We recently upgraded to Android Gradle Plugin 4.0.0-beta03. We are now seeing this error when building one of our library modules
$ ./gradlew library_module:assemble
Execution failed for task ':library_module:bundleDebugAar'.
> Direct local .aar file dependencies are not supported when building an AAR.
The resulting AAR would be broken because the classes and Android resources from any local .aar
file dependencies would not be packaged in the resulting AAR. Previous versions of the Android
Gradle Plugin produce broken AARs in this case too (despite not throwing this error). The
following direct local .aar file dependencies of the :library_module project caused this error:
______.aar
I can see this was added to AGP a few months ago. But they provide no further info on why.
So.
What was the problem? Any more info? I can't find a single bug report anywhere.
How exactly can I fix this? Is this saying that I can't build one .aar that depends on other local .aars? What if this local aar was instead hosted on Maven Central or another remote repo? Why would that make a difference?
I recently encountered the same issue, the fix was to remove the library from libs/ and import it using File -> New -> New Module -> Import .JAR/.AAR Package, then referencing it in the library module build.gradle file:
dependencies {
implementation project(":imported_aar_module")
}
If you are on a newer Android Studio version (4.0.0+), this option is not available. Instead you have to do it manually.
Create a new directory and put the following content into the build.gradle file withing the new directory:
configurations.maybeCreate("default")
artifacts.add("default", file('[nameOfTheAar].aar'))
Place the aar into this new directoy. Next to the build.gradle file.
Add the new created Gradle project to the settings.gradle file:
include(":pathToTheCreatedDirectory")
Include the project in your library where you want to use the aar:
implementation project(":pathToTheCreatedDirectory", configuration = "default")
I want to call out #StefMa's comment on this question which was incredible simple and solved this issue for me, but it's buried among many other comments on this thread and is easily missed.
The 'correct' answer on this thread no longer works because it's not possible to import AARs in Android Studio anymore as referred to in that answer. But, the solution referred to in StefMa's comment linking to this GitHub post does, and it works perfectly.
Long story short - put your AAR into a separate module.
There's no need to muck around with creating lib directories, just follow these directions -
Create a new directory in your project's root directory. The image below shows two of them - spotify-app-remote and spotify-auth, but one is sufficient. Within that, put your AAR in, and create a new build.gradle file.
Within the build.gradle file, add the following, replacing the aar filename with the name of your AAR file -
configurations.maybeCreate("default")
artifacts.add("default", file('spotify-app-remote-release-0.7.1.aar'))
Add this to your settings.gradle file, substituting the name of the directory you created
include ':spotify-app-remote'
Include your new module in the module you wish to use the AAR. eg, if you want to use it within your app module, open app's build.gradle and add
api project(':spotify-app-remote')
within your dependencies { } block, obviously again substituting spotify-app-remote with whatever the name of your module is.
When building an Android library that depends on other Android libraries (i.e., aar files), you will get the following error message if you include the aar files as dependencies in the project:
Direct local .aar file dependencies are not supported when building an AAR. The resulting AAR would be broken because the classes and Android resources from any local .aar file dependencies would not be packaged in the resulting AAR. Previous versions of the Android Gradle Plugin produce broken AARs in this case too (despite not throwing this error).
As the above message states, when you build an Android library project, any aar it depends on is not packaged. If you built this way prior to AGP (Android Gradle Plugin) 4, you probably noticed that you had to include the aar dependencies on the project consuming your library.
You can compile your Android library project by specifying that the aar dependencies are compileOnly. See this for more info on when to use compileOnly.
So just add the following to your app build.gradle file:
compileOnly files('libs/some-library.aar')
Note that if you do this you will have to include the aar dependencies on the application project that consumes your library.
Alternatively, you can create a module that imports your aar dependency as #Sandi mentioned in the answer above.
Another way is to publish your aar dependencies to a maven repository and then add them to your library project like this:
implementation 'mylibrarygroup:mylibraryartifact:version-x.y.z#aar'
In my experience, when Gradle Plugin version is 4.2.2+ and Gradle version is 7.1+, as in #Luis's answer 'compileOnly' works.
compileOnly files('libs/your_library_name.aar')
It didn't work when the Gradle versions were lower.
