Microdroid is a (very) lightweight version of Android that is intended to run on on-device virtual machines. It is built from the same source code as the regular Android, but it is much smaller; no system server, no HALs, no GUI, etc. It is intended to host headless & native workloads only.
Any 64-bit target (either x86_64 or arm64) is supported. 32-bit target is not supported.
The only remaining requirement is that com.android.virt
APEX has to be pre-installed. To do this, add the following line in your product makefile.
$(call inherit-product, packages/modules/Virtualization/apex/product_packages.mk)
Build the target product after adding the line, and flash it. This step needs to be done only once for the target.
If you are using Pixel 6 and beyond or Cuttlefish (aosp_cf_x86_64_phone
) adding above line is not necessary as it's already done.
Microdroid is part of the com.android.virt
APEX. To build it and install to the device:
banchan com.android.virt aosp_arm64 UNBUNDLED_BUILD_SDKS_FROM_SOURCE=true m apps_only dist adb install out/dist/com.android.virt.apex adb reboot
If your target is x86_64 (e.g. aosp_cf_x86_64_phone
), replace aosp_arm64
with aosp_x86_64
.
A vm payload is a shared library file that gets executed in microdroid. It is packaged as part of an Android application. The library should have an entry point AVmPayload_main
as shown below:
extern "C" int AVmPayload_main() { printf("Hello Microdroid!\n"); }
Then build it as a shared library:
cc_library_shared { name: "MyMicrodroidPayload", srcs: ["**/*.cpp"], sdk_version: "current", }
Embed the shared library file in an APK:
android_app { name: "MyApp", srcs: ["**/*.java"], jni_libs: ["MyMicrodroidPayload"], use_embedded_native_libs: true, sdk_version: "current", }
Finally, you build the APK.
TARGET_BUILD_APPS=MyApp m apps_only dist
First of all, install the APK to the target device.
adb install out/dist/MyApp.apk
There are two ways start a VM and run the payload in it.
vm
tool via adb shell
.vm
toolExecute the following commands to launch a VM. The VM will boot to microdroid and then automatically execute your payload (the shared library MyMicrodroidPayload.so
).
TEST_ROOT=/data/local/tmp/virt adb shell /apex/com.android.virt/bin/vm run-app \ --log $TEST_ROOT/log.txt \ --console $TEST_ROOT/console.txt \ PATH_TO_YOUR_APP \ $TEST_ROOT/MyApp.apk.idsig \ $TEST_ROOT/instance.img \ --payload-binary-name MyMicrodroidPayload.so
ALL_CAP
s below are placeholders. They need to be replaced with correct values:
PACKAGE_NAME_OF_YOUR_APP
: package name of your app (e.g. com.acme.app
).PATH_TO_YOUR_APP
: path to the installed APK on the device. Can be obtained via the following command.adb shell pm path PACKAGE_NAME_OF_YOUR_APP
It shall report a cryptic path similar to /data/app/~~OgZq==/com.acme.app-HudMahQ==/base.apk
.The console output from the VM is stored to $TEST_ROOT/console.txt
and logcat is stored to $TEST_ROOT/log.txt
file for debugging purpose. If you omit --log
or --console
option, the console output will be emitted to the current console and the logcat logs are sent to the main logcat in Android.
Stopping the VM can be done by pressing Ctrl+C
.
Use the Android Virtualization Framework Java APIs in your app to create a microdroid VM and run payload in it. The APIs currently are @SystemApi, thus available only to privileged apps.
If you are looking for an example usage of the APIs, you may refer to the demo app.
Refer to Debugging protected VMs.