1page.title=Compiling with Jack 2@jd:body 3 4<!-- 5 Copyright 2015 The Android Open Source Project 6 7 Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); 8 you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. 9 You may obtain a copy of the License at 10 11 http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 12 13 Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software 14 distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, 15 WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. 16 See the License for the specific language governing permissions and 17 limitations under the License. 18--> 19 20<div id="qv-wrapper"> 21 <div id="qv"> 22 <h2>In this document</h2> 23 <ol id="auto-toc"> 24 </ol> 25 </div> 26</div> 27 28<h2 id=the_jack_toolchain>The Jack toolchain</h2> 29 30<p>Jack is a new Android toolchain that compiles Java 31source into Android dex bytecode. It replaces the previous Android toolchain, 32which consists of multiple tools, such as javac, ProGuard, jarjar, and dx.</p> 33 34<p>The Jack toolchain provides the following advantages:</p> 35 36<ul> 37 <li> <strong>Completely open source</strong><br> 38Available in AOSP; users are welcome to contribute. 39 <li> <strong>Speeds compilation time</strong><br> 40 41Jack has specific supports to reduce compilation time: pre-dexing, incremental 42compilation and a Jack compilation server. 43 <li> <strong>Handles shrinking, obfuscation, repackaging and multidex</strong><br> 44Using a separate package such as ProGuard is no longer necessary. 45</ul> 46 47<p class="note">Note that beginning in Android 7.0 (N), Jack supports code coverage with JaCoCo. 48See <a href="https://android.googlesource.com/platform/prebuilts/sdk/+/master/tools/README-jack-code-coverage.md"> 49Code Coverage with JaCoCo</a> and <a href="https://developer.android.com/preview/j8-jack.html"> 50Java 8 Language Features</a> for details.</p> 51 52<img src="{@docRoot}images/jack-overview.png" height="75%" width="75%" alt="Jack overview" /> 53<p class="img-caption"><strong>Figure 1. </strong>Jack overview</p> 54 55 56<h2 id=the_jack_library_format>The .jack library format</h2> 57 58<p>Jack has its own .jack file format, which contains the pre-compiled dex code 59for the library, allowing for faster compilation (pre-dex).</p> 60 61<img src="{@docRoot}images/jack-library-file.png" height="75%" width="75%" alt="Jack library file contents" /> 62<p class="img-caption"><strong>Figure 2. </strong>Jack library file contents</p> 63 64<h2 id=jill>Jill</h2> 65 66<p>The Jill tool translates the existing .jar libraries into the new library 67format, as shown below.</p> 68 69<img src="{@docRoot}images/jill.png" alt="Importing existing .jar libraries using Jill" /> 70<p class="img-caption"><strong>Figure 3. </strong>Workflow to import an existing .jar library</p> 71 72<h2 id=using_jack_in_your_android_build>Using Jack in your Android build</h2> 73 74<div class="note">For instructions on using Jack in Android 7.0 (N) and later, see the <a 75href="https://android.googlesource.com/platform/prebuilts/sdk/+/master/tools/README-jack-server.md">Jack 76server documentation</a>. For Android 6.0 (M), use the instructions in this section.</div> 77 78<p>You don’t have to do anything differently to use Jack — just use your 79standard makefile commands to compile the tree or your project. Jack is the 80default Android build toolchain for M.</p> 81 82<p>The first time Jack is used, it launches a local Jack compilation server on 83your computer:</p> 84 85<ul> 86 <li> This server brings an intrinsic speedup, because it avoids launching a new host 87JRE JVM, loading Jack code, initializing Jack and warming up the JIT at each 88compilation. It also provides very good compilation times during small 89compilations (e.g. in incremental mode). 90 <li> The server is also a short-term solution to control the number of parallel Jack 91compilations, and so to avoid overloading your computer (memory or disk issue), 92because it limits the number of parallel compilations. 