We have a class named as X , It has reference to aidl library LibA from class Y. There is one more class named Z, where we have an java sdk aidl library LibB inside Class Z.
Class X is trying to call a method from LibA testMethod(ObjectB)
ObjectB is a Parcelable object from LibB
We are facing NoClassDefFoundError for ObjectB when calling testMethod from Class X
How to resolve this runtime issue in Android 10 platform.
We are using Android bp file convention to build the files in Jenkins platform
ClassX
android_app {
name: "ClassX",
srcs: [
"aidl/**/*.aidl",
"java/**/*.java",
],
libs: [ClassY.LibA],
required: []
}
ClassZ => LibB
java_sdk_library {
name: "LibB",
manifest: "AndroidManifest.xml",
srcs: [
"java//*.java",
"aidl//*.aidl",
],
aidl: {
local_include_dirs: ["aidl"],
},
api_packages: [
"LibB",
],
compile_dex: true,
}
ClassY => LibA
java_sdk_library {
name: "LibA",
manifest: "AndroidManifest.xml",
srcs: [
"java//*.java",
"aidl//I*.aidl",
],
aidl: {
local_include_dirs: ["aidl"],
include_dirs: ["LibB/src/main/aidl"],
},
static_libs: [ "androidx.annotation_annotation"],
libs: ["LibB"],
api_packages: ["LibA"],
}
ClassY
android_app {
name: "ClassY",
srcs: ["aidl//*.aidl", "java//*.java"],
libs: ["LibB", "LibA"],
required: ["LibB"]
}
Related
I am setting up gatsby-plugin-mdx in gatsby-config.js like this
plugins: [
{
resolve: `gatsby-plugin-mdx`,
options: {
extensions: ['.lol'],
},
},
...
but it still loads .mdx files from my directories and classifies them as
node.internal.type === `Mdx`
Why?
I have generic repository "my_repo". I uploaded files there from jenkins with to paths like my_repo/branch_buildNumber/package.tar.gz and with custom property "tag" like "1.9.0","1.10.0" etc. I want to get item/file with latest/newest tag.
I tried to modify Example 2 from this link ...
https://www.jfrog.com/confluence/display/JFROG/Using+File+Specs#UsingFileSpecs-Examples
... and add sorting and limit the way it was done here ...
https://www.jfrog.com/confluence/display/JFROG/Artifactory+Query+Language#ArtifactoryQueryLanguage-limitDisplayLimitsandPagination
But im getting "unknown property desc" error.
The Jenkins Artifactory Plugin, like most of the JFrog clients, supports File Specs for downloading and uploading generic files.
The File Specs schema is described here. When creating a File Spec for downloading files, you have the option of using the "pattern" property, which can include wildcards. For example, the following spec downloads all the zip files from the my-local-repo repository into the local froggy directory:
{
"files": [
{
"pattern": "my-local-repo/*.zip",
"target": "froggy/"
}
]
}
Alternatively, you can use "aql" instead of "pattern". The following spec, provides the same result as the previous one:
{
"files": [
{
"aql": {
"items.find": {
"repo": "my-local-repo",
"$or": [
{
"$and": [
{
"path": {
"$match": "*"
},
"name": {
"$match": "*.zip"
}
}
]
}
]
}
},
"target": "froggy/"
}
]
}
The allowed AQL syntax inside File Specs does not include everything the Artifactory Query Language allows. For examples, you can't use the "include" or "sort" clauses. These limitations were put in place, to make the response structure known and constant.
Sorting however is still available with File Specs, regardless of whether you choose to use "pattern" or "aql". It is supported throw the "sortBy", "sortOrder", "limit" and "offset" File Spec properties.
For example, the following File Spec, will download only the 3 largest zip file files:
{
"files": [
{
"aql": {
"items.find": {
"repo": "my-local-repo",
"$or": [
{
"$and": [
{
"path": {
"$match": "*"
},
"name": {
"$match": "*.zip"
}
}
]
}
]
}
},
"sortBy": ["size"],
"sortOrder": "desc",
"limit": 3,
"target": "froggy/"
}
]
}
And you can do the same with "pattern", instead of "aql":
{
"files": [
{
"pattern": "my-local-repo/*.zip",
"sortBy": ["size"],
"sortOrder": "desc",
"limit": 3,
"target": "local/output/"
}
]
}
You can read more about File Specs here.
