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4.0 KiB
4.0 KiB
Building and Development
Setup Environment
- Supported platforms:
- Linux x64
- macOS x64 (Intel)
- macOS arm64 (Apple Silicon)
- Windows x64
- Windows only: Enable developer mode. This is required because we need symbolic link support.
- Install Python 3.8+:
- On Unix, install python3 using your favorite package manager
- On Windows, download and install the latest Python version on the official website.
Make sure to select "Add Python to PATH" during installation. - (Optional on Windows): Run
pip install colorama
to install thecolorama
python package
- Install Git:
- On Unix, install git with your favorite package manager
- On Windows, download the install the latest Git version on the official website.
Make sure to "Enable symbolic links" during installation.
- Install Android Studio and follow the instructions and go through the initial setup.
- Set environment variable
ANDROID_SDK_ROOT
to the Android SDK folder. This path can be found in Android Studio settings. - Setup JDK:
- The recommended option is to set environment variable
ANDROID_STUDIO
to the path where your Android Studio is installed. The build script will automatically find and use the bundled JDK. - You can also setup JDK 17 yourself, but this guide will not cover the instructions.
- The recommended option is to set environment variable
- Clone sources:
git clone --recurse-submodules https://github.com/topjohnwu/Magisk.git
- Run
./build.py ndk
to let the script download and install NDK for you
Building
- To build everything and create the final Magisk APK, run
./build.py all
. - You can also build specific sub-components; call
build.py
to see your options.
For each action, use-h
to access help (e.g../build.py binary -h
) - Configure the build by using
config.prop
. A sampleconfig.prop.sample
is provided.
IDE Support
- The repository can be directly opened with Android Studio as a project.
- The Kotlin, Java, C++, and C code in the project should be properly supported in Android Studio out of the box.
- Run
./build.py binary
before working on native code, as some generated code is only created during the build process.
Developing Rust in Android Studio
Because the Magisk NDK package, ONDK (the one installed with ./build.py ndk
), contains a fully self contained Clang + Rust toolchain, building the Magisk project alone does not require configuring toolchains. However, due to the way the IntelliJ Rust plugin works, you'll have to go through some additional setup to make Android Studio work with Magisk's Rust codebase:
- Install rustup, the official Rust toolchain manager
- Link the ONDK Rust toolchain and set it as default:
# Link the ONDK toolchain with the name "magisk"
rustup toolchain link magisk "$ANDROID_SDK_ROOT/ndk/magisk/toolchains/rust"
# Set as default
rustup default magisk
- Install the Intellij Rust plugin in Android Studio
- In Preferences > Languages & Frameworks > Rust, set
$ANDROID_SDK_ROOT/ndk/magisk/toolchains/rust/bin
as the toolchain location - Open
native/src/Cargo.toml
, and select "Attach" in the "No Cargo projects found" banner
Signing and Distribution
- In release builds, the certificate of the key signing the Magisk APK will be used by Magisk's root daemon as a reference to reject and forcefully uninstall any non-matching Magisk apps to protect users from malicious and unverified Magisk APKs.
- To do any development on Magisk itself, switch to an official debug build and reinstall Magisk to turn off the signature check.
- To distribute your own Magisk builds signed with your own keys, set your signing configs in
config.prop
. - Check Google's Documentation for more details on generating your own key.