Soong is one of the build systems used in Android. There are altogether three:
- The legacy Make-based build system that is controlled by files called
Android.mk
. - Soong, which is controlled by files called
Android.bp
. - The upcoming Bazel-based build system that is controlled by files called
BUILD.bazel
.
Android.bp
file are JSON-like declarative descriptions of "modules" to build;
a "module" is the basic unit of building that Soong understands, similarly to
how "target" is the basic unit of building for Bazel (and Make, although the
two kinds of "targets" are very different)
See Simple Build Configuration on source.android.com to read how Soong is configured for testing.
Code reviews are handled through the usual code review system of Android, available here.
For simple changes (fixing typos, obvious optimizations, etc.), sending a code review request is enough. For more substantial changes, file a bug in our bug tracker or or write us at [email protected] .
By design, Android.bp files are very simple. There are no conditionals or control flow statements - any complexity is handled in build logic written in Go. The syntax and semantics of Android.bp files are intentionally similar to Bazel BUILD files when possible.
A module in an Android.bp file starts with a module type, followed by a set of
properties in name: value,
format:
cc_binary {
name: "gzip",
srcs: ["src/test/minigzip.c"],
shared_libs: ["libz"],
stl: "none",
}
Every module must have a name
property, and the value must be unique across
all Android.bp files.
The list of valid module types and their properties can be generated by calling
m soong_docs
. It will be written to $OUT_DIR/soong/docs/soong_build.html
.
This list for the current version of Soong can be found here.
Properties that take a list of files can also take glob patterns and output path expansions.
-
Glob patterns can contain the normal Unix wildcard
*
, for example"*.java"
.Glob patterns can also contain a single
**
wildcard as a path element, which will match zero or more path elements. For example,java/**/*.java
will matchjava/Main.java
andjava/com/android/Main.java
. -
Output path expansions take the format
:module
or:module{.tag}
, wheremodule
is the name of a module that produces output files, and it expands to a list of those output files. With the optional{.tag}
suffix, the module may produce a different list of outputs according totag
.For example, a
droiddoc
module with the name "my-docs" would return its.stubs.srcjar
output with":my-docs"
, and its.doc.zip
file with":my-docs{.doc.zip}"
.This is commonly used to reference
filegroup
modules, whose output files consist of theirsrcs
.
An Android.bp file may contain top-level variable assignments:
gzip_srcs = ["src/test/minigzip.c"],
cc_binary {
name: "gzip",
srcs: gzip_srcs,
shared_libs: ["libz"],
stl: "none",
}
Variables are scoped to the remainder of the file they are declared in, as well as any child Android.bp files. Variables are immutable with one exception - they can be appended to with a += assignment, but only before they have been referenced.
Android.bp files can contain C-style multiline /* */
and C++ style single-line
//
comments.
Variables and properties are strongly typed. Variables are dynamically typed based on the first assignment, and properties are statically typed by the module type. The supported types are:
- Bool (
true
orfalse
) - Integers (
int
) - Strings (
"string"
) - Lists of strings (
["string1", "string2"]
) - Maps (
{key1: "value1", key2: ["value2"]}
)
Maps may contain values of any type, including nested maps. Lists and maps may have trailing commas after the last value.
Strings can contain double quotes using \"
, for example "cat \"a b\""
.
The +
operator:
- Sums integers.
- Concatenates strings and lists.
- Produces the union of maps.
Concatenating maps produces a map whose keys are the union of the given maps' keys, and whose mapped values are the union of the given maps' corresponding mapped values.
A defaults
module can be used to repeat the same properties in multiple
modules. For example:
cc_defaults {
name: "gzip_defaults",
shared_libs: ["libz"],
stl: "none",
}
cc_binary {
name: "gzip",
defaults: ["gzip_defaults"],
srcs: ["src/test/minigzip.c"],
}
The build is organized into packages where each package is a collection of related files and a specification of the dependencies among them in the form of modules.
A package is defined as a directory containing a file named Android.bp
, residing beneath the
top-level directory in the build and its name is its path relative to the top-level directory. A
package includes all files in its directory, plus all subdirectories beneath it, except those which
themselves contain an Android.bp
file.
The modules in a package's Android.bp
and included files are part of the module.
