3.9 KiB
The following instructions apply to v1.2 and later. For earlier versions the best documentation is https://github.com/vcmi/vcmi-android/blob/master/building.txt (and reading scripts in that repo), however very limited to no support will be provided from our side if you wish to go down that rabbit hole.
Note: building has been tested only on Linux and macOS. It may or may not work on Windows out of the box.
Requirements
- CMake 3.20+: download from your package manager or from https://cmake.org/download/
- JDK 11, not necessarily from Oracle
- Android command line tools or Android Studio for your OS: https://developer.android.com/studio/
- Android NDK version r25c (25.2.9519653), there're multiple ways to obtain it:
- install with Android Studio
- install with
sdkmanager
command line tool - download from https://developer.android.com/ndk/downloads
- download with Conan, see #NDK and Conan
- Optional:
- Ninja: download from your package manager or from https://github.com/ninja-build/ninja/releases
- Ccache: download from your package manager or from https://github.com/ccache/ccache/releases
Obtaining source code
Clone https://github.com/vcmi/vcmi with submodules. Example for command line:
git clone --recurse-submodules https://github.com/vcmi/vcmi.git
Obtaining dependencies
We use Conan package manager to build/consume dependencies, find detailed usage instructions here. Note that the link points to the state of the current branch, for the latest release check the same document in the master branch.
On the step where you need to replace PROFILE, choose:
android-32
to build for 32-bit architecture (armeabi-v7a)android-64
to build for 64-bit architecture (aarch64-v8a)
NDK and Conan
Conan must be aware of the NDK location when you execute conan install
. There're multiple ways to achieve that as written in the Conan docs:
- the easiest is to download NDK from Conan (option 1 in the docs), then all the magic happens automatically. On the step where you need to replace PROFILE, choose android-X-ndk where X is either
32
or64
. - to use an already installed NDK, you can simply pass it on the command line to
conan install
: (note that this will work only when consuming the pre-built binaries)
conan install -c tools.android:ndk_path=/path/to/ndk ...
Build process
Building for Android is a 2-step process. First, native C++ code is compiled to a shared library (unlike an executable on other platforms), then Java code is compiled to an actual executable which will be loading the native shared library at runtime.
This is a traditional CMake project, you can build it from command line or some IDE. You're not required to pass any custom options (except Conan toolchain file), defaults are already good. If you wish to use your own CMake presets, inherit them from our build-with-conan
preset.
The Java code (located in the android
directory of the repo) will be built automatically after the native code using the androiddeployqt
tool. But you must set JAVA_HOME
and ANDROID_HOME
environment variables.
APK will appear in <build dir>/android-build/vcmi-app/build/outputs/apk/debug
directory which you can then install to your device with adb install -r /path/to/apk
(adb
command is from Android command line tools).
Example
# the following environment variables must be set
export JAVA_HOME=/path/to/jdk11
export ANDROID_HOME=/path/to/android/sdk
cmake -S . -B ../build -G Ninja -D CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug -D ENABLE_CCACHE:BOOL=ON --toolchain ...
cmake --build ../build
You can also see a more detailed walkthrough on CMake configuration at How to build VCMI (macOS).