Reputation: 481
I am trying to include Opencv to my native C code in an android studio project through Cmake. I did some research online and downloaded the FindOpenCV.cmake file from online and added it to the app directory of my android project. This is also where the CMakeLists.txt is located. I imported OpenCV onto my Android Studio project as a module using this tutorial: https://www.learn2crack.com/2016/03/setup-opencv-sdk-android-studio.html, and when I run:
if(!OpenCVLoader.initDebug()){
System.out.println("Opencv not loaded");
} else {
System.out.println("Opencv loaded");
}
I get that Opencv is loaded.
However, since I'm trying to add OpenCV to my native code, and not the Java code, I don't think I can use this. Here is the CMakeLists I have right now:
# Sets the minimum version of CMake required to build your native library.
# This ensures that a certain set of CMake features is available to
# your build.
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.4.1)
set(CMAKE_MODULE_PATH ${CMAKE_MODULE_PATH} FindOpenCV.cmake)
# Specifies a library name, specifies whether the library is STATIC or
# SHARED, and provides relative paths to the source code. You can
# define multiple libraries by adding multiple add.library() commands,
# and CMake builds them for you. When you build your app, Gradle
# automatically packages shared libraries with your APK.
add_library(# Specifies the name of the library.
apriltag
# Sets the library as a shared library.
SHARED
# Provides a relative path to your source file(s).
src/main/apriltag/apriltag.c
src/main/apriltag/apriltag_jni.c
src/main/apriltag/apriltag_quad_thresh.c
src/main/apriltag/common/g2d.c
src/main/apriltag/common/getopt.c
src/main/apriltag/common/homography.c
src/main/apriltag/common/image_f32.c
src/main/apriltag/common/image_u8.c
src/main/apriltag/common/image_u8x3.c
src/main/apriltag/common/matd.c
src/main/apriltag/common/pnm.c
src/main/apriltag/common/string_util.c
src/main/apriltag/common/svd22.c
src/main/apriltag/common/time_util.c
src/main/apriltag/common/unionfind.c
src/main/apriltag/common/workerpool.c
src/main/apriltag/common/zarray.c
src/main/apriltag/common/zhash.c
src/main/apriltag/common/zmaxheap.c
src/main/apriltag/tag16h5.c
src/main/apriltag/tag25h7.c
src/main/apriltag/tag25h9.c
src/main/apriltag/tag36artoolkit.c
src/main/apriltag/tag36h10.c
src/main/apriltag/tag36h11.c
)
STRING(REPLACE "-O0" "-O4" CMAKE_C_FLAGS_DEBUG ${CMAKE_C_FLAGS_DEBUG})
STRING(REPLACE "-O2" "-O4" CMAKE_C_FLAGS_RELEASE ${CMAKE_C_FLAGS_RELEASE})
include_directories(src/main/apriltag/)
include_directories(${OpenCV_INCLUDE_DIRS})
find_package(OpenCV REQUIRED)
find_library(log-lib log)
find_library(jnigraphics-lib jnigraphics)
target_link_libraries(apriltag ${log-lib} ${jnigraphics-lib})
Here are the errors I'm getting while building the gradle:
By not providing "FindOpenCV.cmake" in CMAKE_MODULE_PATH this project has
asked CMake to find a package configuration file provided by "OpenCV", but
CMake did not find one.
Could not find a package configuration file provided by "OpenCV" with any of
the following names:
OpenCVConfig.cmake
opencv-config.cmake
Add the installation prefix of "OpenCV" to CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH or set
"OpenCV_DIR" to a directory containing one of the above files. If "OpenCV"
provides a separate development package or SDK, be sure it has been
installed.
So my questions are:
Ideally, I want to build and be able to add #include <opencv2/opencv.hpp>
and using namespace cv
to my c file and add functions that use opencv functions.
