1page.title=Adding a New Device 2@jd:body 3 4<!-- 5 Copyright 2015 The Android Open Source Project 6 7 Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); 8 you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. 9 You may obtain a copy of the License at 10 11 http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 12 13 Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software 14 distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, 15 WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. 16 See the License for the specific language governing permissions and 17 limitations under the License. 18--> 19<div id="qv-wrapper"> 20 <div id="qv"> 21 <h2>In this document</h2> 22 <ol id="auto-toc"> 23 </ol> 24 </div> 25</div> 26 27<p>Use the information in this page to create the Makefiles for your device and 28product. Please note, unlike the other pages in this section, the contents here 29are applicable only when creating an entirely new device type and are intended 30for company build and product teams only.</p> 31 32<h2 id="build-layers">Understand Build Layers</h2> 33 34<p>The build hierarchy includes the abstraction layers that correspond to the 35physical makeup of a device. These layers are described in the table below. 36Each layer relates to the one above it in a one-to-many relationship. For 37example, an architecture can have more than one board and each board can have 38more than one product. You may define an element in a given layer as a 39specialization of an element in the same layer, thus eliminating copying and 40simplifying maintenance.</p> 41 42<table> 43 <tbody><tr> 44 <th>Layer</th> 45 <th>Example</th> 46 <th>Description</th> 47 </tr> 48 <tr> 49 <td>Product</td> 50 <td>myProduct, myProduct_eu, myProduct_eu_fr, j2, sdk</td> 51 <td><p>The product layer defines the feature specification of a shipping product such as the modules to build, 52 locales supported, and the configuration for various locales. In other words, this is the name of the 53 overall product. Product-specific variables are defined in product definition Makefiles. A product 54 can inherit from other product definitions, 55 which simplifies maintenance. A common method is to create a base product that contains features that apply 56 for all products, then creating product variants based on that base product. For example, you can have 57 two products that differ only by their radios (CDMA vs GSM) inherit from the same base product that does not define a radio. 58</td> 59 60 </tr> 61 <tr> 62 <td>Board/Device</td> 63 <td>sardine, trout, goldfish</td> 64 <td>The device/board layer represents the physical layer of plastic on the 65 device (i.e. the industrial design of the device). For example, North American 66 devices probably include QWERTY keyboards whereas devices sold in France 67 probably include AZERTY keyboards. This layer also represents the bare 68 schematics of a product. These include the peripherals on the board and their 69 configuration. The names used are merely codes for different board/device configurations.</td> 70 </tr> 71<tr> 72 <td>Arch</td> 73 <td>arm, x86, mips, arm64, x86_64, mips64</td> 74 <td>The architecture layer describes the processor configuration and ABI (Application Binary Interface) running on the board. </td> 75 </tr> 76</table> 77 78<h2 id="build-variants">Use Build Variants</h2> 79 80<p>When building for a particular product, it's often useful to have minor 81variations on what is ultimately the final release build. In a module 82definition, the module can specify tags with <code>LOCAL_MODULE_TAGS</code>, 83which can be one or more values of <code>optional</code> (default), 84<code>debug</code>, <code>eng</code>.</p> 85 86<p>If a module doesn't specify a tag (by <code>LOCAL_MODULE_TAGS</code>), its 87tag defaults to <code>optional</code>. An optional module is installed only if 88it is required by product configuration with <code>PRODUCT_PACKAGES</code>. 89 90<p>These are the currently-defined build variants:</p> 91 92<table border=1> 93<tr> 94 <td> 95 <code>eng<code> 96 </td> 97 <td> 98 This is the default flavor. 