commit | d5f4960b425ac84cc7a9fd699f39c06869ce2666 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Pavlin Radoslavov <pavlin@google.com> | Tue Jan 03 16:53:18 2017 -0800 |
committer | Pavlin Radoslavov <pavlin@google.com> | Wed Jan 25 18:40:45 2017 -0800 |
tree | 8ceaf5def09c77aa703802b487544e64d85b5f2e | |
parent | 87cf1322fc72acc83bcedcda77a99fa3cade267f [diff] |
Integration of the AAC codec for A2DP source Also: - Implemented data fragmentation inside bta_av_data_path() that is RTP compatible. - Do not use the codec_type when composing the RTP payload type per RFC 3016, Section 4.2. That value doesn't have actual meaning in the context of the Bluetooth supported codecs, and is ambiguous: all vendor codecs map to the same value 0xFF. - Updated support function A2DP_BitsSet() so it works for up to 64-bit integers. - Updated a log message inside l2c_data_write() to print packet length and peer MTU on error. Test: A2DP streaming to AAC headsets Bug: 30958229 Change-Id: I1b530f1c5c495b8231fd68bed788d4567096683d
Just build AOSP - Fluoride is there by default.
Instructions for Ubuntu, tested on 14.04 with Clang 3.5.0 and 16.10 with Clang 3.8.0
mkdir ~/fluoride cd ~/fluoride git clone https://android.googlesource.com/platform/system/bt
Install dependencies (require sudo access):
cd ~/fluoride/bt build/install_deps.sh
Then fetch third party dependencies:
cd ~/fluoride/bt mkdir third_party cd third_party git clone https://github.com/google/googletest.git git clone https://android.googlesource.com/platform/external/libchrome git clone https://android.googlesource.com/platform/external/modp_b64 git clone https://android.googlesource.com/platform/external/tinyxml2 git clone https://android.googlesource.com/platform/hardware/libhardware
And third party dependencies of third party dependencies:
cd fluoride/bt/third_party/libchrome/base/third_party mkdir valgrind cd valgrind curl https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src/base/+/master/third_party/valgrind/valgrind.h?format=TEXT | base64 -d > valgrind.h curl https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src/base/+/master/third_party/valgrind/memcheck.h?format=TEXT | base64 -d > memcheck.h
NOTE: If system/bt is checked out under AOSP, then create symbolic links instead of downloading sources
cd system/bt mkdir third_party cd third_party ln -s ../../../external/libchrome libchrome ln -s ../../../external/modp_b64 modp_b64 ln -s ../../../external/tinyxml2 tinyxml2 ln -s ../../../hardware/libhardware libhardware ln -s ../../../external/googletest googletest
cd ~/fluoride/bt gn gen out/Default
cd ~/fluoride/bt ninja -C out/Default all
This will build all targets (the shared library, executables, tests, etc) and put them in out/Default. To build an individual target, replace "all" with the target of your choice, e.g. ninja -C out/Default net_test_osi
.
cd ~/fluoride/bt/out/Default LD_LIBRARY_PATH=./ ./bluetoothtbd -create-ipc-socket=fluoride
Follows the Chromium project Eclipse Setup Instructions until "Optional: Building inside Eclipse" section (don't do that section, we will set it up differently)
Generate Eclipse settings:
cd system/bt gn gen --ide=eclipse out/Default
In Eclipse, do File->Import->C/C++->C/C++ Project Settings, choose the XML location under system/bt/out/Default
Right click on the project. Go to Preferences->C/C++ Build->Builder Settings. Uncheck "Use default build command", but instead using "ninja -C out/Default"
Goto Behaviour tab, change clean command to "-t clean"