So I’m attempting to use libopus on my native code for an Android application.
My Android.mk file looks like this:
PLATFORM_PREFIX := /opt/android-ext/
LOCAL_PATH := $(PLATFORM_PREFIX)/lib
include $(CLEAR_VARS)
LOCAL_MODULE := libopus
LOCAL_SRC_FILES := libopus.a
include $(PREBUILT_STATIC_LIBRARY)
# I have to redeclare LOCAL_PATH because the library is in /opt/android-ext/
# and my project is somewhere else. Not very elegant.
LOCAL_PATH := /home/sergio/workspace/Project/jni
include $(CLEAR_VARS)
LOCAL_MODULE := opusUtilsNative
LOCAL_SRC_FILES := opusUtilsNative.c
LOCAL_C_INCLUDES += $(PLATFORM_PREFIX)/include
LOCAL_STATIC_LIBRARIES := android_native_app_glue libopus
include $(BUILD_SHARED_LIBRARY)
And my code in opusUtilsNative.c looks like this:
#include "opusUtilsNative.h"
#include <opus/opus.h>
#include <opus/opus_types.h>
JNIEXPORT jbyteArray JNICALL Java_Project_OpusUtils_encode
(JNIEnv * je, jclass jc, jbyteArray data){
int rc;
opus_int16 * testOutBuffer;
unsigned char* opusBuffer;
OpusDecoder *dec;
dec = opus_decoder_create(48000, 2, &rc);
return data;
}
And when I try to build it, it works fine only if I remove the line that uses the “opus_decoder_create” function. Else I will get this:
error: undefined reference to 'opus_decoder_create'
I can see that opus_decoder_create is clearly defined on opus.h, which is clearly being included since if I exclude that line, I’ll get an error regarding the opus_int16 and OpusDecoder declarations. How come some definitions are being included and some aren’t?
Any help will be greatly appreciated.
This was tricky. After digging around for a bit, I realized I hadn’t cross-compiled the opus library correctly, and I didn’t have an ARM binary after all.
A good way to verify if your library was cross-compiled correctly:
The output should look like this:
Otherwise, you might want to double-check your cross-compilation process.