99 <ul> 100 <li>Installs modules tagged with: <code>eng</code> and/or <code>debug</code>. 101 <li>Installs modules according to the product definition files, in addition to tagged modules.</li> 102 <li><code>ro.secure=0</code> 103 <li><code>ro.debuggable=1</code> 104 <li><code>ro.kernel.android.checkjni=1</code> 105 <li><code>adb</code> is enabled by default. 106 </td> 107</tr> 108<tr> 109 <td> 110 <code>user<code> 111 </td> 112 <td> 113 This is the flavor intended to be the final release bits. 114 <ul> 115 <li>Installs modules tagged with <code>user</code>.</li> 116 <li>Installs modules according to the product definition files, in addition to tagged modules.</li> 117 <li><code>ro.secure=1</code> </li> 118 <li><code>ro.debuggable=0</code> </li> 119 <li><code>adb</code> is disabled by default.</li> 120 </td> 121</tr> 122<tr> 123 <td> 124 <code>userdebug<code> 125 </td> 126 <td> 127 The same as <code>user</code>, except: 128 <ul> 129 <li>Also installs modules tagged with <code>debug</code>. 130 <li><code>ro.debuggable=1</code> 131 <li><code>adb</code> is enabled by default. 132 </td> 133</tr> 134</table> 135 136<h2 id="build-a-product">Build a Product</h2> 137 138<p> 139There are many ways to organize the source files for your device. We'll briefly 140go over how the Nexus 6 implementation was organized as an example, but you can 141organize your source files and build the way you see fit. 142</p> 143<p> 144Nexus 6 was implemented with a main device configuration named 145<code>shamu</code>. From this device configuration, a product is created with a 146product definition Makefile that declares product-specific information about 147the device such as the name and model. You can view the 148<code>device/moto/shamu</code> directory to see how all of this is setup. 149</p> 150<h3 id="makefiles">Write the Makefiles</h2> 151<p> 152 The following steps describe how to set up product Makefiles in a way similar 153to that of the Nexus 6 product line: 154</p> 155<ol> 156 <li>Create a <code>device/<company_name>/<device_name></code> directory for your 157 product. For example, <code>device/moto/shamu</code>. This directory will contain source code 158 for your device along with the Makefiles to build them. 159 </li> 160 161 <li>Create a <code>device.mk</code> Makefile that declares the files and modules needed for the 162 device. For an example, see <code>device/moto/shamu/device.mk</code>. 163 </li> 164 165 <li>Create a product definition Makefile to create a specific product based on the device. The 166 following Makefile is taken from <code>device/moto/shamu/aosp_shamu.mk</code> as an example. 167 Notice the product is inheriting from the 168 <code>device/moto/shamu/device.mk</code> and 169 <code>vendor/moto/shamu/device-vendor.mk</code> files via the Makefile while 170 also declaring the product-specific information such as name, brand, and model. 171 172<pre> 173# Inherit from the common Open Source product configuration 174$(call inherit-product, $(SRC_TARGET_DIR)/product/aosp_base_telephony.mk) 175 176PRODUCT_NAME := aosp_shamu 177PRODUCT_DEVICE := shamu 178PRODUCT_BRAND := Android 179PRODUCT_MODEL := AOSP on Shamu 180PRODUCT_MANUFACTURER := motorola 181PRODUCT_RESTRICT_VENDOR_FILES := true 182 183$(call inherit-product, device/moto/shamu/device.mk) 184$(call inherit-product-if-exists, vendor/moto/shamu/device-vendor.mk) 185 186PRODUCT_NAME := aosp_shamu 187 188PRODUCT_PACKAGES += \ 189 Launcher3 190</pre> 191 192 <p> 193 See <a href="#prod-def">Product Definition Variables</a> for additional product-specific 194 variables you can add to your Makefiles. 195 </p> 196 </li> 197 198 <li>Create an <code>AndroidProducts.mk</code> file that points to the product's Makefiles. In 199 this example, only the product definition Makefile is needed. The example below is from 200 <code>device/moto/shamu/AndroidProducts.mk</code>: 201 <pre> 202# 203# This file should set PRODUCT_MAKEFILES to a list of product makefiles 204# to expose to the build system. LOCAL_DIR will already be set to 205# the directory containing this file. 206# 207# This file may not rely on the value of any variable other than 208# LOCAL_DIR; do not use any conditionals, and do not look up the 209# value of any variable that isn't set in this file or in a file that 210# it includes. 