Upvotes: 7
Views: 14515
Reputation: 6901
UPDATE 21-Oct-19: Deprecated Git/Simpler Way in favor of new AndroidOpenCVGradlePlugin
UPDATE 22-May-18: Added missing step number 6.
UPDATE 10-May-17: New solution provides proper integration of OpenCV into application with CMake and Android Gradle plugin 2.3.1. Tested using Android Studio 2.3.1.
UPDATE 11-May-17: An additional solution has been provided
There are two ways of including OpenCV.
Using AndroidOpenCVGradlePlugin
Visit https://github.com/ahasbini/AndroidOpenCVGradlePlugin for more details.
Git/Simpler Way
Visit https://github.com/ahasbini/Android-OpenCV for more details.
Manual/Advanced Way
To include OpenCV libraries into Android Studio Project, its best to create a new Library Module in the project and port the files from OpenCV Android SDK bundle into it:
OpenCV
opencv
org.opencv
path_to_opencv_sdk/sdk/java/src
directory into path_to_your_project/opencv/src/main/java
.main
, create the following directly path: aidl/org/opencv/engine
and move main/java/org/opencv/engine/OpenCVEngineInterface.aidl
into it.path_to_opencv_sdk/sdk/java/res
into path_to_your_project/opencv/src/main/res
.sdk
folder inside path_to_your_project/opencv/src/
and copy path_to_opencv_sdk/sdk/native
folder into it.opencv
module, create CMakeLists.txt
file and add the following lines in the following order:cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.4.1)
set(OpenCV_DIR "src/sdk/native/jni")
find_package(OpenCV REQUIRED)
message(STATUS "OpenCV libraries: ${OpenCV_LIBS}")
include_directories(${OpenCV_INCLUDE_DIRS})
opencv
module, edit the build.gradle
file as such:...
android {
...
defaultConfig {
minSdkVersion 8
targetSdkVersion 25
versionCode 3200
versionName "3.2.0"
...
externalNativeBuild {
cmake {
cppFlags "-frtti -fexceptions"
}
}
}
buildTypes {
...
}
externalNativeBuild {
cmake {
path "CMakeLists.txt"
}
}
sourceSets {
main {
jni.srcDirs = [jni.srcDirs, 'src/sdk/native/jni/include']
jniLibs.srcDirs = [jniLibs.srcDirs, 'src/sdk/native/3rdparty/libs', 'src/sdk/native/libs']
}
}
}
...
app
(application module, could be another name) module, create/edit CMakeLists.txt
file and add the following lines in the following order (Note the different path set to OpenCV_DIR
):set(OpenCV_DIR "../opencv/src/sdk/native/jni")
find_package(OpenCV REQUIRED)
message(STATUS "OpenCV libraries: ${OpenCV_LIBS}")
target_link_libraries(YOUR_TARGET_LIB ${OpenCV_LIBS})
app
(application module, could be another name) module, edit the build.gradle
file as such:...
android {
...
defaultConfig {
...
externalNativeBuild {
cmake {
cppFlags "-frtti -fexceptions"
}
}
buildTypes {
...
}
externalNativeBuild {
cmake {
path "CMakeLists.txt"
}
}
}
dependencies {
...
compile project(':opencv')
}
When project is built and apk is launched, you could inspect the packaged apk under path_to_project/path_to_app_module/build/output/
(drag the apk onto the text editor tabs of Android Studio)
You should see a libopencv_java3.so
under each abi architecture folder.
Initialize the OpenCV SDK in your java class :
public class MyClass {
static {
if (BuildConfig.DEBUG) {
OpenCVLoader.initDebug();
}
}
...
