commit | 3d1127fce4613b313bddb9186d5aa6fb3f04e362 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Matthias Maennich <maennich@google.com> | Thu Jun 03 13:48:48 2021 +0100 |
committer | Matthias Maennich <maennich@google.com> | Thu Jun 03 13:53:36 2021 +0100 |
tree | d5b7329bc5ac00e9f6add37758fe0b8ec01c2e15 | |
parent | e1d6ee2fab91f83f432493671a434881172c366e [diff] |
Add diagnostic make file targets This helps diagnose issues related to the environment this is developed in. For now, just gather information about GNU Make and the current shell. Signed-off-by: Matthias Maennich <maennich@google.com>
kati is an experimental GNU make clone. The main goal of this tool is to speed-up incremental build of Android.
Currently, kati does not offer a faster build by itself. It instead converts your Makefile to a ninja file.
Building:
$ make ckati
The above command produces a ckati
binary in the project root.
Testing (best ran in a Ubuntu 18.04 environment):
$ make test $ go test --ckati $ go test --ckati --ninja $ go test --ckati --ninja --all
The above commands run all cKati and Ninja tests in the testcases/
directory.
Alternatively, you can also run the tests in a Docker container in a prepared test enviroment:
$ docker build -t kati-test . && docker run kati-test
For Android-N+, ckati and ninja is used automatically. There is a prebuilt checked in under prebuilts/build-tools that is used.
All Android's build commands (m, mmm, mmma, etc.) should just work.