Contribute ========== Extending Python for android native support ------------------------------------------- So, you want to get into python-for-android and extend what's available to Python on Android ? Turns out it's not very complicated, here is a little introduction on how to go about it. Without Pyjnius, the schema to access the Java API from Cython is:: [1] Cython -> [2] C JNI -> [3] Java Think about acceleration sensors: you want to get the acceleration values in Python, but nothing is available natively. Lukcily you have a Java API for that : the Google API is available here http://developer.android.com/reference/android/hardware/Sensor.html You can't use it directly, you need to do your own API to use it in python, this is done in 3 steps Step 1: write the java code to create very simple functions to use ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ like : accelerometer Enable/Reading In our project, this is done in the Hardware.java: https://github.com/kivy/python-for-android/blob/master/src/src/org/renpy/android/Hardware.java you can see how it's implemented Step 2 : write a jni wrapper ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This is a C file to be able to invoke/call Java functions from C, in our case, step 2 (and 3) are done in the android python module. The JNI part is done in the android_jni.c: https://github.com/kivy/python-for-android/blob/master/recipes/android/src/android_jni.c Step 3 : you have the java part, that you can call from the C ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ You can now do the Python extension around it, all the android python part is done in https://github.com/kivy/python-for-android/blob/master/recipes/android/src/android.pyx → [python] android.accelerometer_reading ⇒ [C] android_accelerometer_reading ⇒ [Java] Hardware.accelerometer_reading() The jni part is really a C api to call java methods. a little bit hard to get it with the syntax, but working with current example should be ok Example with bluetooth ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Start directly from a fork of https://github.com/kivy/python-for-android The first step is to identify where and how they are doing it in sl4a, it's really easy, because everything is already done as a client/server client/consumer approach, for bluetooth, they have a "Bluetooth facade" in java. http://code.google.com/p/android-scripting/source/browse/android/BluetoothFacade/src/com/googlecode/android_scripting/facade/BluetoothFacade.java You can learn from it, and see how is it's can be used as is, or if you can simplify / remove stuff you don't want. From this point, create a bluetooth file in python-for-android/tree/master/src/src/org/renpy/android in Java. Do a good API (enough simple to be able to write the jni in a very easy manner, like, don't pass any custom java object in argument). Then write the JNI, and then the python part. 3 steps, once you get it, the real difficult part is to write the java part :) Jni gottchas ~~~~~~~~~~~~ - package must be org.renpy.android, don't change it. Create your own recipes ----------------------- A recipe is a script that contains the "definition" of a module to compile. The directory layout of a recipe for a is something like:: python-for-android/recipes//recipe.sh python-for-android/recipes//patches/ python-for-android/recipes//patches/fix-path.patch When building, all the recipe builds must go to:: python-for-android/build// For example, if you want to create a recipe for sdl, do:: cd python-for-android/recipes mkdir sdl cp recipe.sh.tmpl sdl/recipe.sh sed -i 's#XXX#sdl#' sdl/recipe.sh Then, edit the sdl/recipe.sh to adjust other information (version, url) and complete the build function.