platform_system_core/init/builtins.cpp

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2008-10-21 16:00:00 +02:00
/*
* Copyright (C) 2008 The Android Open Source Project
*
* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
* you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
* You may obtain a copy of the License at
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
* See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
* limitations under the License.
*/
#include "builtins.h"
#include <dirent.h>
#include <errno.h>
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#include <fcntl.h>
#include <fts.h>
#include <linux/loop.h>
#include <linux/module.h>
#include <mntent.h>
#include <net/if.h>
#include <sched.h>
#include <signal.h>
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#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
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#include <sys/mount.h>
#include <sys/resource.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <sys/syscall.h>
#include <sys/system_properties.h>
#include <sys/time.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/wait.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <android-base/chrono_utils.h>
#include <android-base/file.h>
#include <android-base/logging.h>
#include <android-base/parseint.h>
#include <android-base/properties.h>
#include <android-base/stringprintf.h>
#include <android-base/strings.h>
#include <android-base/unique_fd.h>
#include <bootloader_message/bootloader_message.h>
#include <cutils/android_reboot.h>
#include <ext4_utils/ext4_crypt.h>
#include <ext4_utils/ext4_crypt_init_extensions.h>
#include <fs_mgr.h>
#include <selinux/android.h>
#include <selinux/label.h>
#include <selinux/selinux.h>
#include <system/thread_defs.h>
#include "action.h"
#include "bootchart.h"
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#include "init.h"
#include "parser.h"
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#include "property_service.h"
remove emergency shutdown and improve init's reboot logic - Emergency shutdown just marks the fs as clean while leaving fs in the middle of any state. Do not use it anymore. - Changed android_reboot to set sys.powerctl property so that all shutdown can be done by init. - Normal reboot sequence changed to 1. Terminate processes (give time to clean up). And wait for completion based on ro.build.shutdown_timeout. Default value (when not set) is changed to 3 secs. If it is 0, do not terminate processes. 2. Kill all remaining services except critical services for shutdown. 3. Shutdown vold using "vdc volume shutdown" 4. umount all emulated partitions. If it fails, just detach. Wait in step 5 can handle it. 5. Try umounting R/W block devices for up to max timeout. If it fails, try DETACH. If umount fails to complete before reboot, it can be detected when system reboots. 6. Reboot - Log shutdown time and umount stat to log so that it can be collected after reboot - To umount emulated partitions, all pending writes inside kernel should be completed. - To umount /data partition, all emulated partitions on top of /data should be umounted and all pending writes should be completed. - umount retry will only wait up to timeout. If there are too many pending writes, reboot will discard them and e2fsck after reboot will fix any file system issues. bug: 36004738 bug: 32246772 Test: many reboots combining reboot from UI and adb reboot. Check last_kmsg and fs_stat after reboot. Change-Id: I6e74d6c68a21e76e08cc0438573d1586fd9aaee2
2017-03-13 19:54:47 +01:00
#include "reboot.h"
#include "rlimit_parser.h"
#include "selinux.h"
#include "service.h"
#include "subcontext.h"
#include "util.h"
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using namespace std::literals::string_literals;
using android::base::unique_fd;
builtins.c: Don't require file open() for chmod/chown 42a9349dc4e98019d27d7f8d19bc6c431695d7e1 modified init's builtin chmod, chown, and mkdir calls to avoid following symlinks. This addressed a number of attacks we were seeing at the time where poorly written init scripts were following attacker supplied symlinks resulting in rooting vulnerabilities. To avoid race conditions, the previous implementation only ran fchown / fchmod on file descriptors opened with open(O_NOFOLLOW). Unfortunately, unlike the normal "chown" or "chmod" calls, this requires read or write access to the underlying file. This isn't ideal, as opening some files may have side effects, or init may not have permission to open certain files (such as when SELinux is enabled). Instead of using open(O_NOFOLLOW) + fchown(), use lchown() instead. As before, the target of the symlink won't be modified by chown. This also supports setting the ownership of symlinks. Instead of using open(O_NOFOLLOW) + fchmod(), use fchmodat(AT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW) instead. As before, the target of the symlink won't be modified by chmod. This change will continue to ensure that chown/chmod/mkdir doesn't follow symlinks, without requiring init to open every file in read-only or read-write mode. This change depends on bionic commit I1eba0cdb2c509d9193ceecf28f13118188a3cfa7 Addresses the following mako/occam SELinux denial: audit(1422770408.951:6): avc: denied { write } for pid=1 comm="init" name="smd7" dev="tmpfs" ino=7207 scontext=u:r:init:s0 tcontext=u:object_r:radio_device:s0 tclass=chr_file Change-Id: I14fde956784d65c44e7aa91dd7eea9a004df3081
2015-02-01 06:39:46 +01:00
#define chmod DO_NOT_USE_CHMOD_USE_FCHMODAT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW
namespace android {
namespace init {
static constexpr std::chrono::nanoseconds kCommandRetryTimeout = 5s;
static Result<Success> reboot_into_recovery(const std::vector<std::string>& options) {
std::string err;
if (!write_bootloader_message(options, &err)) {
return Error() << "Failed to set bootloader message: " << err;
}
property_set("sys.powerctl", "reboot,recovery");
return Success();
}
template <typename F>
static void ForEachServiceInClass(const std::string& classname, F function) {
for (const auto& service : ServiceList::GetInstance()) {
if (service->classnames().count(classname)) std::invoke(function, service);
}
}
static Result<Success> do_class_start(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
// Starting a class does not start services which are explicitly disabled.
