I thought this might interest you Rust folk. This is kinda like an LLVM bitcode to JVM bytecode translator. So run rustc with --emit=llvm-ir (I think that’s the flag) and then pass the bitcode image to this program, then get JVM bytecode which you can make a JVM bytecode archive (JAR) from it. Could be an interesting? The author says it can JVM code from Clang output, so why not Rustc?

Keep in mind that these are two different beasts, JVM is designed for a safe virtual machine and LLVM is chiefly used to be translated into machine code. However, stupider and more wonderful things have been done with LLVM and JVM, for example, there’s an LLVM to 6502 translator, so you could be making NES games with Rust.

I will test this in a few days, busy implementing my own JVM (hope I can do it) and I don’t have the Rust toolchain installed on my system. But hey maybe someone can make a Cargo plugin from it (is it possible?)

Thanks, later.

  • @AVincentInSpace
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    2 months ago

    We can already write Android apps in pure Rust though. Android apps are allowed to run native machine code – that’s how the Android versions of Genshin Impact, CoD, Fortnite et. al. work – and winit and wgpu support Android NativeActivity as a backend.

    https://github.com/inferrna/hello_world_android_egui

      • @AVincentInSpace
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        42 months ago

        I dunno. I just kinda aimlessly Googled terms related to Android and Rust until I found that link.

        The GitHub link in my previous comment shows a basic example of using the egui GUI framework on Android via wgpu. I haven’t found an excuse to play around with it yet, plus getting the Android NDK cross compiler working with Cargo (for crates that compile C code) is a bit of a pain, but I’d assume it works how it says on the tin.

        Tell you what, gimme a minute to screw around with this and I’ll report back

        • @XTL@sopuli.xyz
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          12 months ago

          This is a thing I look for now and then, but it always seems to fall back to “install android studio” and I nope at that point. Maybe one of these days. Having the ability to make some simple app would be interesting.

          • @AVincentInSpace
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            2 months ago

            @sashin@vegnism.social @XTL@sopuli.xyz Alright, I’m back. Survey says: we are, indeed, Android yet!

            I found this example repo in my travels: https://github.com/inferrna/hello_world_android_egui

            It shows the same demo setup that can be experienced through a Web browser at http://egui.rs, only now as a native-code Android application. To compile it I had to:

            • install lld (it uses that linker I think exclusively and will complain if you don’t have it)
            • rustup target add aarch64-linux-android
            • ignore the build instructions in the repo since the tool they recommend (cargo apk) has been deprecated and no longer works (either that or i couldn’t get it working – xbuild is easier anyway)
            • cargo install xbuild
            • cargo update the repo since the version of android-activity it ships with is out of date and will crash since my version of Android passed it a null pointer it wasn’t expecting
            • connect phone to PC via adb
            • invoke xbuild to compile and deploy the app: x run --device adb:ADB_ID_GOES_HERE

            I did NOT have to:

            • download Android Studio, even as the command line tools (xbuild took care of downloading the SDK and NDK for me)

            (I did download them separately as part of a different troubleshooting step, but I deleted them and it continued working. Not sure what to make of this. Not about to reinstall my OS to make sure these steps are reproducible. Please let me know if they are or not!)

            UPDATE: It seems egui is not able to accept text input at all – it does not know how to bring up the virtual keyboard when you click a textbox, nor does it accept keyboard input when the virtual keyboard is forced open through third party app nor through a physical USB keyboard. Still more work to be done, but I’m shocked at how much is already possible!

            • @XTL@sopuli.xyz
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              12 months ago

              Very interesting, thank you. I should give this a try when I get back to a dev machine. Sounds like it still downloads and uses the SDK which might be significant for licensing or other reasons, but I’m probably fine with that for personal use.

    • @onlinepersona@programming.dev
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      -12 months ago

      They are probably using Android NDK and generating glue code that calls the compiled library with it. It wouldn’t surprise me if the actual solution is creating an activity with an OpenGL context into which apps can draw.

      Regardless, I don’t see the harm of transpiling parts of the app into JVM to access the full breadth of features. Take a look at what’s missing on winit. There’s probably more, but I’m not an android dev.

      Anti Commercial-AI license

      • @AVincentInSpace
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        2 months ago

        I don’t see the harm of transpiling parts of the app into JVM to access the full breadth of features

        You mean apart from the 5x performance hit?

        I’m unaware of anything the Android SDK supports that the NDK doesn’t, and the ndk-rs crate provides bindings for it. I agree that Rust on Android is not where we’d like it to be yet, especially with regard to familiar interfaces like winit, but transpiling Rust to JVM bytecode is not the solution. Come to that, it’s not the solution to any problem that currently does or (with any luck) will ever exist. Best case scenario, you shift the problem from creating bindings to the NDK to creating much uglier bindings to random Java classes through something JNI-like.

        Speaking of the JNI, actually, writing Rust native code that can both be called from and call into to Java/Kotlin/other JVM code via the JNI is actually fairly straightforward.

        Transpiling Rust to Java bytecode is a remarkably silly idea and I cannot fathom why anyone would ever do it, except maybe if they really cared about portability.

          • @AVincentInSpace
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            32 months ago

            No, I’m serious. Why would you ever do that? What features are available to the Java version of the Android API that aren’t available via the NDK? And if those features exist, why is writing the portions of your app that depend on those features in Kotlin and the rest in Rust infeasible?