211# 212 213PRODUCT_MAKEFILES := \ 214 $(LOCAL_DIR)/aosp_shamu.mk 215</pre> 216 </li> 217 218 <li>Create a <code>BoardConfig.mk</code> Makefile that contains board-specific configurations. 219 For an example, see <code>device/moto/shamu/BoardConfig.mk</code>. 220 </li> 221 222 <li>Create a <code>vendorsetup.sh</code> file to add your product (a "lunch combo") to the build 223 along with a <a href="#build-variants">build variant</a> separated by a dash. For example: 224<pre> 225add_lunch_combo <product_name>-userdebug 226</pre> 227 </li> 228 229 <li>At this point, you can create more product variants based on the same device. 230 </li> 231 232</ol> 233<h3 id="prod-def">Set Product Definition Variables</h3> 234<p> 235 Product-specific variables are defined in the product's Makefile. Variables maintained in a 236 product definition files include: 237</p> 238<table> 239 <tbody> 240 <tr> 241 <th> 242 Parameter 243 </th> 244 <th> 245 Description 246 </th> 247 <th> 248 Example 249 </th> 250 </tr> 251 <tr> 252 <td> 253 PRODUCT_AAPT_CONFIG 254 </td> 255 <td> 256 <code>aapt</code> configurations to use when creating packages 257 </td> 258 <td></td> 259 </tr> 260 <tr> 261 <td> 262 PRODUCT_BRAND 263 </td> 264 <td> 265 The brand (e.g., carrier) the software is customized for, if any 266 </td> 267 <td></td> 268 </tr> 269 <tr> 270 <td> 271 PRODUCT_CHARACTERISTICS 272 </td> 273 <td> 274 <code>aapt</code> characteristics to allow adding variant-specific resources to a package. 275 </td> 276 <td> 277 tablet,nosdcard 278 </td> 279 </tr> 280 <tr> 281 <td> 282 PRODUCT_COPY_FILES 283 </td> 284 <td> 285 List of words like <code>source_path:destination_path</code>. The file at the source path 286 should be copied to the destination path when building this product. The rules for the copy 287 steps are defined in config/Makefile 288 </td> 289 <td></td> 290 </tr> 291 <tr> 292 <td> 293 PRODUCT_DEVICE 294 </td> 295 <td> 296 Name of the industrial design. This is also the board name, and the build system uses it to locate the <code>BoardConfig.mk.</code> 297 </td> 298 <td> 299 <code>tuna</code> 300 </td> 301 </tr> 302 <tr> 303 <td> 304 PRODUCT_LOCALES 305 </td> 306 <td> 307 A space-separated list of two-letter language code, two-letter country code pairs that 308 describe several settings for the user, such as the UI language and time, date and currency 309 formatting. The first locale listed in PRODUCT_LOCALES is used as the product's default locale. 310 </td> 311 <td> 312 <code>en_GB de_DE es_ES fr_CA</code> 313 </td> 314 </tr> 315 <tr> 316 <td> 317 PRODUCT_MANUFACTURER 318 </td> 319 <td> 320 Name of the manufacturer 321 </td> 322 <td> 323 <code>acme</code> 324 </td> 325 </tr> 326 <tr> 327 <td> 328 PRODUCT_MODEL 329 </td> 330 <td> 331 End-user-visible name for the end product 332 </td> 333 <td></td> 334 </tr> 335 <tr> 336 <td> 337 PRODUCT_NAME 338 </td> 339 <td> 340 End-user-visible name for the overall product. Appears in the Settings > About screen. 341 </td> 342 <td></td> 343 </tr> 344 <tr> 345 <td> 346 PRODUCT_OTA_PUBLIC_KEYS 347 </td> 348 <td> 349 List of Over the Air (OTA) public keys for the product 350 </td> 351 <td></td> 352 </tr> 353 <tr> 354 <td> 355 PRODUCT_PACKAGES 356 </td> 357 <td> 358 Lists the APKs and modules to install. 359 </td> 360 <td> 361 <code>Calendar Contacts</code> 362 </td> 363 </tr> 364 <tr> 365 <td> 366 PRODUCT_PACKAGE_OVERLAYS 367 </td> 368 <td> 369 Indicate whether to use default resources or add any product specific overlays 370 </td> 371 <td> 372 <code>vendor/acme/overlay</code> 373 </td> 374 </tr> 375 <tr> 376 <td> 377 PRODUCT_PROPERTY_OVERRIDES 378 </td> 379 <td> 380 List of system property assignments in the format "key=value" 381 </td> 382 <td></td> 383 </tr> 384 </tbody> 385</table> 386