Difference between revisions of "Template:RK3399-BuildFromSource"
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− | === | + | ===Compile Android10 Source Code=== |
− | ==== | + | ====Download Android10 Source Code==== |
− | + | There are two ways to download the source code: | |
− | * ''' | + | * '''repo archive file on netdisk''' |
− | + | Netdisk URL: [http://download.friendlyarm.com/{{#replace:{{#replace:{{BASEPAGENAME}}| |}}|/zh|}} Click here]<br /> | |
− | + | File location on netdisk:rk3399-android-10.git-YYYYMMDD.tar.xz (YYYYMMDD means the date of packaging)<br /> | |
− | + | After extracting the repo package from the network disk, you need to execute the sync.sh script, which will pull the latest code from gitlab: | |
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> | <syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> | ||
tar xf /path/to/netdisk/sources/rk3399-android-10.git-YYYYMMDD.tar.xz | tar xf /path/to/netdisk/sources/rk3399-android-10.git-YYYYMMDD.tar.xz | ||
cd rk3399-android-10 | cd rk3399-android-10 | ||
+ | ./sync.sh | ||
</syntaxhighlight> | </syntaxhighlight> | ||
− | * ''' | + | * '''git clone from gitlab''' |
− | {{{1}}} | + | {{{1}}} source code is maintained in gitlab, You can download it by running the following command: |
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> | <syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> | ||
git clone --recursive https://gitlab.com/friendlyelec/rk3399-android-10.git -b main | git clone --recursive https://gitlab.com/friendlyelec/rk3399-android-10.git -b main | ||
</syntaxhighlight> | </syntaxhighlight> | ||
− | + | ====Generate Image File==== | |
− | ==== | + | You can compile an Android source code and generate an image file (non-root user is recommended): |
− | + | ||
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> | <syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> | ||
cd rk3399-android-10 | cd rk3399-android-10 | ||
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</syntaxhighlight> | </syntaxhighlight> | ||
− | ==== | + | ====Update System with New Image==== |
− | + | After compilation is done a new image file will be generated in the "rockdev/Image-nanopc_t4/" directory under Android 10's source code directory. You can follow the steps below to update the OS in {{{1}}}:<br /> | |
− | 1) | + | 1) Insert an SD card which is processed with EFlasher to an SD card reader and insert this reader to a PC running Ubuntu. The SD card's partitions will be automatically mounted; <br /> |
− | 2) | + | 2) Copy all the files under the "rockdev/Image-nanopc_t4/" directory to the SD card's android10 directory in the "FRIENDLYARM" partition;<br /> |
− | 3) | + | 3) Insert this SD card to {{{1}}} and reflash Android<br /> |
− | + | When flashing Android 10, EFlasher requires v1.3 or above. When flashing with Type-C, please use the tool AndroidTool v2.71 or Linux_Upgrade_Tool v1.49 provided by Rockchip. | |
− | + | ||
===Compile Android8.1 Source Code=== | ===Compile Android8.1 Source Code=== |
Revision as of 02:41, 20 August 2020
Contents
- 1 Make Your Own OS Image
- 1.1 Setup Development Environment
- 1.2 Install Cross Compiler
- 1.3 Compile Android10 Source Code
- 1.4 Compile Android8.1 Source Code
- 1.5 Compile Android7 Source Code
- 1.6 Compile FriendlyCore/FriendlyDesktop/Lubuntu/EFlasher Kernel Source Code
- 1.7 Compile FriendlyCore/FriendlyDesktop/Lubuntu/EFlasher U-boot Source Code
- 1.8 Make Bootable SD Card for Mass Production
1 Make Your Own OS Image
1.1 Setup Development Environment
In order to compile an Android image we suggest you do it on a 64 bit Ubuntu 16.04 system and install the following packages:
sudo apt-get install bison g++-multilib git gperf libxml2-utils make python-networkx zip sudo apt-get install flex curl libncurses5-dev libssl-dev zlib1g-dev gawk minicom sudo apt-get install openjdk-8-jdk sudo apt-get install exfat-fuse exfat-utils device-tree-compiler liblz4-tool
For more details refer to https://source.android.com/source/initializing.html;
Or you can do it in Docker: friendlyelec-android-docker
1.2 Install Cross Compiler
1.2.1 Install aarch64-linux-gcc 6.4
This compiler can be used to compile a Linux kernel and u-boot. You can do it by running the following commands:
