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How to get NDK debugging to work in Android Studio?

Android Studio doesn't stop at breakpoints in C++ code, this is what i've done so far :

  1. In AndroidManifest.xml :

    android:debuggable="true"
    
  2. In build.gradle (this may be the problem):

    sourceSets.main {
      jniLibs.srcDir 'src/main/libs'
      jni.srcDirs = []
    }
    
    task ndkBuild(type: Exec) {
      commandLine android.ndkDirectory.getAbsolutePath() + '\\' + 'ndk-build.cmd', '-C', file('src/main/jni').absolutePath, 'NDK_DEBUG=1'
    }
    
    tasks.withType(JavaCompile) {
      compileTask -> compileTask.dependsOn ndkBuild
    }
    
    1. Configured the application as a native application on Android Studio

    2. Put breakpoints in C++ code

    3. Debug the app

This seems to work because it is saying : "Now Launching Native Debug Session" moreover I can pause the app with the stop button but no breakpoint is working.

Thank you for your help

like image 462
PadThai Avatar asked Sep 05 '15 13:09

PadThai


6 Answers

With LLDB installed, one has native / dual debugging available.

Run/Debug Configurations

like image 132
Martin Zeitler Avatar answered Oct 03 '22 20:10

Martin Zeitler


  1. In Run->Debug Configuration "Debugger" tab, choose Debug type as "Native". In the field of "Before launch", if Android studio reports conflicts, accept the recommendation for 'fix' it. Android studio will download lldb library.

  2. click on the 'debug' bottom and wait until debugger attached to the process.

  3. now you can see the variables in the debug windown.

like image 25
Hong Avatar answered Sep 30 '22 20:09

Hong


By the syntax of your build.gradle looks like you don't use the experimental plugin for gradle, without it you wont be able to debug native c/c++ in android studio. For more information read this : Android NDK Preview

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VitalyD Avatar answered Oct 02 '22 20:10

VitalyD


If you're still looking, Android Studio has recently added support for direct integration of ndk-build and CMake projects: http://tools.android.com/tech-docs/external-c-builds

Kind regards, Jomo

like image 33
Jomo Fisher Avatar answered Sep 29 '22 20:09

Jomo Fisher


you can try this:

1.in app/build.gradle:

at dependencies label:

releaseCompile project(path:':youModuleName',configuration:'release')
debugCompile project(path:':youModuleName',configuration:'debug')

2.in youModule/build.gradle:

at android label:

publishNonDefault true

demo:

https://github.com/sunalong/JNIDemo

like image 41
sunalong Avatar answered Oct 01 '22 20:10

sunalong


Android Studio 3

Android Studio 3 makes the whole process trivial.

To start, get your hands on a simple example app such as: https://github.com/googlesamples/android-ndk/tree/2020d9674a6601e8219eed2921f5028beb856a24/hello-gl2/

Then just set breakpoints, either on C++ or Java, and do: Run > Debug

You can also step into native calls from Java and fall in the C++ code.

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