(After answering this question here, we also updated the File Specs documentation with these examples).
After a lot of testing and experimenting i found that there are many ways of solving my main problem (getting latest version of package) but each of way require some function which is available in paid version. Like sort() in AQL or [RELEASE] in REST API. But i found that i still can get JSON with a full list of files and its properties. I can also download each single file. This led me to solution with simple python script. I can't publish whole but only the core which should bu fairly obvious
import requests, argparse
from packaging import version
...
query="""
items.find({
"type" : "file",
"$and":[{
"repo" : {"$match" : \"""" + args.repository + """\"},
"path" : {"$match" : \"""" + args.path + """\"}
}]
}).include("name","repo","path","size","property.*")
"""
auth=(args.username,args.password)
def clearVersion(ver: str):
new = ''
for letter in ver:
if letter.isnumeric() or letter == ".":
new+=letter
return new
def lastestArtifact(response: requests):
response = response.json()
latestVer = "0.0.0"
currentItemIndex = 0
chosenItemIndex = 0
for results in response["results"]:
for prop in results['properties']:
if prop["key"] == "tag":
if version.parse(clearVersion(prop["value"])) > version.parse(clearVersion(latestVer)):
latestVer = prop["value"]
chosenItemIndex = currentItemIndex
currentItemIndex += 1
return response["results"][chosenItemIndex]
req = requests.post(url,data=query,auth=auth)
if args.verbose:
print(req.text)
latest = lastestArtifact(req)
...
I just want to point that THIS IS NOT permanent solution. We just didnt want to buy license yet only because of one single problem. But if there will be more of such problems then we definetly buy PRO subscription.
I'm having some trouble getting this WebComponents polyfill + native-shim to work right across all devices, though webpack.
Some background on my setup:
* Webpack2 + babel-6
* app is written in ES6, transpiling to ES5
* imports a node_module package written in ES6, which defines/registers a CustomElement used in the app
So the relevant webpack dev config looks something like this:
const config = webpackMerge(baseConfig, {
entry: [
'webpack/hot/only-dev-server',
'#webcomponents/custom-elements/src/native-shim',
'#webcomponents/custom-elements',
'<module that uses CustomElements>/dist/src/main',
'./src/client',
],
output: {
path: path.resolve(__dirname, './../dist/assets/'),
filename: 'app.js',
},
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.js$/,
loader: 'babel-loader',
options: {
cacheDirectory: true,
},
include: [
path.join(NODE_MODULES_DIR, '<module that uses CustomElements>'),
path.join(__dirname, '../src'),
],
},
],
},
...
key take aways:
* I need CustomElement poly loaded before <module that uses CustomElements>
* I need <module that uses CustomElements> loaded before my app soure
* <module that uses CustomElements> is ES6 so we're transpiling it ( thus the include in the babel-loader).
The above works as-expected in modern ES6 browsers ( IE desktop Chrome ), HOWEVER
it does not work in older browsers. I get the following error in older browsers, for example iOS 8:
SyntaxError: Unexpected token ')'
pointing to the opening anonymous function in the native-shim pollyfill:
(() => {
'use strict';
// Do nothing if `customElements` does not exist.
if (!window.customElements) return;
const NativeHTMLElement = window.HTMLElement;
const nativeDefine = window.customElements.define;
const nativeGet = window.customElements.get;
So it seems to me like the native-shim would need to be transpiled to ES5:
include: [
+ path.join(NODE_MODULES_DIR, '#webcomponents/custom-elements/src/native-shim'),
path.join(NODE_MODULES_DIR, '<module that uses CustomElements>'),
path.join(__dirname, '../src'),
],
...but doing so now breaks both Chrome and iOS 8 with the following error:
app.js:1 Uncaught TypeError: Failed to construct 'HTMLElement': Please use the 'new' operator, this DOM object constructor cannot be called as a function.