git clone https://github.com/friendlyarm/prebuilts.git -b master --depth 1 cd prebuilts/gcc-x64 cat toolchain-6.4-aarch64.tar.gz* | sudo tar xz -C /
Add the compiler's directory to the PATH variable by appending the following lines to the ~/.bashrc file:
export PATH=/opt/FriendlyARM/toolchain/6.4-aarch64/bin:$PATH export GCC_COLORS=auto
Run the ~/.bashrc script to make it effective in the current commandline. Note: there is a space after ".":
. ~/.bashrc
This is a 64 bit compiler and cannot work on a 32 bit Linux system. You can test if your compiler is installed correctly by running the following commands:
aarch64-linux-gcc -v Using built-in specs. COLLECT_GCC=aarch64-linux-gcc COLLECT_LTO_WRAPPER=/opt/FriendlyARM/toolchain/6.4-aarch64/libexec/gcc/aarch64-cortexa53-linux-gnu/6.4.0/lto-wrapper Target: aarch64-cortexa53-linux-gnu Configured with: /work/toolchain/build/aarch64-cortexa53-linux-gnu/build/src/gcc/configure --build=x86_64-build_pc-linux-gnu --host=x86_64-build_pc-linux-gnu --target=aarch64-cortexa53-linux-gnu --prefix=/opt/FriendlyARM/toolchain/6.4-aarch64 --with-sysroot=/opt/FriendlyARM/toolchain/6.4-aarch64/aarch64-cortexa53-linux-gnu/sysroot --enable-languages=c,c++ --enable-fix-cortex-a53-835769 --enable-fix-cortex-a53-843419 --with-cpu=cortex-a53 ... Thread model: posix gcc version 6.4.0 (ctng-1.23.0-150g-FA)
1.3 Compile Android10 Source Code
1.3.1 Download Android10 Source Code
There are two ways to download the source code:
- repo archive file on netdisk
Netdisk URL: Click here
File location on netdisk:rk3399-android-10.git-YYYYMMDD.tar.xz (YYYYMMDD means the date of packaging)
After extracting the repo package from the network disk, you need to execute the sync.sh script, which will pull the latest code from gitlab:
tar xf /path/to/netdisk/sources/rk3399-android-10.git-YYYYMMDD.tar.xz cd rk3399-android-10 ./sync.sh
- git clone from gitlab
{{{1}}} source code is maintained in gitlab, You can download it by running the following command:
git clone --recursive https://gitlab.com/friendlyelec/rk3399-android-10.git -b main
1.3.2 Generate Image File
You can compile an Android source code and generate an image file (non-root user is recommended):
cd rk3399-android-10 ./build-nanopc-t4.sh -F -M
1.3.3 Update System with New Image
After compilation is done a new image file will be generated in the "rockdev/Image-nanopc_t4/" directory under Android 10's source code directory. You can follow the steps below to update the OS in {{{1}}}:
1) Insert an SD card which is processed with EFlasher to an SD card reader and insert this reader to a PC running Ubuntu. The SD card's partitions will be automatically mounted;
2) Copy all the files under the "rockdev/Image-nanopc_t4/" directory to the SD card's android10 directory in the "FRIENDLYARM" partition;
3) Insert this SD card to {{{1}}} and reflash Android
When flashing Android 10, EFlasher requires v1.3 or above. When flashing with Type-C, please use the tool AndroidTool v2.71 or Linux_Upgrade_Tool v1.49 provided by Rockchip.
1.4 Compile Android8.1 Source Code
1.4.1 Download Android8.1 Source Code
There are two ways to download the source code:
- repo archive file on netdisk
Netdisk URL: Click here
File location on netdisk:sources/rk3399-android-8.1.git-YYYYMMDD.tgz (YYYYMMDD means the date of packaging)
After extracting the repo package from the network disk, you need to execute the sync.sh script, which will pull the latest code from gitlab:
tar xvzf /path/to/netdisk/sources/rk3399-android-8.1.git-YYYYMMDD.tgz cd rk3399-android-8.1 ./sync.sh
- git clone from gitlab
{{{1}}} source code is maintained in gitlab, You can download it by running the following command:
git clone https://gitlab.com/friendlyelec/rk3399-android-8.1 --depth 1 -b master
1.4.2 Generate Image File
You can compile an Android source code and generate an image file:
cd rk3399-android-8.1 ./build-nanopc-t4.sh -F -M
1.4.3 Update System with New Image
After compilation is done a new image file will be generated in the "rockdev/Image-nanopc_t4/" directory under Android 8.1's source code directory. You can follow the steps below to update the OS in {{{1}}}:
1) Insert an SD card which is processed with EFlasher to an SD card reader and insert this reader to a PC running Ubuntu. The SD card's partitions will be automatically mounted;