For example, in the following directory tree (where .../android/
is the top-level Android
directory) there are two packages, my/app
, and the subpackage my/app/tests
. Note that
my/app/data
is not a package, but a directory belonging to package my/app
.
.../android/my/app/Android.bp
.../android/my/app/app.cc
.../android/my/app/data/input.txt
.../android/my/app/tests/Android.bp
.../android/my/app/tests/test.cc
This is based on the Bazel package concept.
The package
module type allows information to be specified about a package. Only a single
package
module can be specified per package and in the case where there are multiple .bp
files
in the same package directory it is highly recommended that the package
module (if required) is
specified in the Android.bp
file.
Unlike most module type package
does not have a name
property. Instead the name is set to the
name of the package, e.g. if the package is in top/intermediate/package
then the package name is
//top/intermediate/package
.
E.g. The following will set the default visibility for all the modules defined in the package and
any subpackages that do not set their own default visibility (irrespective of whether they are in
the same .bp
file as the package
module) to be visible to all the subpackages by default.
package {
default_visibility: [":__subpackages__"]
}
A module libfoo
can be referenced by its name
cc_binary {
name: "app",
shared_libs: ["libfoo"],
}
Obviously, this works only if there is only one libfoo
module in the source
tree. Ensuring such name uniqueness for larger trees may become problematic. We
might also want to use the same name in multiple mutually exclusive subtrees
(for example, implementing different devices) deliberately in order to describe
a functionally equivalent module. Enter Soong namespaces.
The presence of the soong_namespace {..}
in an Android.bp file defines a
namespace. For instance, having
soong_namespace {
...
}
...
in device/google/bonito/Android.bp
informs Soong that within the
device/google/bonito
package the module names are unique, that is, all the
modules defined in the Android.bp files in the device/google/bonito/
tree have
unique names. However, there may be modules with the same names outside
device/google/bonito
tree. Indeed, there is a module "pixelstats-vendor"
both in device/google/bonito/pixelstats
and in
device/google/coral/pixelstats
.
The name of a namespace is the path of its directory. The name of the namespace
in the example above is thus device/google/bonito
.
An implicit global namespace corresponds to the source tree as a whole. It has empty name.
A module name's scope is the smallest namespace containing it. Suppose a
source tree has device/my
and device/my/display
namespaces. If libfoo
module is defined in device/my/display/lib/Android.bp
, its namespace is
device/my/display
.
The name uniqueness thus means that module's name is unique within its scope. In
other words, "//scope:name" is globally unique module reference, e.g,
"//device/google/bonito:pixelstats-vendor"
. Note that the name of the
namespace for a module may be different from module's package name: libfoo
belongs to device/my/display
namespace but is contained in
device/my/display/lib
package.
The form of a module reference determines how Soong locates the module.
For a global reference of the "//scope:name" form, Soong verifies there is a namespace called "scope", then verifies it contains a "name" module and uses it. Soong verifies there is only one "name" in "scope" at the beginning when it parses Android.bp files.
A local reference has "name" form, and resolving it involves looking for a
module "name" in one or more namespaces. By default only the global namespace
is searched for "name" (in other words, only the modules not belonging to an
explicitly defined scope are considered). The imports
attribute of the
soong_namespaces
allows to specify where to look for modules . For instance,
with device/google/bonito/Android.bp
containing
soong_namespace {
imports: [
"hardware/google/interfaces",
"hardware/google/pixel",
"hardware/qcom/bootctrl",
],
}
a reference to "libpixelstats"
will resolve to the module defined in
hardware/google/pixel/pixelstats/Android.bp
because this module is in
hardware/google/pixel
namespace.
TODO: Conventionally, languages with similar concepts provide separate
constructs for namespace definition and name resolution (namespace
and using
in C++, for instance). Should Soong do that, too?
While we are gradually converting makefiles to Android.bp files, Android build is described by a mixture of Android.bp and Android.mk files, and a module defined in an Android.mk file can reference a module defined in Android.bp file. For instance, a binary still defined in an Android.mk file may have a library defined in already converted Android.bp as a dependency.
A module defined in an Android.bp file and belonging to the global namespace can be referenced from a makefile without additional effort. If a module belongs to an explicit namespace, it can be referenced from a makefile only after after the name of the namespace has been added to the value of PRODUCT_SOONG_NAMESPACES variable.
