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Android NDK

Platform Package Size (Bytes) MD5 Checksum
Windows 32-bit android-ndk-r9b-windows-x86.zip 455928388 cfb9402ea08a1554186e85ed28cb4593
android-ndk-r9b-windows-x86-legacy-toolchains.zip 152568224 00c8373b53ad9475f1bab1de4219b877
Windows 64-bit android-ndk-r9b-windows-x86_64.zip 479012553 1ba6be7ebf4e9272d77031dd70f81e94
android-ndk-r9b-windows-x86_64-legacy-toolchains.zip 166961852 6eee9459986e8b7f1032d62831dd775b
Mac OS X 32-bit android-ndk-r9b-darwin-x86.tar.bz2 349307548 b5fa7aa3b9fca5a5b0c46bdd970d284b
android-ndk-r9b-darwin-x86-legacy-toolchains.tar.bz2 119394536 be0a07bcea3695f7d93cbd1b880d3f75
Mac OS X 64-bit android-ndk-r9b-darwin-x86_64.tar.bz2 354748937 710d80b6ff807f03e585f9aacee3bf09
android-ndk-r9b-darwin-x86_64-legacy-toolchains.tar.bz2 122378495 19c696a5b690b040409c68b21e9fcf46
Linux 32-bit (x86) android-ndk-r9b-linux-x86.tar.bz2 361394055 d7f783deaeea6b60cb515d9427c01c2e
android-ndk-r9b-linux-x86-legacy-toolchains.tar.bz2 125676842 bfc7a1e6baf856b4348d57abffc761d2
Linux 64-bit (x86) android-ndk-r9b-linux-x86_64.tar.bz2 366988131 56c0999a2683d6711591843217f943e0
android-ndk-r9b-linux-x86_64-legacy-toolchains.tar.bz2 127742633 f41017d5888a8dc210d1703dcdf1def7

The NDK is a toolset that allows you to implement parts of your app using native-code languages such as C and C++. For certain types of apps, this can be helpful so you can reuse existing code libraries written in these languages, but most apps do not need the Android NDK.

Before downloading the NDK, you should understand that the NDK will not benefit most apps. As a developer, you need to balance its benefits against its drawbacks. Notably, using native code on Android generally does not result in a noticable performance improvement, but it always increases your app complexity. In general, you should only use the NDK if it is essential to your app—never because you simply prefer to program in C/C++.

Typical good candidates for the NDK are self-contained, CPU-intensive operations that don't allocate much memory, such as signal processing, physics simulation, and so on. When examining whether or not you should develop in native code, think about your requirements and see if the Android framework APIs provide the functionality that you need.

Downloads

With NDK revision 9 and higher, the release packages have been split to reduce download size. The first download for each platform contains the default NDK toolchain. The second download contains legacy NDK toolchains for that platform, which is only required if you are not using the current, recommended toolchain for your NDK builds.

Revisions

The following sections provide information about releases of the NDK.

Android NDK, Revision 9b (October 2013)

Important changes:
  • Updated include/android/*h and math.h for all Android API levels up to 18, including the addition of levels 13, 15, 16 and 17. For information on added APIs, see commit messages for Changes 68012 and 68014. (Issues 47150, 58528, and 38423)
  • Added support for API level 19, including Renderscript binding.
  • Added support for -mhard-float in the existing armeabi-v7a ABI. For more information and current restrictions on Clang, see tests/device/hard-float/jni/Android.mk.
  • Migrated from GNU Compiler Collection (GCC) 4.8 to 4.8.2, and added diagnostic color support. To enable diagnostic colors, set -fdiagnostics-color=auto, -fdiagnostics-color=always, or export GCC_COLORS as shown below:
    GCC_COLORS='error=01;31:warning=01;35:note=01;36:caret=01;32:locus=01:quote=01'
    
    For more information, see GCC Language Independent Options.
  • Added two new samples to demonstrate OpenGL ES 3.0 features: Teapot and MoreTeapots. These samples run on devices with Android 4.1 (API level 16) and higher.
  • Deprecated GCC 4.7 and Clang 3.2 support, which will be removed in the next release.
Important bug fixes:
  • Fixed problem with ARM GCC 4.6 thumb2 failing to generate 16-bit relative jump tables. (GCC Issue)
  • Fixed GCC 4.8 internal compiler error (ICE) on g++.dg/cpp0x/lambda/lambda-defarg3.C. (Change 62770, GCC Issue)
  • Fixed a problem with Windows 32-bit *-gdb.exe executables failing to launch. (Issue 58975)
  • Fixed GCC 4.8 ICE when building bullet library. The error message is as follows:
    internal compiler error: verify_flow_info failed
    (Issue 58916, GCC Issue)
  • Modified GDB/ARM build to skip ARM.exidx data for unwinding in prologue code and added a command (set arm exidx-unwinding) to control exidx-based stack unwinding. (Issue 55826)
  • Fixed Clang 3.3 MIPS compiler problem where HI and LO registers are incorrectly reused.
  • Fixed issue with MIPS 4.7 ICE in dbx_reg_number. The error message is as follows:
    external/icu4c/i18n/decimfmt.cpp:1322:1:
    internal compiler error: in dbx_reg_number, at dwarf2out.c:10185
    
    (GCC Patch)
Other bug fixes:
  • Header fixes
    • Fixed the ARM WCHAR_MIN and WCHAR_MAX to be unsigned according to spec (the X86/MIPS versions are signed). Define _WCHAR_IS_ALWAYS_SIGNED to restore old behavior. (Issue 57749)
    • Fixed include/netinet/tcp.h to contain TCP_INFO state enum. (Issue 38881)
    • Fixed the cdefs_elh.h macro _C_LABEL_STRING to stop generating warnings in the GCC 4.8 toolchain when using c++11 mode. (Issue 58135, Issue 58652)
    • Removed non-existent functions imaxabs and imaxdiv from header inttypes.h.
    • Fixed issue with pthread_exit() return values and pthread_self(). (Issue 60686)
    • Added missing mkdtemp() function, which already exists in bionic header stdlib.h.
  • Fixed problem building samples/gles3jni with Clang on Android API level 11.
  • Fixed MCLinker to allow multiple occurrences of the following options: -gc-sections and --eh-frame-hdr.
  • Fixed MCLinker to accept the --no-warn-mismatch option.
  • Modified cpu-features option to not assume all VFPv4 devices support IDIV. Now this option only adds IDIV to white-listed devices, including Nexus 4. (Issue 57637)
  • Fixed problem with android_native_app_glue.c erroneously logging errors on event predispatch operations.
  • Fixed all operations on gabi++ terminate and unexpected_handler to be thread-safe.
  • Fixed several issues with Clang -integrated-as option so it can pass tests for ssax-instructions and fenv.
  • Fixed GCC 4.6/4.7/4.8 compiler to pass the linker option --eh-frame-hdr even for static executables. For more information, see the GCC patch.
  • Fixed extra apostrophe in CPU-ARCH-ABIS.html. For more information, see NDK-DEPENDS.html. (Issue 60142)
  • Fixed extra quotes in ndk-build output on Windows. (Issue 60649)
  • Fixed Clang 3.3 to compile ARM's built-in, atomic operations such as __atomic_fetch_add, __atomic_fetch_sub, and __atomic_fetch_or.
  • Fixed Clang 3.3 ICE with customized vfprintf. (Clang issue)
Other changes:
  • Enabled OpenMP for all GCC builds. To use this feature, add the following flags to your build settings:
    LOCAL_CFLAGS += -fopenmp
    LOCAL_LDFLAGS += -fopenmp
    
    For code examples, see tests/device/test-openmp
  • Reduced the size of ld.mcld significantly (1.5MB vs. ld.bfd 3.5MB and ld.gold 7.5MB), resulting in a speed improvement of approximately 20%.
  • Added LOCAL_CONLYFLAGS and APP_CONLYFLAGS to specify options applicable to C only but not C++. The existing LOCAL_CFLAGS and APP_CFLAGS are also used for C++ compilation (to save trouble of specifying most options twice), so options such as -std=gnu99 may fail in g++ builds with a warning and clang++ builds with an error.
  • Added gabi++ array helper functions.
  • Modified GCC builds so that all libgcc.a files are built with -funwind-tables to allow the stack to be unwound past previously blocked points, such as __aeabi_idiv0.
  • Added Ingenic MXU support in MIPS GCC4.6/4.7/4.8 with new -mmxu option.
  • Extended MIPS GCC4.6/4.7/4.8 -mldc1-sdc1 to control ldxc1/sdxc1 too
  • Added crazy linker. For more information, see sources/android/crazy_linker/README.TXT.
  • Fixed bitmap-plasma to draw to full screen rather than a 200x200 pixel area.
  • Reduced linux and darwin toolchain sizes by 25% by creating symlinks to identical files.

Android NDK, Revision 9 (July 2013)

Important changes:
  • Added support for Android 4.3 (API level 18). For more information, see STABLE-APIS.html and new code examples in samples/gles3jni/README.
  • Added headers and libraries for OpenGL ES 3.0, which is supported by Android 4.3 (API level 18) and higher.
  • Added GNU Compiler Collection (GCC) 4.8 compiler to the NDK. Since GCC 4.6 is still the default, you must explicitly enable this option:
    • For ndk-build builds, export NDK_TOOLCHAIN_VERSION=4.8 or add it in Application.mk.
    • For standalone builds, use the --toolchain= option in make-standalone-toolchain.sh, for example:
      --toolchain=arm-linux-androideabi-4.8

    Note: The -Wunused-local-typedefs option is enabled by -Wall. Be sure to add __attribute__((unused)) if you use compile-time asserts like sources/cxx-stl/stlport/stlport/stl/config/features.h, line #311. For more information, see Change 55460

    Note: In the GCC 4.7 release and later, ARM compilers generate unaligned access code by default for ARMv6 and higher build targets. You may need to add the -mno-unaligned-access build option when building for kernels that do not support this feature.

  • Added Clang 3.3 support. The NDK_TOOLCHAIN_VERSION=clang build option now picks Clang 3.3 by default.

    Note: Both GCC 4.4.3 and Clang 3.1 are deprecated, and will be removed from the next NDK release.

  • Updated GNU Project Debugger (GDB) to support python 2.7.5.
  • Added MCLinker to support Windows hosts. Since ld.gold is the default where available, you must add -fuse-ld=mcld in LOCAL_LDFLAGS or APP_LDFLAGS to enable MCLinker.
  • Added ndk-depends tool which prints ELF library dependencies. For more information, see NDK-DEPENDS.html. (Issue 53486)
Important bug fixes:
  • Fixed potential event handling issue in android_native_app_glue. (Issue 41755)
  • Fixed ARM/GCC-4.7 build to generate sufficient alignment for NEON load and store instructions VST and VLD. (GCC Issue 57271)
  • Fixed a GCC 4.4.3/4.6/4.7 internal compiler error (ICE) for a constant negative index value on a string literal. (Issue 54623)
  • Fixed GCC 4.7 segmentation fault for constant initialization with an object address. (Issue 56508)
  • Fixed GCC 4.6 ARM segmentation fault for -O values when using Boost 1.52.0. (Issue 42891)
  • Fixed libc.so and libc.a to support the wait4() function. (Issue 19854)
  • Updated the x86 libc.so and libc.a files to include the clone() function.
  • Fixed LOCAL_SHORT_COMMANDS bug where the linker.list file is empty or not used.
  • Fixed GCC MIPS build on Mac OS to use CFI directives, without which ld.mcld --eh-frame-hdr fails frequently.
  • Fixed Clang 3.2 X86/MIPS internal compiler error in llvm/lib/VMCore/Value.cpp. (Change 59021)
  • Fixed GCC 4.7 64-bit Windows assembler crash. (Error: out of memory allocating 4294967280 bytes).
  • Updated ndk-gdb script so that the --start or --launch actions now wait for the GNU Debug Server, so that it can more reliably hit breakpoints set early in the execution path (such as breakpoints in JNI code). (Issue 41278)

    Note: This feature requires jdb and produces warning about pending breakpoints. Specify the --nowait option to restore previous behavior.