2) Copy all the files under the "rockdev/Image-nanopc_t4/" directory to the SD card's android8 directory in the "FRIENDLYARM" partition;
3) Insert this SD card to {{{1}}} and reflash Android
Here is an alternative guide to update OS: sd-fuse_rk3399
1.5 Compile Android7 Source Code
1.5.1 Download Android7 Source Code
There are two ways to download the source code:
- repo archive file on netdisk
Netdisk URL: Click here
File location on netdisk:sources/rk3399-android-7.git-YYYYMMDD.tgz (YYYYMMDD means the date of packaging)
After extracting the repo package from the network disk, you need to execute the sync.sh script, which will pull the latest code from gitlab:
tar xvzf /path/to/netdisk/sources/rk3399-android-7.git-YYYYMMDD.tgz cd rk3399-nougat ./sync.sh
- git clone from gitlab
{{{1}}} source code is maintained in gitlab, You can download it by running the following command:
git clone https://gitlab.com/friendlyelec/rk3399-nougat --depth 1 -b nanopc-t4-nougat
1.5.2 Generate Image File
You can compile an Android7 source code and generate an image file:
cd rk3399-nougat ./build-nanopc-t4.sh -F -M
1.5.3 Update System with New Image
After compilation is done a new image file will be generated in the "rockdev/Image-nanopc_t4/" directory under Android7's source code directory. You can follow the steps below to update the OS in {{{1}}}:
1) Insert an SD card which is processed with EFlasher to an SD card reader and insert this reader to a PC running Ubuntu. The SD card's partitions will be automatically mounted;
2) Copy all the files under the "rockdev/Image-nanopc_t4/" directory to the SD card's android8 directory in the "FRIENDLYARM" partition;
3) Insert this SD card to {{{1}}} and reflash Android
Here is an alternative guide to update OS: sd-fuse_rk3399
1.6 Compile FriendlyCore/FriendlyDesktop/Lubuntu/EFlasher Kernel Source Code
git clone https://github.com/friendlyarm/kernel-rockchip --depth 1 -b nanopi4-linux-v4.4.y kernel-rockchip cd kernel-rockchip export PATH=/opt/FriendlyARM/toolchain/6.4-aarch64/bin/:$PATH make ARCH=arm64 nanopi4_linux_defconfig make ARCH=arm64 nanopi4-images
After compilation is done a kernel.img and a resource.img will be generated. You can simply copy them to replace the existing files in your eflasher SD card. We assume your SD card's FRIENDLYARM partition is mounted at the FRIENDLYARM directory and you can run the following commands to update system:
# for Lubuntu cp kernel.img resource.img /media/FRIENDLYARM/lubuntu/ # for FriendlyCore cp kernel.img resource.img /media/FRIENDLYARM/friendlycore-arm64/ # for FriendlyDesktop cp kernel.img resource.img /media/FRIENDLYARM/friendlydesktop-arm64/
Or you can use a USB Type-C cable and the Linux_Upgrade_Tool utility to update system.
1.7 Compile FriendlyCore/FriendlyDesktop/Lubuntu/EFlasher U-boot Source Code
git clone https://github.com/friendlyarm/uboot-rockchip --depth 1 -b nanopi4-v2014.10_oreo cd uboot-rockchip export PATH=/opt/FriendlyARM/toolchain/6.4-aarch64/bin/:$PATH make CROSS_COMPILE=aarch64-linux- rk3399_defconfig make CROSS_COMPILE=aarch64-linux-
After compilation is done a uboot.img, a trust.img and a rk3399_loader_v1.22.119.bin will be generated. You need to rename the rk3399_loader_v1.22.119.bin to "MiniLoaderAll.bin" and copy it to replace the existing file in your eflasher SD card. We assume your SD card's FRIENDLYARM partition is mounted at the FRIENDLYARM directory. You can run the following commands to update system:
# for Lubuntu cp uboot.img trust.img /media/FRIENDLYARM/lubuntu cp rk3399_loader_v1.22.119.bin /media/FRIENDLYARM/lubuntu/MiniLoaderAll.bin # for FriendlyCore cp uboot.img trust.img /media/FRIENDLYARM/friendlycore-arm64 cp rk3399_loader_v1.22.119.bin /media/FRIENDLYARM/friendlycore-arm64/MiniLoaderAll.bin # for FriendlyDesktop cp uboot.img trust.img /media/FRIENDLYARM/friendlydesktop-arm64 cp rk3399_loader_v1.22.119.bin /media/FRIENDLYARM/friendlydesktop-arm64/MiniLoaderAll.bin
Or you can use a USB Type-C cable and the Linux_Upgrade_Tool utility to update system.
1.8 Make Bootable SD Card for Mass Production
If you need to make a bootable SD card for mass production you can refer to this github link:sd-fuse_rk3399