Note that makefiles have no notion of namespaces and exposing namespaces with
the same modules via PRODUCT_SOONG_NAMESPACES may cause Make failure. For
instance, exposing both device/google/bonito
and device/google/coral
namespaces will cause Make failure because it will see two targets for the
pixelstats-vendor
module.
The visibility
property on a module controls whether the module can be
used by other packages. Modules are always visible to other modules declared
in the same package. This is based on the Bazel visibility mechanism.
If specified the visibility
property must contain at least one rule.
Each rule in the property must be in one of the following forms:
["//visibility:public"]
: Anyone can use this module.["//visibility:private"]
: Only rules in the module's package (not its subpackages) can use this module.["//visibility:override"]
: Discards any rules inherited from defaults or a creating module. Can only be used at the beginning of a list of visibility rules.["//visibility:any_partition"]
: Any modules of type android_filesystem or android_system_image can use this module. Intended for modules that no one should link against, but should still be included in soong-built partitions.["//some/package:__pkg__", "//other/package:__pkg__"]
: Only modules insome/package
andother/package
(defined insome/package/*.bp
andother/package/*.bp
) have access to this module. Note that sub-packages do not have access to the rule; for example,//some/package/foo:bar
or//other/package/testing:bla
wouldn't have access.__pkg__
is a special module and must be used verbatim. It represents all of the modules in the package.["//project:__subpackages__", "//other:__subpackages__"]
: Only modules in packagesproject
orother
or in one of their sub-packages have access to this module. For example,//project:rule
,//project/library:lib
or//other/testing/internal:munge
are allowed to depend on this rule (but not//independent:evil
)["//project"]
: This is shorthand for["//project:__pkg__"]
[":__subpackages__"]
: This is shorthand for["//project:__subpackages__"]
where//project
is the module's package, e.g. using[":__subpackages__"]
inpackages/apps/Settings/Android.bp
is equivalent to//packages/apps/Settings:__subpackages__
.["//visibility:legacy_public"]
: The default visibility, behaves as//visibility:public
for now. It is an error if it is used in a module.
The visibility rules of //visibility:public
and //visibility:private
cannot
be combined with any other visibility specifications, except
//visibility:public
is allowed to override visibility specifications imported
through the defaults
property.
Packages outside vendor/
cannot make themselves visible to specific packages
in vendor/
, e.g. a module in libcore
cannot declare that it is visible to
say vendor/google
, instead it must make itself visible to all packages within
vendor/
using //vendor:__subpackages__
.
If a module does not specify the visibility
property then it uses the
default_visibility
property of the package
module in the module's package.
If the default_visibility
property is not set for the module's package then
it will use the default_visibility
of its closest ancestor package for which
a default_visibility
property is specified.
If no default_visibility
property can be found then the module uses the
global default of //visibility:legacy_public
.
The visibility
property has no effect on a defaults module although it does
apply to any non-defaults module that uses it. To set the visibility of a
defaults module, use the defaults_visibility
property on the defaults module;
not to be confused with the default_visibility
property on the package module.
Once the build has been completely switched over to soong it is possible that a
global refactoring will be done to change this to //visibility:private
at
which point all packages that do not currently specify a default_visibility
property will be updated to have
default_visibility = [//visibility:legacy_public]
added. It will then be the
owner's responsibility to replace that with a more appropriate visibility.
Soong includes a canonical formatter for Android.bp files, similar to gofmt. To recursively reformat all Android.bp files in the current directory:
bpfmt -w .
The canonical format includes 4 space indents, newlines after every element of a multi-element list, and always includes a trailing comma in lists and maps.
Soong includes a tool perform a first pass at converting Android.mk files to Android.bp files:
androidmk Android.mk > Android.bp
The tool converts variables, modules, comments, and some conditionals, but any custom Makefile rules, complex conditionals or extra includes must be converted by hand.
- Android.mk files often have multiple modules with the same name (for example
for static and shared version of a library, or for host and device versions).
Android.bp files require unique names for every module, but a single module can
be built in multiple variants, for example by adding
host_supported: true
. The androidmk converter will produce multiple conflicting modules, which must be resolved by hand to a single module with any differences insidetarget: { android: { }, host: { } }
blocks.
Soong deliberately does not support most conditionals in Android.bp files. We suggest removing most conditionals from the build. See Best Practices for some examples on how to remove conditionals.
