commit | f1ab0fe80bd9776a476297d3f4df7cbec192372a | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Dan Willemsen <dan@danw.org> | Fri Jan 11 14:50:15 2019 -0800 |
committer | GitHub <noreply@github.com> | Fri Jan 11 14:50:15 2019 -0800 |
tree | fb82fd34d67c852065bd51a22135d5eac64e98bd | |
parent | 1c62f05ec619d7d4f8f049bb46796aabf0526730 [diff] | |
parent | 59e7b3e05f1b8553f2c6e9fa329543d8b42fca8e [diff] |
Merge pull request #163 from danw/random_affinity Use std::random_device instead of initializing via getpid
kati is an experimental GNU make clone. The main goal of this tool is to speed-up incremental build of Android.
Currently, kati does not offer a faster build by itself. It instead converts your Makefile to a ninja file.
For Android-N+, ckati and ninja is used automatically. There is a prebuilt checked in under prebuilts/build-tools that is used.
All Android's build commands (m, mmm, mmma, etc.) should just work.
Set up kati:
% cd ~/src % git clone https://github.com/google/kati % cd kati % make
Build Android:
% cd <android-directory> % source build/envsetup.sh % lunch <your-choice> % ~/src/kati/m2n --kati_stats % ./ninja.sh
You need ninja in your $PATH.
% ./ninja.sh -t clean
Note ./ninja.sh passes all parameters to ninja.
For example, the following is equivalent to "make cts":
% ./ninja.sh cts
Or, if you know the path you want, you can do:
% ./ninja.sh out/host/linux-x86/bin/adb