// They must be started individually.
for (const auto& service : ServiceList::GetInstance()) {
if (service->classnames().count(args[1])) {
if (auto result = service->StartIfNotDisabled(); !result) {
LOG(ERROR) << "Could not start service '" << service->name()
<< "' as part of class '" << args[1] << "': " << result.error();
}
}
}
return Success();
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}
static Result<Success> do_class_stop(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
ForEachServiceInClass(args[1], &Service::Stop);
return Success();
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}
static Result<Success> do_class_reset(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
ForEachServiceInClass(args[1], &Service::Reset);
return Success();
}
static Result<Success> do_class_restart(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
ForEachServiceInClass(args[1], &Service::Restart);
return Success();
}
static Result<Success> do_domainname(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
init: introduce Result<T> for return values and error handling init tries to propagate error information up to build context before logging errors. This is a good thing, however too often init has the overly verbose paradigm for error handling, below: bool CalculateResult(const T& input, U* output, std::string* err) bool CalculateAndUseResult(const T& input, std::string* err) { U output; std::string calculate_result_err; if (!CalculateResult(input, &output, &calculate_result_err)) { *err = "CalculateResult " + input + " failed: " + calculate_result_err; return false; } UseResult(output); return true; } Even more common are functions that return only true/false but also require passing a std::string* err in order to see the error message. This change introduces a Result<T> that is use to either hold a successful return value of type T or to hold an error message as a std::string. If the functional only returns success or a failure with an error message, Result<Success> may be used. The classes Error and ErrnoError are used to indicate a failed Result<T>. A successful Result<T> is constructed implicitly from any type that can be implicitly converted to T or from the constructor arguments for T. This allows you to return a type T directly from a function that returns Result<T>. Error and ErrnoError are used to construct a Result<T> has failed. Each of these classes take an ostream as an input and are implicitly cast to a Result<T> containing that failure. ErrnoError() additionally appends ": " + strerror(errno) to the end of the failure string to aid in interacting with C APIs. The end result is that the above code snippet is turned into the much clearer example below: Result<U> CalculateResult(const T& input); Result<Success> CalculateAndUseResult(const T& input) { auto output = CalculateResult(input); if (!output) { return Error() << "CalculateResult " << input << " failed: " << output.error(); } UseResult(*output); return Success(); } This change also makes this conversion for some of the util.cpp functions that used the old paradigm. Test: boot bullhead, init unit tests Change-Id: I1e7d3a8820a79362245041251057fbeed2f7979b
2017-08-03 21:54:07 +02:00
if (auto result = WriteFile("/proc/sys/kernel/domainname", args[1]); !result) {
return Error() << "Unable to write to /proc/sys/kernel/domainname: " << result.error();
}
return Success();
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}
static Result<Success> do_enable(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
Service* svc = ServiceList::GetInstance().FindService(args[1]);
if (!svc) return Error() << "Could not find service";
if (auto result = svc->Enable(); !result) {
return Error() << "Could not enable service: " << result.error();
}
return Success();
}
static Result<Success> do_exec(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
auto service = Service::MakeTemporaryOneshotService(args.args);
if (!service) {
return Error() << "Could not create exec service";
}
if (auto result = service->ExecStart(); !result) {
return Error() << "Could not start exec service: " << result.error();
}
ServiceList::GetInstance().AddService(std::move(service));
return Success();
}
static Result<Success> do_exec_background(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
auto service = Service::MakeTemporaryOneshotService(args.args);
if (!service) {
return Error() << "Could not create exec background service";
}
if (auto result = service->Start(); !result) {
return Error() << "Could not start exec background service: " << result.error();
}
ServiceList::GetInstance().AddService(std::move(service));
return Success();
}
static Result<Success> do_exec_start(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
Service* service = ServiceList::GetInstance().FindService(args[1]);
if (!service) {
return Error() << "Service not found";
}
if (auto result = service->ExecStart(); !result) {
return Error() << "Could not start exec service: " << result.error();
}
return Success();
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}
static Result<Success> do_export(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
if (setenv(args[1].c_str(), args[2].c_str(), 1) == -1) {
return ErrnoError() << "setenv() failed";
}
return Success();
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}
static Result<Success> do_hostname(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
init: introduce Result<T> for return values and error handling init tries to propagate error information up to build context before logging errors. This is a good thing, however too often init has the overly verbose paradigm for error handling, below: bool CalculateResult(const T& input, U* output, std::string* err) bool CalculateAndUseResult(const T& input, std::string* err) { U output; std::string calculate_result_err; if (!CalculateResult(input, &output, &calculate_result_err)) { *err = "CalculateResult " + input + " failed: " + calculate_result_err; return false; } UseResult(output); return true; } Even more common are functions that return only true/false but also require passing a std::string* err in order to see the error message. This change introduces a Result<T> that is use to either hold a successful return value of type T or to hold an error message as a std::string. If the functional only returns success or a failure with an error message, Result<Success> may be used. The classes Error and ErrnoError are used to indicate a failed Result<T>. A successful Result<T> is constructed implicitly from any type that can be implicitly converted to T or from the constructor arguments for T. This allows you to return a type T directly from a function that returns Result<T>. Error and ErrnoError are used to construct a Result<T> has failed. Each of these classes take an ostream as an input and are implicitly cast to a Result<T> containing that failure. ErrnoError() additionally appends ": " + strerror(errno) to the end of the failure string to aid in interacting with C APIs. The end result is that the above code snippet is turned into the much clearer example below: Result<U> CalculateResult(const T& input); Result<Success> CalculateAndUseResult(const T& input) { auto output = CalculateResult(input); if (!output) { return Error() << "CalculateResult " << input << " failed: " << output.error(); } UseResult(*output); return Success(); } This change also makes this conversion for some of the util.cpp functions that used the old paradigm. Test: boot bullhead, init unit tests Change-Id: I1e7d3a8820a79362245041251057fbeed2f7979b
2017-08-03 21:54:07 +02:00
