asanjuan wrote:Hi all,
My friends are asking me when I'm going to make an android version of my UCI engine Rhetoric. I wonder which are the steps to build such version because I've never compiled anything to that platform.
do I have to change something in the uci protocol?
is so simple as compile for the arm processor?
Is there a tutorial? Any reference guide?
I need a hint.
Thanks in advance.
I compile directly on my Android device, using CCTools. That's where the Android build of Senpai comes from, for instance.
That's cool! because I have an android TV box, so I even can edit in a big screen for android, while I'm sitting in my sofa !
I can't wait to get home and install it on my TV!
Thank you so much!
Android has brought a world of posibilities to work, enjoy, or even compile your own programs! And everything in a device that fits in a hand. It's amazing.
Yes, compiling a chess engine on a mobile device is really epic ! The only problem with CCTool's shell is that it has no cut & paste, and no commands history, so if you typed something wrong in your five-lines long command you'll have to write it all again.
asanjuan wrote:Hello guys!
Thanks to your comments, just now, I'm playing against Rhetoric running in my phone!
(and losing every single game, of course)
@Pedro, I could make my own makefile from your example. Thank you very much!!
asanjuan wrote:Hello guys!
Thanks to your comments, just now, I'm playing against Rhetoric running in my phone!
(and losing every single game, of course)
@Pedro, I could make my own makefile from your example. Thank you very much!!
But I think that I still have to do some more tests... May i have to compile for ARMv5TE? I don't know how to do it. I used the -mtune=arm7 option, like Pedro did with DanaSah.
Is it useful for you? is it equivalent?
Still learning how to play chess...
knigths move in "L" shape ¿right?
asanjuan wrote:Mail sent!
Hope to see Rhetoric playing in your tournaments. Have you planned any starting date?
Thanks. Works great. Here are the results of a few quick test matches at 1 seconds per move on my Nexus 4 phone using random book opening lines and engines of various strength. Very well done!
I am not completely sure yet when I will do another Android tournament and in what format. In earlier tournaments, I collected and even compiled many engines myself, because I was still interested in promoting Android as a viable platform for chess at the time. But nowadays I would actually like to see a lot more interest from participating engine authors as well, so I may send out a call for participation first and see how many engine authors enroll, and then proceed with just that set if we have critical mass.