  • Fixed GDB crash when library list is empty.
  • Fixed GDB crash when using a stepi command past a bx pc or blx pc Thumb instruction. (Issue 56962, Issue 36149)
  • Fixed MIPS gdbserver to look for DT_MIPS_RLD_MAP instead of DT_DEBUG. (Issue 56586)
  • Fixed a circular dependency in the ndk-build script, for example: If A->B and B->B, then B was dropped from build. (Issue 56690)
Other bug fixes:
  • Fixed the ndk-build script to enable you to specify a version of Clang as a command line option (e.g., NDK_TOOLCHAIN_VERSION=clang3.2). Previously, only specifying the version as an environment variable worked.
  • Fixed gabi++ size of _Unwind_Exception to be 24 for MIPS build targets when using the Clang compiler. (Change 54141)
  • Fixed the ndk-build script to ensure that built libraries are actually removed from projects that include prebuilt static libraries when using the ndk-build clean command. (Change 54461, Change 54480)
  • Modified the NDK_ANALYZE=1 option to be less verbose.
  • Fixed gnu-libstdc++/Android.mk to include a backward/ path for builds that use backward compability. (Issue 53404)
  • Fixed a problem where stlport new sometimes returned random values.
  • Fixed ndk-gdb to match the order of CPU_ABIS, not APP_ABIS. (Issue 54033)
  • Fixed a problem where the NDK 64-bit build on MacOSX choses the wrong path for compiler. (Issue 53769)
  • Fixed build scripts to detect 64-bit Windows Vista. (Issue 54485)
  • Fixed x86 ntonl/swap32 error: invalid 'asm': operand number out of range. (Issue 54465, Change 57242)
  • Fixed ld.gold to merge string literals.
  • Fixed ld.gold to handle large symbol alignment.
  • Updated ld.gold to enable the --sort-section=name option.
  • Fixed GCC 4.4.3/4.6/4.7 to suppress the -export-dynamic option for statically linked programs. GCC no longer adds an .interp section for statically linked programs.
  • Fixed GCC 4.4.3 stlport compilation error about inconsistent typedef of _Unwind_Control_Block. (Issue 54426)
  • Fixed awk scripts to handle AndroidManifest.xml files created on Windows which may contain trailing \r characters and cause build errors. (Issue 42548)
  • Fixed make-standalone-toolchain.sh to probe the prebuilts/ directory to detect if the host is 32 bit or 64 bit.
  • Fixed the Clang 3.2 -integrated-as option.
  • Fixed the Clang 3.2 ARM EHABI compact model pr1 and pr2 handler data.
  • Added Clang -mllvm -arm-enable-ehabi option to fix the following Clang error:
    clang: for the -arm-enable-ehabi option: may only occur zero or one times!
  • Fixed build failure when there is no uses-sdk element in application manifest. (Issue 57015)
Other changes:
  • Header Fixes
    • Modified headers to make __set_errno an inlined function, since __set_errno in errno.h is deprecated, and libc.so no longer exports it.
    • Modified elf.h to include stdint.h. (Issue 55443)
    • Fixed sys/un.h to be included independently of other headers. (Issue 53646)
    • Fixed all of the MotionEvent_getHistorical API family to take the const AInputEvent* motion_event. (Issue 55873)
    • Fixed malloc_usable_size to take const void*. (Issue 55725)
    • Fixed stdint.h to be more compatible with C99. (Change 46821)
    • Modified wchar.h to not redefine WCHAR_MAX and WCHAR_MIN
    • Fixed <inttypes.h> declaration for pointer-related PRI and SCN macros. (Issue 57218)
    • Changed the sys/cdefs.h header so that __WCHAR_TYPE__ is 32-bit for API levels less than 9, which means that wchat_t is 32-bit for all API levels. To restore the previous behavior, define the _WCHAR_IS_8BIT boolean variable. (Issue 57267)
  • Added more formatting in NDK docs/ and miscellaneous documentation fixes.
  • Added support for a thin archive technique when building static libraries. (Issue 40303)
  • Updated script make-standalone-toolchain.sh to support the stlport library in addition to gnustl, when you specify the option --stl=stlport. For more information, see STANDALONE-TOOLCHAIN.html.
  • Updated the make-standalone-toolchain.sh script so that the --llvm-version= option creates the $TOOLCHAIN_PREFIX-clang and $TOOLCHAIN_PREFIX-clang++ scripts in addition to clang and clang++, to avoid using the host's clang and clang++ definitions by accident.
  • Added two flags to re-enable two optimizations in upstream Clang but disabled in NDK for better compatibility with code compiled by GCC:
    • Added a -fcxx-missing-return-semantics flag to re-enable missing return semantics in Clang 3.2+. Normally, all paths should terminate with a return statement for a value-returning function. If this is not the case, clang inserts an undefined instruction (or trap in debug mode) at the path without a return statement. If you are sure your code is correct, use this flag to allow the optimizer to take advantage of the undefined behavior. If you are not sure, do not use this flag. The caller may still receive a random incorrect value, but the optimizer will not exploit it and make your code harder to debug.
    • Added a -fglobal-ctor-const-promotion flag to re-enable promoting global variables with static constructor to be constants. With this flag, the global variable optimization pass of LLVM tries to evaluate the global variables with static constructors and promote them to global constants. Although this optimization is correct, it may cause some incompatability with code compiled by GCC. For example, code may do const_cast to cast the constant to mutable and modify it. In GCC, the variable is in read-write and the code is run by accident. In Clang, the const variable is in read-only memory and may cause your application to crash.
  • Added -mldc1-sdc1 to the MIPS GCC and Clang compilers. By default, compilers align 8-byte objects properly and emit the ldc1 and sdc1 instructions to move them around. If your app uses a custom allocator that does not always align with a new object's 8-byte boundary in the same way as the default allocator, your app may crash due to ldc1 and sdc1 operations on unaligned memory. In this case, use the -mno-ldc1-sdc1 flag to workaround the problem.
  • Downgraded the event severity from warning to info if APP_PLATFORM_LEVEL is larger than APP_MIN_PLATFORM_LEVEL. The APP_PLATFORM_LEVEL may be lower than APP_PLATFORM in jni/Application.mk because the NDK does not have headers for all levels. In this case, the actual level is shifted downwards. The APP_MIN_PLATFORM_LEVEL is specified by the android:minSdkVersion in your application's manifest. (Issue 39752)
  • Added the android_getCpuIdArm() and android_setCpuArm() methods to cpu-features.c. This addition enables easier retrieval of the ARM CPUID information. (Issue 53689)
  • Modified ndk-build to use GCC 4.7's as/ld for Clang compiling.

    Note: In GCC 4.7, monotonic_clock and is_monotonic have been renamed to steady_clock and is_steady, respectively.

  • Added the following new warnings to the ndk-build script:
    • Added warnings if LOCAL_LDLIBS/LDFLAGS are used in static library modules.
    • Added a warning if a configuration has no module to build.
    • Added a warning for non-system libraries being used in LOCAL_LDLIBS/LDFLAGS of a shared library or executable modules.
  • Updated build scripts, so that if APP_MODULES is not defined and only static libraries are listed in Android.mk, the script force-builds all of them. (Issue 53502)
  • Updated ndk-build to support absolute paths in LOCAL_SRC_FILES.
  • Removed the *-gdbtui executables, which are duplicates of the *-gdb executables with the -tui option enabled.
  • Updated the build scripts to warn you when the Edison Design Group (EDG) compiler front-end turns _STLP_HAS_INCLUDE_NEXT back on. (Issue 53646)
  • Added the environment variable NDK_LIBS_OUT to allow overriding of the path for libraries/gdbserver from the default $PROJECT/libs. For more information, see OVERVIEW.html.
  • Changed ndk-build script defaults to compile code with format string protection -Wformat -Werror=format-security. You may set LOCAL_DISABLE_FORMAT_STRING_CHECKS=true to disable it. For more information, see ANDROID-MK.html
  • Added STL pretty-print support in ndk-gdb-py. For more information, see NDK-GDB.html.
  • Added tests based on the googletest frameworks.
  • Added a notification to the toolchain build script that warns you if the current shell is not bash.

Android NDK, Revision 8e (March 2013)