if (auto result = WriteFile("/proc/sys/kernel/hostname", args[1]); !result) {
return Error() << "Unable to write to /proc/sys/kernel/hostname: " << result.error();
}
return Success();
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}
static Result<Success> do_ifup(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
struct ifreq ifr;
strlcpy(ifr.ifr_name, args[1].c_str(), IFNAMSIZ);
unique_fd s(TEMP_FAILURE_RETRY(socket(AF_INET, SOCK_DGRAM, 0)));
if (s < 0) return ErrnoError() << "opening socket failed";
if (ioctl(s, SIOCGIFFLAGS, &ifr) < 0) {
return ErrnoError() << "ioctl(..., SIOCGIFFLAGS, ...) failed";
}
ifr.ifr_flags |= IFF_UP;
if (ioctl(s, SIOCSIFFLAGS, &ifr) < 0) {
return ErrnoError() << "ioctl(..., SIOCSIFFLAGS, ...) failed";
}
return Success();
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}
static Result<Success> do_insmod(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
int flags = 0;
auto it = args.begin() + 1;
if (!(*it).compare("-f")) {
flags = MODULE_INIT_IGNORE_VERMAGIC | MODULE_INIT_IGNORE_MODVERSIONS;
it++;
}
std::string filename = *it++;
std::string options = android::base::Join(std::vector<std::string>(it, args.end()), ' ');
unique_fd fd(TEMP_FAILURE_RETRY(open(filename.c_str(), O_RDONLY | O_NOFOLLOW | O_CLOEXEC)));
if (fd == -1) return ErrnoError() << "open(\"" << filename << "\") failed";
int rc = syscall(__NR_finit_module, fd.get(), options.c_str(), flags);
if (rc == -1) return ErrnoError() << "finit_module for \"" << filename << "\" failed";
return Success();
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}
// mkdir <path> [mode] [owner] [group]
static Result<Success> do_mkdir(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
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mode_t mode = 0755;
if (args.size() >= 3) {
mode = std::strtoul(args[2].c_str(), 0, 8);
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}
if (!make_dir(args[1], mode)) {
/* chmod in case the directory already exists */
if (errno == EEXIST) {
if (fchmodat(AT_FDCWD, args[1].c_str(), mode, AT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW) == -1) {
return ErrnoError() << "fchmodat() failed";
}
} else {
return ErrnoError() << "mkdir() failed";
}
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}
if (args.size() >= 4) {
init: introduce Result<T> for return values and error handling init tries to propagate error information up to build context before logging errors. This is a good thing, however too often init has the overly verbose paradigm for error handling, below: bool CalculateResult(const T& input, U* output, std::string* err) bool CalculateAndUseResult(const T& input, std::string* err) { U output; std::string calculate_result_err; if (!CalculateResult(input, &output, &calculate_result_err)) { *err = "CalculateResult " + input + " failed: " + calculate_result_err; return false; } UseResult(output); return true; } Even more common are functions that return only true/false but also require passing a std::string* err in order to see the error message. This change introduces a Result<T> that is use to either hold a successful return value of type T or to hold an error message as a std::string. If the functional only returns success or a failure with an error message, Result<Success> may be used. The classes Error and ErrnoError are used to indicate a failed Result<T>. A successful Result<T> is constructed implicitly from any type that can be implicitly converted to T or from the constructor arguments for T. This allows you to return a type T directly from a function that returns Result<T>. Error and ErrnoError are used to construct a Result<T> has failed. Each of these classes take an ostream as an input and are implicitly cast to a Result<T> containing that failure. ErrnoError() additionally appends ": " + strerror(errno) to the end of the failure string to aid in interacting with C APIs. The end result is that the above code snippet is turned into the much clearer example below: Result<U> CalculateResult(const T& input); Result<Success> CalculateAndUseResult(const T& input) { auto output = CalculateResult(input); if (!output) { return Error() << "CalculateResult " << input << " failed: " << output.error(); } UseResult(*output); return Success(); } This change also makes this conversion for some of the util.cpp functions that used the old paradigm. Test: boot bullhead, init unit tests Change-Id: I1e7d3a8820a79362245041251057fbeed2f7979b
2017-08-03 21:54:07 +02:00
auto uid = DecodeUid(args[3]);
if (!uid) {
return Error() << "Unable to decode UID for '" << args[3] << "': " << uid.error();
}
init: introduce Result<T> for return values and error handling init tries to propagate error information up to build context before logging errors. This is a good thing, however too often init has the overly verbose paradigm for error handling, below: bool CalculateResult(const T& input, U* output, std::string* err) bool CalculateAndUseResult(const T& input, std::string* err) { U output; std::string calculate_result_err; if (!CalculateResult(input, &output, &calculate_result_err)) { *err = "CalculateResult " + input + " failed: " + calculate_result_err; return false; } UseResult(output); return true; } Even more common are functions that return only true/false but also require passing a std::string* err in order to see the error message. This change introduces a Result<T> that is use to either hold a successful return value of type T or to hold an error message as a std::string. If the functional only returns success or a failure with an error message, Result<Success> may be used. The classes Error and ErrnoError are used to indicate a failed Result<T>. A successful Result<T> is constructed implicitly from any type that can be implicitly converted to T or from the constructor arguments for T. This allows you to return a type T directly from a function that returns Result<T>. Error and ErrnoError are used to construct a Result<T> has failed. Each of these classes take an ostream as an input and are implicitly cast to a Result<T> containing that failure. ErrnoError() additionally appends ": " + strerror(errno) to the end of the failure string to aid in interacting with C APIs. The end result is that the above code snippet is turned into the much clearer example below: Result<U> CalculateResult(const T& input); Result<Success> CalculateAndUseResult(const T& input) { auto output = CalculateResult(input); if (!output) { return Error() << "CalculateResult " << input << " failed: " << output.error(); } UseResult(*output); return Success(); } This change also makes this conversion for some of the util.cpp functions that used the old paradigm. Test: boot bullhead, init unit tests Change-Id: I1e7d3a8820a79362245041251057fbeed2f7979b
2017-08-03 21:54:07 +02:00
Result<gid_t> gid = -1;
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if (args.size() == 5) {
