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Android JNI bindings library
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glennguy/libandroidjni
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libandroidjni ============= Quick and dirty readme. 1. What is this? It is a native wrapper for JNI specifically designed to provide easy access to the Android API. The goal is to create a 1:1 mapping of java functionality to native apps. 2. Is that possible? No. But we can try :) Java and c++ have some fundamental differences that make an exact mapping impossible. But we can come close. 3. How does it work? The native classes use JNI to call into java while hiding the gory details from the user. Under the hood it's quite un-elegant. Typical JNI objects created and passed around using a thin wrapper. This wrapper is a heavily modified version of one found in libcrystax. Thanks crystax! 4. What does it look like? Here's a quick example: void MyFunction() { // Find the launch intent for a package and start its activity CJNIPackageManager manager = getPackageManager(); CJNIIntent intent = manager.getLaunchIntentForPackage("org.xbmc.kodi"); startActivity(sendIntent); } This tiny bit of functionality would require dozens of lines if using JNI directly, but here it looks just like java code. 5. How do I use it in my app? It is assumed that you are using a NativeActivity. Apps should create a main class that inherits from CJNIContext, and passes android_app->state->clazz to the constructor. This class now acts like a standard NativeActivity which inherits from Context. This class can now call the same functions that a Java activity can. Additionally, a virtual OnReceive function will catch broadcast events. TODO: Rename and make the distinction between NativeActivity and Context classes. 6. How do I interact with the classes? Just as you would with java. There is no documentation for usage, because the Android API documentation should be sufficient. 7. What are the caveats? With any luck, very few. This library is still very new and has not been exposed to many use-cases yet. Here are a few: a. Java can return NULL objects (not null-pointers). workaround: objects can be tested as a bool. Here's an example of a function that would crash: void MyFunction() { std::string externalDir = getExternalFilesDir("foo").getAbsolutePath(); return externalDir; } The Android API specifies that getExternalFilesDir("") can return NULL if the path is not found. Thus getAbsolutePath() has no instance and would crash when called. The fix: std::string MyFunction() { std::string externalDir; CJNIFile myFile = getExternalFilesDir("foo"); if (myFile) externalDir myFile.getAbsolutePath(); retrun externalDir; } b. Java has an understanding of arrays like Type[] which contain size info. C-style arrays don't carry size information, so passing a c-array as a parameter does not provide enough info to work with it realistically. workaround: Data should be passed in/out of Java arrays as std::vectors of primitive types or jni classes. Care should be taken to avoid making needless copies of objects in the process. To automate this, jcast() can be used to convert a j(h)objectArray directly to a vector of native objects. For example: std::vector<CJNIFoo> example() { return jcast<std::vector<CJNIFoo> >(call_method<jhobjectArray>(object, "function", "()[Lsome/Class;")) } c. Probably lots more. 8. Is the entire API implemented? Not even close! Classes and individual functions have been added as-needed. 9. OK, how do I add xyz class? Each (non-static) class inherits from CJNIBase. This class stores an object for the subclass, handles copying, etc. The class is expected to provide functions and members of the same name as the Android api. Helper functions are used to make JNI usage less painful. Simplified Example: #include "JNIBase.h" class CJNISomeClass : public CJNIBase { public: CJNISomeClass(); CJNISomeClass(const jni::jhobject &object) : CJNIBase(object){}; std::string getSomeString(); }; CJNISomeClass::CJNISomeClass() : CJNIBase("android/some/ClassName") { m_object = new_object(GetClassName()); } std::string CJNISomeClass::getSomeString() { return jcast<std::string>(call_method<jhstring>(m_object, "getSomeString", "()Ljava/lang/String;")); } When a CJNISomeClass is created, it will use the hard-coded classname to construct a new instance (<init> is called on the class). If a CJNISomeClass is created from another CJNISomeClass, its underlying object will be used to create a new copy. Note that jhobjects can be cast to and from their parent classes. This is to facilitate easy chaining of functions. new_object and call_method are helper functions that do auto-lookups and casting of params and the result. See jutils/jutils-details.hpp for more helpers. 10. What is the lifetime of the created objects? All native objects are returned as Global refs. This is overkill, but it was done in order to reduce complexity. All refs are automatically destroyed when objects go out of scope. Because of this, all objects should be passed as const ref whenever possible to avoid unnecessary reference creation. CJNISomeClass objects should almost never be long-lived, as some environments may have hard-limits for the amount that can be allocated. 11. Why bother? Aren't there programs to generate these wrappers automatically? Sure, but none of them seemed to do it in a way that reduced complexity to a nominal level. 12. Is it stable? It works as-tested, but hasn't seen much real-world exposure. Time will tell. Don't use it in production. 13. What's with the CJNI naming? This library was created for XBMC and classes were created using XBMC naming conventions. If it is adopted elsewhere, the names should be changed to something more standard.
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