.. | ||
java/src/org/chromium/example/jni_generator | ||
android_jar.classes | ||
AndroidManifest.xml | ||
BUILD.gn | ||
jni_exception_list.gni | ||
jni_generator_helper.h | ||
jni_generator_tests.py | ||
jni_generator.py | ||
jni_registration_generator.py | ||
PRESUBMIT.py | ||
README.md | ||
sample_entry_point.cc | ||
sample_for_tests.cc | ||
sample_for_tests.h | ||
SampleForTests_jni.golden | ||
testCalledByNatives.golden | ||
testConstantsFromJavaP.golden | ||
testFromJavaP.golden | ||
testFromJavaPGenerics.golden | ||
testInnerClassNatives.golden | ||
testInnerClassNativesBothInnerAndOuter.golden | ||
testInnerClassNativesBothInnerAndOuterRegistrations.golden | ||
testInnerClassNativesMultiple.golden | ||
testInputStream.javap | ||
testMotionEvent.javap | ||
testMotionEvent.javap7 | ||
testMultipleJNIAdditionalImport.golden | ||
testNativeExportsOnlyOption.golden | ||
testNatives.golden | ||
testNativesLong.golden | ||
testNativesRegistrations.golden | ||
testSingleJNIAdditionalImport.golden | ||
testTracing.golden |
Overview
JNI (Java Native Interface) is the mechanism that enables Java code to call native functions, and native code to call Java functions.
- Native code calls into Java using apis from
<jni.h>
, which basically mirror Java's reflection APIs. - Java code calls native functions by declaring body-less functions with the
native
keyword, and then calling them as normal Java functions.
jni_generator
generates boiler-plate code with the goal of making our code:
- easier to write, and
- typesafe.
jni_generator
uses regular expressions to parse .Java files, so don't do
anything too fancy. E.g.:
- Classes must be either explicitly imported, or are assumed to be in
the same package. To use
java.lang
classes, add an explicit import. - Inner classes need to be referenced through the outer class. E.g.:
void call(Outer.Inner inner)
The presense of any JNI within a class will result in ProGuard obfuscation for the class to be disabled.
Exposing Native Methods
Without Crazy Linker:
- Java->Native calls are exported from the shared library and lazily resolved
by the runtime (via
dlsym()
).
With Crazy Linker:
- Java->Native calls are explicitly registered with JNI on the native side.
Explicit registration is necessary because crazy linker provides its own
dlsym()
, but JNI is hardcoded to use the system'sdlsym()
.- The logic to explicitly register stubs is generated by
jni_registration_generator.py
.- This script finds all native methods by scanning all source
.java
files of an APK. Inefficient, but very convenient.
- This script finds all native methods by scanning all source
- Since
dlsym()
is not used in this case, we use a linker script to avoid the cost of exporting symbols from the shared library (refer to//build/config/android:hide_all_but_jni_onload
).
- The logic to explicitly register stubs is generated by
jni_registration_generator.py
exposes two registrations methods:RegisterNonMainDexNatives
- Registers native functions needed by multiple process types (e.g. Rendereres, GPU process).RegisterMainDexNatives
- Registers native functions needed only by the browser process.
Exposing Java Methods
Java methods just need to be annotated with @CalledByNative
. The generated
functions can be put into a namespace using @JNINamespace("your_namespace")
.
Usage
Because the generator does not generate any source files, generated headers must
not be #included
by multiple sources. If there are Java functions that need to
be called by multiple sources, one source should be chosen to expose the
functions to the others via additional wrapper functions.
Calling Java -> Native
- Methods marked as
native
will have stubs generated for them that forward calls to C++ function (that you must write). - If the first parameter is a C++ object (e.g.
long mNativePointer
), then the bindings will automatically generate the appropriate cast and call into C++ code (JNI itself is only C).
Calling Native -> Java
- Methods annotated with
@CalledByNative
will have stubs generated for them. - Just call the generated stubs defined in generated
.h
files.
Java Objects and Garbage Collection
All pointers to Java objects must be registered with JNI in order to prevent garbage collection from invalidating them.
For Strings & Arrays - it's common practice to use the //base/android/jni_*
helpers to convert them to std::vectors
and std::strings
as soon as
possible.
For other objects - use smart pointers to store them:
ScopedJavaLocalRef<>
- When lifetime is the current function's scope.ScopedJavaGlobalRef<>
- When lifetime is longer than the current function's scope.JavaObjectWeakGlobalRef<>
- Weak reference (do not prevent garbage collection).JavaParamRef<>
- Use to accept any of the above as a parameter to a function without creating a redundant registration.
Additional Guidelines / Advice
Minimize the surface API between the two sides. Rather than calling multiple functions across boundaries, call only one (and then on the other side, call as many little functions as required).
If a Java object "owns" a native one, store the pointer via
"long mNativeClassName"
. Ensure to eventually call a native method to delete
the object. For example, have a close()
that deletes the native object.
The best way to pass "compound" types across in either direction is to create an inner class with PODs and a factory function. If possible, make mark all the fields as "final".
Build Rules
generate_jni
- Generates a header file with stubs for given.java
filesgenerate_jar_jni
- Generates a header file with stubs for a given.jar
filegenerate_jni_registration
- Generates a header file with functions to register native-side JNI methods (required only when using crazy linker).
Refer to //build/config/android/rules.gni for more about the GN templates.
Changing jni_generator
- Python unit tests live in
jni_generator_tests.py
- A working demo app exists as
//base/android/jni_generator:sample_jni_apk