init: introduce Result<T> for return values and error handling init tries to propagate error information up to build context before logging errors. This is a good thing, however too often init has the overly verbose paradigm for error handling, below: bool CalculateResult(const T& input, U* output, std::string* err) bool CalculateAndUseResult(const T& input, std::string* err) { U output; std::string calculate_result_err; if (!CalculateResult(input, &output, &calculate_result_err)) { *err = "CalculateResult " + input + " failed: " + calculate_result_err; return false; } UseResult(output); return true; } Even more common are functions that return only true/false but also require passing a std::string* err in order to see the error message. This change introduces a Result<T> that is use to either hold a successful return value of type T or to hold an error message as a std::string. If the functional only returns success or a failure with an error message, Result<Success> may be used. The classes Error and ErrnoError are used to indicate a failed Result<T>. A successful Result<T> is constructed implicitly from any type that can be implicitly converted to T or from the constructor arguments for T. This allows you to return a type T directly from a function that returns Result<T>. Error and ErrnoError are used to construct a Result<T> has failed. Each of these classes take an ostream as an input and are implicitly cast to a Result<T> containing that failure. ErrnoError() additionally appends ": " + strerror(errno) to the end of the failure string to aid in interacting with C APIs. The end result is that the above code snippet is turned into the much clearer example below: Result<U> CalculateResult(const T& input); Result<Success> CalculateAndUseResult(const T& input) { auto output = CalculateResult(input); if (!output) { return Error() << "CalculateResult " << input << " failed: " << output.error(); } UseResult(*output); return Success(); } This change also makes this conversion for some of the util.cpp functions that used the old paradigm. Test: boot bullhead, init unit tests Change-Id: I1e7d3a8820a79362245041251057fbeed2f7979b
2017-08-03 21:54:07 +02:00
gid = DecodeUid(args[4]);
if (!gid) {
return Error() << "Unable to decode GID for '" << args[3] << "': " << gid.error();
}
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}
init: introduce Result<T> for return values and error handling init tries to propagate error information up to build context before logging errors. This is a good thing, however too often init has the overly verbose paradigm for error handling, below: bool CalculateResult(const T& input, U* output, std::string* err) bool CalculateAndUseResult(const T& input, std::string* err) { U output; std::string calculate_result_err; if (!CalculateResult(input, &output, &calculate_result_err)) { *err = "CalculateResult " + input + " failed: " + calculate_result_err; return false; } UseResult(output); return true; } Even more common are functions that return only true/false but also require passing a std::string* err in order to see the error message. This change introduces a Result<T> that is use to either hold a successful return value of type T or to hold an error message as a std::string. If the functional only returns success or a failure with an error message, Result<Success> may be used. The classes Error and ErrnoError are used to indicate a failed Result<T>. A successful Result<T> is constructed implicitly from any type that can be implicitly converted to T or from the constructor arguments for T. This allows you to return a type T directly from a function that returns Result<T>. Error and ErrnoError are used to construct a Result<T> has failed. Each of these classes take an ostream as an input and are implicitly cast to a Result<T> containing that failure. ErrnoError() additionally appends ": " + strerror(errno) to the end of the failure string to aid in interacting with C APIs. The end result is that the above code snippet is turned into the much clearer example below: Result<U> CalculateResult(const T& input); Result<Success> CalculateAndUseResult(const T& input) { auto output = CalculateResult(input); if (!output) { return Error() << "CalculateResult " << input << " failed: " << output.error(); } UseResult(*output); return Success(); } This change also makes this conversion for some of the util.cpp functions that used the old paradigm. Test: boot bullhead, init unit tests Change-Id: I1e7d3a8820a79362245041251057fbeed2f7979b
2017-08-03 21:54:07 +02:00
if (lchown(args[1].c_str(), *uid, *gid) == -1) {
return ErrnoError() << "lchown failed";
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}
/* chown may have cleared S_ISUID and S_ISGID, chmod again */
if (mode & (S_ISUID | S_ISGID)) {
if (fchmodat(AT_FDCWD, args[1].c_str(), mode, AT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW) == -1) {
return ErrnoError() << "fchmodat failed";
}
}
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}
if (e4crypt_is_native()) {
if (e4crypt_set_directory_policy(args[1].c_str())) {
const std::vector<std::string> options = {
"--prompt_and_wipe_data",
"--reason=set_policy_failed:"s + args[1]};
reboot_into_recovery(options);
return Success();
}
}
return Success();
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}
/* umount <path> */
static Result<Success> do_umount(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
if (umount(args[1].c_str()) < 0) {
return ErrnoError() << "umount() failed";
}
return Success();
}
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static struct {
const char *name;
unsigned flag;
} mount_flags[] = {
{ "noatime", MS_NOATIME },
{ "noexec", MS_NOEXEC },
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{ "nosuid", MS_NOSUID },
{ "nodev", MS_NODEV },
{ "nodiratime", MS_NODIRATIME },
{ "ro", MS_RDONLY },
{ "rw", 0 },
{ "remount", MS_REMOUNT },
{ "bind", MS_BIND },
{ "rec", MS_REC },
{ "unbindable", MS_UNBINDABLE },
{ "private", MS_PRIVATE },
{ "slave", MS_SLAVE },
{ "shared", MS_SHARED },
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{ "defaults", 0 },
{ 0, 0 },
};
#define DATA_MNT_POINT "/data"
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/* mount <type> <device> <path> <flags ...> <options> */
static Result<Success> do_mount(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
const char* options = nullptr;
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unsigned flags = 0;
bool wait = false;
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for (size_t na = 4; na < args.size(); na++) {
size_t i;
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for (i = 0; mount_flags[i].name; i++) {
if (!args[na].compare(mount_flags[i].name)) {
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flags |= mount_flags[i].flag;
break;
}
}
if (!mount_flags[i].name) {
if (!args[na].compare("wait")) {
wait = true;
// If our last argument isn't a flag, wolf it up as an option string.
} else if (na + 1 == args.size()) {
options = args[na].c_str();
}
}
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}
const char* system = args[1].c_str();
const char* source = args[2].c_str();
const char* target = args[3].c_str();
if (android::base::StartsWith(source, "loop@")) {
int mode = (flags & MS_RDONLY) ? O_RDONLY : O_RDWR;
unique_fd fd(TEMP_FAILURE_RETRY(open(source + 5, mode | O_CLOEXEC)));
if (fd < 0) return ErrnoError() << "open(" << source + 5 << ", " << mode << ") failed";
for (size_t n = 0;; n++) {
std::string tmp = android::base::StringPrintf("/dev/block/loop%zu", n);
unique_fd loop(TEMP_FAILURE_RETRY(open(tmp.c_str(), mode | O_CLOEXEC)));
if (loop < 0) return ErrnoError() << "open(" << tmp << ", " << mode << ") failed";
loop_info info;
/* if it is a blank loop device */
if (ioctl(loop, LOOP_GET_STATUS, &info) < 0 && errno == ENXIO) {
/* if it becomes our loop device */
if (ioctl(loop, LOOP_SET_FD, fd.get()) >= 0) {
if (mount(tmp.c_str(), target, system, flags, options) < 0) {
ioctl(loop, LOOP_CLR_FD, 0);
return ErrnoError() << "mount() failed";
}
return Success();
}
}
}
return Error() << "out of loopback devices";
} else {
if (wait)
wait_for_file(source, kCommandRetryTimeout);
if (mount(source, target, system, flags, options) < 0) {
return ErrnoError() << "mount() failed";
}
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}
return Success();
}
/* Imports .rc files from the specified paths. Default ones are applied if none is given.
