Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
64 lines (42 loc) · 2.28 KB

README-OLD.md

File metadata and controls

64 lines (42 loc) · 2.28 KB

libpagekite

These are obsolete sections from the README.md - the need to be rewritten, but are kept here to give hints and help folks get started in the meantime.

Getting started on Windows

WARNING: This section is outdated and needs to be rewritten!

Libpagekite can be cross-compiled from Linux to Windows by installing the MXE environment, built with pthread and openssl at least.

You can the cross-compile Windows binaries and a DLL like so:

$ make -f Makefile.pk windows

Check docs/API.txt for more details.

Releases include pre-built executables and DLLs in the bin/ and lib/ folders for your convenience.

Getting started on Android

WARNING: This section is outdated and needs to be rewritten!

This source tree can be included in an Android project using the NDK. It has been tested and verified to work with revision 8 of the NDK, targetting Android 2.2 (Froyo, API level 8).

If PageKite is the only native package you are using, the quickest way to get it to build as part of your project is by adding the following symbolic links to your project tree:

cd /path/to/YourApp/
ln -s /path/to/libpagekite/ jni
mkdir -p src/net/pagekite
ln -s /path/to/libpagekite/net.pagekite.lib src/net/pagekite/lib

You will also need to grab a copy of OpenSSL for Android, we recommend the version maintained by the Guardian Project:

cd /path/to/libpagekite/
git clone https://github.com/guardianproject/openssl-android.git

(Although not recommended, SSL support can be skipped by commenting out the relevant lines in the Android.mk file and removing #define HAVE_OPENSSL from common.h.)

Finally, the JNI interface can then be built using the commands:

cd /path/to/YourApp/
export NDK_PROJECT_PATH=/path/to/android-ndk
make -f jni/Makefile android

Expect this to take a while, as building OpenSSL for multiple architectures is a pretty big task. Once everything has been compiled, you should be able to import net.pagekite.lib and use the methods of the PageKiteAPI class in your app - but please read our licensing terms carefully if your app is not Open Source.

If you are using multiple native packages, you may need to structure your code differently and massage the Android.mk files a bit.