Minimal manifest for building TWRP for devices shipped with Android 5.1 through Android 9.0
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.gitignore Add minimal twrp for 9.0 2020-09-16 10:32:20 +02:00
default.xml manifest: android-10.0.0_r41 2020-08-13 20:24:46 +02:00
GLOBAL-PREUPLOAD.cfg manifest: disable global commit_msg_test_field repohook check 2018-12-17 00:09:44 +01:00
omni-aosp.xml manifest: fork Provision 2020-07-08 13:28:42 +02:00
omni-caf.xml manifest: split extra repos 2020-06-14 09:35:07 +02:00
omni-default.xml twrp-10.0 initial 2020-09-16 10:32:21 +02:00
omni-extra.xml manifest: split extra repos 2020-06-14 09:35:07 +02:00
omni-private.xml manifest: move OmniLib to public repos 2020-04-23 09:21:22 +02:00
README.md twrp-10.0 initial 2020-09-16 10:32:21 +02:00
remove-minimal.xml Revert "update repos for minimal tree" 2020-10-18 13:07:28 -04:00
remove.xml manifest: fork Provision 2020-07-08 13:28:42 +02:00
twrp-extras.xml Add nano repo 2021-02-13 12:32:53 -05:00

Submitting Patches


Our project is open source, and patches are always welcome! You can send patches by using:

Pull request, right here on git.

Contact @lj50036 on irc, Network: freenode, Channel: #twrp

Maintaining Authorship


Maintaining authorship is a very important aspect of working with Open Source code. If you wish to submit a patch/fix from anywhere else (another ROM, project, etc.), it is imperative that you maintain the ownership of the person whose work you are seeking to include. Doing so will ensure that credit is given where it is deserved, and the principles of open source are upheld. Your contribution to the project will still be recognized as you will forever be listed as the committer.

If you manually cherry pick a patch/fix then you will need to add the original author prior to pushing to our gerrit. This is a very easy task to perform, and is usually done after you commit a patch/fix locally. This is accomplished after you type in git commit -a , type in the commit message and save. You would then do the following:

git commit --amend --author "Author <email@address.com>"

So it should look like this once you get all of the author's information:

git commit --amend --author "Spencer McGillicuddy <spencer.the.bestest@gmail.com>"

Alternatively, adding as part of the original git commit message is preferred and done like the following:

git commit --author="Author <email@address.com>" -m "[commit message]"

This saves time, and when part of your normal routine, prevents the infamous "ermahgerd I forgot to add authorship - let me fix it because I was found out!" message.

Getting Started


To get started with OMNI sources to build TWRP, you'll need to get familiar with Git and Repo.

To initialize your local repository using the OMNIROM trees to build TWRP, use a command like this:

repo init -u git://github.com/minimal-manifest-twrp/platform_manifest_twrp_omni.git -b twrp-10.0

To initialize a shallow clone, which will save even more space, use a command like this:

repo init --depth=1 -u git://github.com/minimal-manifest-twrp/platform_manifest_twrp_omni.git -b twrp-10.0

Then to sync up:

repo sync

Then to build for a device with recovery partition:

 cd <source-dir>; export ALLOW_MISSING_DEPENDENCIES=true; . build/envsetup.sh; lunch omni_<device>-eng; mka recoveryimage

Then to build for a device without recovery partition:

 cd <source-dir>; export ALLOW_MISSING_DEPENDENCIES=true; . build/envsetup.sh; lunch omni_<device>-eng; mka bootimage