The header ABI checker consists of 3 tools: header-abi-dumper, header-abi-linker, and header-abi-diff. The first two commands generate ABI dumps for shared libraries. The third command compares the ABI dumps with the prebuilt reference ABI dumps.
header-abi-dumper
dumps the ABIs (including classes, functions, variables, etc) defined in a C/C++ source file.
The -I
command line option controls the scope of ABIs that must be dumped. If -I <path-to-export-include-dir>
is specified, the generated ABI dump will only include the classes, the functions, and the variables that are defined in the header files under the exported include directories.
header-abi-dumper -o <dump-file> <source_file> \ -I <export-include-dir-1> \ -I <export-include-dir-2> \ ... \ -- \ <cflags>
For more command line options, run header-abi-dumper --help
.
header-abi-linker
links several ABI dumps produced by header-abi-dumper
. This tool combines all the ABI information present in the input ABI dump files and prunes the irrelevant ABI dumps.
header-abi-linker -o <linked-abi-dump> \ <abi-dump1> <abi-dump2> <abi-dump3> ... \ -so <path to so file> \ -v <path to version script>
For more command line options, run header-abi-linker --help
.
header-abi-diff
compares two header ABI dumps produced by header-abi-dumper
. It produces a report outlining all the differences between the ABIs exposed by the two dumps.
header-abi-diff -old <old-abi-dump> -new <new-abi-dump> -o <report>
For more command line options, run header-abi-diff --help
.
0
: Compatible1
: Changes to APIs unreferenced by symbols in the .dynsym
table4
: Compatible extension8
: Incompatible16
: ELF incompatible (Some symbols in the .dynsym
table, not exported by public headers, were removed.)header-abi-diff reads a config file named config.json
. The config file must be placed in the dump directory, such as prebuilts/abi-dumps/platform/33/64/x86_64/source-based/config.json
. The file consists of multiple sections. There are two types of sections: global config section and library config section. Each library config section contains flags for a specific version and a library. header-abi-diff chooses the library config section by command line options -target-version
and -lib
.
Here is an example of a config.json.
{ "global": { "flags": { "allow_adding_removing_weak_symbols": true, }, }, "libfoo": [ { "target_version": "current", "flags": { "check_all_apis": true, }, }, { "target_version": "34", "ignore_linker_set_keys": [ "_ZTI14internal_state", ], "flags": { "allow_extensions": true, } } ] }
A library config section includes members: “target_version”, “ignore_linker_set_keys” and “flags”. header-abi-diff selects the config section that matches the target version given by CLI. Take above config as an example, if -target-version 34
and -lib libfoo
are specified, the selected config section is:
{ "target_version": "34", "ignore_linker_set_keys": [ "_ZTI14internal_state", ], "flags": { "allow_extensions": true, } }
The config file and the header-abi-diff CLI support the same set of flags
. If a flag is present in both CLI and config sections, the library config section takes priority, then the global config section and the CLI.
Android build system runs the ABI checker automatically when it builds particular libraries, such as NDK and VNDK. Developers can enable the ABI check for common libraries by the following steps:
Set the ABI checker properties in Android.bp. For example,
cc_library { name: "libfoo", ... target: { vendor: { header_abi_checker: { enabled: true, symbol_file: "map.txt", ref_dump_dirs: ["abi-dumps"], }, }, }, }
cc_library
modules and their platform
, product
, and vendor
variants support header_abi_checker
. The following are the commonly used properties of header_abi_checker
:
enabled
explicitly enables or disables the check.symbol_file
is the file containing the exported symbols.diff_flags
are the command line options for header-abi-diff.ref_dump_dirs
are the directories containing the dumps and config files.Follow the instructions in Update Opt-in Reference ABI Dumps to generate ABI dumps in the ref_dump_dirs
.
Verify that the ABI check is working.
$ make libfoo.vendor $ find $ANDROID_BUILD_TOP/out/soong/.intermediates \ -name libfoo.so.opt0.abidiff
The build system compares the source code with three sets of reference dumps: current version, opt-in, and previous version. The ABI difference is propagated as build errors. This section describes the common methods to resolve them.
When the build system finds difference between the source code and the ABI reference dumps for the current version, it instructs you to run create_reference_dumps.py
to update the dumps.
The command below updates the reference ABI dumps for all monitored libraries on arm, arm64, x86, and x86_64 architectures:
$ python3 utils/create_reference_dumps.py
To update reference ABI dumps for a specific library, libfoo
for example, run the command below:
$ python3 utils/create_reference_dumps.py -l libfoo
For more command line options, run:
$ utils/create_reference_dumps.py --help
When the build system finds difference between the source code and the opt-in ABI reference dumps, it instructs you to run create_reference_dumps.py
with --ref-dump-dir
to update the dumps.
The command below updates the reference ABI dumps for a specific library:
$ python3 utils/create_reference_dumps.py -l libfoo \ --ref-dump-dir /path/to/abi-dumps
You may specify -products
if you don't want to create the ABI dumps for all architectures. For example, with -products aosp_arm
, the command creates dumps for 32-bit arm only.
When the build system finds incompatibility between the source code and the ABI of the previous version, it instructs you to follow this document to resolve it.
If the ABI difference is intended, you may configure the ABI tools to ignore it. The following example shows how to make an exception for the ABI difference in libfoo
between the current source and the previous version, 33
:
Open libfoo.so.33.abidiff
which is located in $OUT_DIR/soong/.intermediates
or $DIST_DIR/abidiffs
. Find out the linker_set_key
of the type that has ABI difference. Here is a sample abidiff file:
lib_name: "libfoo" arch: "x86_64" record_type_diffs { name: "bar" ... linker_set_key: "_ZTI3bar" } compatibility_status: INCOMPATIBLE
Find the reference dump directories by
find $ANDROID_BUILD_TOP/prebuilts/abi-dumps/*/33 -name libfoo.so.lsdump -exec dirname {} +
The command should show 6 directories for different architectures.
Create or edit config.json
in every directory, for instance,
prebuilts/abi-dumps/ndk/33/64/x86_64/source-based/config.json
{ "libfoo": [ { "target_version": "34", "ignore_linker_set_keys": [ "_ZTI3bar", ], }, ], }
The config above makes the ABI tools ignore the difference in type _ZTI3bar
in libfoo
. If the API level of this branch has been finalized (i.e., PLATFORM_VERSION_CODENAME=REL), target_version
must be set to the API level. Otherwise, target_version
must be set to the previous finalized API level + 1 so that the config will continue being effective after finalization.
For more information about the config files, please refer to Configuration.
If you compile Android with a customized toolchain, it may produce different weak symbols. You may make header-abi-diff ignore the weak symbols by adding config.json
to each reference dump directory. For example, the following configuration makes header-abi-diff ignore weak symbols for all x86_64 NDK libraries at API level 33:
prebuilts/abi-dumps/ndk/33/64/x86_64/source-based/config.json
{ "global": { "flags": { "allow_adding_removing_weak_symbols": true, }, }, }
To ignore weak symbols for a specific library, you can add extra flags to its Android.bp. For example,
cc_library { header_abi_checker: { diff_flags: ["-allow-adding-removing-weak-symbols"], }, }
You can disable the ABI check entirely by setting the environment variable SKIP_ABI_CHECKS
. For example,
$ SKIP_ABI_CHECKS=true make
You can disable the ABI check for a specific library by using the property enabled
in its Android.bp. For example,
cc_library { header_abi_checker: { enabled: false, }, }