Building Android apps with Genero

Genero provides a command-line tool to create applications for Android™ devices.

Basics

Genero mobile apps for Android are distributed as APK packages like any other Android app.

Genero provides the gmabuildtool command line tool, to build the APK package for your mobile application.

For testing purposes, the tool can deploy and automatically launch the app on a specific device or simulator.

The tool has also an option to update the Android SDK and an option to manage scaffold archives.

Note: This documentation section implies that you are familiar with Android app programming concepts and requirements. For example, you will need the Android SDK tools to be installed (and up to date) to build your Android apps. For more details, visit the Android SDK tools download page.

Prerequisites

Before starting the command line tool to build or deploy the app, fulfill the following prerequisites:
  1. The Genero BDL development environment (FGLDIR) must be installed to compile your program files.
  2. The Java JDK must be installed.
    Important: To build Android apps, the minimum required JDK version is 8 (you can use JDK 11 for example). However, the gmabuildtool updatesdk command uses Android sdkmanager, which supports only JDK 8. Therefore, you need to setup a JDK 8 environment when updating the Android SDK. This limitation may disappear in future versions of the sdkmanager.
  3. The Android SDK must be installed (the buildtool uses the "Gradle" utility).
    Note: The first time the Android tools are called, they automatically check for updates. An internet connection is required.
  4. Install the GMA software components.

    The GMA buildtool and GMA binary archive are provided in the GMA distribution archive (fjs-gma-*.zip).

    To set up the GMA installation directory, perform the following steps:
    1. Create a dedicated directory (gma-install-dir)
    2. Extract the content of the fjs-gma-*.zip.
    3. Add the gma-install-dir directory to your PATH environment variable, in order to find the gmabuildtool command.

    The gma-install-dir will contain the gmabuildtool command, and the original GMA scaffold archive (gma-install-dir/artifacts).

  5. All required Android SDK packages must be downloaded. To download the required Android SDK packages, execute the gmabuildtool updatesdk command.
    Note: Execute the gmabuildtool updatesdk command every time a new version of the GMA buildtool and GMA binary archive is installed.
  6. Android-specific app resources such as icons (in all required sizes) are required, along with the application program files.
  7. If you plan to publish your app on Google Play, register to Google Play as a developer and create a Google Play project.

Environment settings

Define the following environment variables before starting the command-line buildtool:
  • Android SDK environment settings (ANDROID_SDK_ROOT, PATH)
  • Java JDK environment settings (JAVA_HOME, PATH)

Update the Android SDK with the GMA buildtool

After a fresh installation of the GMA buildtool and GMA binary archive, upgrade the Android SDK, to download all required Android SDK packages, with the gmabuildtool updatesdk command.

Important: When using gmabuildtool updatesdk on Microsoft™ Windows® platforms, the "tools" package of Android SDK cannot be updated due to an SDK manager bug. The workaround is to download and install a new Android SDK. This problem exists for example with Android SDK 26.0.2, and may be solved in higher SDK versions.

The Android SDK installation directory is required for the SDK update, and is found in ANDROID_SDK_ROOT environment variable, or with the --android-sdk option:

gmabuildtool updatesdk
    --android-sdk /use/local/32bits/android-sdk/r22.6.2
Use the --accept-licenses option to silently accept all Android SDK licenses.
gmabuildtool updatesdk
    --accept-licenses
    ...
If you need to specify a proxy to download the Android SDK, use the --proxy-host and --proxy-port options:
gmabuildtool updatesdk
    --proxy-host amadeus --proxy-port 3232
    ...
Use the --no-install-extras option to skip the installation of extra SDK modules such as Google's driver for Windows and the HAXM for Windows and OS X:
gmabuildtool updatesdk
    --no-install-extras
    ...

Manage GMA scaffold archives

The GMA scaffold archives can be managed by the gmabuildtool scaffold command.

In order to get the list of plugins installed in the GMA development environment, use the --list-plugins option:

$ gmabuildtool scaffold --list-plugins
...
cordova-plugin-device-motion.aar
cordova-plugin-media.aar
...

To install additional plugins in the GMA installation directory, use the --install-plugins option, for example:

$ gmabuildtool scaffold --install-plugins path-to-plugin-sources

For more usage examples, see Cordova plugins.

Building your APK with the GMA buildtool

The gmabuildtool build ... command creates the APK from a set of files, and following the options passed as parameter.

gmabuildtool build
    ... build options ...

The process will be explained in details in the next sections of this topic.

For a complete description of the build command options, see gmabuildtool.

Gradle build cache

To build Android apps, the GMA buildtool uses the Gradle toolkit.

Gradle can speed up APK creation time, by reusing outputs saved in a cache produced from previous builds. The gmabuildtool command uses the Gradle build cache.

On Unix-like platforms, the gmabuildtool Gradle build cache is in the /tmp/gma directory. On Windows, it is in C:\tmp\gma.

Important: The Gradle build cache directory used by gmabuildtool (/tmp/gma or C:\tmp\gma) can grow to a significant size and consequently fill the disk. Take care to monitor the size of this cache and manually clean out the cache files, to ensure that it does not become too large in size.

