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Native assets (nodejs mobile)
Quiet uses nodejs-mobile
for running @quiet/backend
in node process on mobile. nodejs-mobile
forks official nodejs, which means all the binaries used by project's dependencies has to be compiled against this fork. nodejs-mobile-react-native
has the ability to compile those native assets on buildtime (they're being stored inside build/Release
folder within certain package's directory). node-gyp-build
's responsibility is to search for those assets either within previously mentioned location or package's prebuild assets.
.aab ships assets fitted for certain architecture only. It generates .apks file containing all necessary data prepared for shipping in the form of multiple .apk files.
@quiet/backend
is present within base-master.apk
and it figures as nodejs-project
. All the native assets compiled against nodejs-mobile
exists within similar, proper cpu-arch suffixed directories, e.g. nodejs-project-android-arm64
bundletool build-apks --bundle=<path-to-aab> --output=<path-to-apks> --ks=<keysotre.jks> --ks-pass=pass:<password> --ks-key-alias=<alias>
bundletool install-apks --adb=<path-to-adb> --apks=<path-to-apks>
Always make sure proper binaries are being built and shipped onto your device. Although you cannot debug signed releases, it's possible to generate debuggable app bundle using ./gradlew bundleDebug
.
Android studio provides UI for searching through device's file system (Device File Explorer). Application's data exists under /data/data/<com.appid>