Important changes:
  • Added 64-bit host toolchain set (package name suffix *-x86_64.*). For more information, see CHANGES.HTML and NDK-BUILD.html.
  • Added Clang 3.2 compiler. GCC 4.6 is still the default. For information on using the Clang compiler, see CHANGES.HTML.
  • Added static code analyzer for Linux/MacOSX hosts. For information on using the analyzer, see CHANGES.HTML.
  • Added MCLinker for Linux/MacOSX hosts as an experimental feature. The ld.gold linker is the default where available, so you must explicitly enable it. For more information, see CHANGES.HTML.
  • Updated ndk-build to use topological sort for module dependencies, which means the build automatically sorts out the order of libraries specified in LOCAL_STATIC_LIBRARIES, LOCAL_WHOLE_STATIC_LIBRARIES and LOCAL_SHARED_LIBRARIES. For more information, see CHANGES.HTML. (Issue 39378)
Important bug fixes:
  • Fixed build script to build all toolchains in -O2. Toolchains in previous releases were incorrectly built without optimization.
  • Fixed build script which unconditionally builds Clang/llvm for MacOSX in 64-bit.
  • Fixed GCC 4.6/4.7 internal compiler error: gen_thumb_movhi_clobber at config/arm/arm.md:5832. (Issue 52732)
  • Fixed build problem where GCC/ARM 4.6/4.7 fails to link code using 64-bit atomic built-in functions. (Issue 41297)
  • Fixed GCC 4.7 linker DIV usage mismatch errors. (Sourceware Issue)
  • Fixed GCC 4.7 internal compiler error build_data_member_initialization, at cp/semantics.c:5790.
  • Fixed GCC 4.7 internal compiler error redirect_eh_edge_1, at tree-eh.c:2214. (Issue 52909)
  • Fixed a GCC 4.7 segfault. (GCC Issue)
  • Fixed <chrono> clock resolution and enabled steady_clock. (Issue 39680)
  • Fixed toolchain to enable _GLIBCXX_HAS_GTHREADS for GCC 4.7 libstdc++. (Issue 41770, Issue 41859)
  • Fixed problem with the X86 MXX/SSE code failing to link due to missing posix_memalign. (Change 51872)
  • Fixed GCC4.7/X86 segmentation fault in i386.c, function distance_non_agu_define_in_bb(). (Change 50383)
  • Fixed GCC4.7/X86 to restore earlier cmov behavior. (GCC Issue)
  • Fixed handling NULL return value of setlocale() in libstdc++/GCC4.7. (Issue 46718)
  • Fixed ld.gold runtime undefined reference to __exidx_start and __exidx_start_end. (Change 52134)
  • Fixed Clang 3.1 internal compiler error when using Eigen library. (Issue 41246)
  • Fixed Clang 3.1 internal compiler error including <chrono> in C++11 mode. (Issue 39600)
  • Fixed Clang 3.1 internal compiler error when generating object code for a method call to a uniform initialized rvalue. (Issue 41387)
  • Fixed Clang 3.1/X86 stack realignment. (Change 52154)
  • Fixed problem with GNU Debugger (GDB) SIGILL when debugging on Android 4.1.2. (Issue 40941)
  • Fixed problem where GDB cannot set source:line breakpoints when symbols contain long, indirect file paths. (Issue 42448)
  • Fixed GDB read_program_header for MIPS PIE executables. (Change 49592)
  • Fixed STLport segmentation fault in uncaught_exception(). (Change 50236)
  • Fixed STLport bus error in exception handling due to unaligned access of DW_EH_PE_udata2, DW_EH_PE_udata4, and DW_EH_PE_udata8.
  • Fixed Gabi++ infinite recursion problem with nothrow new[] operator. (Issue 52833)
  • Fixed Gabi++ wrong offset to exception handler pointer. (Change 53446)
  • Removed Gabi++ redundant free on exception object (Change 53447)
Other bug fixes:
  • Fixed NDK headers:
    • Removed redundant definitions of size_t, ssize_t, and ptrdiff_t.
    • Fixed MIPS and ARM fenv.h header.
    • Fixed stddef.h to not redefine offsetof since it already exists in the toolchain.
    • Fixed elf.h to contain Elf32_auxv_t and Elf64_auxv_t. (Issue 38441)
    • Fixed the #ifdef C++ definitions in the OpenSLES_AndroidConfiguration.h header file. (Issue 53163)
  • Fixed STLport to abort after out of memory error instead of silently exiting.
  • Fixed system and Gabi++ headers to be able to compile with API level 8 and lower.
  • Fixed cpufeatures to not parse /proc/self/auxv. (Issue 43055)
  • Fixed ld.gold to not depend on host libstdc++ and on Windows platforms, to not depend on the libgcc_sjlj_1.dll library.
  • Fixed Clang 3.1 which emits inconsistent register list in .vsave and fails assembler. (Change 49930)
  • Fixed Clang 3.1 to be able to compile libgabi++ and pass the test-stlport tests for MIPS build targets. (Change 51961)
  • Fixed Clang 3.1 to only enable exception by default for C++, not for C.
  • Fixed several issues in Clang 3.1 to pass most GNU exception tests.
  • Fixed scripts clang and clang++ in standalone NDK compiler to detect -cc1 and to not specify -target when found.
  • Fixed ndk-build to observe NDK_APP_OUT set in Application.mk.
  • Fixed X86 libc.so and lib.a which were missing the sigsetjmp and siglongjmp functions already declared in setjmp.h. (Issue 19851)
  • Patched GCC 4.4.3/4.6/4.7 libstdc++ to work with Clang in C++ 11. (Clang Issue)
  • Fixed cygwin path in argument passed to HOST_AWK.
  • Fixed ndk-build script warning in windows when running from project's JNI directory. (Issue 40192)
  • Fixed problem where the ndk-build script does not build if makefile has trailing whitespace in the LOCAL_PATH definition. (Issue 42841)
Other changes:
  • Enabled threading support in GCC/MIPS toolchain.
  • Updated GCC exception handling helpers __cxa_begin_cleanup and __cxa_type_match to have default visibility from the previous hidden visibility in GNU libstdc++. For more information, see CHANGES.HTML.
  • Updated build scripts so that Gabi++ and STLport static libraries are now built with hidden visibility except for exception handling helpers.
  • Updated build so that STLport is built for ARM in Thumb mode.
  • Added support for std::set_new_handler in Gabi++. (Issue 52805)
  • Enabled FUTEX system call in GNU libstdc++.
  • Updated ndk-build so that it no longer copies prebuilt static library to a project's obj/local/<abi>/ directory. (Issue 40302)
  • Removed __ARM_ARCH_5*__ from ARM toolchains/*/setup.mk script. (Issue 21132)
  • Built additional GNU libstdc++ libraries in thumb for ARM.
  • Enabled MIPS floating-point madd/msub/nmadd/nmsub/recip/rsqrt instructions with 32-bit FPU.
  • Enabled graphite loop optimizer in GCC 4.6 and 4.7 to allow more optimizations: -fgraphite, -fgraphite-identity, -floop-block, -floop-flatten, -floop-interchange, -floop-strip-mine, -floop-parallelize-all, and -ftree-loop-linear. (info)
  • Enabled polly for Clang 3.1 on Linux and Max OS X 32-bit hosts which analyzes and optimizes memory access. (info)
  • Enabled -flto in GCC 4.7, 4.6, Clang 3.2 and Clang 3.1 on linux (Clang LTO via LLVMgold.so). MIPS compiler targets are not supported because ld.gold is not available.
  • Enabled --plugin and --plugin-opt for ld.gold in GCC 4.6/4.7.
  • Enabled --text-reorder for ld.gold in GCC 4.7.
  • Configured GNU libstdc++ with _GLIBCXX_USE_C99_MATH which undefines the isinf script in the bionic header. For more information, see CHANGES.html.
  • Added APP_LDFLAGS to the build scripts. For more information, see ANDROID-MK.html.
  • Updated build scripts to allow NDK_LOG=0 to disable the NDK_LOG.
  • Updated build scripts to allow NDK_HOST_32BIT=0 to disable the host developer environment 32-bit toolchain.
  • Changed the default GCC/X86 flags -march= and -mtune= from pentiumpro and generic to i686 and atom.
  • Enhanced toolchain build scripts:
    • Fixed a race condition in build-gcc.sh for the mingw build type which was preventing a significant amount of parallel build processing.
    • Updated build-gabi++.sh and build-stlport.sh so they can now run from the NDK package. (Issue 52835)
    • Fixed run-tests.sh in the MSys utilities collection.
    • Improved 64-bit host toolchain and Canadian Cross build support.
    • Updated build-mingw64-toolchain.sh script to more recent version.
    • Added option to build libgnustl_static.a and stlport_static.a without hidden visibility.

Android NDK, Revision 8d (December 2012)

Important changes:
  • Added the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC) 4.7 compiler to the NDK. The GCC 4.6 compiler is still the default, so you must to explicitly enable the new version as follows:
    • For ndk-build, export the NDK_TOOLCHAIN_VERSION=4.7 variable or add it to Application.mk.
    • For standalone builds, add the --toolchain= option to make-standalone-toolchain.sh, for example:
      --toolchain=arm-linux-androideabi-4.7

    Note: This feature is experimental. Please try it and report any issues.

  • Added stlport exception support via gabi++. Note that the new gabi++ depends on dlopen and related code, meaning that:
    • You can no longer build a static executable using the -static option or include libstlport_static.a using APP_STL := stlport_static. (You can still use the -static option with a standalone toolchain.) Compiling a dynamic executable using include $(BUILD_EXECUTABLE) continues to work because the compiler automatically adds the -ldl option.
    • If your project links using -nostdlib and {-Wl,--no-undefined}, you must manually include the -ldl option.
    For more information, see CPLUSPLUS-SUPPORT.html.

    Note: This feature is experimental and works better with the GCC 4.6/4.7 compilers than with GCC 4.4.3 or Clang 3.1. Please try it and report any issues.

  • Added a -mstack-protector-guard= option for x86 to choose between a global default path which is compatible with older Android C library (bionic) and a new tls path (%gs:20) for -fstack-protector, -fstack-protector-all and -fstack-protector-strong using the GCC 4.6 and higher compilers.

    Note: The -mstack-protector-guard setting itself does not enable any -fstack-protector* options.

  • Added android_setCpu() function to sources/android/cpufeatures/cpu-features.c for use when auto-detection via /proc is not possible in Android 4.1 and higher. (Chromium Issue 164154)
Important bug fixes:
  • Fixed unnecessary rebuild of object files when using the ndk-build script. (Issue 39810)
  • Fixed a linker failure with the NDK 8c release for Mac OS X 10.6.x that produced the following error:
    dyld: lazy symbol binding failed: Symbol not found: _memmem
    Referenced from: ...../arm-linux-androideabi/bin/ld
    Expected in: /usr/lib/libSystem.B.dylib
    This problem was caused by building on Mac OS X 10.7, which produced binaries that were not compatible with Mac OS 10.6.x and the NDK.
  • Removed the -x c++ options from the Clang++ standalone build script. (Issue 39089)
  • Fixed issues using the NDK_TOOLCHAIN_VERSION=clang3.1 option in Cygwin. (Issue 39585)
  • Fixed the make-standalone-toolchain.sh script to allow generation of a standalone toolchain using the Cygwin or MinGW environments. The resulting toolchain can be used in Cygwin, MingGW or CMD.exe environments. (Issue 39915, Issue 39585)
  • Added missing SL_IID_ANDROIDBUFFERQUEUESOURCE option in android-14 builds for ARM and X86. (Issue 40625)
  • Fixed x86 CPU detection for the ANDROID_CPU_X86_FEATURE_MOVBE feature. (Issue 39317)
  • Fixed an issue preventing the Standard Template Library (STL) from using C++ sources that do not have a .cpp file extension.
  • Fixed GCC 4.6 ARM internal compiler error at reload1.c:1061. (Issue 20862)
  • Fixed GCC 4.4.3 ARM internal compiler error at emit-rtl.c:1954. (Issue 22336)
  • Fixed GCC 4.4.3 ARM internal compiler error at postreload.c:396. (Issue 22345)
  • Fixed problem with GCC 4.6/4.7 skipping lambda functions. (Issue 35933)
Other bug fixes:
  • NDK header file fixes:
    • Fixed __WINT_TYPE__ and wint_t to be the same type.
    • Corrected typo in android/bitmap.h. (Issue 15134)
    • Corrected typo in errno.h.
    • Added check for the presence of __STDC_VERSION__ in sys/cdefs.h. (Issue 14627)
    • Reorganized headers in byteswap.h and dirent.h.
    • Fixed limits.h to include page.h which provides PAGE_SIZE settings. (Issue 39983)
    • Fixed return type of glGetAttribLocation() and glGetUniformLocation() from int to GLint.
    • Fixed __BYTE_ORDER constant for x86 builds. (Issue 39824)
  • Fixed ndk-build script to not overwrite -Os with -O2 for ARM builds.
  • Fixed build scripts to allow overwriting of HOST_AWK, HOST_SED, and HOST_MAKE settings.
  • Fixed issue for ld.gold on fsck_msdos builds linking objects built by the Intel C/C++ compiler (ICC).
  • Fixed ARM EHABI support in Clang to conform to specifications.
  • Fixed GNU Debugger (GDB) to shorten the time spent on walking the target's link map during solib events. (Issue 38402)
  • Fixed missing libgcc.a file when linking shared libraries.
Other changes:
  • Backported 64-bit built-in atomic functions for ARM to GCC 4.6.
  • Added documentation for audio output latency, along with other documentation and fixes.
  • Fixed debug builds with Clang so that non-void functions now raise a SIGILL signal for paths without a return statement.
  • Updated make-standalone-toolchain.sh to accept the suffix -clang3.1 which is equivalent to adding --llvm-version=3.1 to the GCC 4.6 toolchain.
  • Updated GCC and Clang bug report URL to: http://source.android.com/source/report-bugs.html
  • Added ARM ELF support to llvm-objdump.
  • Suppressed treating c input as c++ warning for Clang builds.
  • Updated build so that only the 32-bit version of libiberty.a is built and placed in lib32/.

Android NDK, Revision 8c (November 2012)

Important changes:
  • Added the Clang 3.1 compiler to the NDK. The GNU Compiler Collection (GCC) 4.6 is still the default, so you must explicitly enable the Clang compiler option as follows:
    • For ndk-build, export NDK_TOOLCHAIN_VERSION=clang3.1 or add this environment variable setting to Application.mk.
    • For standalone builds, add --llvm-version=3.1 to make-standalone-toolchain.sh and replace CC and CXX in your makefile with <tool-path>/bin/clang and <tool-path>/bin/clang++. See STANDALONE-TOOLCHAIN.html for details.

    Note: This feature is experimental. Please try it and report any issues.

  • Added Gold linker ld.gold for the Windows toolchain. Gold linker is also the default for ARM and X86 on all hosts. You may override it to use the ld.bfd linker by adding LOCAL_LDFLAGS += -fuse-ld=bfd to Android.mk, or by passing -fuse-ld=bfd to the g++/clang++ command line that does the linking.
  • Added checks for spaces in the NDK path to the ndk-build[.cmd] and ndk-gdb scripts, to prevent build errors that are difficult to diagnose.
  • Made the following changes to API level handling:
    • Modified build logic so that projects that specify android-10 through android-13 in APP_PLATFORM, project.properties or default.properties link against android-9 instead of android-14.
    • Updated build so that executables using android-16 (Jelly Bean) or higher are compiled with the -fPIE option for position-independent executables (PIE). A new APP_PIE option allows you to control this behavior. See APPLICATION-MK.html for details.

