commit | ec038884d295f115e9e7db670ba5eb33091cde74 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Sandeep Samdaria <samdaria@google.com> | Tue Apr 18 15:25:40 2023 -0700 |
committer | Sandeep Samdaria <samdaria@google.com> | Tue Apr 18 15:43:43 2023 -0700 |
tree | 175ef6db57aedd2e2b9a3d8dd4fde8ac3b90aa0f | |
parent | 6f89f10e7b5bdfaef8cd812caa1ea3deeb6793d5 [diff] |
Address media button session being changed Problem: A remote device (e.g. phone) sends a play command to the car bluetooth stack and bluetooth process doesn't have an audio focus and other app has an audio focus. It results in BT to become the default media button session until the other media app sends media/audio events to media service. Media session service consumes bunch of signals in order to promote a session to default media button session One of the signal is from the audio player on when a stream starts. Solution: Bluetooth process will start the decoding (i.e. start the track stream) only once the audio focus is available. If the audio focus is unavailable then it will not flush the audio buffer to the AAudio stream. Since the audio stream doesn't result in audio config change. The media session service never receives the callback about any BT audio being changed and doesn't result in BT media session to become the default button session. Bug:273543318 Tag: #stability Test: Tested by playing the audio after acquiring the focus manually. Test: Tested the scenario where other media app was the primary focus holder and initiated a media play command from the remote device. It didn't resulted in BT to become the media button session. Change-Id: Id3c731c4f7aa4e86d77a3ad248bf2edab4338fe1
Just build AOSP - Fluoride is there by default.
Instructions for a Debian based distribution:
You'll want to download some pre-requisite packages as well. If you're currently configured for AOSP development, you should have most required packages. Otherwise, you can use the following apt-get list or use the --run-bootstrap
option on build.py
(see below) to get a list of packages missing on your system:
sudo apt-get install repo git-core gnupg flex bison gperf build-essential \ zip curl zlib1g-dev gcc-multilib g++-multilib \ x11proto-core-dev libx11-dev libncurses5 \ libgl1-mesa-dev libxml2-utils xsltproc unzip liblz4-tool libssl-dev \ libc++-dev libevent-dev \ flatbuffers-compiler libflatbuffers1 openssl \ libflatbuffers-dev libtinyxml2-dev \ libglib2.0-dev libevent-dev libnss3-dev libdbus-1-dev \ libprotobuf-dev ninja-build generate-ninja protobuf-compiler \ libre2-9 debmake \ llvm libc++abi-dev \ libre2-dev libdouble-conversion-dev \ libgtest-dev libgmock-dev libabsl-dev
You will also need a recent-ish version of Rust and Cargo. Please follow the instructions on Rustup to install a recent version.
mkdir ~/fluoride cd ~/fluoride git clone https://android.googlesource.com/platform/packages/modules/Bluetooth
build.py
is the helper script used to build Fluoride for Linux (i.e. Floss). It accepts a --run-bootstrap
option that will set up your build staging directory and also make sure you have all required system packages to build (should work on Debian and Ubuntu). You will still need to build some unpackaged dependencies (like libchrome, modp_b64, googletest, etc).
To use it:
./build.py --run-bootstrap
This will install your bootstrapped build environment to ~/.floss
. If you want to change this, just pass in --bootstrap-dir
to the script.
The following third-party dependencies are necessary but currently unavailable via a package manager. You may have to build these from source and install them to your local environment.
We provide a script to produce debian packages for those components. Please see the instructions in build/dpkg/README.txt for more details.
cd system/build/dpkg mkdir -p outdir/{modp_b64,libchrome} # Build and install modp_b64 pushd modp_b64 ./gen-src-pkg.sh $(readlink -f ../outdir/modp_b64) popd sudo dpkg -i outdir/modp_b64/*.deb # Build and install libchrome pushd libchrome ./gen-src-pkg.sh $(readlink -f ../outdir/libchrome) popd sudo dpkg -i outdir/libchrome/*.deb
Note: Handled by --run-bootstrap
option.
Run the following to install Rust dependencies:
cargo install cxxbridge-cmd
Note: Handled by --run-bootstrap
option.
For host build, we depend on a few other repositories:
Clone these all somewhere and create your staging environment.
export STAGING_DIR=path/to/your/staging/dir mkdir ${STAGING_DIR} mkdir -p ${STAGING_DIR}/external ln -s $(readlink -f ${PLATFORM2_DIR}/common-mk) ${STAGING_DIR}/common-mk ln -s $(readlink -f ${PLATFORM2_DIR}/.gn) ${STAGING_DIR}/.gn ln -s $(readlink -f ${RUST_CRATE_DIR}) ${STAGING_DIR}/external/rust ln -s $(readlink -f ${PROTO_LOG_DIR}) ${STAGING_DIR}/external/proto_logging
We provide a build script to automate building assuming you've staged your build environment already as above. At this point, make sure you have all the pre-requisites installed (i.e. bootstrap option and other dependencies above) or you will see failures. In addition, you may need to set a --libdir=
if your libraries are not stored in /usr/lib
by default.
./build.py
This will build all targets to the output directory at --bootstrap-dir
(which defaults to ~/.floss
). You can also build each stage separately (if you want to iterate on something specific):
You can choose to run only a specific stage by passing an arg via --target
.
Currently, Rust builds are a separate stage that uses Cargo to build. See gd/rust/README.md for more information. If you are iterating on Rust code and want to add new crates, you may also want to use the --no-vendored-rust
option (which will let you use crates.io instead of using a pre-populated vendored crates repo).
By default on Linux, we statically link libbluetooth so you can just run the binary directly. By default, it will try to run on hci0 but you can pass it --hci=N, where N corresponds to /sys/class/bluetooth/hciN.
$OUTPUT_DIR/debug/btadapterd --hci=$HCI INIT_gd_hci=true