This cargo extension handles all the environment configuration needed for successfully building libraries or binaries for Android from a Rust codebase, with support for generating the correct jniLibs
directory structure.
cargo-ndk
provides three subcommands to cargo:
cargo ndk
— a passthrough forcargo
applying all the relevant environment variables to ensure a successful build against the NDKcargo ndk-test
— run tests viaadb
automagicallycargo ndk-env
— generate sh exports, PowerShell env vars or JSON (i.e. for Visual Studio Code) to makerust-analyzer
happy, or other unspeakable crimes I hope you keep to yourself
You'll first need to install all the toolchains you intend to use. Simplest way is with the following:
rustup target add \
aarch64-linux-android \
armv7-linux-androideabi \
x86_64-linux-android \
i686-linux-android
Modify as necessary for your use case.
To eliminate time wasted building cargo-ndk
in your CI pipelines, you can use cargo-binstall
:
cargo binstall cargo-ndk
cargo install cargo-ndk
cargo ndk -t armeabi-v7a -t arm64-v8a -o ./jniLibs build --release
This specifies the Android targets to be built (ordinary triples are also supported), the output directory to use for placing the .so
files in the layout
expected by Android, and then the ordinary flags to be passed to cargo
.
If you have installed the NDK with Android Studio to its default location, cargo ndk
will automatically detect
the most recent NDK version and use it. This can be overriden by specifying the path to the NDK root directory in
the ANDROID_NDK_HOME
environment variable.
If you want cargo run
to automatically run via adb
for Android builds, add a .cargo/config.toml
to your project with the following content:
[target.aarch64-linux-android]
runner = "cargo ndk-runner"
Add for each target that you are using.
cargo ndk-test -t armeabi-v7a
This uses cargo ndk-runner
under the hood to push the binaries to a connected device, and running it in the Android shell.
Add -v
or -vv
as you ordinarily would after the cargo command.
You can configure cargo-ndk
using environment variables with the CARGO_NDK_
prefix:
CARGO_NDK_TARGET
: Set default target(s) (comma-separated for multiple targets)CARGO_NDK_PLATFORM
: Set default API platform levelCARGO_NDK_OUTPUT_PATH
: Set default output directory
These can be overridden by command-line arguments.
cargo-ndk
derives which environment variables to read the same way as the cc
crate.
These environment variables are exported for use in build scripts and other downstream use cases:
CARGO_NDK_ANDROID_PLATFORM
: the Android platform API number as an integer (e.g.21
)CARGO_NDK_ANDROID_TARGET
: the Android name for the build target (e.g.armeabi-v7a
)CARGO_NDK_OUTPUT_PATH
: the output path as specified with the-o
flagCARGO_NDK_SYSROOT_PATH
: path to the sysroot inside the Android NDKCARGO_NDK_SYSROOT_TARGET
: the target name for the files inside the sysroot (differs slightly from the standard LLVM triples)CARGO_NDK_SYSROOT_LIBS_PATH
: path to the libraries inside the sysroot with the given sysroot target (e.g.$CARGO_NDK_SYSROOT_PATH/usr/lib/$CARGO_NDK_SYSROOT_TARGET
)
Environment variables for bindgen are automatically configured and exported as well.
Sometimes you just want the environment variables that cargo-ndk
configures so you can, say, set up rust-analyzer in VS Code or similar.
If you want to source it into your bash environment:
source <(cargo ndk-env)
PowerShell:
cargo ndk-env --powershell | Invoke-Expression
Rust Analyzer and anything else with JSON-based environment handling:
For configuring rust-analyzer, add the --json
flag and paste the blob into the relevant place in the config.
Add --link-builtins
to your cargo ndk build
command and you should be happy.
Add --link-cxx-shared
to your cargo ndk build
.
- Linux
- macOS (
x86_64
andarm64
) - Windows
You can also build for Termux or similar by providing the environment variable CARGO_NDK_ON_ANDROID
at build-time. Please note that this configuration is not supported.
git clone
and then install the crate with cargo
:
cargo install --path .
This project is licensed under either of
- Apache License, Version 2.0 (LICENSE-APACHE or http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0)
- MIT license (LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)
at your option.