      Note: All API levels above 14 still link against platforms/android-14 and no new platforms/android-N have been added.

    • Modified ndk-build to provide warnings if the adjusted API level is larger than android:minSdkVersion in the project's AndroidManifest.xml.
  • Updated the cpu-features helper library to include more ARM-specific features. See sources/android/cpufeatures/cpu-features.h for details.
  • Modified the long double on the X86 platform to be 8 bytes. This data type is now the same size as a double, but is still treated as a distinct type.
  • Updated build for APP_ABI=armeabi-v7a:
    • Modified this build type to pass the -march=armv7-a parameter to the linker. This change ensures that v7-specific libraries and crt*.o are linked correctly.
    • Added -mfpu=vfpv3-d16 to ndk-build instead of the -mfpu=vfp option used in previous releases.
Important bug fixes:
  • Fixed an issue where running make-standalone-toolchain.sh with root privileges resulted in the stand alone tool chain being inaccessible to some users. (Issue 35279)
    • All files and executables in the NDK release package are set to have read and execute permissions for all.
    • The ownership/group of libstdc++.a is now preserved when copied.
  • Removed redundant \r from Windows prebuilt echo.exe. The redundant \r caused gdb.setup to fail in the GNU Debugger (GDB) because it incorrectly became part of the path. (Issue 36054)
  • Fixed Windows parallel builds that sometimes failed due to timing issues in the host-mkdir implementation. (Issue 25875)
  • Fixed GCC 4.4.3 GNU libstdc++ to not merge typeinfo names by default. For more details, see toolchain repo gcc/gcc-4.4.3/libstdc++-v3/libsupc++/typeinfo. (Issue 22165)
  • Fixed problem on null context in GCC 4.6 cp/mangle.c::write_unscoped_name, where GCC may crash when the context is null and dereferenced in TREE_CODE.
  • Fixed GCC 4.4.3 crashes on ARM NEON-specific type definitions for floats. (Issue 34613)
  • Fixed the STLport internal _IteWrapper::operator*() implementation where a stale stack location holding the dereferenced value was returned and caused runtime crashes. (Issue 38630)
  • ARM-specific fixes:
    • Fixed ARM GCC 4.4.3/4.6 g++ to not warn that the mangling of <va_list> was changed in GCC 4.4. The workaround using the -Wno-psabi switch to avoid this warning is no longer required.
    • Fixed an issue when a project with .arm or .neon suffixes in LOCAL_SRC_FILES also used APP_STL. With APP_STL, the ndk-build script searches for C++ files in LOCAL_SRC_FILES before adding STL header/lib paths to compilation. Modified ndk-build to filter out .arm and .neon suffixes before the search, otherwise items in LOCAL_SRC_FILES like myfile.cpp.arm.neon won't be compiled as C++ code.
    • Fixed binutils-2.21/ld.bfd to be capable of linking object from older binutils without tag_FP_arch, which was producing assertion fail error messages in GNU Binutils. (Issue 35209)
    • Removed Unknown EABI object attribute 44 warning when binutils-2.19/ld links prebuilt object by newer binutils-2.21
    • Fixed an issue in GNU stdc++ compilation with both -mthumb and -march=armv7-a, by modifying make-standalone-toolchain.sh to populate headers/libs in sub-directory armv7-a/thumb. (Issue 35616)
    • Fixed unresolvable R_ARM_THM_CALL relocation error. (Issue 35342)
    • Fixed internal compiler error at reload1.c:3633, caused by the ARM back-end expecting the wrong operand type when sign-extend from char. (GCC Issue 50099)
    • Fixed internal compiler error with negative shift amount. (GCC Issue)
  • Fixed -fstack-protector for X86, which is also the default for the ndk-build x86 ABI target.
  • MIPS-specific fixes:
    • Fixed STLport endian-ness by setting _STLP_LITTLE_ENDIAN to 1 when compiling MIPS libstlport_*.
    • Fixed GCC __builtin_unreachable issue when compiling LLVM. (GCC Issue 54369)
    • Backported fix for cc1 compile process consuming 100% CPU. (GCC Issue 50380)
  • GNU Debugger-specific fixes:
    • Disabled Python support in gdb-7.x at build, otherwise the gdb-7.x configure function may pick up whatever Python version is available on the host and build gdb with a hard-wired dependency on a specific version of Python. (Issue 36120)
    • Fixed ndk-gdb when APP_ABI contains all and matchs none of the known architectures. (Issue 35392)
    • Fixed Windows pathname support, by keeping the : character if it looks like it could be part of a Windows path starting with a drive letter. (GDB Issue 12843)
    • Fixed adding of hardware breakpoint support for ARM in gdbserver. (GDB Issue)
    • Added fix to only read the current solibs when the linker is consistent. This change speeds up solib event handling. (Issue 37677)
    • Added fix to make repeated attempts to find solib breakpoints. GDB now retries enable_break() during every call to svr4_current_sos() until it succeeds. (Change 43563)
    • Fixed an issue where gdb would not stop on breakpoints placed in dlopen-ed libraries. (Issue 34856)
    • Fixed SIGILL in dynamic linker when calling dlopen(), on system where /system/bin/linker is stripped of symbols and rtld_db_dlactivity() is implemented as Thumb, due to not preserving LSB of sym_addr. (Issue 37147)
Other bug fixes:
  • Fixed NDK headers:
    • Fixed arch-mips/include/asm/* code that was incorrectly removed from original kernel. (Change 43335)
    • Replaced struct member data __unused with __linux_unused in linux/sysctl.h and linux/icmp.h to avoid conflict with #define __unused in sys/cdefs.h.
    • Fixed fenv.h for enclosed C functions with __BEGIN_DECLS and __END_DECLS.
    • Removed unimplemented functions in malloc.h.
    • Fixed stdint.h defintion of uint64_t for ANSI compilers. (Issue 1952)
    • Fixed preprocessor macros in <arch>/include/machine/*.
    • Replaced link.h for MIPS with new version supporting all platforms.
    • Removed linux-unistd.h
    • Move GLibc-specific macros LONG_LONG_MIN, LONG_LONG_MAX and ULONG_LONG_MAX from <pthread.h> to <limits.h>.
  • Fixed a buffer overflow in ndk-stack-parser.
  • Fixed _STLP_USE_EXCEPTIONS, when not defined, to omit all declarations and uses of __Named_exception. Compiling and use of __Named_exception settings only occurs when STLport is allowed to use exceptions.
  • Fixed building of Linux-only NDK packages without also building Windows code. Use the following settings to perform this type of build:
    ./build/tools/make-release.sh --force --systems=linux-x86
  • Fixed libc.so so it does not export atexit() and __do_handler. These symbols are exported for ARM builds by the system version of the C library to support legacy native libraries. NDK-generated should never reference them directly. Instead, each shared library or executable should embed its own version of these symbols, provided by crtbegin_*.o.

    If your project is linked with the -nostdlib -Wl,--no-undefined options, you must provide your own __dso_handle because crtbegin_so.o is not linked in this case. The content of __dso_handle does not matter, as shown in the following example code:

    extern "C" {
      extern void *__dso_handle __attribute__((__visibility__ ("hidden")));
      void *__dso_handle;
    }
    
  • Fixed symbol decoder for ARM used in objdump for plt entries to generate a more readable form function@plt.
  • Removed the following symbols, introduced in GCC 4.6 libgcc.a, from the X86 platform libc.so library: __aeabi_idiv0, __aeabi_ldiv0, __aeabi_unwind_cpp_pr1, and __aeabi_unwind_cpp_pr2.
  • Removed unused .ctors, .dtors, and .eh_frame in MIPS crt*_so.S.
  • Updated ndk-gdb so that it only takes the last line of output for ndk-build DUMP_XXXX. This change ensures that if Application.mk or Android.mk print something with $(info ...) syntax, it does not get injected into the result of DUMP_XXXX. (More info)
Other changes:
  • Removed arch-x86 and arch-mips headers from platforms/android-[3,4,5,8]. Those headers were incomplete, since both X86 and MIPS ABIs are only supported at API 9 or higher.
  • Simplified c++ include path in standalone packages, as shown below. (Issue 35279)
    <path>/arm-linux-androideabi/include/c++/4.6.x-google
      to:
    <path>/include/c++/4.6/
    
  • Fixed ndk-build to recognize more C++ file extensions by default: .cc .cp .cxx .cpp .CPP .c++ .C. You may still use LOCAL_CPP_EXTENSION to overwrite these extension settings.
  • Fixed an issue in samples/san-angeles that caused a black screen or freeze frame on re-launch.
  • Replaced deprecated APIs in NDK samples. (Issue 20017)
    • hello-gl2 from android-5 to android-7
    • native-activity from android-9 to android-10
    • native-audio from android-9 to android-10
    • native-plasma from android-9 to android-10
  • Added new branding for Android executables with a simpler scheme in section .note.android.ident (defined in crtbegin_static/dynamic.o) so that debugging tools can act accordingly. The structure member and values are defined as follows:
    static const struct {
      int32_t namesz;  /* = 8,  sizeof ("Android") */
      int32_t descsz;  /* = 1 * sizeof(int32_t) */
      int32_t type;    /* = 1, ABI_NOTETYPE */
      char name[sizeof "Android"];  /* = "Android" */
      int32_t android_api; /* = 3, 4, 5, 8, 9, 14 */
    }
    

    The previous branding options in section .note.ABI-tag are deprecated.

  • Added a new script run-tests-all.sh which calls run-tests.sh and standalone/run.sh with various conditions. The script run-tests.sh runs without the --abi option, and is enhanced to compile most of the tests for all supported ABIs and run on all attached devices

Android NDK, Revision 8b (July 2012)

The main features of this release are a new GNU Compiler Collection (GCC) 4.6 toolchain and GNU Debugger (GDB) 7.3.x which adds debugging support for the Android 4.1 (API Level 16) system image.

Important bug fixes:
  • Fixed LOCAL_SHORT_COMMANDS issues on Mac OS, Windows Cygwin environments for static libraries. List file generation is faster, and it is not regenerated to avoid repeated project rebuilds.
  • Fixed several issues in ndk-gdb:
    • Updated tool to pass flags -e, -d and -s to adb more consistently.
    • Updated tool to accept device serial names containing spaces.
    • Updated tool to retrieve /system/bin/link information, so gdb on the host can set a breakpoint in __dl_rtld_db_dlactivity and be aware of linker activity (e.g., rescan solib symbols when dlopen() is called).
  • Fixed ndk-build clean on Windows, which was failing to remove ./libs/*/lib*.so.
  • Fixed ndk-build.cmd to return a non-zero ERRORLEVEL when make fails.
  • Fixed libc.so to stop incorrectly exporting the __exidx_start and __exidx_end symbols.
  • Fixed SEGV when unwinding the stack past __libc_init for ARM and MIPS.
Important changes:
  • Added GCC 4.6 toolchain (binutils 2.21 with gold and GDB 7.3.x) to co-exist with the original GCC 4.4.3 toolchain (binutils 2.19 and GDB 6.6).
    • GCC 4.6 is now the default toolchain. You may set NDK_TOOLCHAIN_VERSION=4.4.3 in Application.mk to select the original one.
    • Support for the gold linker is only available for ARM and x86 architectures on Linux and Mac OS hosts. This support is disabled by default. Add LOCAL_LDLIBS += -fuse-ld=gold in Android.mk to enable it.
    • Programs compiled with -fPIE require the new GDB for debugging, including binaries in Android 4.1 (API Level 16) system images.
    • The binutils 2.21 ld tool contains back-ported fixes from version 2.22:
      • Fixed ld --gc-sections, which incorrectly retains zombie references to external libraries. (more info).
      • Fixed ARM strip command to preserve the original p_align and p_flags in GNU_RELRO section if they are valid. Without this fix, programs built with -fPIE could not be debugged. (more info)
    • Disabled sincos() optimization for compatibility with older platforms.
  • Updated build options to enable the Never eXecute (NX) bit and relro/bind_now protections by default:
    • Added --noexecstack to assembler and -z noexecstack to linker that provides NX protection against buffer overflow attacks by enabling NX bit on stack and heap.
    • Added -z relro and -z now to linker for hardening of internal data sections after linking to guard against security vulnerabilities caused by memory corruption. (more info: 1, 2)
    • These features can be disabled using the following options:
      1. Disable NX protection by setting the --execstack option for the assembler and -z execstack for the linker.
      2. Disable hardening of internal data by setting the -z norelro and -z lazy options for the linker.
      3. Disable these protections in the NDK jni/Android.mk by setting the following options:
        LOCAL_DISABLE_NO_EXECUTE=true  # disable "--noexecstack" and "-z noexecstack"
        DISABLE_RELRO=true             # disable "-z relro" and "-z now"
        

      See docs/ANDROID-MK.html for more details.

