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Working for Android (on Linux)
This guide shows you how to set up and build a raylib project for Android on Linux. This was tested on Ubuntu 21.10 (64-bit only) and Android 10. Generated APK files will run on Android 6 and up.
This guide is based on gxbuild, a simple shell script based build system that can build for Windows, Linux, Web and Android.
First, we need to create some directories for files used in the build process. Open a terminal in your project folder, this terminal will be needed throughout the guide. Run the following commands:
mkdir --parents android/sdk android/build assets include lib/armeabi-v7a lib/arm64-v8a lib/x86 lib/x86_64 src
cd android/build
mkdir --parents obj dex res/values src/com/raylib/game assets
mkdir --parents lib/armeabi-v7a lib/arm64-v8a lib/x86 lib/x86_64
mkdir --parents res/drawable-ldpi res/drawable-mdpi res/drawable-hdpi res/drawable-xhdpi
cd ../..
-
android
contains everything used by the Android build system. -
android/ndk
contains the Android NDK. -
android/sdk
contains the SDK and all of its packages. -
android/build
contains temporary files used for the build, these will be packaged into the APK file. -
assets
is used for your app icon and any other assets your project may need. -
include
only hasraylib.h
by default but you can put headers for other libraries if needed. -
lib
contains the compiled raylib library for Android. -
src
is for your app's source code, put all*.c
files there.
Android is based on the Java language, a Java installation is also required to create Android apps. There are many versions of Java, I use OpenJDK version 18 (or newer) which can be downloaded here.
The Android SDK (Software Development Kit) lets you create apps for Android. It has a modular design. The Android Studio contains all of the packages, but in this guide we'll use the command line tools to install only the necessary packages. You can get the command line tools here.
- Decompress downloaded
commandlinetools-linux-...
into your project inandroid/sdk
. Make sure there is acmdline-tools
folder. - From the terminal, run the following commands:
cd android/sdk/cmdline-tools/bin
./sdkmanager --update --sdk_root=../..
./sdkmanager --install "build-tools;29.0.3" --sdk_root=../..
./sdkmanager --install "platform-tools" --sdk_root=../..
./sdkmanager --install "platforms;android-29" --sdk_root=../..
cd ../../../..
The Android NDK (Native Development Kit) allows Android apps to use the C programming language. Download it here and extract it. Rename the created android-ndk-r...
folder to ndk
and put it inside the android
folder. Make sure there are build
, meta
, etc. folders inside android/ndk
.
If you don't already have raylib
in your project folder, clone the repository.
git clone https://github.com/raysan5/raylib --depth 1
Build raylib for ARM and x86 architectures, both 32 and 64 bit. You can exclude some of these if you know what you're doing. Make sure you don't see any errors and that the file sizes in lib
make sense for each architecture.
cd raylib/src
cp raylib.h ../../include
make clean
make PLATFORM=PLATFORM_ANDROID ANDROID_NDK=../../android/ndk ANDROID_ARCH=arm ANDROID_API_VERSION=29
mv libraylib.a ../../lib/armeabi-v7a
make clean
make PLATFORM=PLATFORM_ANDROID ANDROID_NDK=../../android/ndk ANDROID_ARCH=arm64 ANDROID_API_VERSION=29
mv libraylib.a ../../lib/arm64-v8a
make clean
make PLATFORM=PLATFORM_ANDROID ANDROID_NDK=../../android/ndk ANDROID_ARCH=x86 ANDROID_API_VERSION=29
mv libraylib.a ../../lib/x86
make clean
make PLATFORM=PLATFORM_ANDROID ANDROID_NDK=../../android/ndk ANDROID_ARCH=x86_64 ANDROID_API_VERSION=29
mv libraylib.a ../../lib/x86_64
make clean
cd ../..
A few more files need to be created for the Android build to work.
- Create icons for different display densities (ldpi, mdpi, hdpi, xhdpi). In this guide, I will put them in
assets
, namedicon_ldpi.png
,icon_mdpi.png
and so on. There are higher display densities but icons for them are not needed. As an example, these commands create the icons for the raylib logo:
cp raylib/logo/raylib_36x36.png assets/icon_ldpi.png
cp raylib/logo/raylib_48x48.png assets/icon_mdpi.png
cp raylib/logo/raylib_72x72.png assets/icon_hdpi.png
cp raylib/logo/raylib_96x96.png assets/icon_xhdpi.png
- Keystore, this file contains the key for signing your APK file. You can change the
storepass
andkeypass
if you want to, but make sure to change them in the build script later.
cd android
keytool -genkeypair -validity 1000 -dname "CN=raylib,O=Android,C=ES" -keystore raylib.keystore -storepass 'raylib' -keypass 'raylib' -alias projectKey -keyalg RSA
cd ..