Cleaning intermediate build files

The build process is optimized to avoid a complete APK rebuild every time you invoke the GMA buildtool.

The GMA buildtool creates intermediate archive files, that can be reused in the next build, if no changes are detected in application program files. However, these files might be corrupted, in case of user interruption or gradle build failure.

In this situation, you can use the --clean option of the gmabuildtool build ... command, to clean up the scaffold build directory, and restart with a fresh build:

gmabuildtool build --clean
    ... build options ...

Force scaffold update during build

During the build process, if not yet done, the GMA buildtool will automatically unzip the original GMA scaffold archive (gma-install-dir/artifacts) into the --build-project directory. During next builds, the scaffold files present in the project build directory will be reused.

If needed (especially, when upgrading GMA), you can force an update of these scaffold files with the --build-force-scaffold-update option of the gmabuildtool build command:

gmabuildtool build --build-force-scaffold-update
    ... build options ...
Note: When using the --build-force-scaffold-update option, the GMA buildtool will ask for a confirmation to remove the scaffold files in your project directory. In order to build silently and answer yes to all questions asked during the build process, use the --build-quietly option:
gmabuildtool build --build-force-scaffold-update --build-quietly
    ... build options ...

Using an options file

To simplify option specification, create a file with the list of options to be passed to the gmabuildtool with the --input-options argument. Each option must be specified in a dedicated line (note that the main command argument appears in the first line):
$ cat myoptions.txt
build
--build-output-apk-name MyApp
--build-app-name MyApp
--build-app-package-name com.example.myapp
...
$ gmabuildtool --input-options ./myoptions.txt

Elements used in building the Android app

The gmabuildtool build command builds the Android APK package from the following:
  • The GMA binary archive, containing the GMA front-end and the FGLGWS runtime system. The original scaffold is provided in gma-install-dir/artifacts and unzipped/copied for APK builds into a directory defined by the --build-project option.
  • The compiled application program and resource files (.42m, .42f, etc) (--build-app-genero-program* options),
  • The prefix for the APK file name to be generated (--build-output-apk-name option),
  • The name of the app (--build-app-name option),
  • The version code of the app (--build-app-version-code option),
  • The version name of the app (--build-app-version-name option),
  • Android app specific resources:
    • Android app icons (all sizes) (--build-app-icon* and --build-status-icon-* options).
  • Android app specifics (to sign the app, not required in development mode):
    • The keystore alias, used with the keytool to generate the keystore file (--build-jarsigner-alias option).
    • The keystore file, generated from keytool (for the --build-jarsigner-keystore option).

Generate the keystore file to sign your app

In order to build an APK that can be deployed on the market (Google Play), you need to sign your Android app.

First, you need to generate a keystore file with the keytool Android utility.

The keystore file and keystore alias will be used by the gmabuildtool to sign the APK with the jarsigner utility. These signing credentials are passed to the buildtool with the --build-jarsigner-keystore and --build-jarsigner-alias options.

For more details, see manual Android application signing.

Generated APK file name

The file name of the APK package is formed from:
  1. The APK file name prefix defined by the --build-output-apk-name option (by default, "app"),
  2. When building a debug version, the -debug suffix,
  3. The .apk file extension.
For example, if the APK file name prefix is MyApp and is a debug package, the resulting APK file name will be: MyApp-debug.apk.

Default build directory structure

For convenience, the buildtool supports a default directory structure to find all files required to build the APK:

top-dir
|
|-- main.42m and other program files, as described in Directory structure for GMA apps
|
|-- gma
|   |-- project
|   |   ...
|   |-- ic_app_hdpi.png
|   |-- ic_app_mdpi.png
|   |-- ic_app_xhdpi.png
|   |-- ic_app_xxhdpi.png
|   |   ...
In the above directory structure:
  1. top-dir is the top directory of the default structure. It typically holds your application program files. The program files directory can be specified with the --build-app-genero-program option.
  2. top-dir/gma is the default directory containing the GMA binary archive and the app icons.
  3. top-dir/gma/project contains the scaffold files copied automatically by gmabuildtool from gma-install-dir/artifacts. This directory can be specified with the --build-project option.

Android permissions

To use a mobile device feature such as the camera, an Android app must be created with the corresponding Android permission.

Android distinguishes "Normal Permissions" and "Dangerous Permissions": Dangerous Permissions require a user validation at runtime, the first time the device feature is used.
Note: Before Android 6, Dangerous Permissions defined by the app were set at app installation. Starting with version 6, Dangerous Permissions must be requested by the app code on demand.

Android permissions can be specified with the --build-app-permissions option of the gmabuildtool. Define the list of permissions as a single argument, by using the comma as separator.

For example:
gmabuildtool build \
    ...
    --build-app-permissions android.permission.READ_CALENDAR,... \
    ...

Assuming that the permission was specified when building the APK, a Dangerous Permission required for a core GMA feature (like internet access), or a built-in front call, will make the GMA automatically ask for user confirmation. For example, if the app code makes a chooseContact front call, the GMA will automatically request the user to access the contacts database.