  • Added branding for Android executables with the .note.ABI-tag section (in crtbegin_static/dynamic.o) so that debugging tools can act accordingly. The structure member and values are defined as follows:
    static const struct {
      int32_t namesz;  /* = 4,  sizeof ("GNU") */
      int32_t descsz;  /* = 6 * sizeof(int32_t) */
      int32_t type;    /* = 1 */
      char  name[sizeof "GNU"];  /* = "GNU" */
      int32_t os;      /* = 0 */
      int32_t major;   /* = 2 */
      int32_t minor;   /* = 6 */
      int32_t teeny;   /* = 15 */
      int32_t os_variant;  /* = 1 */
      int32_t android_api; /* = 3, 4, 5, 8, 9, 14 */
    }
Other bug fixes:
  • Fixed mips-linux-gnu relocation truncated to fit R_MIPS_TLS_LDM issue. (more info)
  • Fixed ld tool segfaults when using --gc-sections. (more info)
  • Fixed MIPS GOT_PAGE counting issue. (more info)
  • Fixed follow warning symbol link for mips_elf_count_got_symbols.
  • Fixed follow warning symbol link for mips_elf_allocate_lazy_stub.
  • Moved MIPS .dynamic to the data segment, so that it is writable.
  • Replaced hard-coded values for symbols with correct segment sizes for MIPS.
  • Removed the -mno-shared option from the defaults in the MIPS toolchain. The default for Android toolchain is -fPIC (or -fpic if supported). If you do not explicitly specify -mshared, -fpic, -fPIC, -fpie, or -fPIE, the MIPS compiler adds -mno-shared that turns off PIC. Fixed compiler not to add -mno-shared in this case.
  • Fixed wrong package names in samples hello-jni and two-libs so that the tests project underneath it can compile.
Other Changes:
  • Changed locations of binaries:
    • Moved gdbserver from toolchain/<arch-os-ver>/prebuilt/gdbserver to prebuilt/android-<arch>/gdbserver/gdbserver.
    • Renamed x86 toolchain prefix from i686-android-linux- to i686-linux-android-.
    • Moved sources/cxx-stl/gnu-libstdc++/include and lib to sources/cxx-stl/gnu-libstdc++/4.6 when compiled with GCC 4.6, or sources/cxx-stl/gnu-libstdc++/4.4.3 when compiled with GCC 4.4.3.
    • Moved libbfd.a and libintl.a from lib/ to lib32/.
  • Added and improved various scripts in the rebuild and test NDK toolchain:
    • Added build-mingw64-toolchain.sh to generate a new Linux-hosted toolchain that generates Win32 and Win64 executables.
    • Improved speed of download-toolchain-sources.sh by using the clone command and only using checkout for the directories that are needed to build the NDK toolchain binaries.
    • Added build-host-gcc.sh and build-host-gdb.sh scripts.
    • Added tests/check-release.sh to check the content of a given NDK installation directory, or an existing NDK package.
    • Rewrote the tests/standalone/run.sh standalone tests .
  • Removed if_dl.h header from all platforms and architectures. The AF_LINK and sockaddr_dl elements it describes are specific to BSD (i.e., they don't exist in Linux).

Android NDK, Revision 8 (May 2012)

This release of the NDK includes support for MIPS ABI and a few additional fixes.

New features:
  • Added support for the MIPS ABI, which allows you to generate machine code that runs on compatible MIPS-based Android devices. Major features for MIPS include MIPS-specific toolchains, system headers, libraries and debugging support. For more details regarding MIPS support, see docs/CPU-MIPS.html in the NDK package.

    By default, code is generated for ARM-based devices. You can add mips to your APP_ABI definition in your Application.mk file to build for MIPS platforms. For example, the following line instructs ndk-build to build your code for three distinct ABIs:

    APP_ABI := armeabi armeabi-v7a mips

    Unless you rely on architecture-specific assembly sources, such as ARM assembly code, you should not need to touch your Android.mk files to build MIPS machine code.

  • You can build a standalone MIPS toolchain using the --arch=mips option when calling make-standalone-toolchain.sh. See docs/STANDALONE-TOOLCHAIN.html for more details.

Note: To ensure that your applications are available to users only if their devices are capable of running them, Google Play filters applications based on the instruction set information included in your application ? no action is needed on your part to enable the filtering. Additionally, the Android system itself also checks your application at install time and allows the installation to continue only if the application provides a library that is compiled for the device's CPU architecture.

Important bug fixes:
  • Fixed a typo in GAbi++ implementation where the result of dynamic_cast<D>(b) of base class object b to derived class D is incorrectly adjusted in the opposite direction from the base class. (Issue 28721)
  • Fixed an issue in which make-standalone-toolchain.sh fails to copy libsupc++.*.
Other bug fixes:
  • Fixed ndk-build.cmd to ensure that ndk-build.cmd works correctly even if the user has redefined the SHELL environment variable, which may be changed when installing a variety of development tools in Windows environments.

Android NDK, Revision 7c (April 2012)

This release of the NDK includes an important fix for Tegra2-based devices, and a few additional fixes and improvements:

Important bug fixes:
  • Fixed GNU STL armeabi-v7a binaries to not crash on non-NEON devices. The files provided with NDK r7b were not configured properly, resulting in crashes on Tegra2-based devices and others when trying to use certain floating-point functions (e.g., cosf, sinf, expf).
Important changes:
  • Added support for custom output directories through the NDK_OUT environment variable. When defined, this variable is used to store all intermediate generated files, instead of $PROJECT_PATH/obj. The variable is also recognized by ndk-gdb.
  • Added support for building modules with hundreds or even thousands of source files by defining LOCAL_SHORT_COMMANDS to true in your Android.mk.

    This change forces the NDK build system to put most linker or archiver options into list files, as a work-around for command-line length limitations. See docs/ANDROID-MK.html for details.

Other bug fixes:
  • Fixed android_getCpuCount() implementation in the cpufeatures helper library. On certain devices, where cores are enabled dynamically by the system, the previous implementation would report the total number of active cores the first time the function was called, rather than the total number of physically available cores.

Android NDK, Revision 7b (February 2012)

This release of the NDK includes fixes for native Windows builds, Cygwin and many other improvements:

Important bug fixes:
  • Updated sys/atomics.h to avoid correctness issues on some multi-core ARM-based devices. Rebuild your unmodified sources with this version of the NDK and this problem should be completely eliminated. For more details, read docs/ANDROID-ATOMICS.html.
  • Reverted to binutils 2.19 to fix debugging issues that appeared in NDK r7 (which switched to binutils 2.20.1).
  • Fixed ndk-build on 32-bit Linux. A packaging error put a 64-bit version of the awk executable under prebuilt/linux-x86/bin in NDK r7.
  • Fixed native Windows build (ndk-build.cmd). Other build modes were not affected. The fixes include:
    • Removed an infinite loop / stack overflow bug that happened when trying to call ndk-build.cmd from a directory that was not the top of your project path (e.g., in any sub-directory of it).
    • Fixed a problem where the auto-generated dependency files were ignored. This meant that updating a header didn't trigger recompilation of sources that included it.
    • Fixed a problem where special characters in files or paths, other than spaces and quotes, were not correctly handled.
  • Fixed the standalone toolchain to generate proper binaries when using -lstdc++ (i.e., linking against the GNU libstdc++ C++ runtime). You should use -lgnustl_shared if you want to link against the shared library version or -lstdc++ for the static version.

    See docs/STANDALONE-TOOLCHAIN.html for more details about this fix.

  • Fixed gnustl_shared on Cygwin. The linker complained that it couldn't find libsupc++.a even though the file was at the right location.
  • Fixed Cygwin C++ link when not using any specific C++ runtime through APP_STL.
Other changes:
  • When your application uses the GNU libstdc++ runtime, the compiler will no longer forcibly enable exceptions and RTTI. This change results in smaller code.

    If you need these features, you must do one of the following:

    • Enable exceptions and/or RTTI explicitly in your modules or Application.mk. (recommended)
    • Define APP_GNUSTL_FORCE_CPP_FEATURES to 'exceptions', 'rtti' or both in your Application.mk. See docs/APPLICATION-MK.html for more details.
  • ndk-gdb now works properly when your application has private services running in independent processes. It debugs the main application process, instead of the first process listed by ps, which is usually a service process.
  • Fixed a rare bug where NDK r7 would fail to honor the LOCAL_ARM_MODE value and always compile certain source files (but not all) to 32-bit instructions.
  • STLport: Refresh the sources to match the Android platform version. This update fixes a few minor bugs:
    • Fixed instantiation of an incomplete type
    • Fixed minor "==" versus "=" typo
    • Used memmove instead of memcpy in string::assign
    • Added better handling of IsNANorINF, IsINF, IsNegNAN, etc.

    For complete details, see the commit log.

  • STLport: Removed 5 unnecessary static initializers from the library.
  • The GNU libstdc++ libraries for armeabi-v7a were mistakenly compiled for armeabi instead. This change had no impact on correctness, but using the right ABI should provide slightly better performance.
  • The cpu-features helper library was updated to report three optional x86 CPU features (SSSE3, MOVBE and POPCNT). See docs/CPU-FEATURES.html for more details.
  • docs/NDK-BUILD.html was updated to mention NDK_APPLICATION_MK instead of NDK_APP_APPLICATION_MK to select a custom Application.mk file.
  • Cygwin: ndk-build no longer creates an empty "NUL" file in the current directory when invoked.
  • Cygwin: Added better automatic dependency detection. In the previous version, it didn't work properly in the following cases:
    • When the Cygwin drive prefix was not /cygdrive.
    • When using drive-less mounts, for example, when Cygwin would translate /home to \\server\subdir instead of C:\Some\Dir.
  • Cygwin: ndk-build does not try to use the native Windows tools under $NDK/prebuilt/windows/bin with certain versions of Cygwin and/or GNU Make.

Android NDK, Revision 7 (November 2011)

This release of the NDK includes new features to support the Android 4.0 platform as well as many other additions and improvements:

New features
  • Added official NDK APIs for Android 4.0 (API level 14), which adds the following native features to the platform:
    • Added native multimedia API based on the Khronos Group OpenMAX AL? 1.0.1 standard. The new <OMXAL/OpenMAXAL.h> and <OMXAL/OpenMAXAL_Android.h> headers allow applications targeting API level 14 to perform multimedia output directly from native code by using a new Android-specific buffer queue interface. For more details, see docs/openmaxal/index.html and http://www.khronos.org/openmax/.
    • Updated the native audio API based on the Khronos Group OpenSL ES 1.0.1? standard. With API Level 14, you can now decode compressed audio (e.g. MP3, AAC, Vorbis) to PCM. For more details, see docs/opensles/index.html and http://www.khronos.org/opensles/.
  • Added CCache support. To speed up large rebuilds, define the NDK_CCACHE environment variable to ccache (or the path to your ccache binary). When declared, the NDK build system automatically uses CCache when compiling any source file. For example:
    export NDK_CCACHE=ccache
    

    Note: CCache is not included in the NDK release so you must have it installed prior to using it. For more information about CCache, see http://ccache.samba.org.

