Add stack side interface for Bluetooth audio HAL V2

This bases on the new Bluetooth Audio HAL V2 to provide a HIDL based
interface for the stack. There will be a common interface named
BluetoothAudioClientInterface that the stack can register its session for
stream of A2DP or Hearing Aid. When the stack registers to this
pre-implemented BluetoothAudioClientInterface, the audio HAL can control
the stream state and the stack can report results to the audio HAL.
When running for software encoding, there will also data path via FMQ to
provide the bridge between audio HAL and the stack. This change contains
A2DP software encoding (legacy) only.

Bug: 111519504
Test: manual with A2DP software encoding (legacy)

Change-Id: Iac5a43c929d4036fa86e2b0c2c2920ca2b9dfa50
13 files changed
tree: 1bdc073ce2af583ef6e4603cb18d483c1ecfa982
  1. proto/
  2. system/
  3. .clang-format
  4. .gitignore
  5. .gn
  6. Android.bp
  7. AndroidTestTemplate.xml
  8. BUILD.gn
  9. CleanSpec.mk
  10. EventLogTags.logtags
  11. MODULE_LICENSE_APACHE2
  12. NOTICE
  13. OWNERS
  14. PREUPLOAD.cfg
  15. README.md
  16. TEST_MAPPING
README.md

Fluoride Bluetooth stack

Building and running on AOSP

Just build AOSP - Fluoride is there by default.

Building and running on Linux

Instructions for Ubuntu, tested on 14.04 with Clang 3.5.0 and 16.10 with Clang 3.8.0

Download source

mkdir ~/fluoride
cd ~/fluoride
git clone https://android.googlesource.com/platform/packages/modules/Bluetooth/system

Install dependencies (require sudo access):

cd ~/fluoride/bt
build/install_deps.sh

Then fetch third party dependencies:

cd ~/fluoride/bt
mkdir third_party
cd third_party
git clone https://github.com/google/googletest.git
git clone https://android.googlesource.com/platform/external/aac
git clone https://android.googlesource.com/platform/external/libchrome
git clone https://android.googlesource.com/platform/external/libldac
git clone https://android.googlesource.com/platform/external/modp_b64
git clone https://android.googlesource.com/platform/external/tinyxml2

And third party dependencies of third party dependencies:

cd fluoride/bt/third_party/libchrome/base/third_party
mkdir valgrind
cd valgrind
curl https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src/base/+/master/third_party/valgrind/valgrind.h?format=TEXT | base64 -d > valgrind.h
curl https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src/base/+/master/third_party/valgrind/memcheck.h?format=TEXT | base64 -d > memcheck.h

NOTE: If packages/modules/Bluetooth/system is checked out under AOSP, then create symbolic links instead of downloading sources

cd packages/modules/Bluetooth/system
mkdir third_party
cd third_party
ln -s ../../../external/aac aac
ln -s ../../../external/libchrome libchrome
ln -s ../../../external/libldac libldac
ln -s ../../../external/modp_b64 modp_b64
ln -s ../../../external/tinyxml2 tinyxml2
ln -s ../../../external/googletest googletest

Generate your build files

cd ~/fluoride/bt
gn gen out/Default

Build

cd ~/fluoride/bt
ninja -C out/Default all

This will build all targets (the shared library, executables, tests, etc) and put them in out/Default. To build an individual target, replace "all" with the target of your choice, e.g. ninja -C out/Default net_test_osi.

Run

cd ~/fluoride/bt/out/Default
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=./ ./bluetoothtbd -create-ipc-socket=fluoride

Eclipse IDE Support

  1. Follows the Chromium project Eclipse Setup Instructions until "Optional: Building inside Eclipse" section (don't do that section, we will set it up differently)

  2. Generate Eclipse settings:

cd packages/modules/Bluetooth/system
gn gen --ide=eclipse out/Default
  1. In Eclipse, do File->Import->C/C++->C/C++ Project Settings, choose the XML location under packages/modules/Bluetooth/system/out/Default

  2. Right click on the project. Go to Preferences->C/C++ Build->Builder Settings. Uncheck "Use default build command", but instead using "ninja -C out/Default"

  3. Goto Behaviour tab, change clean command to "-t clean"