The Linaro Android Platform 11.11 Cycle

11.11 started the last week of October after Linaro 11.10 was released
on Oct 27th. The Android team had the RC for the 24th done on the 21st
so that Bernhard RosenkrÀnzer and I could focus on ELC-E in Prague and
the team could focus on getting ready for Linaro Connect Q4.11 in
Orlando, Oct 31st through November 4th. The theme for 11.10 had been
"make it shiny" as we wanted to put our best foot forward at ELC-E and
during Connect.

Prague went well. Bernhard and I did our presentation and ran the
booth with Ricardo Salveti. We had a bit of excitement when one of our
evening hacking sessions turned into a travel scramble as Arnd Bergman
and others tried to find alternative flights after the French Air
Strike.

ELC-E Presentation, Linaro's Android Platform
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zWuGDX6Sz2Y

elinux.org tutorial
http://elinux.org/Android_Tutorials_Unbox_to_App

Everyone got to Connect okay and we set off on a very exciting week of
planning, hacking, arguing and "socializing." We ran sessions on
device tree, sched_mc,  build improvements, automated testing,
educational outreach, handling binaries, benchmarking, future plans,
QA and gave a tutorial on how to use Linaro's Android distribution.
Amit Pundir also started off his Linaro career with a great porting
Android to new platforms session. Bernhard made great strides in
supporting a dual toolchain, Chao Yang debugged libpng issues, Tony
MĂ„nsson worked on Powertutor extensions, Frans Gifford got the CI loop
working with each target, Prashanth Srinivasan onboarded by helping do
and test builds and Abhishek Paliwal worked to unify our QA tests with
each test description. We capped the week off with demos including,
Vishal Bhoj's getting a Linphone based Video Conferencing App working,
Noritsuna Imamura's Cluster Android App Engine and Botao Sun showing
WiFi on Samsung Origen, Woot! Jon Medhurst (Tixy) was also able to
make substantial progress getting Android running on Vexpress with
Mathieu Poirier's help and Michael Edwards offered to help with our
SGX upgrade.

Linaro Connect: Demo Friday III
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3lRxiTA6A10

Linaro Connect Q4.11 - Panda cloud cluster
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pSGNf0KZ71c

Linaro Android Tech Lead Zach Pfeffer at Linaro Connect
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yVZ1kblmQMY

Porting Android to New Platforms
https://docs.google.com/a/linaro.org/viewer?a=v&pid=explorer&chrome=true&srcid=0B3pUtxWjZbP9MTYyMjE5ZmItNTU3NS00NzVhLTg0NmItOTIxNmU2ZDZkYWI0&hl=en_US

After connect we set out to finish out 11.11, knowing that Ice Cream
Sandwich (ICS) would land at anytime. Bernhard even had a cron job
looking for new commits at AOSP. Even thought we live in the future we
can't predict it and Patrik Ryd set out to upgrade our baseline to
2.3.7. The upgrade plus our usual work of upgrading to the latest
Linaro toolchain and adding support for each board feature kept us
busy until, Nov 14th's email about ICS dropping:

http://groups.google.com/group/android-building/browse_thread/thread/4f85d9242667a85f

Alexander Sack started syncing the code the minute is was ready, I
started a build and VIshal and I started getting AOSP to compile on
Pandaboard. Vishal fixed a few issues and we tried the AOSP first
thing the next morning.

AOSP running on Pandaboard
http://www.youtube.com/user/pfefferzlinaro?feature=mhee#p/u/4/eaVszdsZ8aY

Vishal also started looking into getting this running using just
software GL and had a prototype working soon after that showed Panda
running with a Linaro kernel

Android 4.0.1 (ICS) with the Linaro Kernel
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-LtjvekCDKM

With this proof on concept Mathieu was able to get Snowball running ICS

ICS running on Snowball
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CvRg6OX0DL8

Alexander then challenged the group to get each board switched over
and to release a preliminary release on Thanksgiving. With the wind at
our backs the Linaro Android team achieved this.

We had a few snags, the largest was related to the enormous strain
that the ICS code base put on the existing infrastructure. On Friday
Nov 18th, as we were getting ready to start cutting 2.3.7 releases, we
had 2 coincident events: a cross git change that had to be reverted
and a build system that couldn't sync the code base because of the
expanded size of ICS in the git mirror. After a stand-up meeting Paul
Sokolovsky saved the day be launching his seeded build mechanism that
not only allowed the builds to go through, but cut down on the sync
time. This change brought about a paradigm shift in build performance
and reliability.

11.11 was an incredible cycle. The lessons learned were:

1. Gerrit doesn't handle cross git changes so it should be extended to
2. We need to ensure that each target in LAVA is stable
3. If things are starting to get chaotic then anyone can yell
stopthepresses in #linaro-android and we'll all stop and regroup

For 11.12 the high-level plan is to:

1. Compile ICS with Linaro's 4.6 Toolchain and send the source
modifications to Google
2. Integrate our work on 2.3.7 including, libjpeg-turbo and ds-5 into
ICS and send the changes to Google
3. Get PoCs for each binary, get them into linaro-android, enabling
graphics and multimedia

11.12 starts tomorrow, Nov 28th, the 11.12 RCs will come out Dec. 20th
and be cut on the 18th. Its going to be a great December!

-- 
Zach Pfeffer
Android Platform Team Lead, Linaro Platform Teams
Linaro.org | Open source software for ARM SoCs
Follow Linaro: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Linaro
http://twitter.com/#!/linaroorg - http://www.linaro.org/linaro-blog

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