On Sat, 14 Dec 2019 at 05:10, Thiago Macieira <thiago.macie...@intel.com> wrote: > > On Thursday, 12 December 2019 18:28:26 PST Christian Gagneraud wrote: > > A stock Android NDK has the kernel headers for CAN, but doesn't have > > libsocketcan. > > libsocketcan doesn't seem to be necessary, as per configure's output > > A stock Android *phone* 8doesn't have a CAN bus in the first place.
A stock Android NDK has all the required kernel headers. > A device with a CAN bus is usually one "your company" (whichever company that > is) made or bought Yes, it's not a phone, it's a custom device as mentioned previously, see [1] if you're curious. > That means you shouldn't be using the stock Android NDK, > but instead should use a sysroot dedicated for your device. Actually, we do everything we can to avoid this. We have good reasons for that. The first one being that it guarantees that a stock Android app will work on our device, no need for a custom SDK/NDK to be compatible with our device. Chris [1] https://www.google.com/search?q=navico+mfd&tbm=isch _______________________________________________ Interest mailing list Interest@qt-project.org https://lists.qt-project.org/listinfo/interest