93</ul> 94 95<p>The Jack server shuts itself down after an idle time without any compilation. 96It uses two TCP ports on the localhost interface, and so is not available 97externally. All these parameters (number of parallel compilations, timeout, 98ports number, etc) can be modified by editing the<code> $HOME/.jack</code> file.</p> 99 100<h3 id=$home_jack_file>$HOME/.jack file</h3> 101 102<p>The <code>$HOME/.jack</code> file contains settings for Jack server variables, in a full bash syntax. </p> 103 104<p>Here are the available settings, with their definitions and default values:</p> 105 106<ul> 107 <li> <strong><code>SERVER=true</strong> </code>Enable the server feature of Jack. 108 <li> <strong><code>SERVER_PORT_SERVICE=8072</code> 109</strong>Set the TCP port number of the server for compilation purposes. 110 <li> <strong><code>SERVER_PORT_ADMIN=8073</code></strong> 111Set the TCP port number of the server for admin purposes. 112 <li> <strong><code>SERVER_COUNT=1</code></strong> 113Unused at present. 114 <li> <strong><code>SERVER_NB_COMPILE=4</code></strong> 115Maximum number of parallel compilations allowed. 116 <li> <strong><code>SERVER_TIMEOUT=60</code></strong> 117Number of idle seconds the server has to wait without any compilation before 118shutting itself down. 119 <li> <strong><code>SERVER_LOG=${SERVER_LOG:=$SERVER_DIR/jack-$SERVER_PORT_SERVICE.log}</code></strong> 120File where server logs are written. By default, this variable can be 121overloaded by an environment variable. 122 <li> <strong><code>JACK_VM_COMMAND=${JACK_VM_COMMAND:=java}</code></strong> 123The default command used to launch a JVM on the host. By default, this 124variable can be overloaded by environment variable. 125</ul> 126 127<h3 id=jack_troubleshooting>Jack troubleshooting</h3> 128 129<p><strong>If your computer becomes unresponsive during compilation or if you experience 130Jack compilations failing on “Out of memory error”</strong></p> 131 132<p>You can improve the situation by reducing the number of Jack simultaneous 133compilations by editing your<code> $HOME/.jack</code> and changing<code> SERVER_NB_COMPILE</code> to a lower value.</p> 134 135<p><strong>If your compilations are failing on “Cannot launch background server”</strong></p> 136 137<p>The most likely cause is TCP ports are already used on your computer. Try to 138change it by editing your <code>$HOME/.jack </code>(<code>SERVER_PORT_SERVICE</code> and <code>SERVER_PORT_ADMIN</code> variables).</p> 139 140<p>If it doesn’t solve the problem, please report and attach your compilation log 141and the Jack server log (see ‘Finding the Jack log’ below to know where to find 142the server log file). To unblock the situation, disable jack compilation server 143by editing your <code>$HOME/.jack</code> and changing <code>SERVER</code> to false. Unfortunately this will significantly slow down your compilation and 144may force you to launch <code>make -j</code> with load control (option "<code>-l</code>" of <code>make</code>). </p> 145 146<p><strong>If your compilation gets stuck without any progress</strong></p> 147 148<p>Please report this and give us the following additional information (where 149possible):</p> 150 151<ul> 152 <li> The command line at which you are stuck. 153 <li> The output of this command line. 154 <li> The result of executing <code>jack-admin server-stat</code>. 155 <li> The <code>$HOME/.jack</code> file. 156 <li> The content of the server log with the server state dumped. To get this — 157 <ul> 158 <li> Find the Jack background server process by running <code>jack-admin list-server</code>. 159 <li> Send a <code>kill -3</code> command to this server to dump its state into the log file. 160 <li> To locate the server log file, see ‘Finding the Jack log’ below. 161 </ul> 162 <li> The result of executing <code>ls -lR $TMPDIR/jack-$USER.</code> 163 <li> The result of running <code>ps j -U $USER.