commit | ac135886b45166c8a24a12e3d343a464d4da345b | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Søren Gjesse <sgjesse@google.com> | Wed May 22 12:53:08 2024 +0200 |
committer | Søren Gjesse <sgjesse@google.com> | Wed May 22 12:53:08 2024 +0200 |
tree | e7e98a54d303f2d6c9f602700e8f47029f181d10 | |
parent | af9e6c9001d79388f8b81c283e77a5cf2d5e6c05 [diff] |
Version 8.4.29 Bug: b/341476044 Bug: b/341618078 Change-Id: I9b57208f17e462b315e523d503171dfaddf6799d
The R8 repo contains two tools:
D8 is a replacement for the DX dexer and R8 is an alternative to the ProGuard shrinking and minification tool.
There are several places to obtain a prebuilt version without building it yourself.
The stable release versions shipped with Android Studio are available from the Google Maven repository, see https://maven.google.com/web/index.html#com.android.tools:r8.
Our CI builds for each commit and stores all build artifacts in Google Cloud Storage in the bucket r8-releases.
To obtain a prebuild from the CI for a specifc version (including both stable and -dev
versions), download from the following URL:
https://storage.googleapis.com/r8-releases/raw/<version>/r8lib.jar
To obtain a prebuild from the CI for a specifc main branch hash, download from the following URL:
https://storage.googleapis.com/r8-releases/raw/main/<hash>/r8lib.jar
The prebuilt JARs have been processed by R8, and for each build the corresponding mapping file is located together with the prebuild under the name r8lib.jar.map
.
To get prebuilds which has not been processed by R8 replace r8lib.jar
with r8.jar
in the URLs above.
The Google Cloud Storage bucket r8-releases can also be used as a simple Maven repository using the following in a Gradle build file:
maven { url = uri("https://storage.googleapis.com/r8-releases/raw") }
See Running D8 and Running R8 below on how to invoke D8 and R8 using the obtained r8lib.jar
in place of build/libs/r8.jar
.
The R8 project uses depot_tools
from the chromium project to manage dependencies. Install depot_tools
and add it to your path before proceeding.
The R8 project uses Java 8 language features and requires a Java 8 compiler and runtime system.
Typical steps to download and build:
$ git clone https://r8.googlesource.com/r8 $ cd r8 $ tools/gradle.py r8
The tools/gradle.py
script will bootstrap using depot_tools to download a version of gradle to use for building on the first run. This will produce a jar file: build/libs/r8.jar
which contains both R8 and D8.
The D8 dexer has a simple command-line interface with only a few options. D8 consumes class files and produce DEX.
The most important option is whether to build in debug or release mode. Debug is the default mode and includes debugging information in the resulting dex files. Debugging information contains information about local variables used when debugging dex code. This information is not useful when shipping final Android apps to users and therefore, final builds should use the --release
flag to remove this debugging information to produce smaller dex files.
Typical invocations of D8 to produce dex file(s) in the out directoy:
Debug mode build:
$ java -cp build/libs/r8.jar com.android.tools.r8.D8 \ --min-api <min-api> \ --output out \ --lib <android.jar/rt.jar> \ input.jar
Release mode build:
$ java -cp build/libs/r8.jar com.android.tools.r8.D8 --release \ --min-api <min-api> \ --output out \ --lib <android.jar/rt.jar> \ input.jar
See Running R8 for information on options --min-api
and --lib
.
The full set of D8 options can be obtained by running the command line tool with the --help
option.
R8 is a whole-program optimizing compiler with focus on shrinking the size of programs. R8 uses the ProGuard configuration format for configuring the whole-program optimization including specifying the entry points for an application.
R8 consumes class files and can output either DEX for Android apps or class files for Java apps.
Typical invocations of R8 to produce optimized DEX file(s) in the out
directory:
$ java -cp build/libs/r8.jar com.android.tools.r8.R8 \ --release \ --min-api <min-api> \ --output out \ --pg-conf proguard.cfg \ --lib <android.jar/rt.jar> \ input.jar
This produce DEX targeting Android devices with a API level of <min-api>
and above.
The option --lib
is passing the bootclasspath for the targeted runtime. For targeting Android use an android.jar
from the Android Platform SDK, typically located in ~/Android/Sdk/platforms/android-XX
, where XX
should be the latest Android version.
To produce class files pass the option --classfile
and leave out --min-api <min-api>
. This invocation will provide optimized Java classfiles in output.jar
:
$ java -cp build/libs/r8.jar com.android.tools.r8.R8 \ --release \ --classfile \ --output output.jar \ --pg-conf proguard.cfg \ --lib <android.jar/rt.jar> \ input.jar
When producing output targeted for the JVM one can pass $JAVA_HOME
to -lib
. R8 will then locate the Java bootclasspath from there.
The full set of R8 options can be obtained by running the command line tool with the --help
option.
R8 is not command line compatible with ProGuard, for instance keep rules cannot be passed on the command line, but have to be passed in a file using the --pg-conf
option.
Android Gradle plugin (AGP) ships with R8 embedded (as part of the builder.jar
from com.android.tools.build:builder:<agp version>
on https://maven.google.com).
To override the embedded version with a prebuilt R8 with version <version>
, merge the following into the top level settings.gradle
or settings.gradle.kts
:
pluginManagement { buildscript { repositories { mavenCentral() maven { url = uri("https://storage.googleapis.com/r8-releases/raw") } } dependencies { classpath("com.android.tools:r8:<version>") } } }
To override the embedded version with a downloaded or freshly built <path>/r8.jar
merge the following into the top level settings.gradle
or settings.gradle.kts
:
pluginManagement { buildscript { dependencies { classpath(files("<path>/r8.jar")) } } }
Typical steps to run tests:
$ tools/test.py --no_internal
The tools/test.py
script will use depot_tools to download a lot of tests and test dependencies on the first run. This includes prebuilt version of the art runtime on which to validate the produced dex code.
In order to contribute to D8/R8 you have to sign the Contributor License Agreement. If your contribution is owned by your employer you need the Corporate Contributor License Agreement.
Once the license agreement is in place, please send an email to r8-dev@googlegroups.com to be added as a contributor.
After being added as a contributer you can upload your patches using git cl
which is available in depot_tools
. Once you have a change that you are happy with you should make sure that it passes all tests and then upload the change to our code review tool using:
$ git cl upload
On your first upload you will be asked to acquire credentials. Follow the instructions given by git cl upload
.
On successful uploads a link to the code review is printed in the output of the upload command. In the code review tool you can assign reviewers and mark the change ready for review. At that point the code review tool will send emails to reviewers.
For questions, reach out to us at r8-dev@googlegroups.com.
For D8, find known issues in the D8 issue tracker or file a new D8 bug report.
For R8, find known issues in the R8 issue tracker or file a new R8 bug report.