When I/O error happens, reboot and retry installation two times
before we abort this OTA update.
Bug: 25633753
Change-Id: Iba6d4203a343a725aa625a41d237606980d62f69
Move to using std::vector and std::unique_ptr to manage key
certificates to stop memory leaks.
Bug: 26908001
Change-Id: Ia5f799bc8dcc036a0ffae5eaa8d9f6e09abd031c
Although stdout and stderr are both redirected to log file with no
buffering, we are seeing some outputs are mixed in random order.
This is because ui_print commands from the updater are passed to the
recovery binary via a pipe, which may interleave with other outputs
that go to stderr directly.
In recovery, adding ui::PrintOnScreenOnly() function to handle
ui_print command, which skips printing to stdout. Meanwhile, updater
prints the contents to stderr in addition to piping them to recovery.
Change-Id: Idda93ea940d2e23a0276bb8ead4aa70a3cb97700
These commands are for the communication between the installer and the
update binary (edify interpreter). Update the comments in sync with the
codes.
Change-Id: I7390f022b1447049a974b0b45697ef1d2e71d4e0
Currently it rotates the log files every time it boots into the recovery
mode. We lose useful logs after ten times. This CL changes the rotation
condition so that it will rotate only if it performs some actual
operations that modify the flash (installs, wipes, sideloads and etc).
Bug: 19695622
Change-Id: Ie708ad955ef31aa500b6590c65faa72391705940
Implement a new method of sideloading over ADB that does not require
the entire package to be held in RAM (useful for low-RAM devices and
devices using block OTA where we'd rather have more RAM available for
binary patching).
We communicate with the host using a new adb service called
"sideload-host", which makes the host act as a server, sending us
different parts of the package file on request.
We create a FUSE filesystem that creates a virtual file
"/sideload/package.zip" that is backed by the ADB connection -- users
see a normal file, but when they read from the file we're actually
fetching the data from the adb host. This file is then passed to the
verification and installation systems like any other.
To prevent a malicious adb host implementation from serving different
data to the verification and installation phases of sideloading, the
FUSE filesystem verifies that the contents of the file don't change
between reads -- every time we fetch a block from the host we compare
its hash to the previous hash for that block (if it was read before)
and cause the read to fail if it changes.
One necessary change is that the minadbd started by recovery in
sideload mode no longer drops its root privileges (they're needed to
mount the FUSE filesystem). We rely on SELinux enforcement to
restrict the set of things that can be accessed.
Change-Id: Ida7dbd3b04c1d4e27a2779d88c1da0c7c81fb114
The default recovery UI will reboot the device when the power key is
pressed 7 times in a row, regardless of what recovery is doing.
Disable this feature during package installation, to minimize the
chance of corrupting the device due to a mid-install reboot. (Debug
packages can explicitly request that the feature be reenabled.)
Change-Id: I20f3ec240ecd344615d452005ff26d8dd7775acf
Changes minzip and recovery's file signature verification to work on
memory regions, rather than files.
For packages which are regular files, install.cpp now mmap()s them
into memory and then passes the mapped memory to the verifier and to
the minzip library.
Support for files which are raw block maps (which will be used when we
have packages written to encrypted data partitions) is present but
largely untested so far.
Bug: 12188746
Change-Id: I12cc3e809834745a489dd9d4ceb558cbccdc3f71
A system/core change made in Mar 26 2012 6ebf12f "init: Change umask
of forked processes to 077" changed the default umask of services
forked from init.
Because recovery is forked from init, it has a umask of 077. Therefore
when update-binary is forked from recovery, it too has a umask of 077.
This umask is overly restrictive and can cause problems for scripts
relying on minzip to extract binaries directly into the target
filesystem. Any directories updated by minzip will have their
permissions reset to r-x------ and created files will have similarly
restrictive permissions.
As it seems unlikely this security measure was intended to have this
side effect on legacy sideloads that do not have chmods to repair
the damage done by minzip, this change reverts the umask to 022 in
the fork made for update-binary.
Change-Id: Ib1a3fc83aa4ecc7480b5d0c00f3c7d0d040d4887
When installing a package, we should have /tmp and /cache mounted and
nothing else. Ensure this is true by explicitly mounting them and
unmounting everything else as the first step of every install.
Also fix an error in the progress bar that crops up when you do
multiple package installs in one instance of recovery.
Change-Id: I4837ed707cb419ddd3d9f6188b6355ba1bcfe2b2
Recovery currently has a random mix of messages printed to stdout and
messages printed to stderr, which can make logs hard to read. Move
everything to stdout.
Change-Id: Ie33bd4a9e1272e731302569cdec918e0534c48a6
- recovery takes a --locale argument, which will be passed by the main
system
- the locale is saved in cache, in case the --locale argument is
missing (eg, when recovery is started from fastboot)
- we include images that have prerendered text for many locales
- we split the background states into four (installing update,
erasing, no command, error) so that appropriate text can be shown.
Change-Id: I731b8108e83d5ccc09a4aacfc1dbf7e86b397aaf
- add the --just_exit option to make recovery exit normally without doing anything
- make it possible to build updater extensions in C++
- add the clear_display command so that the updater binary can request
recovery switch to the NONE background UI
These are all used to support the notion of using OTA as a factory
reflash mechanism.
Change-Id: Ib00d1cbf540feff38f52a61a2cf198915b48488c
Move all the functions in ui.c to be members of a ScreenRecoveryUI
class, which is a subclass of an abstract RecoveryUI class. Recovery
then creates a global singleton instance of this class and then invoke
the methods to drive the UI. We use this to allow substitution of a
different RecoveryUI implementation for devices with radically
different form factors (eg, that don't have a screen).
Change-Id: I7fd8b2949d0db5a3f47c52978bca183966c86f33