Reputation: 223
I need to port a C library to Java so it can run on the Blackberry platform (mobile, native application). The options I am considering are:
Please let me know which option is best. thanks
Upvotes: 3
Views: 576
Reputation: 7572
We also have an in-house developed C library for core functionality of our iOS and Android apps.
I asked about using cibyl to run this on BlackBerry in the form of a .jar and the good news is that it's possible: https://twitter.com/#!/simonkagstrom/status/114581622833152000 [backup of the tweet: "Sure, that's how #waze on the blackberry works."]
You can also try MoSync: http://twitter.com/#!/MoSync/status/115088826430533632 [backup of this one: "Yup, you can use MoSync for BB. There's "experimental" Blackberry support in MoSync 2.6, already used in live apps!"]
And David A Roberts, developer of LLJVM sent me this: "I'm not familiar with BlackBerry development, but I see no obvious reason why LLJVM wouldn't work, so long as the library doesn't rely too much on things like the C POSIX library (e.g. dirent.h, etc) - I never got around to implementing this fully. Otherwise LLJVM would need to be updated suitably..."
Side note: BlackBerry's new Tablet OS and planned BBX phones actually have a native SDK but this QNX based stuff is quite unpopular. We just need to wait if BBX is going to become a success since Java based solutions are just too much risks.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 5452
Aha. Some quick googling says "No, JNI does not work for blackberry" source:
http://supportforums.blackberry.com/t5/Java-Development/JNI/m-p/41140.
So you're stuck with bytecode conversion and complete port. Since I have no idea what bytecode conversion is, I'd go with a complete port, so long as you are familiar with both languages. If you can define bytecode conversion for me, I might be able to give you a better answer.
Upvotes: 3