6.1 KiB
Custom pack guide
The MinMicrog update, build, and install scripts were written with one primary goal in mind: To be completely abstracted from any files being processed using it (of course, along with being fast and widely supported), which is its primary advantage in use cases over any other similar Android flashable mods (besides helping me in staying lazy). What is being installed doesn't matter to the installer; All it needs are a few variables in a text file telling it what files to do stuff to and it'll do its job (as smartly as I could think of). What all this means, my dear fellow, is that you can whip up a quick conf file to make MinMicroG build any kind of flashable zip within minutes.
To prove this, we're gonna write a new config and resdl-download file for an entirely new and relatively simple pack: the AuroraServices package containing just AuroraServices along with a perm file.
If you've read through this document (or perhaps want to play Russian roulette
with rm
and your device), there is a blank config file in defconf-dummy.txt
that you can fill in.
update.sh
and resdl-download.txt
First, before making a pack, we gotta get the Aurora APK files from somewhere.
We could've just downloaded and put them in the res
directory, but they'd
need to be updated and I'm lazy, so no.
What update.sh
does for me is get everything I would need for a pack itself
from a list of predefined sources and puts them in their proper places in the
resdl
directory so the build script picks them up. Now, update.sh
knows
what to get by executing and getting the variables from
conf/resdl-download.txt
(open it and see), so we're gonna add a few lines to
it to get the Aurora APKs downloaded automatically when we run the script.
We could get them from FDroid, but their releases are usually out of date and I trust Whyorean so we're gonna grab them from his GitLab page. Fortunately, he has precompiled binaries on his releases page.
Now, we don't need any new FDroid repo for this, so we leave the stuff_repos
list untouched. But we're gonna change stuff_download
.
For AuroraServices, we'll be keeping the file at path
/system/priv-app/AuroraServices/AuroraServices.apk
(inside resdl
). The URL
for the project is https://gitlab.com/AuroraOSS/AuroraServices
at the
official gitlab server, so our source type is gitlab
and source path is
AuroraOSS/AuroraServices
. So we add the line:
/system/priv-app/AuroraServices/AuroraServices.apk gitlab AuroraOSS/AuroraServices
To stuff_download
.
But ding-ding! When you run the script, you may or may not notice that you may
or may not get a valid APK file as the result. Why is that? open
AuroraServices's GitLab releases page for yourself and see. The problem is that
Whyorean provides a Flashable zip with each release too! How considerate. But
that's a problem for the script, because as you may or may not have seen, our
poor update.sh
can get confused between different files in a release, and we
can't exactly blame it; It has no way to know what we wanted and what we got
are different, it's simply grabbing the latest file from a release's
attachments.
Fortunately, I am wise. I foresaw this situation, and so I added a way to
filter through the release files from a GitLab page. All we have to do is add a
.apk
in the fourth column, so that update.sh
will first filter all the
release attachments into only those having .apk at the end, and then grab the
latest of them. So what we have to change that entry into is:
/system/priv-app/AuroraServices/AuroraServices.apk gitlab AuroraOSS/AuroraServices .apk
Note that while here I am using a simple suffix for this filtering since there
are no other APKs to be confused by, you can also use a more complicated
extended regex like AuroraServices-v[.1-9]*.apk
to protect against future
additional APKs in the releases.
Also note that exact same behaviour applies to the fourth column for the
github
source type.
Additionally note that the fourth column for the repo
source type has a
different function but similar purpose; It is the architecture and minimum SDK
level to filter all the available APKs by.
Now, when we run update.sh
, as long as the internet is still up, we will get
a correct AuroraServices.apk where we wanted.
build.sh
and defconf-aurora.txt
For a new pack, we make a new defconf file. Note that the name in the defconf
file is only used to execute the build command, the name of the zip in releases
will be using the variant
variable in the defconf. Open the
defconf-aurora.txt
file and see what the final result is.
NOTE: I only reccomend doing this if you're familiar with shell scripts. DO NOT execute anything directly in the file; it is executed at both build time and flash time, so I hope it's obvious that's a bad idea.
-
First, we set the
variant
variable to "AuroraServices". -
Then, we set
ver
,verc
, anddate
to the correct values, considering thatverc
has to be an integer. -
Since Services only supports lollipop and above, we set
minsdk
to21
. -
Then we fill up the empty values in
modprop
, seeing asid
has to be themodname
defined inupdate-binary
, and the Magisk module template is at1900
. -
Since we have only two files (I wrote up the perm file) to be installed and they both are the same for various architectures and SDKs, we just add them to
stuff
. (To understand how the others likestuff_arch
andstuff_sdk
work, I'd recommend runningupdate.sh
and looking at the keyboard swipe and contact sync files.) -
They don't have anything they conflict with, so nothing to add to
stuff_debloat
. -
We need to add permissions to the two files, so we add their respective directories to
stuff_perm
. -
We don't have anything special to do with this package, so nothing in the build or install functions. But we don't remove the functions completely, that would cause an error.
There, we have the config file for our brand new AuroraServices pack!
Build it
Execute
> ./build.sh aurora
And you should find a AuroraServices pack in the releases
directory.