commit | 332af23e080a15f919027cc9821a3f42b7ea3de5 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Daniel Santiago Rivera <[email protected]> | Thu Nov 15 11:32:45 2018 -0800 |
committer | Daniel Santiago Rivera <[email protected]> | Thu Nov 15 13:23:40 2018 -0800 |
tree | 9c1f5d69e2c3211a2fc254fa24a5285568e9c8e0 | |
parent | 8cf797f8e21f44fb3b54b220b25f46707f7ec4d1 [diff] |
Support custom FTS tokenizers. Refactored tokenizer API to accept a String instead of a Enum so that users can provide their custom tokenizer name when they ship their compiled SQLite with such tokenizer. Note that if a custom tokenizer is defined room will not verify the tokenizer nor its arguments during compile time since the DB for verification will probably not have the tokenizer. Also bumped Room version to 2.1.0-alpha03 Bug: 119234881 Test: ./gradlew room:room-compiler:test \ room:room-migration:test \ room:integration-tests:testapp:cC Change-Id: I56f17077bd8f9be056f1ae5a9d051d8dbc864ddc
We are not currently accepting new modules.
NOTE: You will need to use Linux or Mac OS. Building under Windows is not currently supported.
Follow the “Downloading the Source” guide to install and set up repo
tool, but instead of running the listed repo
commands to initialize the repository, run the folowing:
repo init -u https://android.googlesource.com/platform/manifest -b androidx-master-dev
The first time you initialize the repository, it will ask for user name and email.
Now your repository is set to pull only what you need for building and running AndroidX libraries. Download the code (and grab a coffee while we pull down 3GB):
repo sync -j8 -c
You will use this command to sync your checkout in the future - it’s similar to git fetch
Open path/to/checkout/frameworks/support/
in Android Studio. Now you're ready edit, run, and test!
If you get “Unregistered VCS root detected” click “Add root” to enable git integration for Android Studio.
If you see any warnings (red underlines) run Build > Clean Project
.
You can do most of your work from Android Studio, however you can also build the full AndroidX library from command line:
cd path/to/checkout/frameworks/support/ ./gradlew createArchive
You can build maven artifacts locally, and test them directly in your app:
./gradlew createArchive
And put in your project build.gradle
file:
handler.maven { url '/path/to/checkout/out/host/gradle/frameworks/support/build/support_repo' }
Run FooBarTest
Run androidx.foobar
The AndroidX repository has a set of Android applications that exercise AndroidX code. These applications can be useful when you want to debug a real running application, or reproduce a problem interactively, before writing test code.
These applications are named either <libraryname>-integration-tests-testapp
, or support-\*-demos
(e.g. support-4v-demos
or support-leanback-demos
). You can run them by clicking Run > Run ...
and choosing the desired application.
Before uploading your first contribution, you will need setup a password and agree to the contribution agreement:
Generate a HTTPS password: https://android-review.googlesource.com/new-password
Agree to the Google Contributor Licenses Agreement: https://android-review.googlesource.com/settings/new-agreement
cd path/to/checkout/frameworks/support/ repo start my_branch_name . (make needed modifications) git commit -a repo upload --current-branch .
If you see the following prompt, choose always
:
Run hook scripts from https://android.googlesource.com/platform/manifest (yes/always/NO)?
If the upload succeeds, you'll see output like:
remote: remote: New Changes: remote: https://android-review.googlesource.com/c/platform/frameworks/support/+/720062 Further README updates remote:
To edit your change, use git commit --amend
, and re-upload.
AndroidX uses git to store all the binary Gradle dependencies. They are stored in prebuilts/androidx/internal
and prebuilts/androidx/external
directories in your checkout. All the dependencies in these directories are also available from google()
, jcenter()
, or mavenCentral()
. We store copies of these dependencies to have hermetic builds. You can pull in a new dependency using our importMaven tool.