Chromium Docs - Accessing C++ Enums In Java (original) (raw)

Introduction

Accessing C++ enums in Java is implemented via a Python script which analyzes the C++ enum and spits out the corresponding Java class. The enum needs to be annotated in a particular way. By default, the generated class name will be the same as the name of the enum. If all the names of the enum values are prefixed with the MACRO_CASED_ name of the enum those prefixes will be stripped from the Java version.

Features

Usage

  1. Add directives to your C++ enum. Only the GENERATED_JAVA_ENUM_PACKAGE directive is required:
    // GENERATED_JAVA_ENUM_PACKAGE: org.chromium.chrome
    // GENERATED_JAVA_CLASS_NAME_OVERRIDE: FooBar
    // GENERATED_JAVA_PREFIX_TO_STRIP: BAR_
    // GENERATED_JAVA_IS_FLAG: true
    enum SomeEnum {
    BAR_A = 1 << 0,
    BAR_B = 1 << 1,
    BAR_C = BAR_B,
    };
  2. Add a new build target and add it to the srcjar_deps of an android_library target:
    if (is_android) {
    import("//build/config/android/rules.gni")
    }
    if (is_android) {
    java_cpp_enum("java_enum_srcjar") {

    External code should depend on ":foo_java" instead.

    visibility = [ ":*" ]
    sources = [

    Include the .h or .cc file(s) which defines the enum(s).

    "base/android/native_foo_header.h",
    ]
    }

If there's already an android_library target, you can add

java_enum_srcjar to that target's srcjar_deps. Otherwise, the best

practice is to create a new android_library just for this target.

android_library("foo_java") {
srcjar_deps = [ ":java_enum_srcjar" ]
# Important: the generated enum uses the @IntDef annotation provided by
# this dependency.
deps = [ "//third_party/androidx:androidx_annotation_annotation_java" ]
}
} 3. The generated file org/chromium/chrome/FooBar.java would contain:
package org.chromium.chrome;
import androidx.annotation.IntDef;
import java.lang.annotation.Retention;
import java.lang.annotation.RetentionPolicy;
@IntDef(flag = true, value = {
FooBar.A, FooBar.B, FooBar.C
})
@Retention(RetentionPolicy.SOURCE)
public @interface FooBar {
int A = 1 << 0;
int B = 1 << 1;
int C = 1 << 1;
}

Formatting Notes

Troubleshooting

Symbol not found/could not resolve IntDef

You may see an error like this when compiling:

$ autoninja -C out/Default base/foo_java util.build_utils.CalledProcessError: Command failed: ... org/chromium/chrome/FooBar.java:13: error: symbol not found androidx.annotation.IntDef Hint: Add "//third_party/androidx:androidx_annotation_annotation_java" to deps of //base/foo_java import androidx.annotation.IntDef; ^ org/chromium/chrome/FooBar.java🔞 error: could not resolve IntDef @IntDef({ ^

The fix is to add "//third_party/androidx:androidx_annotation_annotation_java" to the deps of the android_library. Note: do not add this to the java_cpp_enum target by mistake, otherwise you'll see a new error:

$ autoninja -C out/Default base/foo_java [0/1] Regenerating ninja files ERROR at //base/BUILD.gn:194:12: Assignment had no effect. deps = [ "//third_party/androidx:androidx_annotation_annotation_java" ] ^-------------------------------------------------------------- You set the variable "deps" here and it was unused before it went out of scope. ...

See also

Code