*
* start_index: index of the first path in the args list
*/
static void import_late(const std::vector<std::string>& args, size_t start_index, size_t end_index) {
auto& action_manager = ActionManager::GetInstance();
auto& service_list = ServiceList::GetInstance();
Parser parser = CreateParser(action_manager, service_list);
if (end_index <= start_index) {
// Fallbacks for partitions on which early mount isn't enabled.
for (const auto& path : late_import_paths) {
parser.ParseConfig(path);
}
late_import_paths.clear();
} else {
for (size_t i = start_index; i < end_index; ++i) {
parser.ParseConfig(args[i]);
}
}
// Turning this on and letting the INFO logging be discarded adds 0.2s to
// Nexus 9 boot time, so it's disabled by default.
if (false) DumpState();
}
/* mount_fstab
*
* Call fs_mgr_mount_all() to mount the given fstab
*/
static Result<int> mount_fstab(const char* fstabfile, int mount_mode) {
/*
* Call fs_mgr_mount_all() to mount all filesystems. We fork(2) and
* do the call in the child to provide protection to the main init
* process if anything goes wrong (crash or memory leak), and wait for
* the child to finish in the parent.
*/
pid_t pid = fork();
if (pid > 0) {
/* Parent. Wait for the child to return */
int status;
int wp_ret = TEMP_FAILURE_RETRY(waitpid(pid, &status, 0));
if (wp_ret == -1) {
// Unexpected error code. We will continue anyway.
PLOG(WARNING) << "waitpid failed";
}
if (WIFEXITED(status)) {
return WEXITSTATUS(status);
} else {
return Error() << "child aborted";
}
} else if (pid == 0) {
/* child, call fs_mgr_mount_all() */
// So we can always see what fs_mgr_mount_all() does.
// Only needed if someone explicitly changes the default log level in their init.rc.
android::base::ScopedLogSeverity info(android::base::INFO);
struct fstab* fstab = fs_mgr_read_fstab(fstabfile);
int child_ret = fs_mgr_mount_all(fstab, mount_mode);
fs_mgr_free_fstab(fstab);
if (child_ret == -1) {
PLOG(ERROR) << "fs_mgr_mount_all returned an error";
}
_exit(child_ret);
} else {
return Error() << "fork() failed";
}
}
/* Queue event based on fs_mgr return code.
*
* code: return code of fs_mgr_mount_all
*
* This function might request a reboot, in which case it will
* not return.
*
* return code is processed based on input code
*/
static Result<Success> queue_fs_event(int code) {
if (code == FS_MGR_MNTALL_DEV_NEEDS_ENCRYPTION) {
ActionManager::GetInstance().QueueEventTrigger("encrypt");
return Success();
} else if (code == FS_MGR_MNTALL_DEV_MIGHT_BE_ENCRYPTED) {
property_set("ro.crypto.state", "encrypted");
property_set("ro.crypto.type", "block");
ActionManager::GetInstance().QueueEventTrigger("defaultcrypto");
return Success();
} else if (code == FS_MGR_MNTALL_DEV_NOT_ENCRYPTED) {
property_set("ro.crypto.state", "unencrypted");
ActionManager::GetInstance().QueueEventTrigger("nonencrypted");
return Success();
} else if (code == FS_MGR_MNTALL_DEV_NOT_ENCRYPTABLE) {
property_set("ro.crypto.state", "unsupported");
ActionManager::GetInstance().QueueEventTrigger("nonencrypted");
return Success();
} else if (code == FS_MGR_MNTALL_DEV_NEEDS_RECOVERY) {
/* Setup a wipe via recovery, and reboot into recovery */
PLOG(ERROR) << "fs_mgr_mount_all suggested recovery, so wiping data via recovery.";
const std::vector<std::string> options = {"--wipe_data", "--reason=fs_mgr_mount_all" };
reboot_into_recovery(options);
return Success();
/* If reboot worked, there is no return. */
} else if (code == FS_MGR_MNTALL_DEV_FILE_ENCRYPTED) {
if (e4crypt_install_keyring()) {
return Error() << "e4crypt_install_keyring() failed";
}
property_set("ro.crypto.state", "encrypted");
property_set("ro.crypto.type", "file");
// Although encrypted, we have device key, so we do not need to
// do anything different from the nonencrypted case.
ActionManager::GetInstance().QueueEventTrigger("nonencrypted");
return Success();
} else if (code == FS_MGR_MNTALL_DEV_IS_METADATA_ENCRYPTED) {
if (e4crypt_install_keyring()) {
return Error() << "e4crypt_install_keyring() failed";
}
property_set("ro.crypto.state", "encrypted");
property_set("ro.crypto.type", "file");
// defaultcrypto detects file/block encryption. init flow is same for each.
ActionManager::GetInstance().QueueEventTrigger("defaultcrypto");
return Success();
} else if (code == FS_MGR_MNTALL_DEV_NEEDS_METADATA_ENCRYPTION) {
if (e4crypt_install_keyring()) {
return Error() << "e4crypt_install_keyring() failed";
}
property_set("ro.crypto.type", "file");
// encrypt detects file/block encryption. init flow is same for each.
ActionManager::GetInstance().QueueEventTrigger("encrypt");
return Success();
} else if (code > 0) {
Error() << "fs_mgr_mount_all() returned unexpected error " << code;
}
/* else ... < 0: error */
return Error() << "Invalid code: " << code;
2008-10-21 16:00:00 +02:00
}
/* mount_all <fstab> [ <path> ]* [--<options>]*
*
* This function might request a reboot, in which case it will
* not return.