Getting same error when use this code.
implementation fileTree(include: ['*.jar'], dir: 'libs')
implementation fileTree(include: ['*.aar'], dir: 'libs')
Replace your code with following.
Open the top level ‘build.gradle’ file and add.
repositories {
flatDir {
dirs('/src/main/libs')
}
}
Then in your project’s build.gradle add the following.
api(name:'aar_module_name', ext:'aar')
There are some changes now, You need to add your AAR or JAR as a dependency
1.) First, Navigate to File > Project Structure
[Reference Image 1]
2.) Then go to Dependencies > Declared Dependencies tab, click and select JAR/AAR Dependency in the dropdown
[Reference Image 2]
3.)In the Add Jar/Aar Dependency dialog, first enter the path to your .aar or .jar file, then select the configuration to which the dependency applies. If the library should be available to all configurations, select the "implementation" configuration.
[Reference Image 3]
4.) Click OK then Apply > OK.
You are good to go.
I had the same issue, in the sense I wanted to encapsulate a library dependency into a module. However this library dependency had a bunch of aars and creating separate module each of them is just clutter, and can't even find that option in the new studio.
To resolve it I published the aar-s into my local maven, before starting the build process.
So my encapsulating module's build.gradle looked like this:
plugins {
id 'com.android.library'
id 'kotlin-android'
id 'maven-publish'
}
//..
parent.allprojects { // for some reason simply repositories didn't work
repositories {
mavenLocal()
}
}
//...
publishing {
publications {
barOne(MavenPublication) {
groupId 'foo-aar-dependency'
artifactId 'bar1'
version '1.0'
artifact("$libsDirName/bar1.aar")
}
barTwo(MavenPublication) {
groupId 'foo-aar-dependency'
artifactId 'bar2'
version '1.0'
artifact("$libsDirName/bar2.aar")
}
barThree(MavenPublication) {
groupId 'foo-aar-dependency'
artifactId 'bar3'
version '1.0'
artifact("$libsDirName/bar3.aar")
}
// and so on...
}
}
// add the publication before the build even starts
// used ./gradlew mymodule:assemble --dry-run to find where to put it
afterEvaluate {
tasks.clean.dependsOn("publishToMavenLocal")
tasks.preBuild.dependsOn("publishToMavenLocal")
}
dependencies {
implementation "foo-aar-dependency:bar1:1.0"
implementation "foo-aar-dependency:bar2:1.0"
implementation "foo-aar-dependency:bar3:1.0"
// and so on
// also I had to make sure to add the aar's transitive dependencies as implementation below
}
Note: When I sync for the first time the dependencies are not found, but as soon as any clean/assemble is called the dependencies are published prior so it runs as it needs.
Note2: most of this can be moved into a separate file to not clutter your build.gradle
Note3: If you actually want to publish your module as a library this solution is not for you.
Note4: This also works on CI if you run clean then your next task.
For those who prefer to use as a regular dependency (or an item on your Gradle's version catalog):
Create a folder eg. spotifyAppRemote at the same level of app folder
Add the desired .aar file at the root of spotifyAppRemote folder
Create a settings.gradle.kts file at the root of spotifyAppRemote folder. This file will be empty, it just needs to be there for the composite builds. See: docs
Create a build.gradle.kts file at the root of spotifyAppRemote folder:
plugins {
base //allows IDE clean to trigger clean on this module too
}
configurations.maybeCreate("default")
artifacts.add("default", file("spotify-app-remote-release-0.7.2.aar"))
//Change group to whatever you want. Here I'm using the package from the aar that I'm importing from
group = "com.spotify.android"
version = "0.7.2"
Next add Gradle files to this folder to allow this module to build itself. You can do it manually or add the following snippet at the root of settings.gradle.kts (!! the project root, not the empty one created above)
/* Optional - automatically sync gradle files for included build */
rootDir.run {
listOf(
"gradle.properties",
"gradlew.bat",
"gradlew",
"gradle/wrapper/gradle-wrapper.jar",
"gradle/wrapper/gradle-wrapper.properties"
).map { path ->
resolve(path)
.copyTo(
target = rootDir.resolve("spotifyAppRemote").resolve(path),
overwrite = true
)
}
}
Now you can go ahead and add this folder as a module at the settings.gradle.kts on your project root. The same where may add the snippet above:
rootProject.name = "Your project name"
include(":app")
includeBuild("spotifyAppRemote")
Sync and build your project.
Now your included build will be available for your as a regular dependency with the defined group and version. To use this dependency:
dependencies {
// group:moduleName:version
implementation("com.spotify.android:spotifyAppRemote:0.7.2")
}
Thanks other members for the solution.
Source code on github: https://github.com/rsicarelli/SpotifySdkCompositeBuild
If you want to bundle a local .aar within your library and use that library in another project, you could take a look at "fat aars" https://github.com/kezong/fat-aar-android
EDIT : if the AAR does not contain android resources or native code, this could help you.
If you want this local resource directly linked to an "app" or "sdk" module
(no compileOnly)
=> Use a jar.
Rename the .aar to .zip
Extract it
Use the classes.jar inside
That's it.
Patch the problematic 3rd party dependency's build.gradle file. Under their dependencies { } section, they had a line like this:
implementation fileTree(dir: 'libs', include: ['*.jar','*.aar']) //Load all aars and jars from libs folder
My patch changes that line to:
implementation(name: 'the-name-of-the-aar', ext: 'aar')
In my project's build.gradle, under allprojects { repositories { }, added:
flatDir { dirs "$rootDir/../node_modules/the-third-party-dependency/android/src/main/libs" }
Where the AAR file lives
It was tested with reactnative >= 0.69.x
I faced a similar problem:
Task: add .aar SDK inside another SDK
Solution:
We have to create new Android Library Module inside our library (right click on our library name -> module -> Android library )
Delete all files inside it
Insert our .arr inside this module
Create build.gradle file inside module and put there:
configurations.maybeCreate("default")
artifacts.add("default", file('your_arr_name.aar'))
Add to your library build.gradle inside dependencies block next:
implementation project(':your_library:your_arr_module')
Now rebuild project and everything should work fine
It is bug in Android Studio 4.0.+.However, there is a solution.
First, project/build.gradle:
allprojects {
repositories {
google()
jcenter()
mavenCentral()
flatDir {dirs "../MoudleA/aars,../MoudleB/aars,../MoudleC/libs".split(",")
}
}
}
Second, Moudle/build.gradle:
// MoudleA/build.gradle
repositories {
flatDir {
dirs 'aars'
}
}
dependencies {
api fileTree(dir: 'libs', include: ['*.jar'])
//api fileTree(dir: 'aars', include: ['*.aar'])
// aar
new File('MoudleA/aars').traverse(
nameFilter: ~/.*\.aar/
) { file ->
def name = file.getName().replace('.aar', '')
api(name: name, ext: 'aar')
}
}
// MoudleB/build.gradle
repositories {
flatDir {
dirs 'aars'
}
}
dependencies {
api fileTree(dir: 'libs', include: ['*.jar'])
//fullApi fileTree(dir: 'aars/full', include: ['*.aar'])
//liteApi fileTree(dir: 'aars/lite', include: ['*.aar'])
// aar
new File('MoudleB/aars/full').traverse(
nameFilter: ~/.*\.aar/
) { file ->
def name = file.getName().replace('.aar', '')
fullApi(name: 'full/' + name, ext: 'aar')
}
new File('MoudleB/aars/lite').traverse(
nameFilter: ~/.*\.aar/
) { file ->
def name = file.getName().replace('.aar', '')
liteApi(name: 'lite/' + name, ext: 'aar')
}
}
// MoudleC/build.gradle
repositories {
flatDir {
dirs 'libs'
}
}
dependencies {
//api fileTree(dir: 'libs', include: ['*.jar','*.aar'])
api fileTree(dir: 'libs', include: ['*.jar'])
// aar
new File('MoudleC/libs').traverse(
nameFilter: ~/.*\.aar/
) { file ->
def name = file.getName().replace('.aar', '')
api(name: name, ext: 'aar')
}
}
It works for me,You can also try.
You can upload the AARs to an Artifactory, and consume them.
In my case, I realised that I have created libs folder at wrong place then recreated folder in main folder and implementation fileTree(include: ['*.aar'], dir: 'libs') worked.
Adapt aar dependency to maven repo standards and depend on it.
Lets connect the dependency in build.gradle
repositories {
maven { url "$project.projectDir/libs" }
}
dependencies {
api "my-library-group:my-library-module:my-library-version"
}
Replace you libs/myLibrary.arr file with next files:
libs/my-library-group/my-library-module/my-library-version/my-library-module-my-library-version.aar
libs/my-library-group/my-library-module/my-library-version/my-library-module-my-library-version.pom
libs/my-library-group/my-library-module/maven-metadata-local.xml
Where my-library-module-my-library-version.aar is the original aar file
Content of my-library-module-my-library-version.pom
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<project xsi:schemaLocation="http://maven.apache.org/POM/4.0.0 https://maven.apache.org/xsd/maven-4.0.0.xsd" xmlns="http://maven.apache.org/POM/4.0.0"
xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance">
<modelVersion>4.0.0</modelVersion>
<groupId>my-library-group</groupId>
<artifactId>my-library-module</artifactId>
<version>my-library-version</version>
<packaging>aar</packaging>
</project>
Content of maven-metadata-local.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<metadata>
<groupId>my-library-group</groupId>
<artifactId>my-library-module</artifactId>
<versioning>
<latest>my-library-version</latest>
<release>my-library-version</release>
<versions>
<version>my-library-version</version>
</versions>
<lastUpdated>20211130111015</lastUpdated>
</versioning>
</metadata>
Feel free to replace my-library-group, my-library-module, my-library-version with any value you like
Good news for everyone. It seems that we can finally include AARs without subprojects again. I was able to accomplish it using the implementation files directive as follows in the dependencies { } block:
implementation files('ssi.aar')
I also hit this issue when I increase my Android plugin version to 4.0.1, and it turns to error, tried some solutions but none of them are actually doable in our project.
Since we are using product flavours, and different flavours are using different local aar file, we simply can not just using api(name: "xxx", ext: 'aar') since those aar files are located in different flatDir.
For now I have to roll back to previous gradle plugin version.
will edit this answer if I figure something out
Much lazier way to do this in build.gradle.kts files is to use a fileTree combined with flatDir repository.
repositories {
flatDir {
dir("$rootDir/libraries")
}
}
dependencies {
fileTree("$rootDir/libraries").forEach { file ->
implementation(group = "", name = file.name.removeSuffix(".aar"), ext = "aar")
}
}
This way when you add or remove deps to the folder they are automatically configured
for me works this solution:
put into dependences in build.gradle:app file this string:
api fileTree(dir: 'libs', include: ['*.aar'])
I have a module called "Common" as library, this module has few dependencies like: com.badlogicgames.gdx, com.squareup.wire etc. And it works fine, I use them inside of this module.
And I have another module called "Tracking", where in the gradle I have:
dependencies {
compile project(':Common')
}
And if I try there to import any public class of module "Common", it works fine, but if I try to import any class of library com.badlogicgames.gdxor com.squareup.wire, it says me "Cannot resolve symbol ..." and hightlight it red. And no code autocompleting for such classes.
However the project compiles and starts on the device without errors.
Has somebody any idea? I tried "clean and rebuild" for project, "invalidate cashes and restart" for Android Studio. Nothing helps.
in the module common you need to declare those transitive dependencies as api to expose them to other modules:
e.g. common/build.gradle:
dependencies {
implementation fileTree(dir: 'libs', include: ['*.jar'])
implementation 'com.android.support:appcompat-v7:28.0.0'
api 'com.squareup.wire'
}
https://jeroenmols.com/blog/2017/06/14/androidstudio3/
Solution
Change compile to api
dependencies {
api project(':Common')
}
Reason
Because compile is deprecated, so it is been treated as implementation.
FYI compile and api (new keyword for compile) are same in which all internal modules are visible.
But new gradle project having compile keyword are treated as implementation. and in implementation internal modules are not visible to main project.
Suggestion
You should declare dependency in your gradle because it is not good to make leak of internal modules.
I'm starting to do some projects with this IDE and still I find several anoying situations that where very easy to solve with eclipse but that I don't know how to face here.
I'm implementing mail sending functionality to my app. This must be transparent for the user, so I'm using javax.mail.
For this, I have downloaded the "activation.jar", "additionnal.jar" and "mail.jar" files and I have save them in the libs folder.
Now I'm creating the custom sender class, which extendes javax.mail.Authenticator. But it does not find the import for the javax.mail, mail is appearing in red. I'm triying to import it from the libs but it does not find them.
I have also included this in gradle.build:
dependencies {
compile fileTree(dir: 'libs', include: ['*.jar'])
I have readed in several questions like this, that the way is to right click on the library and click on Add as library, but this option is not appearing for me.
So, whats the way of making Android Studio recognize these libraries?
I would encourage you to use an artifactory like Sonatype Nexus is for instance. In here you would deploy and retrive your artifacts and artifacts from other remote artifactories. But for now may just use MavenCentral.
In your top level build.gradle you would need to configure a repository where your artifacts reside.
repositories {
mavenCentral() //a public artifactory
maven {
url "https://your.privaterepo.com"
}
}
In your project level build.gradle you would add a dependency for javax.mail like
dependencies {
compile 'javax.mail:mail:1.5.0-b01' // G:A:V
}
For looking up GAV-coordinates of artifacts (GroupArtifactVersion) you could use just google, which often points you to http://mvnrepository.com/ where you can easily pick up dependencies in gradle notation.
You then will never need to download artifacts manually, gradle will handle this for you. All you would have to do is, to declare the repository and the dependencies.
For deploying artefacts from gradle, I use a goal uploadArchives in my module level build.gradle:
apply plugin: 'maven'
//noinspection GroovyMissingReturnStatement
uploadArchives {
repositories {
mavenDeployer {
repository(url: 'http://our.private.nexus/nexus/content/repositories/releases') {
authentication(userName: NEXUS_USERNAME, password: NEXUS_PASSWORD);
}
snapshotRepository(url: 'http://our.private.nexus/nexus/content/repositories/snapshots') {
authentication(userName: NEXUS_USERNAME, password: NEXUS_PASSWORD);
}
pom.groupId = "the.groupid.for.this.artifact"
pom.artifactId = "artifactid"
pom.version = "1.2.3"
}
}
}
if you have added libraries into lib folder in src. It will not going to work.
Click on android in project showcase and select Project, make new folder as libs and then add all third party libraries into it after that when you will right click on it, you will get option to add it as a library.
You also dont need to write in gradle file after adding it. Android Studio automatically add line itself.
I usually do a trick with import *.jar libs. After put *.jar files in libs folder. I delete some characters in compile fileTree(dir: 'libs', include: ['*.jar']) to compile fileTree(dir: 'libs', include: ['*.j']) and rewrite it to compile fileTree(dir: 'libs', include: ['*.jar']). It's a way to sync my build.gradle :)
My project is an Android Library which depends on Dropbox's android library.
dependencies {
...
provided fileTree(dir: '../Libraries/Dropbox', include: ['*.jar'])
...
}
Everything works well excepts Gradle puts all the .jar files from Dropbox into my output .aar file.
MyLib.aar
|-classes.jar
|-AndroidManifest.xml
|-...
|-libs
|-bcprov-jdk16-146.jar
|-commons-logging-1.1.1.jar
|-dropbox-android-sdk-1.6.1
|-json_simple-1.1.jar
How can I avoid this?
something like this might help you:
android.libraryVariants.all { variant ->
variant.outputs.each { output ->
def packageLib = output.getPackageLibrary()
packageLib.exclude('libs/externalLibrary.jar')
}
}
inside android {} block
Why do you want to avoid this? When you give your library to someone, they have all the dependencies already in one file.
You can include the dependencies via
compile 'com.dropbox.core:dropbox-core-sdk:1.7.7'
compile 'com.googlecode.json-simple:json-simple:1.1.1'
compile 'commons-logging:commons-logging:1.2'
compile 'org.bouncycastle:bcprov-jdk16:1.46'
in your build.gradle file and remove it from the libs folder. Do the same with the other dependencies. This way they will not be packaged into your .aar file.