  • Added support for setting APP_ABI to all to indicate that you want to build your NDK modules for all the ABIs supported by your given NDK release. This means that either one of the following two lines in your Application.mk are equivalent with this release:
    APP_ABI := all
    APP_ABI := armeabi armeabi-v7a x86
    

    This also works if you define APP_ABI when calling ndk-build from the command-line, which is a quick way to check that your project builds for all supported ABIs without changing the project's Application.mk file. For example:

    ndk-build APP_ABI=all
    
  • Added a LOCAL_CPP_FEATURES variable in Android.mk that allows you to declare which C++ features (RTTI or Exceptions) your module uses. This ensures that the final linking works correctly if you have prebuilt modules that depend on these features. See docs/ANDROID-MK.html and docs/CPLUSPLUS-SUPPORT.html for more details.
  • Shortened paths to source and object files that are used in build commands. When invoking $NDK/ndk-build from your project path, the paths to the source, object, and binary files that are passed to the build commands are significantly shorter now, because they are passed relative to the current directory. This is useful when building projects with a lot of source files, to avoid limits on the maximum command line length supported by your host operating system. The behavior is unchanged if you invoke ndk-build from a sub-directory of your project tree, or if you define NDK_PROJECT_PATH to point to a specific directory.
Experimental features
You can now build your NDK source files on Windows without Cygwin by calling the ndk-build.cmd script from the command line from your project path. The script takes exactly the same arguments as the original ndk-build script. The Windows NDK package comes with its own prebuilt binaries for GNU Make, Awk and other tools required by the build. You should not need to install anything else to get a working build system.

Important: ndk-gdb does not work on Windows, so you still need Cygwin to debug.

This feature is still experimental, so feel free to try it and report issues on the public bug database or public forum. All samples and unit tests shipped with the NDK succesfully compile with this feature.

Important bug fixes
  • Imported shared libraries are now installed by default to the target installation location (libs/<abi>) if APP_MODULES is not defined in your Application.mk. For example, if a top-level module foo imports a module bar, then both libfoo.so and libbar.so are copied to the install location. Previously, only libfoo.so was copied, unless you listed bar in your APP_MODULES too. If you define APP_MODULES explicitly, the behavior is unchanged.
  • ndk-gdb now works correctly for activities with multiple categories in their MAIN intent filters.
  • Static library imports are now properly transitive. For example, if a top-level module foo imports static library bar that imports static library zoo, the libfoo.so will now be linked against both libbar.a and libzoo.a.
Other changes
  • docs/NATIVE-ACTIVITY.HTML: Fixed typo. The minimum API level should be 9, not 8 for native activities.
  • docs/STABLE-APIS.html: Added missing documentation listing EGL as a supported stable API, starting from API level 9.
  • download-toolchain-sources.sh: Updated to download the toolchain sources from android.googlesource.com, which is the new location for the AOSP servers.
  • Added a new C++ support runtime named gabi++. More details about it are available in the updated docs/CPLUSPLUS-SUPPORT.html.
  • Added a new C++ support runtime named gnustl_shared that corresponds to the shared library version of GNU libstdc++ v3 (GPLv3 license). See more info at docs/CPLUSPLUS-SUPPORT.html
  • Added support for RTTI in the STLport C++ runtimes (no support for exceptions).
  • Added support for multiple file extensions in LOCAL_CPP_EXTENSION. For example, to compile both foo.cpp and bar.cxx as C++ sources, declare the following:
    LOCAL_CPP_EXTENSION := .cpp .cxx
    
  • Removed many unwanted exported symbols from the link-time shared system libraries provided by the NDK. This ensures that code generated with the standalone toolchain doesn't risk to accidentally depend on a non-stable ABI symbol (e.g. any libgcc.a symbol that changes each time the toolchain used to build the platform is changed)
  • Refreshed the EGL and OpenGLES Khronos headers to support more extensions. Note that this does not change the NDK ABIs for the corresponding libraries, because each extension must be probed at runtime by the client application.

    The extensions that are available depend on your actual device and GPU drivers, not the platform version the device runs on. The header changes simply add new constants and types to make it easier to use the extensions when they have been probed with eglGetProcAddress() or glGetProcAddress(). The following list describes the newly supported extensions:

    GLES 1.x
    • GL_OES_vertex_array_object
    • GL_OES_EGL_image_external
    • GL_APPLE_texture_2D_limited_npot
    • GL_EXT_blend_minmax
    • GL_EXT_discard_framebuffer
    • GL_EXT_multi_draw_arrays
    • GL_EXT_read_format_bgra
    • GL_EXT_texture_filter_anisotropic
    • GL_EXT_texture_format_BGRA8888
    • GL_EXT_texture_lod_bias
    • GL_IMG_read_format
    • GL_IMG_texture_compression_pvrtc
    • GL_IMG_texture_env_enhanced_fixed_function
    • GL_IMG_user_clip_plane
    • GL_IMG_multisampled_render_to_texture
    • GL_NV_fence
    • GL_QCOM_driver_control
    • GL_QCOM_extended_get
    • GL_QCOM_extended_get2
    • GL_QCOM_perfmon_global_mode
    • GL_QCOM_writeonly_rendering
    • GL_QCOM_tiled_rendering
    GLES 2.0
    • GL_OES_element_index_uint
    • GL_OES_get_program_binary
    • GL_OES_mapbuffer
    • GL_OES_packed_depth_stencil
    • GL_OES_texture_3D
    • GL_OES_texture_float
    • GL_OES_texture_float_linear
    • GL_OES_texture_half_float_linear
    • GL_OES_texture_npot
    • GL_OES_vertex_array_object
    • GL_OES_EGL_image_external
    • GL_AMD_program_binary_Z400
    • GL_EXT_blend_minmax
    • GL_EXT_discard_framebuffer
    • GL_EXT_multi_draw_arrays
    • GL_EXT_read_format_bgra
    • GL_EXT_texture_format_BGRA8888
    • GL_EXT_texture_compression_dxt1
    • GL_IMG_program_binary
    • GL_IMG_read_format
    • GL_IMG_shader_binary
    • GL_IMG_texture_compression_pvrtc
    • GL_IMG_multisampled_render_to_texture
    • GL_NV_coverage_sample
    • GL_NV_depth_nonlinear
    • GL_QCOM_extended_get
    • GL_QCOM_extended_get2
    • GL_QCOM_writeonly_rendering
    • GL_QCOM_tiled_rendering
    EGL
    • EGL_ANDROID_recordable
    • EGL_NV_system_time

Android NDK, Revision 6b (August 2011)

This release of the NDK does not include any new features compared to r6. The r6b release addresses the following issues in the r6 release:

Important bug fixes
  • Fixed the build when APP_ABI="armeabi x86" is used for multi-architecture builds.
  • Fixed the location of prebuilt STLport binaries in the NDK release package. A bug in the packaging script placed them in the wrong location.
  • Fixed atexit() usage in shared libraries with the x86standalone toolchain.
  • Fixed make-standalone-toolchain.sh --arch=x86. It used to fail to copy the proper GNU libstdc++ binaries to the right location.
  • Fixed the standalone toolchain linker warnings about missing the definition and size for the __dso_handle symbol (ARM only).
  • Fixed the inclusion order of $(SYSROOT)/usr/include for x86 builds. See the bug for more information.
  • Fixed the definitions of ptrdiff_t and size_t in x86-specific systems when they are used with the x86 standalone toolchain.

Android NDK, Revision 6 (July 2011)

This release of the NDK includes support for the x86 ABI and other minor changes. For detailed information describing the changes in this release, read the CHANGES.HTML document included in the NDK package.

General notes:
  • Adds support for the x86 ABI, which allows you to generate machine code that runs on compatible x86-based Android devices. Major features for x86 include x86-specific toolchains, system headers, libraries and debugging support. For all of the details regarding x86 support, see docs/CPU-X86.html in the NDK package.

    By default, code is generated for ARM-based devices, but you can add x86 to your APP_ABI definition in your Application.mk file to build for x86 platforms. For example, the following line instructs ndk-build to build your code for three distinct ABIs:

    APP_ABI := armeabi armeabi-v7a x86

    Unless you rely on ARM-based assembly sources, you shouldn't need to touch your Android.mk files to build x86 machine code.

  • You can build a standalone x86 toolchain using the --toolchain=x86-4.4.3 option when calling make-standalone-toolchain.sh. See docs/STANDALONE-TOOLCHAIN.html for more details.
  • The new ndk-stack tool lets you translate stack traces in logcat that are generated by native code. The tool translates instruction addresses into a readable format that contains things such as the function, source file, and line number corresponding to each stack frame. For more information and a usage example, see docs/NDK-STACK.html.
Other changes:
arm-eabi-4.4.0, which had been deprecated since NDK r5, has been removed from the NDK distribution.

Android NDK, Revision 5c (June 2011)

This release of the NDK does not include any new features compared to r5b. The r5c release addresses the following problems in the r5b release:

Important bug fixes:
  • ndk-build: Fixed a rare bug that appeared when trying to perform parallel builds of debuggable projects.
  • Fixed a typo that prevented LOCAL_WHOLE_STATIC_LIBRARIES to work correctly with the new toolchain and added documentation for this in docs/ANDROID-MK.html.
  • Fixed a bug where code linked against gnustl_static crashed when run on platform releases older than API level 8 (Android 2.2).
  • ndk-gdb: Fixed a bug that caused a segmentation fault when debugging Android 3.0 or newer devices.
  • <android/input.h>: Two functions that were introduced in API level 9 (Android 2.3) were incorrect and are fixed. While this breaks the source API, the binary interface to the system is unchanged. The incorrect functions were missing a history_index parameter, and the correct definitions are shown below:
    float AMotionEvent_getHistoricalRawX(const AInputEvent* motion_event,
                                               size_t pointer_index,
                                               size_t history_index);
    
    float AMotionEvent_getHistoricalRawY(const AInputEvent* motion_event,
                                               size_t pointer_index,
                                               size_t history_index);
    
  • Updated the C library ARM binary for API level 9 (Android 2.3) to correctly expose at link time new functions that were added in that API level (for example, pthread_rwlock_init).
Minor improvements and fixes:
  • Object files are now always linked in the order they appear in LOCAL_SRC_FILES. This was not the case previously because the files were grouped by source extensions instead.
  • When import-module fails, it now prints the list of directories that were searched. This is useful to check that the NDK_MODULE_PATH definition used by the build system is correct.
  • When import-module succeeds, it now prints the directory where the module was found to the log (visible with NDK_LOG=1).
  • Increased the build speed of debuggable applications when there is a very large number of include directories in the project.
  • ndk-gdb: Better detection of adb shell failures and improved error messages.
  • <pthread.h>: Fixed the definition of PTHREAD_RWLOCK_INITIALIZER for API level 9 (Android 2.3) and higher.
  • Fixed an issue where a module could import itself, resulting in an infinite loop in GNU Make.
  • Fixed a bug that caused the build to fail if LOCAL_ARM_NEON was set to true (typo in build/core/build-binary.mk).
  • Fixed a bug that prevented the compilation of .s assembly files (.S files were okay).

