Fixed
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am...@google.com <am...@google.com>
hm...@google.com <hm...@google.com> #3
[Comment deleted]
my...@gmail.com <my...@gmail.com> #4
Also of note is the adb error when trying to install bad APK: INSTALL_FAILED_DEXOPT
hm...@google.com <hm...@google.com> #5
load dex files over 5Gb. -> load dex files over 5Mb.
my...@gmail.com <my...@gmail.com> #6
Same here! Looking forward to a solution :)
Android Studio version: 0.8.12
buildToolsVersion 21.0.1
Gradle 1.11
Android Studio version: 0.8.12
buildToolsVersion 21.0.1
Gradle 1.11
hm...@google.com <hm...@google.com> #7
There is already an option in dx allowing to force generation of smaller dex files:
--set-max-idx-number=<value>
Unfortunately changing the default is not a solution since the linearAlloc limit can be reached at very different levels depending on the classes hierarchy and other criteria.
In addition for most applications, moving to multidex will only help to workaround the linearalloc limit for the installation. But the application will still crash against the same limit at execution. The only working use case where I know multidex can help with linearalloc is when the apk does not contains one application but distinct pieces running in separate process.
--set-max-idx-number=<value>
Unfortunately changing the default is not a solution since the linearAlloc limit can be reached at very different levels depending on the classes hierarchy and other criteria.
In addition for most applications, moving to multidex will only help to workaround the linearalloc limit for the installation. But the application will still crash against the same limit at execution. The only working use case where I know multidex can help with linearalloc is when the apk does not contains one application but distinct pieces running in separate process.
my...@gmail.com <my...@gmail.com> #8
Thanks for your quick response.
It's nice to know about that command line option. I do not see it in the output of 'dx --help', might be good to add that.
I'm not very familiar with the 'linearAlloc limit' issue outside of the context of the dexopt step. My sample app is able to run once the lower idx value is set, although I do not actually call into any of the library code that is bundled with the app. I assume it's undefined when/if the 'linearAlloc limit' will be hit in a large application on gb.
I'm a bit confused as to the platform compatibility of multidex given the 'linearAlloc limit' bug. What specific versions of Android are supported? The multidex code implies back to v4 (https://android.googlesource.com/platform/frameworks/multidex/+/master/library/src/android/support/multidex/MultiDex.java ) but it would seem that ICS is the earliest supported platform. Is this correct?
It's nice to know about that command line option. I do not see it in the output of 'dx --help', might be good to add that.
I'm not very familiar with the 'linearAlloc limit' issue outside of the context of the dexopt step. My sample app is able to run once the lower idx value is set, although I do not actually call into any of the library code that is bundled with the app. I assume it's undefined when/if the 'linearAlloc limit' will be hit in a large application on gb.
I'm a bit confused as to the platform compatibility of multidex given the 'linearAlloc limit' bug. What specific versions of Android are supported? The multidex code implies back to v4 (
my...@gmail.com <my...@gmail.com> #9
The option is not documented in --help because it was designed for testing and we're not capable of documenting a reliable way to use it as a workaround of the linearalloc limit.
The linearalloc limit is reached when loading classes. At install time dexopt is loading all classes contained in the dex so it's facing the limit immediately. At execution the limit may be reached after some delay dependending of the usage you have of the packaged classes. If you face it at install time but not at execution, this means you never trigger the loading of some classes. In a real application those never loaded classes should have been shrinked away manually or by Proguard. The exception is when there are different groups of classes in the dex files used in separate process.
About multidex library supported versions I've merged recently a change to try to be clearerhttps://android-review.googlesource.com/#/c/108023/
The summary is that the library should work down to API 4 (Donut), but below ICS applications will probably be hit by the linearalloc limit
The linearalloc limit is reached when loading classes. At install time dexopt is loading all classes contained in the dex so it's facing the limit immediately. At execution the limit may be reached after some delay dependending of the usage you have of the packaged classes. If you face it at install time but not at execution, this means you never trigger the loading of some classes. In a real application those never loaded classes should have been shrinked away manually or by Proguard. The exception is when there are different groups of classes in the dex files used in separate process.
About multidex library supported versions I've merged recently a change to try to be clearer
The summary is that the library should work down to API 4 (Donut), but below ICS applications will probably be hit by the linearalloc limit
hm...@google.com <hm...@google.com> #10
for Android studio use:
dexOptions {
additionalParameters = ['--multi-dex', '--set-max-idx-number=40000']
}
dexOptions {
additionalParameters = ['--multi-dex', '--set-max-idx-number=40000']
}
hm...@google.com <hm...@google.com> #11
I still have this issue and it's driving me nuts
my...@gmail.com <my...@gmail.com> #14
I even manually installed openjdk-17 and switched to it using Project Structures dialog. Both bugs remain.
my...@gmail.com <my...@gmail.com> #15
Updating buildToolsVersion to 34.0.0-rc2 did not help either.
hm...@google.com <hm...@google.com> #16
Can you upload the changes to a branch that i can pull down and test. In my testing, after running gradlew clean build
, I do not see any testOnly flags set in manifest files.
VPNHotspot$ cat mobile/build/intermediates/merged_manifest/freedomDebug/AndroidManifest.xml | grep testOnly
VPNHotspot$ cat mobile/build/intermediates/merged_manifest/freedomRelease/AndroidManifest.xml | grep testOnly
VPNHotspot$ cat mobile/build/intermediates/merged_manifest/googleDebug/AndroidManifest.xml | grep testOnly
VPNHotspot$ cat mobile/build/intermediates/merged_manifest/googleRelease/AndroidManifest.xml | grep testOnly
I am running with AGP 8.1.0-alpha08
and android.injected.testOnly=false
set in gradle.properties
my...@gmail.com <my...@gmail.com> #17
Sure. https://github.com/Mygod/VPNHotspot/tree/testOnlyBug
The task I was testing was :mobile:assembleFreedomRelease but same issues (both occurring) for :mobile:assembleFreedomDebug too.
The task I was testing was :mobile:assembleFreedomRelease but same issues (both occurring) for :mobile:assembleFreedomDebug too.
hm...@google.com <hm...@google.com> #18
android.injected.testOnly=false seems to be missing from your gradle.propeties?
my...@gmail.com <my...@gmail.com> #19
...ok I am an idiot. Thank you!
Still getting compilation errors though...
Still getting compilation errors though...
my...@gmail.com <my...@gmail.com> #20
Looks like it was caused by setting kotlin.jvmToolchain. Thanks again!
su...@gmail.com <su...@gmail.com> #21
Comment has been deleted.
ja...@gmail.com <ja...@gmail.com> #22
Ab date
la...@gmail.com <la...@gmail.com> #23
Add android.injected.testOnly=false to root gradle.properties fixed my issue.
Description
DESCRIBE THE ISSUE IN DETAIL: Setting android.injected.testOnly=false does not prevent the android:testOnly="true" from being added.
STEPS TO REPRODUCE:
ATTACH SCREENSHOTS/RECORDINGS OF THE ISSUE
ATTACH LOG FILES (Select Help > Show Log in Files, or Show Log in Finder on a Mac)
IMPORTANT: Please readhttps://developer.android.com/studio/report-bugs.html carefully and supply
all required information.
Studio Build: Flamingo beta 4 Version of Gradle Plugin: See attached code repo Version of Gradle: See attached code repo Version of Java: 17 OS: Ubuntu