On 2/17/19 1:53 AM, Oscar Bastidas wrote:
Hello,
I would like to install the external Java library known as 'HttpClient' on
my Android tablet so that I can use it in my Java code (I use the Linux
emulator known as Termux and the ecj compiler available for it - I am
trying to do *all* of my coding on my Android tablet without touching a
'real' computer - so far it's been working). On the Apache website (
https://hc.apache.org/downloads.cgi), the binaries for 'HttpClient' are
available for download (I was specifically recommended HttpClient 5.0 for
my endeavors by Apache personnel), but this is where I am stuck (they also
have 'source' files available in .tar.gz and .zip formats too, just like
the binaries).
Would you please tell me how I should proceed with using the available
binary download along with Linux's 'pkg' command? I imagine I'll need to
download the binary for starters, but where does it go (I have a hunch
where it *might* go in the Termux world, but not sure, but I don't mind
trying it for starters)? How does 'pkg' know where binaries are sitting to
open them up? Once it's in the right location, wherever that may be, can I
just execute the 'pkg install BINARY_NAME dx' command? Should I
convert/compile the binaries to 'dex' first?
I should note that using the above paradigm for standard Termux packages
necessitates having the 'dx' at the end of the pkg installation command
(because Android's virtual machine is dalvik which I think only processes
'dex'). Given that this is the case, should I use the the 'source' instead
of the binary and compile everything in it using Java to obtain 'dex'
files, then stick those results into the correct location in order to use
'pkg'?
Thanks for any insight, direction or guidance you can provide me with and
please do excuse me if my questions are naive, but I am kind of new at this
field and trying to teach myself as I go along.
Hi, I think there may be some confusion on your end. This is a mailing
list for FreeBSD's documentation effort. FreeBSD is a Unix type
operating system which is fundamentally different than Linux and
Android, so it doesn't look like anyone here would be able to help you.
You may want to hit up a mailing list or discussion board for Android
users who may be able to help.
Cheers,
-p
--
Pete Wright
[email protected]
@nomadlogicLA
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