*/
static Result<Success> do_mount_all(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
std::size_t na = 0;
bool import_rc = true;
bool queue_event = true;
int mount_mode = MOUNT_MODE_DEFAULT;
const char* fstabfile = args[1].c_str();
std::size_t path_arg_end = args.size();
const char* prop_post_fix = "default";
for (na = args.size() - 1; na > 1; --na) {
if (args[na] == "--early") {
path_arg_end = na;
queue_event = false;
mount_mode = MOUNT_MODE_EARLY;
prop_post_fix = "early";
} else if (args[na] == "--late") {
path_arg_end = na;
import_rc = false;
mount_mode = MOUNT_MODE_LATE;
prop_post_fix = "late";
}
}
std::string prop_name = "ro.boottime.init.mount_all."s + prop_post_fix;
android::base::Timer t;
auto mount_fstab_return_code = mount_fstab(fstabfile, mount_mode);
if (!mount_fstab_return_code) {
return Error() << "mount_fstab() failed " << mount_fstab_return_code.error();
}
property_set(prop_name, std::to_string(t.duration().count()));
if (import_rc) {
/* Paths of .rc files are specified at the 2nd argument and beyond */
import_late(args.args, 2, path_arg_end);
}
if (queue_event) {
/* queue_fs_event will queue event based on mount_fstab return code
* and return processed return code*/
auto queue_fs_result = queue_fs_event(*mount_fstab_return_code);
if (!queue_fs_result) {
return Error() << "queue_fs_event() failed: " << queue_fs_result.error();
}
}
return Success();
}
static Result<Success> do_swapon_all(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
struct fstab *fstab;
int ret;
fstab = fs_mgr_read_fstab(args[1].c_str());
ret = fs_mgr_swapon_all(fstab);
fs_mgr_free_fstab(fstab);
if (ret != 0) return Error() << "fs_mgr_swapon_all() failed";
return Success();
}
static Result<Success> do_setprop(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
property_set(args[1], args[2]);
return Success();
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}
static Result<Success> do_setrlimit(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
auto rlimit = ParseRlimit(args.args);
if (!rlimit) return rlimit.error();
if (setrlimit(rlimit->first, &rlimit->second) == -1) {
return ErrnoError() << "setrlimit failed";
}
return Success();
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}
static Result<Success> do_start(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
Service* svc = ServiceList::GetInstance().FindService(args[1]);
if (!svc) return Error() << "service " << args[1] << " not found";
if (auto result = svc->Start(); !result) {
return Error() << "Could not start service: " << result.error();
}
return Success();
2008-10-21 16:00:00 +02:00
}
static Result<Success> do_stop(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
Service* svc = ServiceList::GetInstance().FindService(args[1]);
if (!svc) return Error() << "service " << args[1] << " not found";
svc->Stop();
return Success();
2008-10-21 16:00:00 +02:00
}
static Result<Success> do_restart(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
Service* svc = ServiceList::GetInstance().FindService(args[1]);
if (!svc) return Error() << "service " << args[1] << " not found";
svc->Restart();
return Success();
2008-10-21 16:00:00 +02:00
}
static Result<Success> do_trigger(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
ActionManager::GetInstance().QueueEventTrigger(args[1]);
return Success();
2008-10-21 16:00:00 +02:00
}
static int MakeSymlink(const std::string& target, const std::string& linkpath) {
std::string secontext;
// Passing 0 for mode should work.
if (SelabelLookupFileContext(linkpath, 0, &secontext) && !secontext.empty()) {
setfscreatecon(secontext.c_str());
}
int rc = symlink(target.c_str(), linkpath.c_str());
if (!secontext.empty()) {
int save_errno = errno;
setfscreatecon(nullptr);
errno = save_errno;
}
return rc;
}
static Result<Success> do_symlink(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
if (MakeSymlink(args[1], args[2]) < 0) {
// The symlink builtin is often used to create symlinks for older devices to be backwards
// compatible with new paths, therefore we skip reporting this error.
if (errno == EEXIST && android::base::GetMinimumLogSeverity() > android::base::DEBUG) {
return Success();
}
return ErrnoError() << "symlink() failed";
}
return Success();
2008-10-21 16:00:00 +02:00
}
static Result<Success> do_rm(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
if (unlink(args[1].c_str()) < 0) {
return ErrnoError() << "unlink() failed";
}
return Success();
}
static Result<Success> do_rmdir(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
if (rmdir(args[1].c_str()) < 0) {
return ErrnoError() << "rmdir() failed";
}
return Success();
}
static Result<Success> do_sysclktz(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
struct timezone tz = {};
if (!android::base::ParseInt(args[1], &tz.tz_minuteswest)) {
return Error() << "Unable to parse mins_west_of_gmt";
}
if (settimeofday(nullptr, &tz) == -1) {
return ErrnoError() << "settimeofday() failed";
}
return Success();
}
static Result<Success> do_verity_load_state(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
int mode = -1;
bool loaded = fs_mgr_load_verity_state(&mode);
if (loaded && mode != VERITY_MODE_DEFAULT) {
ActionManager::GetInstance().QueueEventTrigger("verity-logging");
}
if (!loaded) return Error() << "Could not load verity state";
return Success();
}
static void verity_update_property(fstab_rec *fstab, const char *mount_point,
int mode, int status) {
property_set("partition."s + mount_point + ".verified", std::to_string(mode));
}
static Result<Success> do_verity_update_state(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
if (!fs_mgr_update_verity_state(verity_update_property)) {
return Error() << "fs_mgr_update_verity_state() failed";
}
return Success();
}
static Result<Success> do_write(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
init: introduce Result<T> for return values and error handling init tries to propagate error information up to build context before logging errors. This is a good thing, however too often init has the overly verbose paradigm for error handling, below: bool CalculateResult(const T& input, U* output, std::string* err) bool CalculateAndUseResult(const T& input, std::string* err) { U output; std::string calculate_result_err; if (!CalculateResult(input, &output, &calculate_result_err)) { *err = "CalculateResult " + input + " failed: " + calculate_result_err; return false; } UseResult(output); return true; } Even more common are functions that return only true/false but also require passing a std::string* err in order to see the error message. This change introduces a Result<T> that is use to either hold a successful return value of type T or to hold an error message as a std::string. If the functional only returns success or a failure with an error message, Result<Success> may be used. The classes Error and ErrnoError are used to indicate a failed Result<T>. A successful Result<T> is constructed implicitly from any type that can be implicitly converted to T or from the constructor arguments for T. This allows you to return a type T directly from a function that returns Result<T>. Error and ErrnoError are used to construct a Result<T> has failed. Each of these classes take an ostream as an input and are implicitly cast to a Result<T> containing that failure. ErrnoError() additionally appends ": " + strerror(errno) to the end of the failure string to aid in interacting with C APIs. The end result is that the above code snippet is turned into the much clearer example below: Result<U> CalculateResult(const T& input); Result<Success> CalculateAndUseResult(const T& input) { auto output = CalculateResult(input); if (!output) { return Error() << "CalculateResult " << input << " failed: " << output.error(); } UseResult(*output); return Success(); } This change also makes this conversion for some of the util.cpp functions that used the old paradigm. Test: boot bullhead, init unit tests Change-Id: I1e7d3a8820a79362245041251057fbeed2f7979b
2017-08-03 21:54:07 +02:00
if (auto result = WriteFile(args[1], args[2]); !result) {
return Error() << "Unable to write to file '" << args[1] << "': " << result.error();
}
return Success();
2008-10-21 16:00:00 +02:00
}
static Result<Success> readahead_file(const std::string& filename, bool fully) {
android::base::unique_fd fd(TEMP_FAILURE_RETRY(open(filename.c_str(), O_RDONLY)));
if (fd == -1) {
return ErrnoError() << "Error opening file";
}
if (posix_fadvise(fd, 0, 0, POSIX_FADV_WILLNEED)) {
return ErrnoError() << "Error posix_fadvise file";
}
if (readahead(fd, 0, std::numeric_limits<size_t>::max())) {
return ErrnoError() << "Error readahead file";
}
if (fully) {
char buf[BUFSIZ];
ssize_t n;
while ((n = TEMP_FAILURE_RETRY(read(fd, &buf[0], sizeof(buf)))) > 0) {
}
if (n != 0) {
return ErrnoError() << "Error reading file";
}
}
return Success();
}
static Result<Success> do_readahead(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
struct stat sb;
if (stat(args[1].c_str(), &sb)) {
return ErrnoError() << "Error opening " << args[1];
}
bool readfully = false;
if (args.size() == 3 && args[2] == "--fully") {
readfully = true;
}
// We will do readahead in a forked process in order not to block init
// since it may block while it reads the
// filesystem metadata needed to locate the requested blocks. This
// occurs frequently with ext[234] on large files using indirect blocks
// instead of extents, giving the appearance that the call blocks until
// the requested data has been read.