Most conditionals supported natively by Soong are converted to a map property. When building the module one of the properties in the map will be selected, and its values appended to the property with the same name at the top level of the module.
For example, to support architecture specific files:
cc_library {
...
srcs: ["generic.cpp"],
arch: {
arm: {
srcs: ["arm.cpp"],
},
x86: {
srcs: ["x86.cpp"],
},
},
}
When building the module for arm the generic.cpp
and arm.cpp
sources will
be built. When building for x86 the generic.cpp
and 'x86.cpp' sources will
be built.
When converting vendor modules that contain conditionals, simple conditionals
can be supported through Soong config variables using soong_config_*
modules that describe the module types, variables and possible values:
soong_config_module_type {
name: "acme_cc_defaults",
module_type: "cc_defaults",
config_namespace: "acme",
variables: ["board"],
bool_variables: ["feature"],
value_variables: ["width"],
properties: ["cflags", "srcs"],
}
soong_config_string_variable {
name: "board",
values: ["soc_a", "soc_b", "soc_c"],
}
This example describes a new acme_cc_defaults
module type that extends the
cc_defaults
module type, with three additional conditionals based on
variables board
, feature
and width
, which can affect properties cflags
and srcs
. Additionally, each conditional will contain a conditions_default
property can affect cflags
and srcs
in the following conditions:
- bool variable (e.g.
feature
): the variable is unspecified or not set to a true value - value variable (e.g.
width
): the variable is unspecified - string variable (e.g.
board
): the variable is unspecified or the variable is set to a string unused in the given module. For example, withboard
, if theboard
conditional contains the propertiessoc_a
andconditions_default
, when board=soc_b, thecflags
andsrcs
values underconditions_default
will be used. To specify that no properties should be amended forsoc_b
, you can setsoc_b: {},
.
The values of the variables can be set from a product's BoardConfig.mk
file:
$(call soong_config_set,acme,board,soc_a)
$(call soong_config_set,acme,feature,true)
$(call soong_config_set,acme,width,200)
The acme_cc_defaults
module type can be used anywhere after the definition in
the file where it is defined, or can be imported into another file with:
soong_config_module_type_import {
from: "device/acme/Android.bp",
module_types: ["acme_cc_defaults"],
}
It can used like any other module type:
acme_cc_defaults {
name: "acme_defaults",
cflags: ["-DGENERIC"],
soong_config_variables: {
board: {
soc_a: {
cflags: ["-DSOC_A"],
},
soc_b: {
cflags: ["-DSOC_B"],
},
conditions_default: {
cflags: ["-DSOC_DEFAULT"],
},
},
feature: {
cflags: ["-DFEATURE"],
conditions_default: {
cflags: ["-DFEATURE_DEFAULT"],
},
},
width: {
cflags: ["-DWIDTH=%s"],
conditions_default: {
cflags: ["-DWIDTH=DEFAULT"],
},
},
},
}
cc_library {
name: "libacme_foo",
defaults: ["acme_defaults"],
srcs: ["*.cpp"],
}
With the BoardConfig.mk
snippet above, libacme_foo
would build with
cflags: "-DGENERIC -DSOC_A -DFEATURE -DWIDTH=200"
.
Alternatively, with DefaultBoardConfig.mk
:
SOONG_CONFIG_NAMESPACES += acme
SOONG_CONFIG_acme += \
board \
feature \
width \
SOONG_CONFIG_acme_feature := false
then libacme_foo
would build with cflags: "-DGENERIC -DSOC_DEFAULT -DFEATURE_DEFAULT -DSIZE=DEFAULT"
.
Alternatively, with DefaultBoardConfig.mk
:
SOONG_CONFIG_NAMESPACES += acme
SOONG_CONFIG_acme += \
board \
feature \
width \
SOONG_CONFIG_acme_board := soc_c
then libacme_foo
would build with cflags: "-DGENERIC -DSOC_DEFAULT -DFEATURE_DEFAULT -DSIZE=DEFAULT"
.
soong_config_module_type
modules will work best when used to wrap defaults
modules (cc_defaults
, java_defaults
, etc.), which can then be referenced
by all of the vendor's other modules using the normal namespace and visibility
rules.
soongConfigTraceMutator
enables modules affected by soong config variables to
write outputs into a hashed directory path. It does this by recording accesses
to soong config variables on each module, and then accumulating records of each
module's all dependencies. m soong_config_trace
builds information about
hashes to $OUT_DIR/soong/soong_config_trace.json
.
