for configuration options and other details.
Select your preferred parameters:
export XXX=xxx
export YYY=yyy
...
and run:
cd <libzmq>/builds/android
./build.sh [ arm | arm64 | x86 | x86_64 ]
Parameter selection and the calls to build.sh can be located in a SHELL script, like in ci_build.sh.
Basically, it will call build.sh
once, for each Android target.
This script accepts the same configuration variables, but some are set with different default values. For instance, the dependencies are not downloaded or cloned in `/tmp/tmp-deps, but inside LIBZMQ clone.
It can be used in the same way as build.sh
export XXX=xxx
export YYY=yyy
cd <libzmq>/builds/android
./ci_build.sh
An example of Docker file is provided, for Ubuntu 22.04
Minimal changes are required to support Debian 9 to 11.
Minimal changes are required to support CentOS (7 only), Rocky Linux (8 & 9), and many Fedora (22 to 37).