Android NDK, Revision 5b (January 2011)

This release of the NDK does not include any new features compared to r5. The r5b release addresses the following problems in the r5 release:

  • The r5 binaries required glibc 2.11, but the r5b binaries are generated with a special toolchain that targets glibc 2.7 or higher instead. The Linux toolchain binaries now run on Ubuntu 8.04 or higher.
  • Fixes a compiler bug in the arm-linux-androideabi-4.4.3 toolchain. The previous binary generated invalid thumb instruction sequences when dealing with signed chars.
  • Adds missing documentation for the "gnustl_static" value for APP_STL, that allows you to link against a static library version of GNU libstdc++.
  • The following ndk-build issues are fixed:
    • A bug that created inconsistent dependency files when a compilation error occured on Windows. This prevented a proper build after the error was fixed in the source code.
    • A Cygwin-specific bug where using very short paths for the Android NDK installation or the project path led to the generation of invalid dependency files. This made incremental builds impossible.
    • A typo that prevented the cpufeatures library from working correctly with the new NDK toolchain.
    • Builds in Cygwin are faster by avoiding calls to cygpath -m from GNU Make for every source or object file, which caused problems with very large source trees. In case this doesn't work properly, define NDK_USE_CYGPATH=1 in your environment to use cygpath -m again.
    • The Cygwin installation now notifies the user of invalid installation paths that contain spaces. Previously, an invalid path would output an error that complained about an incorrect version of GNU Make, even if the right one was installed.
  • Fixed a typo that prevented the NDK_MODULE_PATH environment variable from working properly when it contained multiple directories separated with a colon.
  • The prebuilt-common.sh script contains fixes to check the compiler for 64-bit generated machine code, instead of relying on the host tag, which allows the 32-bit toolchain to rebuild properly on Snow Leopard. The toolchain rebuild scripts now also support using a 32-bit host toolchain.
  • A missing declaration for INET_ADDRSTRLEN was added to <netinet/in.h>.
  • Missing declarations for IN6_IS_ADDR_MC_NODELOCAL and IN6_IS_ADDR_MC_GLOBAL were added to <netinet/in6.h>.
  • 'asm' was replaced with '__asm__' in <asm/byteorder.h> to allow compilation with -std=c99.

Android NDK, Revision 5 (December 2010)

This release of the NDK includes many new APIs, most of which are introduced to support the development of games and similar applications that make extensive use of native code. Using the APIs, developers have direct native access to events, audio, graphics and window management, assets, and storage. Developers can also implement the Android application lifecycle in native code with help from the new NativeActivity class. For detailed information describing the changes in this release, read the CHANGES.HTML document included in the downloaded NDK package.

General notes:
  • Adds support for native activities, which allows you to implement the Android application lifecycle in native code.
  • Adds native support for the following:
    • Input subsystem (such as the keyboard and touch screen)
    • Access to sensor data (accelerometer, compass, gyroscope, etc).
    • Event loop APIs to wait for things such as input and sensor events.
    • Window and surface subsystem
    • Audio APIs based on the OpenSL ES standard that support playback and recording as well as control over platform audio effects
    • Access to assets packaged in an .apk file.
  • Includes a new toolchain (based on GCC 4.4.3), which generates better code, and can also now be used as a standalone cross-compiler, for people who want to build their stuff with ./configure && make. See docs/STANDALONE-TOOLCHAIN.html for the details. The binaries for GCC 4.4.0 are still provided, but the 4.2.1 binaries were removed.
  • Adds support for prebuilt static and shared libraries (docs/PREBUILTS.html) and module exports and imports to make sharing and reuse of third-party modules much easier (docs/IMPORT-MODULE.html explains why).
  • Provides a default C++ STL implementation (based on STLport) as a helper module. It can be used either as a static or shared library (details and usage examples are in sources/android/stlport/README). Prebuilt binaries for STLport (static or shared) and GNU libstdc++ (static only) are also provided if you choose to compile against those libraries instead of the default C++ STL implementation. C++ Exceptions and RTTI are not supported in the default STL implementation. For more information, see docs/CPLUSPLUS-SUPPORT.HTML.
  • Includes improvements to the cpufeatures helper library that improves reporting of the CPU type (some devices previously reported ARMv7 CPU when the device really was an ARMv6). We recommend developers that use this library to rebuild their applications then upload to Google Play to benefit from the improvements.
  • Adds an EGL library that lets you create and manage OpenGL ES textures and services.
  • Adds new sample applications, native-plasma and native-activity, to demonstrate how to write a native activity.
  • Includes many bugfixes and other small improvements; see docs/CHANGES.html for a more detailed list of changes.

Android NDK, Revision 4b (June 2010)

NDK r4b notes:

Includes fixes for several issues in the NDK build and debugging scripts — if you are using NDK r4, we recommend downloading the NDK r4b build. For detailed information describing the changes in this release, read the CHANGES.TXT document included in the downloaded NDK package.

General notes:
  • Provides a simplified build system through the new ndk-build build command.
  • Adds support for easy native debugging of generated machine code on production devices through the new ndk-gdb command.
  • Adds a new Android-specific ABI for ARM-based CPU architectures, armeabi-v7a. The new ABI extends the existing armeabi ABI to include these CPU instruction set extensions:
    • Thumb-2 instructions
    • VFP hardware FPU instructions (VFPv3-D16)
    • Optional support for ARM Advanced SIMD (NEON) GCC intrinsics and VFPv3-D32. Supported by devices such as Verizon Droid by Motorola, Google Nexus One, and others.
  • Adds a new cpufeatures static library (with sources) that lets your app detect the host device's CPU features at runtime. Specifically, applications can check for ARMv7-A support, as well as VFPv3-D32 and NEON support, then provide separate code paths as needed.
  • Adds a sample application, hello-neon, that illustrates how to use the cpufeatures library to check CPU features and then provide an optimized code path using NEON instrinsics, if supported by the CPU.
  • Lets you generate machine code for either or both of the instruction sets supported by the NDK. For example, you can build for both ARMv5 and ARMv7-A architectures at the same time and have everything stored to your application's final .apk.
  • To ensure that your applications are available to users only if their devices are capable of running them, Google Play now filters applications based on the instruction set information included in your application — no action is needed on your part to enable the filtering. Additionally, the Android system itself also checks your application at install time and allows the installation to continue only if the application provides a library that is compiled for the device's CPU architecture.
  • Adds support for Android 2.2, including a new stable API for accessing the pixel buffers of Bitmap objects from native code.

Android NDK, Revision 3 (March 2010)

General notes:
  • Adds OpenGL ES 2.0 native library support.
  • Adds a sample application,hello-gl2, that illustrates the use of OpenGL ES 2.0 vertex and fragment shaders.
  • The toolchain binaries have been refreshed for this release with GCC 4.4.0, which should generate slightly more compact and efficient machine code than the previous one (4.2.1). The NDK also still provides the 4.2.1 binaries, which you can optionally use to build your machine code.

Android NDK, Revision 2 (September 2009)

Originally released as "Android 1.6 NDK, Release 1".

General notes:
  • Adds OpenGL ES 1.1 native library support.
  • Adds a sample application, san-angeles, that renders 3D graphics through the native OpenGL ES APIs, while managing activity lifecycle with a GLSurfaceView object.

Android NDK, Revision 1 (June 2009)

Originally released as "Android 1.5 NDK, Release 1".

General notes:
  • Includes compiler support (GCC) for ARMv5TE instructions, including Thumb-1 instructions.
  • Includes system headers for stable native APIs, documentation, and sample applications.

System and Software Requirements

The sections below describe the system and software requirements for using the Android NDK, as well as platform compatibility considerations that affect appplications using libraries produced with the NDK.

The Android SDK

  • A complete Android SDK installation (including all dependencies) is required.
  • Android 1.5 SDK or later version is required.

Supported operating systems

  • Windows XP (32-bit) or Vista (32- or 64-bit)
  • Mac OS X 10.4.8 or later (x86 only)
  • Linux (32 or 64-bit; Ubuntu 8.04, or other Linux distributions using GLibc 2.7 or later)

Required development tools

  • For all development platforms, GNU Make 3.81 or later is required. Earlier versions of GNU Make might work but have not been tested.
  • A recent version of awk (either GNU Awk or Nawk) is also required.
  • For Windows, Cygwin 1.7 or higher is required. The NDK will not work with Cygwin 1.5 installations.

Android platform compatibility

  • The native libraries created by the Android NDK can only be used on devices running specific minimum Android platform versions. The minimum required platform version depends on the CPU architecture of the devices you are targeting. The following table details which Android platform versions are compatible with native code developed for specific CPU architectures.
    Native Code CPU Architecture Used Compatible Android Platform(s)
    ARM, ARM-NEON Android 1.5 (API Level 3) and higher
    x86 Android 2.3 (API Level 9) and higher
    MIPS Android 2.3 (API Level 9) and higher

    These requirements mean you can use native libraries produced with the NDK in applications that are deployable to ARM-based devices running Android 1.5 or later. If you are deploying native libraries to x86 and MIPS-based devices, your application must target Android 2.3 or later.

  • To ensure compatibility, an application using a native library produced with the NDK must declare a <uses-sdk> element in its manifest file, with an android:minSdkVersion attribute value of "3" or higher. For example:
    <manifest>
      <uses-sdk android:minSdkVersion="3" />
      ...
    </manifest>
    
  • If you use this NDK to create a native library that uses the OpenGL ES APIs, the application containing the library can be deployed only to devices running the minimum platform versions described in the table below. To ensure compatibility, make sure that your application declares the proper android:minSdkVersion attribute value, as shown in the following table.
  • OpenGL ES Version Used Compatible Android Platform(s) Required uses-sdk Attribute
    OpenGL ES 1.1 Android 1.6 (API Level 4) and higher android:minSdkVersion="4"
    OpenGL ES 2.0 Android 2.0 (API Level 5) and higher android:minSdkVersion="5"

    For more information about API Level and its relationship to Android platform versions, see Android API Levels.

  • Additionally, an application using the OpenGL ES APIs should declare a <uses-feature> element in its manifest, with an android:glEsVersion attribute that specifies the minimum OpenGl ES version required by the application. This ensures that Google Play will show your application only to users whose devices are capable of supporting your application. For example:
    <manifest>
    
      <uses-feature android:glEsVersion="0x00020000" />
      ...
    </manifest>
    

    For more information, see the <uses-feature> documentation.

  • If you use this NDK to create a native library that uses the API to access Android Bitmap pixel buffers or utilizes native activities, the application containing the library can be deployed only to devices running Android 2.2 (API level 8) or higher. To ensure compatibility, make sure that your application declares <uses-sdk android:minSdkVersion="8" /> attribute value in its manifest.

Installing the NDK

Installing the NDK on your development computer is straightforward and involves extracting the NDK from its download package.

Before you get started make sure that you have downloaded the latest Android SDK and upgraded your applications and environment as needed. The NDK is compatible with older platform versions but not older versions of the SDK tools. Also, take a moment to review the System and Software Requirements for the NDK, if you haven't already.

To install the NDK, follow these steps:

  1. From the table at the top of this page, select the NDK package that is appropriate for your development computer and download the package.
  2. Uncompress the NDK download package using tools available on your computer. When uncompressed, the NDK files are contained in a directory called android-ndk-<version>. You can rename the NDK directory if necessary and you can move it to any location on your computer. This documentation refers to the NDK directory as <ndk>.

You are now ready to start working with the NDK.

Getting Started with the NDK

Once you've installed the NDK successfully, take a few minutes to read the documentation included in the NDK. You can find the documentation in the <ndk>/docs/ directory. In particular, please read the OVERVIEW.HTML document completely, so that you understand the intent of the NDK and how to use it.

If you used a previous version of the NDK, take a moment to review the list of NDK changes in the CHANGES.HTML document.

