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Android
As starting point you can use this example which can be used nativly from Eclipse or NetBeans via pure maven command.
Before installation 0. Go to the Android SDK Manager and install 2.2 (API 8)
NetBeans/IntelliJ/Command line
- Go to graphhopper sources and make sure
mvn -version
prints at least 3.0.3 - Create the graphhopper artifact via
mvn -DskipTests=true clean install
- Download Maven SDK Deployer and execute
mvn install -P 2.2
- it uses Android Maven Plugin under the hood where you need to set up ANDROID_HOME - Install Mapsforge in your local repository via the provided script
scripts/maven-install-mapsforge.sh
- Now go to the graphhopper-android project, build and start GraphHopper via
mvn -DskipTests=true clean install android:deploy android:run
Eclipse 0. Go to graphhopper sources
- Create the graphhopper jar via
mvn -DskipTests=true clean install assembly:single
- Use the graphhopper-[version]-android.jar and copy it to the libs folder of graphhopper-android. Refresh and use it.
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To avoid RAM-bound graph implementations like MemoryGraphSafe you can use MMapGraph but it could be slower.
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For now OSMReader does not work on Android due to some javax.xml dependencies. But you can simply create the graphhopper folder on your desktop and copy them to the Android storage. At the moment the graphhopper data created with a MMapGraph is different to one created with MemoryGraphSafe. So keep in mind that you are using the same graph implementation on the desktop and on android. If all was successful in the logs you should see something like: found graph xy with nodes:3037, edges:3221, edges segments:2, edges segmentSize:16384, created-at:Tue Sep 04 14:54:35 MESZ 2012
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A memory bound a* algoritm is not yet implemented. Let me know if you need this!
Areas as large as Berlin already work: