Debugging JNI Code on my Nexus S - android

How can I debug JNI code on my device! I enable debugging and Im able to successfully set break points in Java and able to debug using Eclipse.
But when it comes to my JNI C/C++ code I can't debug! Eclipse doesn't get no feedback on the breakpoints that I set.
Please help!
ps: Im using Android SDK 2.3.4, NDK r5b on MacOS Snow Leopard

I've used this tutorials:
Using Eclipse for Android C/C++ Development
Using Eclipse for Android C/C++ Debugging

Related

How to debug c++ code in Android Studio?

I use Android Studio 1.5.1 and Windows 7. I installed LLDB, but when I put a breakpoint in my native code, nothing happens. It may be necessary to set some settings in native debugger to make it work?
I can't believe I can't don't allow to debug my native code in such a powerful tool like Android Studio.
About same question has been asked at the end of the link, you can check the answer.
How to get NDK debugging to work in Android Studio?

Is it possible to debug C/C++ in Android Studio?

I'm writing an Android app that includes C/C++ code that is compiled alongside the Java code. My app is crashing during the execution of the native code.
Is there a way to step through Android C/C++ source and inspect variables as it is possible with Java source?
I am not necessarily looking for a way to step through the source from within Android Studio. That is obviously the ideal solution, however, if I need to use an external tool after starting the app from Studio, that's fine. I want to be able to step through the execution line-by-line and inspect variables.
Android Studio 1.0.2
Android NDK r10d
Edit: Stemming from the immediate response of, "Use Eclipse with ADT plugin", let me add more requirements.
This project started as an Eclipse ADT project. However, I have now migrated to Android Studio. My project is now built using Gradle, and my project directory structure reflects this. I am willing to use Eclipse; I am not willing to change my project structure in order to revert to Eclipse from Android Studio. If there is a way to open the Android Studio project in Eclipse and debug it that way, please elaborate on the process.
[UPDATE]
As of July 2015, Android Studio DOES support NDK.
You can learn more about it on this link.
[OLD]
NDK is not yet supported in Android Studio.
When we have to deal with NDK, the only solution is to use Eclipse.
EDIT
We basically keep Eclipse project with NDK feature (map in our case) and Gradle project with other (non-map) features. So everything that has to be done with NDK, we do in Eclipse and then include changes into Gradle project.
To be more precise, inside directory /src/main/ we created another directory called jniLibs and put the compiled *.so file inside architecture-specific folders (armeabi-v7a, armeabi, x86...). Then in the main class of Gradle project simply added a line
static {
System.loadLibrary("OurNDKLibName");
}
You can add this line only once per project. Maybe I am wrong but we did not have any issues for doing so.
As of version 1.3+ Preview Android Studio supports C++ debugging, quoting Android M Developer Preview & Tools:
Most notable is a much requested feature from our Android NDK & game developers: code editing and debugging for C/C++ code. Based on JetBrains Clion platform, the Android Studio NDK plugin provides features such as refactoring and code completion for C/C++ code alongside your Java code. Java and C/C++ code support is integrated into one development experience free of charge for Android app developers.
It isn't wasn't isn't working very well.
hello-jni fails failed with:
Starting LLDB server: run-as com.example.sample
/data/data/com.example.sample/lldb/bin/start_lldb_server.sh
/data/data/com.example.sample/lldb
/data/data/com.example.sample/lldb/tmp/platform.port1442695333842 "lldb
process:gdb-remote packets"
Error while launching debug server on device:
com.android.tools.ndk.run.DebuggerContext$StartServerException:
java.lang.IllegalStateException: Failed to read platform port
/data/data/com.example.sample/lldb/tmp/platform.port1442695333842
I'm using 1.4RC1
compileSdkVersion 23
buildToolsVersion "23.0.1"
And the "app-native" run configuration #Gerry mentioned. It's nearly there, but I can find no trace of an lldb directory in my app's private data folder. I do find a 400kb gdbserver in the lib directory linked from there, with my own *.so right besides. Unfortunately the option for debugging with gdb instead of lldb has gone with the upgrade from 1.3 to 1.4. NDK 10e ships a 400kb gdbserver binary in ndk\prebuilt\android-arm\gdbserver which it is (I guess). On September 15th the gdb debug howto https://github.com/mapbox/mapbox-gl-native/wiki/Android-debugging-with-remote-GDB was updated. This is harder than logcat debugging IMO, but a current topic, sorry to be so negative but I don't believe lldb actually works yet.
I have run hello-jni and reached the same conclusion.
So in answer to your question, it is not yet possible to debug C/C++ in Android Studio. Sorry this wasn't the answer you hoped for and I hope to be proved wrong with conclusive evidence to the contrary, but right here, right now, no chance!
UPDATE I raised an issue where I was given a fix for one phone.
UPDATE2 Too early to tell, it is experimental after all, but I am occasionally failing to connect, often if not always getting out of order stepping and breakpoints with nonsense parameter values. I just set a conditional breakpoint that didn't fire but the logcat shows it should. Initially I assumed it was my logical error, but it goes deeper.
Simply hitting breakpoints at all is very helpful but it is still a million miles short of Java debugging, or Vis Studio C++ debugging.
UPDATE3 Gone back to stable 1.3.1 as the canaray channel version was pausing for a toilet break every keystroke. While native debug build at least launches with my "fixed" phone, no breakpoints are hit even in hellojni, or a slightly extended version to give more opportunity. I'm used to logcat now but have had better degbugging experiences with Android, NDK and Eclipse. A more elaborate solution is also easier to break, but at least it works.
Yes, Android Studio does support C++ debugging at least with Android studio 1.5.1 and android-ndk-r10e.
In the old days, you will have to write make files Android.mk and Application.mk in order to build the C++ code in Android Studio. You don't need them any more. As long as you put them under the jni folder, gradle will be able to pick it up and compile it. You should see something like the following:
And also allow you to set break point and debug it.
You should follow this step-by-step tutorial and learn more about it. And read more about the documentation here. I've uploaded a complete working example so that you can download and try it out on GitHub.
With Android Studio 1.4 from tools.android.com, debugging is possible. When you open/create a project with C++[jni] code in it, Android studio would create a new configuration, something like $(module_name)-native
I would select this configuration, sync gradle, build, set breakpoint etc and run it with Android Studio. After a long wait, my debugger is connected, app is broken in[I think you could also set breakpoint at this time]; this break is not at my set break points, I let it go in android studio and my breakpoint is hit. Hope this helps
Some samples are supposed to work with android debugger
yes! it is possible to debug native code in android studio. As from the updates Android Studio 2.2+ support in built tools for debugging native code.

elf32-littlearm symbol format unrecognized debugging Native Android code

I'm trying to debug some native Android code built through the NDK. Unfortunately, when I launch the process under the debugger from Eclipse I get an error
I'm sorry, Dave, I can't do that. Symbol format `elf32-littlearm' unknown.
The code is compiled for ARM thumb so the symbol format makes sense. However, using Google's bundled ADT for Eclipse should work? Do I need to specify a specific version of GDB to use?
To note, the code runs fine without trying to debug.
I'm running on Windows 7 64 bit with NDK release 10.
After some searching it looks like it is a bug with the GDB shipped with the NDK r10 toolchain. See https://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=74371. The download linked from that bug seems to work for me.

Debugging both Java and native C++ code using Eclipse NDK plugin

I'm trying out the new official Eclipse NDK plugin on Windows. After solving problems with NDK_MODULE_PATH (which were the only problems, surprisingly) the "Debug as Android native application" configuration works as intended. However, it only hits native code breakpoint while I want to debug Java as well. Is it possible to edit this configuration so that Java breakpoints are also hit?

debugging native code (C++) using gdb on android with Eclipse. Is it possible?

I have some piece of code which uses JNI. I can debug code wrote in Java directly in Eclipse (using ADT). I even have a script, which help me debug native code with gdb. However this is not very comfortable way for doing this.
Is it possible to configure Eclipse to use gdb (I guess gdbserver) for debbuging android native applications? Do you know where I could find any description of this?
according to the release notes from Android 2.2 NDK - you can now debug on device native code.
please refer to the NDK docs, since I didn't try this myself.
It depends whether you want to debug JNI code you have written using NDK apis vs native code in AOSP applications.
For the former case, use NDK debugging tools. For the latter, you need to have right version of gdbserver and gdb. The session needs to be configured with gdb script to find symbols for AOSP libs.
Please check Debugging AOSP native applications link for step by step tutorial.

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