at new StandInElement (native-shim.js:122)
at HTMLDocument.createElement (<anonymous>:1:1545)
at ReactDOMComponent.mountComponent (ReactDOMComponent.js:504)
at Object.mountComponent (ReactReconciler.js:46)
at ReactCompositeComponentWrapper.performInitialMount (ReactCompositeComponent.js:371)
at ReactCompositeComponentWrapper.mountComponent (ReactCompositeComponent.js:258)
at Object.mountComponent (ReactReconciler.js:46)
at Object.updateChildren (ReactChildReconciler.js:121)
at ReactDOMComponent._reconcilerUpdateChildren (ReactMultiChild.js:208)
at ReactDOMComponent._updateChildren (ReactMultiChild.js:312)
.. which takes me to this constructor() line in the native-shim:
window.customElements.define = (tagname, elementClass) => {
const elementProto = elementClass.prototype;
const StandInElement = class extends NativeHTMLElement {
constructor() {
Phew. So it's very unclear to me how we actually include this in a webpack based build, where the dependency using CustomElements is ES6 ( and needs transpiling).
Transpiling the native-shim to es5 doesn't work
using the native-shim as-is at the top of the bundle entry point doesn't work for iOS 8, but does for Chrome
not including the native-shim breaks both Chrome and iOS
I'm really quite frustrated with web components at this point. I just want to use this one dependency that happens to be built with web components. How can I get it to work properly in a webpack build, and work across all devices? Am I missing something obvious here?
My .babelrc config for posterity sake (dev config most relevant):
{
"presets": [
["es2015", { "modules": false }],
"react"
],
"plugins": [
"transform-custom-element-classes",
"transform-object-rest-spread",
"transform-object-assign",
"transform-exponentiation-operator"
],
"env": {
"test": {
"plugins": [
[ "babel-plugin-webpack-alias", { "config": "./cfg/test.js" } ]
]
},
"dev": {
"plugins": [
"react-hot-loader/babel",
[ "babel-plugin-webpack-alias", { "config": "./cfg/dev.js" } ]
]
},
"dist": {
"plugins": [
[ "babel-plugin-webpack-alias", { "config": "./cfg/dist.js" } ],
"transform-react-constant-elements",
"transform-react-remove-prop-types",
"minify-dead-code-elimination",
"minify-constant-folding"
]
},
"production": {
"plugins": [
[ "babel-plugin-webpack-alias", { "config": "./cfg/server.js" } ],
"transform-react-constant-elements",
"transform-react-remove-prop-types",
"minify-dead-code-elimination",
"minify-constant-folding"
]
}
}
}
I was able to achieve something similar with the .babelrc plugin pipeline below. It looks like the only differences are https://babeljs.io/docs/plugins/transform-es2015-classes/ and https://babeljs.io/docs/plugins/transform-es2015-classes/, but I honestly can't remember what problems those were solving specifically:
{
"plugins": [
"transform-runtime",
["babel-plugin-transform-builtin-extend", {
"globals": ["Error", "Array"]
}],
"syntax-async-functions",
"transform-async-to-generator",
"transform-custom-element-classes",
"transform-es2015-classes"
]
}
My .travis.yml
language: node_js
node_js:
- "0.12"
before_install:
- "export DISPLAY=:99.0"
- "sh -e /etc/init.d/xvfb start"
I have only added a few very simple tests so far (checking that class attributes exist).
I can see the tests are executed.
Then, the last few lines in the Travis output are this:
WARN [web-server]: 404: /css/style.min.css?1435068425.642
No output has been received in the last 10 minutes, this potentially indicates a stalled build or something wrong with the build itself.
The build has been terminated
If the tests are running, then the build and dependencies must have been installed already?
