commit | 38a2aef3d483ef9bd73989a0a25a636a7d03cad9 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Alex Vakulenko <avakulenko@google.com> | Mon Mar 28 15:41:49 2016 -0700 |
committer | Alex Vakulenko <avakulenko@google.com> | Tue Mar 29 15:05:55 2016 +0000 |
tree | e334ff22c7d5bb72653a3ee97918658b5f030361 | |
parent | bf79a9eb710d8c9df6ab3e5e305ff6c881a19ab2 [diff] |
libweave: Remove release() calls on scoped_ptr Now that scoped_ptr is just a type alias to std::unique_ptr, there is no need to do release()/aquire semantics to convert between scoped_ptr and unique_ptr. Also, replaced base::Value::DeepCopy with the safer smart-pointer-enabled base::Value::CreateDeepCopy. Change-Id: I6b7ed78b3fae6d42a68b7d73ae4d9d5eebf48922 Reviewed-on: https://weave-review.googlesource.com/3067 Reviewed-by: Robert Ginda <rginda@google.com>
libWeave is the library with device side implementation of Weave protocol.
Sources are located in git repository at https://weave.googlesource.com/weave/libweave/
Make sure you have a bin/ directory in your home directory and that it is included in your path:
mkdir ~/bin PATH=~/bin:$PATH
Download the Repo tool and ensure that it is executable:
curl https://storage.googleapis.com/git-repo-downloads/repo > ~/bin/repo chmod a+x ~/bin/repo
repo init -u https://weave.googlesource.com/weave/manifest repo sync
Path | Description |
---|---|
include/ | Includes to be used by device code |
src/ | Implementation sources |
examples/ | Example of device code |
third_party/ | Dependencies |
Makefile, *.mk files | Build files |
sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install \ autoconf \ automake \ binutils \ g++ \ hostapd \ libavahi-client-dev \ libcurl4-openssl-dev \ libevent-dev \ libexpat1-dev \ libnl-3-dev \ libnl-route-3-dev \ libssl-dev \ libtool
The make --jobs/-j
flag is encouraged, to speed up build time. For example
make -j
which happens to be the same as
make all -j
make out/Debug/libweave.so
make all-examples
See the examples README for details.
The build supports transparently downloading & using a few cross-compilers. Just add cross-<arch>
to the command line in addition to the target you want to actually build.
This will cross-compile for an armv7 (hard float) target:
make cross-arm all-libs
This will cross-compile for a mips (little endian) target:
make cross-mipsel all-libs
make test make export-test
or
make testall
The build supports using qemu to run non-native tests.
This will run armv7 tests through qemu:
make cross-arm testall
The Android Developing site has a lot of good tips for working with git and repo in general. The tips below are meant as a quick cheat sheet rather than diving deep into relevant topics.
Make sure to have correct user in local or global config e.g.:
git config --local user.name "User Name" git config --local user.email user.name@example.com
repo start <branch name> .
git commit -a -v
repo upload .
Go to the url from the output of repo upload
and add reviewers.