pid_t pid = fork();
if (pid == 0) {
if (setpriority(PRIO_PROCESS, 0, static_cast<int>(ANDROID_PRIORITY_LOWEST)) != 0) {
PLOG(WARNING) << "setpriority failed";
}
if (android_set_ioprio(0, IoSchedClass_IDLE, 7)) {
PLOG(WARNING) << "ioprio_get failed";
}
android::base::Timer t;
if (S_ISREG(sb.st_mode)) {
if (auto result = readahead_file(args[1], readfully); !result) {
LOG(WARNING) << "Unable to readahead '" << args[1] << "': " << result.error();
_exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
} else if (S_ISDIR(sb.st_mode)) {
char* paths[] = {const_cast<char*>(args[1].data()), nullptr};
std::unique_ptr<FTS, decltype(&fts_close)> fts(
fts_open(paths, FTS_PHYSICAL | FTS_NOCHDIR | FTS_XDEV, nullptr), fts_close);
if (!fts) {
PLOG(ERROR) << "Error opening directory: " << args[1];
_exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
// Traverse the entire hierarchy and do readahead
for (FTSENT* ftsent = fts_read(fts.get()); ftsent != nullptr;
ftsent = fts_read(fts.get())) {
if (ftsent->fts_info & FTS_F) {
const std::string filename = ftsent->fts_accpath;
if (auto result = readahead_file(filename, readfully); !result) {
LOG(WARNING)
<< "Unable to readahead '" << filename << "': " << result.error();
}
}
}
}
LOG(INFO) << "Readahead " << args[1] << " took " << t << " asynchronously";
_exit(0);
} else if (pid < 0) {
return ErrnoError() << "Fork failed";
}
return Success();
}
static Result<Success> do_copy(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
init: introduce Result<T> for return values and error handling init tries to propagate error information up to build context before logging errors. This is a good thing, however too often init has the overly verbose paradigm for error handling, below: bool CalculateResult(const T& input, U* output, std::string* err) bool CalculateAndUseResult(const T& input, std::string* err) { U output; std::string calculate_result_err; if (!CalculateResult(input, &output, &calculate_result_err)) { *err = "CalculateResult " + input + " failed: " + calculate_result_err; return false; } UseResult(output); return true; } Even more common are functions that return only true/false but also require passing a std::string* err in order to see the error message. This change introduces a Result<T> that is use to either hold a successful return value of type T or to hold an error message as a std::string. If the functional only returns success or a failure with an error message, Result<Success> may be used. The classes Error and ErrnoError are used to indicate a failed Result<T>. A successful Result<T> is constructed implicitly from any type that can be implicitly converted to T or from the constructor arguments for T. This allows you to return a type T directly from a function that returns Result<T>. Error and ErrnoError are used to construct a Result<T> has failed. Each of these classes take an ostream as an input and are implicitly cast to a Result<T> containing that failure. ErrnoError() additionally appends ": " + strerror(errno) to the end of the failure string to aid in interacting with C APIs. The end result is that the above code snippet is turned into the much clearer example below: Result<U> CalculateResult(const T& input); Result<Success> CalculateAndUseResult(const T& input) { auto output = CalculateResult(input); if (!output) { return Error() << "CalculateResult " << input << " failed: " << output.error(); } UseResult(*output); return Success(); } This change also makes this conversion for some of the util.cpp functions that used the old paradigm. Test: boot bullhead, init unit tests Change-Id: I1e7d3a8820a79362245041251057fbeed2f7979b
2017-08-03 21:54:07 +02:00
auto file_contents = ReadFile(args[1]);
if (!file_contents) {
return Error() << "Could not read input file '" << args[1] << "': " << file_contents.error();
}
init: introduce Result<T> for return values and error handling init tries to propagate error information up to build context before logging errors. This is a good thing, however too often init has the overly verbose paradigm for error handling, below: bool CalculateResult(const T& input, U* output, std::string* err) bool CalculateAndUseResult(const T& input, std::string* err) { U output; std::string calculate_result_err; if (!CalculateResult(input, &output, &calculate_result_err)) { *err = "CalculateResult " + input + " failed: " + calculate_result_err; return false; } UseResult(output); return true; } Even more common are functions that return only true/false but also require passing a std::string* err in order to see the error message. This change introduces a Result<T> that is use to either hold a successful return value of type T or to hold an error message as a std::string. If the functional only returns success or a failure with an error message, Result<Success> may be used. The classes Error and ErrnoError are used to indicate a failed Result<T>. A successful Result<T> is constructed implicitly from any type that can be implicitly converted to T or from the constructor arguments for T. This allows you to return a type T directly from a function that returns Result<T>. Error and ErrnoError are used to construct a Result<T> has failed. Each of these classes take an ostream as an input and are implicitly cast to a Result<T> containing that failure. ErrnoError() additionally appends ": " + strerror(errno) to the end of the failure string to aid in interacting with C APIs. The end result is that the above code snippet is turned into the much clearer example below: Result<U> CalculateResult(const T& input); Result<Success> CalculateAndUseResult(const T& input) { auto output = CalculateResult(input); if (!output) { return Error() << "CalculateResult " << input << " failed: " << output.error(); } UseResult(*output); return Success(); } This change also makes this conversion for some of the util.cpp functions that used the old paradigm. Test: boot bullhead, init unit tests Change-Id: I1e7d3a8820a79362245041251057fbeed2f7979b
2017-08-03 21:54:07 +02:00
if (auto result = WriteFile(args[2], *file_contents); !result) {
return Error() << "Could not write to output file '" << args[2] << "': " << result.error();
}
return Success();
}
static Result<Success> do_chown(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