So why is the process not finishing once all tests are executed?
karma.config:
module.exports = function(config) {
config.set({
// base path that will be used to resolve all patterns (eg. files, exclude)
basePath: '',
// frameworks to use
// available frameworks: https://npmjs.org/browse/keyword/karma-adapter
frameworks: [
'jasmine',
'requirejs'
],
// list of files / patterns to load in the browser
files: [
{pattern: 'js/vendor/**/*.js', included: false},
{pattern: 'js/*.js', watched: true, included: false},
{pattern: 'test/**/*Spec.js', watched: true, included: false},
{pattern: 'css/**/*.css', included: false},
'test/test-main.js'
],
// list of files to exclude
exclude: [
'test/lib/**/*.js',
'js/vendor/**/test/*.js', //do not include the vendor tests
'js/_admin.js'
],
preprocessors: {
},
reporters: ['progress'],
// web server port
port: 9876,
// enable / disable colors in the output (reporters and logs)
colors: true,
// level of logging
logLevel: config.LOG_INFO,
autoWatch: true,
browsers: ['Firefox'], //'Chrome', 'PhantomJS', 'PhantomJS_custom'
singleRun: false,
});//config.set
};//module.exports
test-main.js in folder test:
var allTestFiles = [];
var TEST_REGEXP = /(spec|test)\.js$/i;
Object.keys(window.__karma__.files).forEach(function(file) {
if (TEST_REGEXP.test(file)) {
// Normalize paths to RequireJS module names.
allTestFiles.push(file);
}
//console.log('test files:', allTestFiles);
});
require.config({
baseUrl: '/base',
paths: {
'jquery': './js/vendor/jquery/jquery-2.1.4.min',
'jquery-ui': './js/vendor/jquery-ui-1.11.4.custom/jquery-ui.min',
'underscore': './js/vendor/underscore/underscore-min',
'backbone': './js/vendor/backbone/backbone-min',
'mustache': './js/vendor/mustache/mustache.min',
'domReady': './js/vendor/requirejs/plugins/domReady/domReady',
'text': './js/vendor/requirejs/plugins/text/text',
//------------------------------------
//custom requireJS application modules
'my': './js/my',
'my-CSS': './js/my-CSS'
},
shim: {
'underscore': {
exports: '_'
}
},
deps: allTestFiles,
callback: window.__karma__.start
});
The my-CSS module loads the css like this:
//custom requireJS module to hold the crowdUI class
define(["my"], function (my) { //prerequisites
'use strict';
//load the CSS definitions
document.head.appendChild(
my.createElement('link', {
attribute: {
id: 'my-CSS',
href: './css/style.min.css?' + crowdUI.TIMESTAMP,
rel: 'stylesheet',
type: 'text/css'
}
})
);
});
If the issue is just that your task requires more than 10 minutes during which it produces no output, the fix is simple: prepend your command with travis_wait.
For instance travis_wait myCommand instead of just myCommand.
I am looking at http://symfony.com/doc/2.0/cookbook/service_container/parentservices.html
newsletter_manager:
class: %newsletter_manager.class%
parent: mail_manager
calls:
- [ setFilter, [ #another_filter ] ]
I am supposed to be able to inject services into function calls (if I didn't understand wrongly). But when I tried in my own project,
myapp.userBridge:
class: ...\NotesBundle\Bridge\UserBridge
arguments:
- '#doctrine.orm.entity_manager'
myapp.user:
class: ...\UserBundle\Entity\User
calls:
- [ initUserNotesBundle, [ #myapp.userBridge ] ]
- [ cleanupUserNotesBundle, [ #myapp.userBridge ] ]
But when the function is called (Doctrine 2 Life Cycle Callback: PrePersist)
public function initUserNotesBundle(UserBridge $userBridge) {
$userBridge->prePersistUser($this);
}
It gives
Catchable Fatal Error: Argument 1 passed to ...\UserBundle\Entity\User::initUserNotesBundle()
must be an instance of ...\NotesBundle\Bridge\UserBridge, none given,
called in ...\Doctrine\ORM\Mapping\ClassMetadataInfo.php on line 1540
and defined in ...\UserBundle\Entity\User.php line 319
Not an exactly an answer to this question, but an alternate method of solving this problem. I found I can use Event Listeners
services:
my.listener:
class: Acme\SearchBundle\Listener\SearchIndexer
tags:
- { name: doctrine.event_listener, event: postSave }
class SearchIndexer
{
public function postSave(LifecycleEventArgs $args)
{
$entity = $args->getEntity();
$entityManager = $args->getEntityManager();
// perhaps you only want to act on some "Product" entity
if ($entity instanceof Product) {
// do something with the Product
}
}
}