Here's the general outline of how you work with the NDK tools:

  1. Place your native sources under <project>/jni/...
  2. Create <project>/jni/Android.mk to describe your native sources to the NDK build system
  3. Optional: Create <project>/jni/Application.mk.
  4. Build your native code by running the 'ndk-build' script from your project's directory. It is located in the top-level NDK directory:
    cd <project>
    <ndk>/ndk-build
    

    The build tools copy the stripped, shared libraries needed by your application to the proper location in the application's project directory.

  5. Finally, compile your application using the SDK tools in the usual way. The SDK build tools will package the shared libraries in the application's deployable .apk file.

For complete information on all of the steps listed above, please see the documentation included with the NDK package.

Using the NDK

The Android framework provides two ways to use native code:

  • Write your application using the Android framework and use JNI to access the APIs provided by the Android NDK. This technique allows you to take advantage of the convenience of the Android framework, but still allows you to write native code when necessary. If you use this approach, your application must target specific, minimum Android platform levels, see Android platform compatibility for more information.
  • Write a native activity, which allows you to implement the lifecycle callbacks in native code. The Android SDK provides the NativeActivity class, which is a convenience class that notifies your native code of any activity lifecycle callbacks (onCreate(), onPause(), onResume(), etc). You can implement the callbacks in your native code to handle these events when they occur. Applications that use native activities must be run on Android 2.3 (API Level 9) or later.

    You cannot access features such as Services and Content Providers natively, so if you want to use them or any other framework API, you can still write JNI code to do so.

Contents of the NDK

The NDK contains the APIs, documentation, and sample applications that help you write your native code. Specifically:

  • A set of tools and build files used to generate native code libraries from C and C++ sources
  • A way to embed the corresponding native libraries into an application package file (.apk) that can be deployed on Android devices
  • A set of native system headers and libraries that will be supported in all future versions of the Android platform, starting from Android 1.5. Applications that use native activities must be run on Android 2.3 or later.
  • Documentation, samples, and tutorials

The latest release of the NDK supports the following instruction sets:

  • ARMv5TE, including Thumb-1 instructions (see docs/CPU-ARCH-ABIS.html for more information)
  • ARMv7-A, including Thumb-2 and VFPv3-D16 instructions, with optional support for NEON/VFPv3-D32 instructions (see docs/CPU-ARM-NEON.html for more information)
  • x86 instructions (see docs/CPU-X86.html for more information)
  • MIPS instructions (see docs/CPU-MIPS.html for more information)

ARMv5TE machine code will run on all ARM-based Android devices. ARMv7-A will run only on devices such as the Verizon Droid or Google Nexus One that have a compatible CPU. The main difference between the two instruction sets is that ARMv7-A supports hardware FPU, Thumb-2, and NEON instructions. You can target either or both of the instruction sets — ARMv5TE is the default, but switching to ARMv7-A is as easy as adding a single line to the application's Application.mk file, without needing to change anything else in the file. You can also build for both architectures at the same time and have everything stored in the final .apk. Complete information is provided in the CPU-ARCH-ABIS.HTML in the NDK package.

The NDK provides stable headers for libc (the C library), libm (the Math library), OpenGL ES (3D graphics library), the JNI interface, and other libraries, as listed in the Development tools section.

Development tools

The NDK includes a set of cross-toolchains (compilers, linkers, etc..) that can generate native ARM binaries on Linux, OS X, and Windows (with Cygwin) platforms.

It provides a set of system headers for stable native APIs that are guaranteed to be supported in all later releases of the platform:

  • libc (C library) headers
  • libm (math library) headers
  • JNI interface headers
  • libz (Zlib compression) headers
  • liblog (Android logging) header
  • OpenGL ES 1.1 and OpenGL ES 2.0 (3D graphics libraries) headers
  • libjnigraphics (Pixel buffer access) header (for Android 2.2 and above).
  • A Minimal set of headers for C++ support
  • OpenSL ES native audio libraries
  • Android native application APIS

The NDK also provides a build system that lets you work efficiently with your sources, without having to handle the toolchain/platform/CPU/ABI details. You create very short build files to describe which sources to compile and which Android application will use them — the build system compiles the sources and places the shared libraries directly in your application project.

Important: With the exception of the libraries listed above, native system libraries in the Android platform are not stable and may change in future platform versions. Your applications should only make use of the stable native system libraries provided in this NDK.

Documentation

The NDK package includes a set of documentation that describes the capabilities of the NDK and how to use it to create shared libraries for your Android applications. In this release, the documentation is provided only in the downloadable NDK package. You can find the documentation in the <ndk>/docs/ directory. Included are these files (partial listing):

  • INSTALL.HTML — describes how to install the NDK and configure it for your host system
  • OVERVIEW.HTML — provides an overview of the NDK capabilities and usage
  • ANDROID-MK.HTML — describes the use of the Android.mk file, which defines the native sources you want to compile
  • APPLICATION-MK.HTML — describes the use of the Application.mk file, which describes the native sources required by your Android application
  • CPLUSPLUS-SUPPORT.HTML — describes the C++ support provided in the Android NDK
  • CPU-ARCH-ABIS.HTML — a description of supported CPU architectures and how to target them.
  • CPU-FEATURES.HTML — a description of the cpufeatures static library that lets your application code detect the target device's CPU family and the optional features at runtime.
  • CHANGES.HTML — a complete list of changes to the NDK across all releases.
  • DEVELOPMENT.HTML — describes how to modify the NDK and generate release packages for it
  • HOWTO.HTML — information about common tasks associated with NDK development
  • IMPORT-MODULE.HTML — describes how to share and reuse modules
  • LICENSES.HTML — information about the various open source licenses that govern the Android NDK
  • NATIVE-ACTIVITY.HTML — describes how to implement native activities
  • NDK-BUILD.HTML — describes the usage of the ndk-build script
  • NDK-GDB.HTML — describes how to use the native code debugger
  • PREBUILTS.HTML — information about how shared and static prebuilt libraries work
  • STANDALONE-TOOLCHAIN.HTML — describes how to use Android NDK toolchain as a standalone compiler (still in beta).
  • SYSTEM-ISSUES.HTML — known issues in the Android system images that you should be aware of, if you are developing using the NDK.
  • STABLE-APIS.HTML — a complete list of the stable APIs exposed by headers in the NDK.

Additionally, the package includes detailed information about the "bionic" C library provided with the Android platform that you should be aware of, if you are developing using the NDK. You can find the documentation in the <ndk>/docs/system/libc/ directory:

  • OVERVIEW.HTML — provides an overview of the "bionic" C library and the features it offers.

Sample apps

The NDK includes sample applications that illustrate how to use native code in your Android applications:

  • hello-jni — a simple application that loads a string from a native method implemented in a shared library and then displays it in the application UI.
  • two-libs — a simple application that loads a shared library dynamically and calls a native method provided by the library. In this case, the method is implemented in a static library imported by the shared library.
  • san-angeles — a simple application that renders 3D graphics through the native OpenGL ES APIs, while managing activity lifecycle with a GLSurfaceView object.
  • hello-gl2 — a simple application that renders a triangle using OpenGL ES 2.0 vertex and fragment shaders.
  • hello-neon — a simple application that shows how to use the cpufeatures library to check CPU capabilities at runtime, then use NEON intrinsics if supported by the CPU. Specifically, the application implements two versions of a tiny benchmark for a FIR filter loop, a C version and a NEON-optimized version for devices that support it.
  • bitmap-plasma — a simple application that demonstrates how to access the pixel buffers of Android Bitmap objects from native code, and uses this to generate an old-school "plasma" effect.
  • native-activity — a simple application that demonstrates how to use the native-app-glue static library to create a native activity
  • native-plasma — a version of bitmap-plasma implemented with a native activity.

For each sample, the NDK includes the corresponding C source code and the necessary Android.mk and Application.mk files. There are located under <ndk>/samples/<name>/ and their source code can be found under <ndk>/samples/<name>/jni/.

You can build the shared libraries for the sample apps by going into <ndk>/samples/<name>/ then calling the ndk-build command. The generated shared libraries will be located under <ndk>/samples/<name>/libs/armeabi/ for (ARMv5TE machine code) and/or <ndk>/samples/<name>/libs/armeabi-v7a/ for (ARMv7 machine code).

Next, build the sample Android applications that use the shared libraries:

  • If you are developing in Eclipse with ADT, use the New Project Wizard to create a new Android project for each sample, using the "Import from Existing Source" option and importing the source from <ndk>/samples/<name>/. Then, set up an AVD, if necessary, and build/run the application in the emulator.
  • If you are developing with Ant, use the android tool to create the build file for each of the sample projects at <ndk>/samples/<name>/. Then set up an AVD, if necessary, build your project in the usual way, and run it in the emulator.

For more information about developing with the Android SDK tools and what you need to do to create, build, and run your applications, see the Overview section for developing on Android.

Exploring the hello-jni Sample

The hello-jni sample is a simple demonstration on how to use JNI from an Android application. The HelloJni activity receives a string from a simple C function and displays it in a TextView.

The main components of the sample include:

  • The familiar basic structure of an Android application (an AndroidManifest.xml file, a src/ and res directories, and a main activity)
  • A jni/ directory that includes the implemented source file for the native code as well as the Android.mk file
  • A tests/ directory that contains unit test code.
  1. Create a new project in Eclipse from the existing sample source or use the android tool to update the project so it generates a build.xml file that you can use to build the sample.
    • In Eclipse:
      1. Click File > New Android Project...
      2. Select the Create project from existing source radio button.
      3. Select any API level above Android 1.5.
      4. In the Location field, click Browse... and select the <ndk-root>/samples/hello-jni directory.
      5. Click Finish.
    • On the command line:
      1. Change to the <ndk-root>/samples/hello-jni directory.
      2. Run the following command to generate a build.xml file:
        android update project -p . -s
  2. Compile the native code using the ndk-build command.
    cd <ndk-root>/samples/hello-jni
    <ndk_root>/ndk-build
    
  3. Build and install the application as you would a normal Android application. If you are using Eclipse, run the application to build and install it on a device. If you are using Ant, run the following commands from the project directory:
    ant debug
    adb install bin/HelloJni-debug.apk
    

When you run the application on the device, the string Hello JNI should appear on your device. You can explore the rest of the samples that are located in the <ndk-root>/samples directory for more examples on how to use the JNI.

Exploring the native-activity Sample Application

The native-activity sample provided with the Android NDK demonstrates how to use the android_native_app_glue static library. This static library makes creating a native activity easier by providing you with an implementation that handles your callbacks in another thread, so you do not have to worry about them blocking your main UI thread. The main parts of the sample are described below:

  • The familiar basic structure of an Android application (an AndroidManifest.xml file, a src/ and res directories). The AndroidManifest.xml declares that the application is native and specifies the .so file of the native activity. See NativeActivity for the source or see the <ndk_root>/platforms/samples/native-activity/AndroidManifest.xml file.
  • A jni/ directory contains the native activity, main.c, which uses the android_native_app_glue.h interface to implement the activity. The Android.mk that describes the native module to the build system also exists here.

To build this sample application:

  1. Create a new project in Eclipse from the existing sample source or use the android tool to update the project so it generates a build.xml file that you can use to build the sample.
    • In Eclipse:
      1. Click File > New Android Project...
      2. Select the Create project from existing source radio button.
      3. Select any API level above Android 2.3.
      4. In the Location field, click Browse... and select the <ndk-root>/samples/native-activity directory.
      5. Click Finish.
    • On the command line:
      1. Change to the <ndk-root>/samples/native-activity directory.
      2. Run the following command to generate a build.xml file:
        android update project -p . -s
        
  2. Compile the native code using the ndk-build command.
    cd <ndk-root>/platforms/samples/android-9/samples/native-activity
    <ndk_root>/ndk-build
    
  3. Build and install the application as you would a normal Android application. If you are using Eclipse, run the application to build and install it on a device. If you are using Ant, run the following commands in the project directory, then run the application on the device:
    ant debug
    adb install bin/NativeActivity-debug.apk