Android 4.2.2 in the Android Open Source Project | Jean-Baptiste Queru | 3/1/13 10:38 AM | Today we're releasing Android 4.2.2 into AOSP, over the next few hours.
The build is JDQ39 and the tag is android-4.2.2_r1 The matching proprietary binaries are available at https://developers.google.com/android/nexus/drivers and the factory images at https://developers.google.com/android/nexus/images As a noteworthy item, this AOSP release includes the full set of proprietary binaries for Nexus 7 (all variants) and for Nexus 4, which are now fully usable with AOSP. This is the first time that any device has all its binaries available for AOSP. For people who prefer to work with older versions, we've tweaked the froyo, gingerbread and ics-mr1 branches so that they can be compiled on Ubuntu 12.04. Enjoy! JBQ -- Jean-Baptiste M. "JBQ" Queru Technical Lead, Android Open Source Project, Google. Questions sent directly to me that have no reason for being private will likely get ignored or forwarded to a public forum with no further warning. |
Re: [android-building] Android 4.2.2 in the Android Open Source Project | Paul Beeler | 3/1/13 10:45 AM | Thank you sir! Really appreciate it. -- |
Re: [android-building] Re: Android 4.2.2 in the Android Open Source Project | Jean-Baptiste Queru | 3/1/13 12:26 PM | The toroplus binaries were published today, Feb 20 is when I last
modified the script to package them for 4.2.2. JBQ On Fri, Mar 1, 2013 at 11:46 AM, Nicholas M <thefasc...@gmail.com> wrote: > Exciting. Have those new Toroplus binaries really been up since February 20th? |
Re: Android 4.2.2 in the Android Open Source Project | Jean-Baptiste Queru | 3/1/13 12:44 PM | Everything is in. Feel free to sync. If something looks wrong, it's a
bug, please let me know. Cheers, JBQ |
Re: [android-building] Re: Android 4.2.2 in the Android Open Source Project | Jean-Baptiste Queru | 3/1/13 1:45 PM | Telephony will definitely work.
I probably forgot to mention those binaries on the download page. It's also possible that no proprietary binaries are needed to use telephony on Nexus 4, in which case it wouldn't get mentioned on the list of proprietary files. I'm not sure which of the two explanations is the right one. Either way, telephony works. For Nexus 4 and for Nexus 7, 100% of the proprietary binaries are available. That had never been the case for other devices at any point in the past. That way, you can know that 100% of the functionality on Nexus 4 and Nexus 7 is supposed to work, without restrictions (other than those caused by bugs). JBQ On Fri, Mar 1, 2013 at 1:35 PM, Artem Russakovskii <arch...@gmail.com> wrote: > JBQ, I noticed the Nexus 4 GSM binaries are missing, while all other > devices, including the N7 3G have it. Does that mean you can't compile Nexus > 4 with telephony support? > > -- |
Re: [android-building] Android 4.2.2 in the Android Open Source Project | Francis Devereux | 3/2/13 4:23 AM | On 1 Mar 2013, at 18:38, Jean-Baptiste Queru <j...@android.com> wrote:Thanks, that's great news - full proprietary binaries for Nexus 4 and Nexus 7, I'm sure a lot of effort went into that behind the scenes! Francis |