}
And you should see within logcat messages specifying the OpenCV has been loaded (the first error is normal):
05-10 10:42:31.451 D/OpenCV/StaticHelper: Trying to get library list
05-10 10:42:31.452 E/OpenCV/StaticHelper: OpenCV error: Cannot load info library for OpenCV
05-10 10:42:31.452 D/OpenCV/StaticHelper: Library list: ""
05-10 10:42:31.452 D/OpenCV/StaticHelper: First attempt to load libs
05-10 10:42:31.452 D/OpenCV/StaticHelper: Trying to init OpenCV libs
05-10 10:42:31.452 D/OpenCV/StaticHelper: Trying to load library opencv_java3
05-10 10:42:32.031 D/OpenCV/StaticHelper: Library opencv_java3 loaded
05-10 10:42:32.031 D/OpenCV/StaticHelper: First attempt to load libs is OK
05-10 10:42:32.045 I/OpenCV/StaticHelper: General configuration for OpenCV 3.2.0 =====================================
05-10 10:42:32.045 I/OpenCV/StaticHelper: Version control: 3.2.0
05-10 10:42:32.045 I/OpenCV/StaticHelper: Platform:
05-10 10:42:32.045 I/OpenCV/StaticHelper: Timestamp: 2016-12-23T13:04:49Z
05-10 10:42:32.045 I/OpenCV/StaticHelper: Host: Linux 4.8.0-25-generic x86_64
05-10 10:42:32.045 I/OpenCV/StaticHelper: Target: Linux 1 x86_64
05-10 10:42:32.045 I/OpenCV/StaticHelper: CMake: 2.8.12.2
05-10 10:42:32.045 I/OpenCV/StaticHelper: CMake generator: Ninja
05-10 10:42:32.045 I/OpenCV/StaticHelper: CMake build tool: /usr/bin/ninja
05-10 10:42:32.045 I/OpenCV/StaticHelper: Configuration: Release
05-10 10:42:32.045 I/OpenCV/StaticHelper: C/C++:
05-10 10:42:32.045 I/OpenCV/StaticHelper: Built as dynamic libs?: NO
05-10 10:42:32.045 I/OpenCV/StaticHelper: C++ Compiler: /usr/bin/ccache /opt/android/android-ndk-r10e/toolchains/x86_64-4.9/prebuilt/linux-x86_64/bin/x86_64-linux-android-g++ (ver 4.9)
Upvotes: 17
Reputation: 606
The manual method outlined by ahasbini worked (Reg. Adding OpenCV to Native C code through CMake on Android Studio), however some minor adjustments were required for the current version of Android Studio/SDK (3.1.3);
1 replace the occurrence of compile
with implementation
in (10) app build.gradle (Still getting warning : Configuration 'compile' is obsolete and has been replaced with 'implementation'). And in (9) app CMakeLists.txt ensure to replace YOUR_TARGET_LIB
with your target lib (e.g. native-lib
).
2 change the STL to gnustl_shared
(Linking errors on Android with OpenCV 3.4.0 and NDK); edit (8) app build.gradle;
defaultConfig {
...
externalNativeBuild {
cmake {
...
arguments "-DANDROID_STL=gnustl_shared"
}
}
This prevents referencing errors within linked opencv libraries (e.g. error: undefined reference to std:: ...
)
3 To support C++11 (How to enable C++11 for Android Studio? / OpenCV Android native code build issue); edit (8) app build.gradle;
defaultConfig {
...
externalNativeBuild {
cmake {
...
cppFlags "-std=c++11"
}
}
Then add the following to (9) app CMakeLists.txt before add_library()
;
set(CMAKE_SHARED_LINKER_FLAGS "${CMAKE_SHARED_LINKER_FLAGS} -Wl,--exclude-libs,libippicv.a -Wl,--exclude-libs,libippiw.a")
This prevents the following error; relocation R_386_GOTOFF against preemptible symbol icv_ippJumpIndexForMergedLibs cannot be used when making a shared object
.
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 841
I used @ahasbini's answer and it produced an error when I wanted to access the open cv libs in my native cpp file.
It produced some error when adding the shared libs but only if I accessed their Classes in my file.
Changing
find_package(OpenCV REQUIRED)
To
find_package(OpenCV REQUIRED java)
Fixed it for me
Upvotes: 1