Other permissions (not related to core GMA features or built-in front calls) need to be specified when building the app.
Note: Dangerous Permissions not related to core GMA features or built-in front calls, need to be enabled by the app code. To request the user for a specific permission, perform a askForPermission front call, before using the feature.
The permissions listed below show Android "Normal Permissions", required for core GMA app features and built-in mobile front calls.
Note: Normal Permissions listed below are set by default. They do not need to be specified when building the APK.
  • android.permission.INTERNET
  • android.permission.ACCESS_NETWORK_STATE
  • android.permission.CHANGE_NETWORK_STATE
  • android.permission.ACCESS_WIFI_STATE
  • android.permission.REORDER_TASKS
  • android.permission.KILL_BACKGROUND_PROCESSES
  • android.permission.MOUNT_FORMAT_FILESYSTEMS
  • android.permission.READ_LOGS
  • android.permission.WAKE_LOCK
  • com.google.android.c2dm.permission.RECEIVE
  • packageName.permission.C2D_MESSAGE
The following list shows the Android "Dangerous Permissions", required for core GMA app features and built-in mobile front calls.
Important: Dangerous Permissions listed below are not set by default: They must be specified explicitly with the --build-app-permissions option, when building the APK.

For a complete list of Android permissions, see Android's Manifest permissions.

Define app's color theme

To customize your Android app, it can be created with a color theme defined by a list of colors. The colors are specified as a comma-separated list of RGB colors with the --build-app-colors option.
Note: This feature is only available with Android 5.0 / SDK 21 and higher. With older versions of Android, the colors specified with the --build-app-colors option will not take effect.

The value provided to the --build-app-colors option must be a comma-separated list of four hexadecimal RGB colors.

The position of the RGB value in the color list defines its purpose:
  1. colorPrimary: The main color used in the app.
  2. primaryDark: The color used for the status bar and the navigation bar.
  3. accent: The accent color used for widgets and table lines.
  4. actionBarText: The foreground color for the texts in the action bar.
  5. primaryText: The text color for items in the whole application.
  6. windowBackground: The window background color.
  7. navigationBarBackground: The background color of the bottom bar.
By default, the color theme is the Genero purple color.
For example, to define a red color theme, use the following combination:
gmabuildtool build \
    ...
    --build-app-colors "#F44336,#B71C1C,#EF9A9A,#FFFFFF,#FF0000,#00AA00,#DDAA00" \
    ...

For more details, see Android material theme and Android color palette

Debug and release versions

Android apps can be generated in a debug or release version. Release version are prepared for distribution on Google Play, while debug versions are used in development. In debug mode, the app installed on the device will listen on the debug TCP port to allow fgldb -m connections.

Debug or release mode can be controlled with the --build-mode option of the gmabuildtool command:
gmabuildtool build \
    --build-mode debug \
    ...

By default the app is built in release mode.

Building an Android app with gmabuildtool

Follow the next steps to setup a GMA app build directory in order to create an Android app, based on the default directory structure:
  1. Create the root distribution directory (top-dir)
  2. Copy compiled program files (.42m, .42f, fglprofile, application images, web component files, etc) under top-dir.
  3. Copy the default English .42s compiled string resource file under top-dir.
  4. Create non-English language directories (fr, ge, ...) under top-dir and copie the corresponding .42s files.
  5. Copy default application data files (database file for ex) under top-dir.
  6. Create the top-dir/gma directory.
  7. Copy Android app resources (icons) under top-dir/gma.
Once the build directory is prepared, issue the following commands to build the APK:
$ cd top-dir
$ gmabuildtool build \
    --android-sdk /home/mike/android/sdk \
    --build-force-scaffold-update \
    --build-apk-outputs /home/mike/work/example/outputs \
    --build-output-apk-name MyApp \
    --build-app-name MyApp \
    --build-app-package-name com.example.myapp \
    --build-app-version-code 1002 \
    --build-app-version-name "10.02" \
    --build-jarsigner-alias android_alias \
    --build-jarsigner-keystore /home/mike/work/example/sign/android.keystore \
    --build-mode release \
    --build-app-permissions android.permission.ACCESS_WIFI_STATE,android.permission.CALL_PHONE

Building an app with GMA custom extensions

The gmabuildtool build command supports APK creation for applications using GMA custom extensions written in Java.

Before building the APK package, create the custom GMA binary archive with your extensions, as described in Packaging custom Java extensions for GMA.

When your custom GMA binary archive is complete, build the APK package with the gmabuildtool build command. Use the --build-project option to specify the path to the Android Studio project that was used to build your custom GMA binary archive:
$ gmabuildtool build
    ...
    --build-project /home/mike/android_project/mycustgma
    ...
Note: Other options have to be specified as for a regular build using the original standard GMI binary archive.

Deploy and launch the app

After building the APK package, for testing purposes, you can deploy and launch your app from the command line with the gmabuildtool test command.
Note: The test command is provided for development only. To deploy your app in production for several devices, use the regular publication channel of Android apps.
In order to deploy and launch the app, you must provide:
  1. the path to the APK file

There must be only one Android device connected or running Android emulator.

$ gmabuildtool test \
     --test-apk /home/mike/work/example/outputs/MyApp-arm-debug.apk