</code> 164</ul> 165 166<p>You should be able to unblock yourself by killing the Jack background server 167(use <code>jack-admin kill-server</code>), and then by removing its temporary directories contained in <code>jack-$USER</code> of your temporary directory (<code>/tmp</code> or <code>$TMPDIR</code>).</p> 168 169<p><strong>If you have any other issues </strong></p> 170 171<p>To report bugs or request features, please use our public issue tracker, 172available at <a href="http://b.android.com">http://b.android.com</a>, with the <a href="https://code.google.com/p/android/issues/entry?template=Jack%20bug%20report">Jack tool bug report</a> or <a href="https://code.google.com/p/android/issues/entry?template=Jack%20feature%20request">Jack tool feature request</a> templates. Please attach the Jack log to the bug report. </p> 173<table> 174 <tr> 175 <td><strong>Finding the Jack log</strong> 176<ul> 177 <li> If you ran a make command with a dist target, the Jack log is located at <code>$ANDROID_BUILD_TOP/out/dist/logs/jack-server.log</code> 178 <li> Otherwise you can find it in by running <code>jack-admin server-log</code> 179</ul> 180</td> 181 </tr> 182</table> 183 184<p>In case of reproducible Jack failures, you can get a more detailed log by 185setting one variable, as follows:</p> 186 187<pre class=prettyprint> 188$ export ANDROID_JACK_EXTRA_ARGS="--verbose debug --sanity-checks on -D 189sched.runner=single-threaded" 190</pre> 191 192<p>Then use your standard makefile commands to compile the tree or your project 193and attach its standard output and error.</p> 194 195<p>To remove detailed build logs use:</p> 196 197<pre class=prettyprint> 198$ unset ANDROID_JACK_EXTRA_ARGS 199</pre> 200 201<h3 id=jack_limitations>Jack limitations</h3> 202 203<ul> 204 <li> The Jack server is mono-user by default, so can be only used by one user on a 205computer. If it is not the case, please, choose different port numbers for each 206user and adjust SERVER_NB_COMPILE accordingly. You can also disable the Jack 207server by setting SERVER=false in your $HOME/.jack. 208 <li> CTS compilation is slow due to current vm-tests-tf integration. 209 <li> Bytecode manipulation tools, like JaCoCo, are not supported. 210</ul> 211 212<h2 id=using_jack_features>Using Jack features</h2> 213 214<p>Jack supports Java programming language 1.7 and integrates additional features 215described below.</p> 216 217<h3 id=predexing>Predexing </h3> 218 219<p>When generating a Jack library file, the .dex of the library is generated and 220stored inside the .jack library file as a pre-dex. When compiling, Jack reuses 221the pre-dex from each library.</p> 222 223<p>All libraries are pre-dexed.</p> 224 225<img src="{@docRoot}images/pre-dex.png" height="75%" width="75%" alt="Jack libraries with pre-dex" /> 226<p class="img-caption"><strong>Figure 4. </strong>Jack libraries with pre-dex</p> 227 228<h4 id=limitations>Limitations</h4> 229 230 231<p>Currently, Jack does not reuse the library pre-dex if 232shrinking/obfuscation/repackaging is used in the compilation.</p> 233 234<h3 id=incremental_compilation>Incremental compilation</h3> 235 236 237<p>Incremental compilation means that only components that were touched since the 238last compilation, and their dependencies, are recompiled. Incremental 239compilation can be significantly faster than a full compilation when changes 240are limited to only a limited set of components.</p> 241 242<h4 id=limitations>Limitations</h4> 243 244 245<p>Incremental compilation is deactivated when shrinking, obfuscation, repackaging 246or multi-dex legacy is enabled.</p> 247 248<h4 id=enabling_incremental_builds>Enabling incremental builds</h4> 249 250 251<p>Currently incremental compilation is not enabled by default. To enable 252incremental builds, add the following line to the Android.mk file of the 253project that you want to build incrementally:</p> 254 255<pre class=prettyprint> 256LOCAL_JACK_ENABLED := incremental 257</pre> 258 259<p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> The first time that you build your project with Jack if some dependencies 260are not built, use <code>mma</code> to build them, and after that you can use the standard build command.