The build logic is written in Go using the blueprint framework. Build logic receives module definitions parsed into Go structures using reflection and produces build rules. The build rules are collected by blueprint and written to a ninja build file.
Soong can optionally load environment variables from a pre-specified configuration file during startup. These environment variables can be used to control the behavior of the build. For example, these variables can determine whether remote-execution should be used for the build or not.
The ANDROID_BUILD_ENVIRONMENT_CONFIG_DIR
environment variable specifies the
directory in which the config file should be searched for. The
ANDROID_BUILD_ENVIRONMENT_CONFIG
variable determines the name of the config
file to be searched for within the config directory. For example, the following
build comand will load ENV_VAR_1
and ENV_VAR_2
environment variables from
the example_config.json
file inside the build/soong
directory.
ANDROID_BUILD_ENVIRONMENT_CONFIG_DIR=build/soong \
ANDROID_BUILD_ENVIRONMENT_CONFIG=example_config \
build/soong/soong_ui.bash
- Best Practices
- Build Performance
- Generating CLion Projects
- Generating YouCompleteMe/VSCode compile_commands.json file
- Make-specific documentation: build/make/README.md
To load the code of Soong in IntelliJ:
- File -> Open, open the
build/soong
directory. It will be opened as a new project. - File -> Settings, then Languages & Frameworks -> Go -> GOROOT, then set it to
prebuilts/go/linux-x86
- File -> Project Structure, then, Project Settings -> Modules, then Add
Content Root, then add the
build/blueprint
directory. - Optional: also add the
external/golang-protobuf
directory. In practice, IntelliJ seems to work well enough without this, too.
Both the Android build driver (soong_ui
) and Soong proper (soong_build
) are
Go applications and can be debugged with the help of the standard Go debugger
called Delve. A client (e.g., IntelliJ IDEA) communicates with Delve via IP port
that Delve listens to (the port number is passed to it on invocation).
To make soong_ui
wait for a debugger connection, use the SOONG_UI_DELVE
variable:
SOONG_UI_DELVE=5006 m nothing
To make soong_build
wait for a debugger connection, install dlv
and then
start the build with SOONG_DELVE=<listen addr>
in the environment.
For example:
SOONG_DELVE=5006 m nothing
Android build driver invokes soong_build
multiple times, and by default each
invocation is run in the debugger. Setting SOONG_DELVE_STEPS
controls which
invocations are run in the debugger, e.g., running
SOONG_DELVE=2345 SOONG_DELVE_STEPS='build,modulegraph' m
results in only build
(main build step) and modulegraph
being run in the debugger.
The allowed step names are bp2build_files
, bp2build_workspace
, build
,
modulegraph
, queryview
, soong_docs
.
Note setting or unsetting SOONG_DELVE
causes a recompilation of soong_build
. This
is because in order to debug the binary, it needs to be built with debug
symbols.
To test the debugger connection, run this command:
dlv connect :5006
If you see an error:
Could not attach to pid 593: this could be caused by a kernel
security setting, try writing "0" to /proc/sys/kernel/yama/ptrace_scope
you can temporarily disable Yama's ptrace protection using:
sudo sysctl -w kernel.yama.ptrace_scope=0
To connect to the process using IntelliJ:
- Run -> Edit Configurations...
- Choose "Go Remote" on the left
- Click on the "+" buttion on the top-left
- Give it a nice name and set "Host" to
localhost
and "Port" to the port in the environment variable (SOONG_UI_DELVE
forsoong_ui
,SOONG_DELVE
forsoong_build
) - Set the breakpoints where you want application to stop
- Run the build from the command line
- In IntelliJ, click Run -> Debug name
- Observe Connecting... message in the debugger pane. It changes to
Connected once the communication with the debugger has been established; the
terminal window where the build started will display
API server listening at ...
message
Sometimes the dlv
process hangs on connection. A symptom of this is dlv
spinning a core or two. In that case, kill -9
dlv
and try again.
Anecdotally, it feels like waiting a minute after the start of soong_build
helps.
Email [email protected] (external) for any questions, or see go/soong (internal).