- We still need a tiny bit of Java code to launch our app, this is handled by the NativeLoader class. Save this file in
android/build/src/com/raylib/game/NativeLoader.java
.
package com.raylib.game;
public class NativeLoader extends android.app.NativeActivity {
static {
System.loadLibrary("main");
}
}
- The last file is our manifest, this file contains metadata about the app such as name and version. Save this in
android/build/AndroidManifest.xml
. There are a few things you can change here:
-
android:label="Game"
This will be the app name in the launcher (home screen). -
android:versionCode="1"
Internal version code, this is not seen by the user. -
android:versionName="1.0"
Human readable version number. -
android:screenOrientation="landscape"
You can change this toportrait
if needed.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<manifest xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
package="com.raylib.game"
android:versionCode="1" android:versionName="1.0" >
<uses-sdk android:minSdkVersion="23" android:targetSdkVersion="29"/>
<uses-feature android:glEsVersion="0x00020000" android:required="true"/>
<uses-permission android:name="android.permission.WRITE_EXTERNAL_STORAGE"/>
<application android:allowBackup="false" android:label="Game" android:icon="@drawable/icon">
<activity android:name="com.raylib.game.NativeLoader"
android:theme="@android:style/Theme.NoTitleBar.Fullscreen"
android:configChanges="orientation|keyboardHidden|screenSize"
android:screenOrientation="landscape" android:launchMode="singleTask"
android:clearTaskOnLaunch="true">
<meta-data android:name="android.app.lib_name" android:value="main"/>
<intent-filter>
<action android:name="android.intent.action.MAIN"/>
<category android:name="android.intent.category.LAUNCHER"/>
</intent-filter>
</activity>
</application>
</manifest>
Okay, finally we can build our APK file. You can create a shell script to build your project faster. Name it for example build.sh
or build_android.sh
in your project folder.
#!/bin/sh
# ______________________________________________________________________________
#
# Compile raylib project for Android
# ______________________________________________________________________________
# stop on error and display each command as it gets executed. Optional step but helpful in catching where errors happen if they do.
set -xe
# NOTE: If you excluded any ABIs in the previous steps, remove them from this list too
ABIS="arm64-v8a armeabi-v7a x86 x86_64"
BUILD_TOOLS=android/sdk/build-tools/29.0.3
TOOLCHAIN=android/ndk/toolchains/llvm/prebuilt/linux-x86_64
NATIVE_APP_GLUE=android/ndk/sources/android/native_app_glue
FLAGS="-ffunction-sections -funwind-tables -fstack-protector-strong -fPIC -Wall \
-Wformat -Werror=format-security -no-canonical-prefixes \
-DANDROID -DPLATFORM_ANDROID -D__ANDROID_API__=29"
INCLUDES="-I. -Iinclude -I../include -I$NATIVE_APP_GLUE -I$TOOLCHAIN/sysroot/usr/include"
# Copy icons
cp assets/icon_ldpi.png android/build/res/drawable-ldpi/icon.png
cp assets/icon_mdpi.png android/build/res/drawable-mdpi/icon.png
cp assets/icon_hdpi.png android/build/res/drawable-hdpi/icon.png
cp assets/icon_xhdpi.png android/build/res/drawable-xhdpi/icon.png
# Copy other assets
cp assets/* android/build/assets
# ______________________________________________________________________________
#
# Compile
# ______________________________________________________________________________
#
for ABI in $ABIS; do
case "$ABI" in
"armeabi-v7a")
CCTYPE="armv7a-linux-androideabi"
ARCH="arm"
LIBPATH="arm-linux-androideabi"
ABI_FLAGS="-std=c99 -march=armv7-a -mfloat-abi=softfp -mfpu=vfpv3-d16"
;;
"arm64-v8a")
CCTYPE="aarch64-linux-android"
ARCH="aarch64"
LIBPATH="aarch64-linux-android"
ABI_FLAGS="-std=c99 -target aarch64 -mfix-cortex-a53-835769"
;;
"x86")
CCTYPE="i686-linux-android"
ARCH="i386"
LIBPATH="i686-linux-android"
ABI_FLAGS=""
;;
"x86_64")
CCTYPE="x86_64-linux-android"
ARCH="x86_64"
LIBPATH="x86_64-linux-android"
ABI_FLAGS=""
;;
esac
CC="$TOOLCHAIN/bin/${CCTYPE}29-clang"
# Compile native app glue
# .c -> .o
$CC -c $NATIVE_APP_GLUE/android_native_app_glue.c -o $NATIVE_APP_GLUE/native_app_glue.o \
$INCLUDES -I$TOOLCHAIN/sysroot/usr/include/$CCTYPE $FLAGS $ABI_FLAGS
# .o -> .a
$TOOLCHAIN/bin/llvm-ar rcs lib/$ABI/libnative_app_glue.a $NATIVE_APP_GLUE/native_app_glue.o
