commit | 95d475ad700e44195b7d2fae5d200d65f0c6abf1 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Alistair Delva <[email protected]> | Fri Nov 06 11:33:06 2020 -0800 |
committer | Alistair Delva <[email protected]> | Fri Nov 06 11:38:13 2020 -0800 |
tree | a831d3aba22a97cf37369500d3bd14e59da22221 | |
parent | a56f590832af9f5da986ea5cac5cfdeb0f1d512c [diff] |
Sync the cuttlefish fstabs with coral - Userdata should be checked - Userdata should be formatted if blank - Userdata should have quota enabled - Enable userdata checkpointing for ext4 and f2fs (differently) - Remove obsolete fsverify usage Change-Id: I2ad2b6d9e5a34ef3bca0849f931e000605dc81de
Make sure virtualization with KVM is available.
grep -c -w "vmx\|svm" /proc/cpuinfo
This should return a non-zero value. If running on a cloud machine, this may take cloud-vendor-specific steps to enable. For Google Compute Engine specifically, see the GCE guide.
Download, build, and install the host debian package:
git clone https://github.com/google/android-cuttlefish cd android-cuttlefish debuild -i -us -uc -b sudo dpkg -i ../cuttlefish-common_*_amd64.deb || sudo apt-get install -f sudo reboot
The reboot will trigger installing additional kernel modules and applying udev rules.
Go to http://ci.android.com/
Enter a branch name. Start with aosp-master
if you don‘t know what you’re looking for
Navigate to aosp_cf_x86_phone
and click on userdebug
for the latest build
Click on Artifacts
Scroll down to the OTA images. These packages look like aosp_cf_x86_phone-img-xxxxxx.zip
-- it will always have img
in the name. Download this file
Scroll down to cvd-host_package.tar.gz
. You should always download a host package from the same build as your images.
On your local system, combine the packages:
mkdir cf cd cf tar xvf /path/to/cvd-host_package.tar.gz unzip /path/to/aosp_cf_x86_phone-img-xxxxxx.zip
Launch cuttlefish with:
$ HOME=$PWD ./bin/launch_cvd
$ HOME=$PWD ./bin/stop_cvd
You can use adb
to debug it, just like a physical device:
$ ./bin/adb -e shell
You can use the TightVNC JViewer. Once you have downloaded the TightVNC Java Viewer JAR in a ZIP archive, run it with
$ java -jar tightvnc-jviewer.jar -ScalingFactor=50 -Tunneling=no -host=localhost -port=6444
Click “Connect” and you should see a lock screen!