The Android platform provides a very minimal C++ runtime support library (libstdc++
). This minimal support does not include, for example:
The NDK provides headers for use with this default library. In addition, the NDK provides a number of helper runtimes that provide additional features. This page provides information about these helper runtimes, their characteristics, and how to use them.
Table 1 provides names, brief explanations, and features of runtimes available inthe NDK.
Name | Explanation> | Features |
---|---|---|
libstdc++ (default) |
The default minimal system C++ runtime library. | N/A |
gabi++_static |
The GAbi++ runtime (static). | C++ Exceptions and RTTI |
gabi++_shared |
The GAbi++ runtime (shared). | C++ Exceptions and RTTI |
stlport_static |
The STLport runtime (static). | C++ Exceptions and RTTI; Standard Library |
stlport_shared |
The STLport runtime (shared). | C++ Exceptions and RTTI; Standard Library |
gnustl_static |
The GNU STL (static). | C++ Exceptions and RTTI; Standard Library |
gnustl_shared |
The GNU STL (shared). | C++ Exceptions and RTTI; Standard Library |
c++_static |
The LLVM libc++ runtime (static). | C++ Exceptions and RTTI; Standard Library |
c++_shared |
The LLVM libc++ runtime (shared). | C++ Exceptions and RTTI; Standard Library |
Use the APP_STL
variable in your Application.mk
file to specify the runtime you wish to use. Use the values in the "Name" column in Table 1 as your setting. For example:
APP_STL := gnustl_static
You may only select one runtime for your app, and can only do in Application.mk
.
Even if you do not use the NDK build system, you can still use STLport, libc++ or GNU STL. For more information on how to use these runtimes with your own toolchain, see Standalone Toolchain.
This runtime only provides the following headers, with no support beyond them:
cassert
cctype
cerrno
cfloat
climits
cmath
csetjmp
csignal
cstddef
cstdint
cstdio
cstdlib
cstring
ctime
cwchar
new
stl_pair.h
typeinfo
utility
This runtime provides the same headers as the default runtime, but adds support for RTTI (RunTime Type Information) and exception handling.
This runtime is an Android port of STLport (http://www.stlport.org). It provides a complete set of C++ standard library headers. It also, by embedding its own instance of GAbi++, provides support for RTTI and exception handling.
While shared and static versions of this runtime are avilable, we recommend using the shared version. For more information, see Static runtimes.
The shared library file is named libstlport_shared.so
instead of libstdc++.so
as is common on other platforms.
In addition to the static- and shared-library options, you can also force the NDK to build the library from sources by adding the following line to your Application.mk
file, or setting it in your environment prior to building:
STLPORT_FORCE_REBUILD := true
This runtime is the GNU Standard C++ Library, (libstdc++-v3
). Its shared library file is namedlibgnustl_shared.so
.
This runtime is an Android port of LLVM libc++. Its shared library file is named libc++_shared.so
.
By default, this runtime compiles with -std=c++11
. As with GNU libstdc++
, you need to explicitly turn on exceptions or RTTI support. For information on how to do this, see C++ Exceptions and RTTI.
The NDK provides prebuilt static and shared libraries for libc++
, but you can force the NDK to rebuild libc++
from sources by adding the following line to your Application.mk
file, or setting it in your environment prior to building:
LIBCXX_FORCE_REBUILD := true
If you include
, it's likely that you also need libatomic
. If you are using ndk-build
, add the following line:
LOCAL_LDLIBS += -latomic
If you are using your own toolchain, use:
-latomic
The NDK's libc++ is not stable. Not all the tests pass, and the test suite is not comprehensive. Some known issues are:
c++_shared
on ARM can crash when an exception is thrown.wchar_t
and the locale APIs is limited.You should also make sure to check the "Known Issues" section of the changelog for the NDK release you are using.
Warning: Attempting to change to an unsupported locale will not fail. The operation will succeed, but the locale will not change and the following message will appear in logcat
.
newlocale() WARNING: Trying to set locale to en_US.UTF-8 other than "", "C" or "POSIX"
In all versions of the NDK later than NDKr5, the NDK toolchain allows you to use C++ runtimes that support exception handling. However, to ensure compatibility with earlier releases, it compiles all C++ sources with -fno-exceptions
support by default. You can enable C++ exceptions either for your entire app, or for individual modules.
To enable exception-handling support for your entire app, add the following line to your Application.mk
file. To enable exception-handling support for individual modules', add the following line to their respective Android.mk
files.
APP_CPPFLAGS += -fexceptions
In all versions of the NDK later than NDKr5, the NDK toolchain allows you to use C++ runtimes that support RTTI. However, to ensure compatibility with earlier releases, it compiles all C++ sources with -fno-rtti
by default.
To enable RTTI support for your entire app for your entire application, add the following line to yourApplication.mk
file:
APP_CPPFLAGS += -frttiTo enable RTTI support for individual modules, add the following line to their respective
Android.mk
files:
LOCAL_CPP_FEATURES += rttiAlternatively, you can use:
LOCAL_CPPFLAGS += -frtti
Linking the static library variant of a C++ runtime to more than one binary may result in unexpected behavior. For example, you may experience:
libfoo.so
going uncaught in libbar.so
, causing your app to crash.std::cout
not working properlyIn addition, if you link two shared libraries–or a shared library and an executable– against the same static runtime, the final binary image of each shared library includes a copy of the runtime's code. Having multiple instances of runtime code is problematic because of duplication of certain global variables that the runtime uses or provides internally.
This problem does not apply to a project comprising a single shared library. For example, you can link againststlport_static
, and expect your app to behave correctly. If your project requires several shared library modules, we recommend that you use the shared library variant of your C++ runtime.
If your app targets a version of Android earlier than Android 4.3 (Android API level 18), and you use the shared library variant of a given C++ runtime, you must load the shared library before any other library that depends on it.
For example, an app may have the following modules:
You must load the libraries in reverse dependency order:
static { System.loadLibrary("stlport_shared"); System.loadLibrary("bar"); System.loadLibrary("foo"); }
Note: Do not use the lib
prefix when calling System.loadLibrary()
.
STLport is licensed under a BSD-style open-source license. See $NDK/sources/cxx-stl/stlport/README
for more details about STLport.
GNU libstdc++ is covered by the GPLv3 license, and not the LGPLv2 or LGPLv3. For more information, see Licenseon the GCC website.
LLVM libc++
is dual-licensed under both the University of Illinois "BSD-Like" license and the MIT license.