# Compile project
for file in src/*.c; do
$CC -c $file -o "$file".o \
$INCLUDES -I$TOOLCHAIN/sysroot/usr/include/$CCTYPE $FLAGS $ABI_FLAGS
done
# Link the project with toolchain specific linker to avoid relocations issue.
$TOOLCHAIN/bin/ld.lld src/*.o -o android/build/lib/$ABI/libmain.so -shared \
--exclude-libs libatomic.a --build-id \
-z noexecstack -z relro -z now \
--warn-shared-textrel --fatal-warnings -u ANativeActivity_onCreate \
-L$TOOLCHAIN/sysroot/usr/lib/$LIBPATH/29 \
-L$TOOLCHAIN/lib/clang/17/lib/linux/$ARCH \
-L. -Landroid/build/obj -Llib/$ABI \
-lraylib -lnative_app_glue -llog -landroid -lEGL -lGLESv2 -lOpenSLES -latomic -lc -lm -ldl
done
# ______________________________________________________________________________
#
# Build APK
# ______________________________________________________________________________
#
$BUILD_TOOLS/aapt package -f -m \
-S android/build/res -J android/build/src -M android/build/AndroidManifest.xml \
-I android/sdk/platforms/android-29/android.jar
# Compile NativeLoader.java
javac -verbose -source 1.8 -target 1.8 -d android/build/obj \
-bootclasspath jre/lib/rt.jar \
-classpath android/sdk/platforms/android-29/android.jar:android/build/obj \
-sourcepath src android/build/src/com/raylib/game/R.java \
android/build/src/com/raylib/game/NativeLoader.java
$BUILD_TOOLS/dx --verbose --dex --output=android/build/dex/classes.dex android/build/obj
# Add resources and assets to APK
$BUILD_TOOLS/aapt package -f \
-M android/build/AndroidManifest.xml -S android/build/res -A assets \
-I android/sdk/platforms/android-29/android.jar -F game.apk android/build/dex
# Add libraries to APK
cd android/build
for ABI in $ABIS; do
../../$BUILD_TOOLS/aapt add ../../game.apk lib/$ABI/libmain.so
done
cd ../..
# Sign and zipalign APK
# NOTE: If you changed the storepass and keypass in the setup process, change them here too
jarsigner -keystore android/raylib.keystore -storepass raylib -keypass raylib \
-signedjar game.apk game.apk projectKey
$BUILD_TOOLS/zipalign -f 4 game.apk game.final.apk
mv -f game.final.apk game.apk
# Install to device or emulator
android/sdk/platform-tools/adb install -r game.apk
raylib android support could still be improved, there are a few issues:
Currently the file system is not accessible on Android. Trying to load any file outside the assets folder results in Failed to open file
. This means that any user created files cannot be loaded.
Assets such as images and sounds that are bundled into the APK file can still be loaded. This build system automatically bundles everything in the assets
folder into the APK.
On Android, the default working directory for loading assets is the assets
folder. On other platforms, it is usually the directory containing the executable. To make sure your assets are loaded from the same directory on all platforms, you can do this:
#ifndef PLATFORM_ANDROID
ChangeDirectory("assets");
#endif
myTexture = LoadTexture("texture.png");
mySound = LoadSound("sound.wav");
myFont = LoadFont("font.ttf");
#ifndef PLATFORM_ANDROID
ChangeDirectory("..");
#endif
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- Architecture
- Syntax analysis
- Data structures
- Enumerated types
- External dependencies
- GLFW dependency
- libc dependency
- Platforms and graphics
- Input system
- Default shader
- Custom shaders
- Coding conventions
- Integration with other libs
- Working on Windows
- Working on macOS
- Working on GNU Linux
- Working on Chrome OS
- Working on FreeBSD
- Working on Raspberry Pi
- Working for Android
- Working for Web (HTML5)
- Creating Discord Activities
- Working anywhere with CMake
- CMake Build Options
- raylib templates: Get started easily
- How To: Quick C/C++ Setup in Visual Studio 2022, GCC or MinGW
- How To: C# Visual Studio Setup
- How To: VSCode
- How To: Eclipse
- How To: Sublime Text
- How To: Code::Blocks