cpython/Android
Miss Islington (bot) 5212624c42
[3.13] gh-116622: Fix testPyObjectPrintOSError on Android (GH-122487) (#122490)
gh-116622: Fix testPyObjectPrintOSError on Android (GH-122487)

Adds extra handling for way BSD/Android return errors from calls to fwrite.
(cherry picked from commit 82db572813)

Co-authored-by: Malcolm Smith <smith@chaquo.com>
2024-07-31 00:49:14 +00:00
..
testbed [3.13] gh-116622: Fix testPyObjectPrintOSError on Android (GH-122487) (#122490) 2024-07-31 00:49:14 +00:00
README.md gh-116622: Add Android testbed (GH-117878) 2024-05-01 08:36:45 +02:00
android-env.sh gh-116622: Android sysconfig updates (#118352) 2024-05-01 16:47:54 +00:00
android.py [3.13] gh-116622: Fix testPyObjectPrintOSError on Android (GH-122487) (#122490) 2024-07-31 00:49:14 +00:00

README.md

Python for Android

These instructions are only needed if you're planning to compile Python for Android yourself. Most users should not need to do this. If you're looking to use Python on Android, one of the following tools will provide a much more approachable user experience:

Prerequisites

Export the ANDROID_HOME environment variable to point at your Android SDK. If you don't already have the SDK, here's how to install it:

  • Download the "Command line tools" from https://developer.android.com/studio.
  • Create a directory android-sdk/cmdline-tools, and unzip the command line tools package into it.
  • Rename android-sdk/cmdline-tools/cmdline-tools to android-sdk/cmdline-tools/latest.
  • export ANDROID_HOME=/path/to/android-sdk

The android.py script also requires the following commands to be on the PATH:

  • curl
  • java
  • tar
  • unzip

Building

Python can be built for Android on any POSIX platform supported by the Android development tools, which currently means Linux or macOS. This involves doing a cross-build where you use a "build" Python (for your development machine) to help produce a "host" Python for Android.

First, make sure you have all the usual tools and libraries needed to build Python for your development machine. The only Android tool you need to install is the command line tools package above: the build script will download the rest.

The easiest way to do a build is to use the android.py script. You can either have it perform the entire build process from start to finish in one step, or you can do it in discrete steps that mirror running configure and make for each of the two builds of Python you end up producing.

The discrete steps for building via android.py are:

./android.py configure-build
./android.py make-build
./android.py configure-host HOST
./android.py make-host HOST

HOST identifies which architecture to build. To see the possible values, run ./android.py configure-host --help.

To do all steps in a single command, run:

./android.py build HOST

In the end you should have a build Python in cross-build/build, and an Android build in cross-build/HOST.

You can use -- as a separator for any of the configure-related commands including build itself to pass arguments to the underlying configure call. For example, if you want a pydebug build that also caches the results from configure, you can do:

./android.py build HOST -- -C --with-pydebug

Testing

To run the Python test suite on Android:

  • Install Android Studio, if you don't already have it.
  • Follow the instructions in the previous section to build all supported architectures.
  • Run ./android.py setup-testbed to download the Gradle wrapper.
  • Open the testbed directory in Android Studio.
  • In the Device Manager dock, connect a device or start an emulator. Then select it from the drop-down list in the toolbar.
  • Click the "Run" button in the toolbar.
  • The testbed app displays nothing on screen while running. To see its output, open the Logcat window.

To run specific tests, or pass any other arguments to the test suite, edit the command line in testbed/app/src/main/python/main.py.