Servidor de AIDL
Por último, podemos crear un servidor que exponga el servicio:
birthday_service/src/server.rs:
//! Servicio de felicitación cumpleaños.
use birthdayservice::BirthdayService;
use com_example_birthdayservice::aidl::com::example::birthdayservice::IBirthdayService::BnBirthdayService;
use com_example_birthdayservice::binder;
const SERVICE_IDENTIFIER: &str = "birthdayservice";
/// Punto de entrada del servicio de felicitación cumpleaños.
fn main() {
let birthday_service = BirthdayService;
let birthday_service_binder = BnBirthdayService::new_binder(
birthday_service,
binder::BinderFeatures::default(),
);
binder::add_service(SERVICE_IDENTIFIER, birthday_service_binder.as_binder())
.expect("No se ha podido registrar el servicio");
binder::ProcessState::join_thread_pool()
}
birthday_service/Android.bp:
rust_binary {
name: "birthday_server",
crate_name: "birthday_server",
srcs: ["src/server.rs"],
rustlibs: [
"com.example.birthdayservice-rust",
"libbinder_rs",
"libbirthdayservice",
],
prefer_rlib: true, // Para evitar errores de enlaces dinámicos.
}
The process for taking a user-defined service implementation (in this case the BirthdayService
type, which implements the IBirthdayService
) and starting it as a Binder service has multiple steps, and may appear more complicated than students are used to if they've used Binder from C++ or another language. Explain to students why each step is necessary.
- Create an instance of your service type (
BirthdayService
). - Wrap the service object in corresponding
Bn*
type (BnBirthdayService
in this case). This type is generated by Binder and provides the common Binder functionality that would be provided by theBnBinder
base class in C++. We don't have inheritance in Rust, so instead we use composition, putting ourBirthdayService
within the generatedBnBinderService
. - Call
add_service
, giving it a service identifier and your service object (theBnBirthdayService
object in the example). - Call
join_thread_pool
to add the current thread to Binder's thread pool and start listening for connections.