</p> 261 262<h3 id=shrinking_and_obfuscation>Shrinking and Obfuscation</h3> 263 264<p>Jack has shrinking and obfuscation support and uses proguard configuration 265files to enable shrinking and obfuscation features. Here are the supported and 266ignored options:</p> 267 268<h4 id=supported_common_options>Supported common options</h4> 269 270 271<p>Common options include the following:</p> 272 273<ul> 274 <li> <code>@</code> 275 <li> <code>-include</code> 276 <li> <code>-basedirectory</code> 277 <li> <code>-injars</code> 278 <li> <code>-outjars // only 1 output jar supported</code> 279 <li> <code>-libraryjars</code> 280 <li> <code>-keep</code> 281 <li> <code>-keepclassmembers</code> 282 <li> <code>-keepclasseswithmembers</code> 283 <li> <code>-keepnames</code> 284 <li> <code>-keepclassmembernames</code> 285 <li> <code>-keepclasseswithmembernames</code> 286 <li> <code>-printseeds</code> 287</ul> 288 289<h4 id=supported_shrinking_options>Supported shrinking options</h4> 290 291 292<p>Shrinking options include the following:</p> 293 294<ul> 295 <li> <code>-dontshrink</code> 296</ul> 297 298<h4 id=supported_obfuscation_options>Supported obfuscation options</h4> 299 300 301<p>Obfuscation options include the following:</p> 302 303<ul> 304 <li> <code>-dontobfuscate</code> 305 <li> <code>-printmapping</code> 306 <li> <code>-applymapping</code> 307 <li> <code>-obfuscationdictionary</code> 308 <li> <code>-classobfuscationdictionary</code> 309 <li> <code>-packageobfuscationdictionary</code> 310 <li> <code>-useuniqueclassmembernames</code> 311 <li> <code>-dontusemixedcaseclassnames</code> 312 <li> <code>-keeppackagenames</code> 313 <li> <code>-flattenpackagehierarchy</code> 314 <li> <code>-repackageclasses</code> 315 <li> <code>-keepattributes</code> 316 <li> <code>-adaptclassstrings</code> 317</ul> 318 319<h4 id=ignored_options>Ignored options</h4> 320 321 322<p>Ignored options include the following:</p> 323 324<ul> 325 <li> <code>-dontoptimize // Jack does not optimize</code> 326 <li> <code>-dontpreverify // Jack does not preverify</code> 327 <li> <code>-skipnonpubliclibraryclasses</code> 328 <li> <code>-dontskipnonpubliclibraryclasses</code> 329 <li> <code>-dontskipnonpubliclibraryclassmembers</code> 330 <li> <code>-keepdirectories</code> 331 <li> <code>-target</code> 332 <li> <code>-forceprocessing</code> 333 <li> <code>-printusage</code> 334 <li> <code>-whyareyoukeeping</code> 335 <li> <code>-optimizations</code> 336 <li> <code>-optimizationpasses</code> 337 <li> <code>-assumenosideeffects</code> 338 <li> <code>-allowaccessmodification</code> 339 <li> <code>-mergeinterfacesaggressively</code> 340 <li> <code>-overloadaggressively</code> 341 <li> <code>-microedition</code> 342 <li> <code>-verbose</code> 343 <li> <code>-dontnote</code> 344 <li> <code>-dontwarn</code> 345 <li> <code>-ignorewarnings</code> 346 <li> <code>-printconfiguration</code> 347 <li> <code>-dump</code> 348</ul> 349 350<p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> Other options will generate an error.</p> 351 352<h3 id=repackaging>Repackaging</h3> 353 354<p>Jack uses jarjar configuration files to do the repackaging.</p> 355 356<p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> Jack is compatible with "rule" rule types, but is not compatible with "zap" or 357"keep" rule types. If you need "zap" or "keep" rule types please file a feature 358request with a description of how you use the feature in your app.</p> 359 360<h3 id=multidex_support>Multidex support</h3> 361 362 363<p>Since dex files are limited to 65K methods, apps with over 65K methods must be 364split into multiple dex files. (See <a href="http://developer.android.com/tools/building/multidex.html">‘Building Apps with Over 65K Methods’</a> for more information about multidex.)</p> 365 366<p>Jack offers native and legacy multidex support. </p> 367 368