init: introduce Result<T> for return values and error handling init tries to propagate error information up to build context before logging errors. This is a good thing, however too often init has the overly verbose paradigm for error handling, below: bool CalculateResult(const T& input, U* output, std::string* err) bool CalculateAndUseResult(const T& input, std::string* err) { U output; std::string calculate_result_err; if (!CalculateResult(input, &output, &calculate_result_err)) { *err = "CalculateResult " + input + " failed: " + calculate_result_err; return false; } UseResult(output); return true; } Even more common are functions that return only true/false but also require passing a std::string* err in order to see the error message. This change introduces a Result<T> that is use to either hold a successful return value of type T or to hold an error message as a std::string. If the functional only returns success or a failure with an error message, Result<Success> may be used. The classes Error and ErrnoError are used to indicate a failed Result<T>. A successful Result<T> is constructed implicitly from any type that can be implicitly converted to T or from the constructor arguments for T. This allows you to return a type T directly from a function that returns Result<T>. Error and ErrnoError are used to construct a Result<T> has failed. Each of these classes take an ostream as an input and are implicitly cast to a Result<T> containing that failure. ErrnoError() additionally appends ": " + strerror(errno) to the end of the failure string to aid in interacting with C APIs. The end result is that the above code snippet is turned into the much clearer example below: Result<U> CalculateResult(const T& input); Result<Success> CalculateAndUseResult(const T& input) { auto output = CalculateResult(input); if (!output) { return Error() << "CalculateResult " << input << " failed: " << output.error(); } UseResult(*output); return Success(); } This change also makes this conversion for some of the util.cpp functions that used the old paradigm. Test: boot bullhead, init unit tests Change-Id: I1e7d3a8820a79362245041251057fbeed2f7979b
2017-08-03 21:54:07 +02:00
auto uid = DecodeUid(args[1]);
if (!uid) {
return Error() << "Unable to decode UID for '" << args[1] << "': " << uid.error();
2008-10-21 16:00:00 +02:00
}
// GID is optional and pushes the index of path out by one if specified.
const std::string& path = (args.size() == 4) ? args[3] : args[2];
init: introduce Result<T> for return values and error handling init tries to propagate error information up to build context before logging errors. This is a good thing, however too often init has the overly verbose paradigm for error handling, below: bool CalculateResult(const T& input, U* output, std::string* err) bool CalculateAndUseResult(const T& input, std::string* err) { U output; std::string calculate_result_err; if (!CalculateResult(input, &output, &calculate_result_err)) { *err = "CalculateResult " + input + " failed: " + calculate_result_err; return false; } UseResult(output); return true; } Even more common are functions that return only true/false but also require passing a std::string* err in order to see the error message. This change introduces a Result<T> that is use to either hold a successful return value of type T or to hold an error message as a std::string. If the functional only returns success or a failure with an error message, Result<Success> may be used. The classes Error and ErrnoError are used to indicate a failed Result<T>. A successful Result<T> is constructed implicitly from any type that can be implicitly converted to T or from the constructor arguments for T. This allows you to return a type T directly from a function that returns Result<T>. Error and ErrnoError are used to construct a Result<T> has failed. Each of these classes take an ostream as an input and are implicitly cast to a Result<T> containing that failure. ErrnoError() additionally appends ": " + strerror(errno) to the end of the failure string to aid in interacting with C APIs. The end result is that the above code snippet is turned into the much clearer example below: Result<U> CalculateResult(const T& input); Result<Success> CalculateAndUseResult(const T& input) { auto output = CalculateResult(input); if (!output) { return Error() << "CalculateResult " << input << " failed: " << output.error(); } UseResult(*output); return Success(); } This change also makes this conversion for some of the util.cpp functions that used the old paradigm. Test: boot bullhead, init unit tests Change-Id: I1e7d3a8820a79362245041251057fbeed2f7979b
2017-08-03 21:54:07 +02:00
Result<gid_t> gid = -1;
if (args.size() == 4) {
init: introduce Result<T> for return values and error handling init tries to propagate error information up to build context before logging errors. This is a good thing, however too often init has the overly verbose paradigm for error handling, below: bool CalculateResult(const T& input, U* output, std::string* err) bool CalculateAndUseResult(const T& input, std::string* err) { U output; std::string calculate_result_err; if (!CalculateResult(input, &output, &calculate_result_err)) { *err = "CalculateResult " + input + " failed: " + calculate_result_err; return false; } UseResult(output); return true; } Even more common are functions that return only true/false but also require passing a std::string* err in order to see the error message. This change introduces a Result<T> that is use to either hold a successful return value of type T or to hold an error message as a std::string. If the functional only returns success or a failure with an error message, Result<Success> may be used. The classes Error and ErrnoError are used to indicate a failed Result<T>. A successful Result<T> is constructed implicitly from any type that can be implicitly converted to T or from the constructor arguments for T. This allows you to return a type T directly from a function that returns Result<T>. Error and ErrnoError are used to construct a Result<T> has failed. Each of these classes take an ostream as an input and are implicitly cast to a Result<T> containing that failure. ErrnoError() additionally appends ": " + strerror(errno) to the end of the failure string to aid in interacting with C APIs. The end result is that the above code snippet is turned into the much clearer example below: Result<U> CalculateResult(const T& input); Result<Success> CalculateAndUseResult(const T& input) { auto output = CalculateResult(input); if (!output) { return Error() << "CalculateResult " << input << " failed: " << output.error(); } UseResult(*output); return Success(); } This change also makes this conversion for some of the util.cpp functions that used the old paradigm. Test: boot bullhead, init unit tests Change-Id: I1e7d3a8820a79362245041251057fbeed2f7979b
2017-08-03 21:54:07 +02:00
gid = DecodeUid(args[2]);
if (!gid) {
return Error() << "Unable to decode GID for '" << args[2] << "': " << gid.error();
}
}
if (lchown(path.c_str(), *uid, *gid) == -1) {
return ErrnoError() << "lchown() failed";
}
return Success();
2008-10-21 16:00:00 +02:00
}
static mode_t get_mode(const char *s) {
mode_t mode = 0;
while (*s) {
if (*s >= '0' && *s <= '7') {
mode = (mode<<3) | (*s-'0');
} else {
return -1;
}
s++;
}
return mode;
}
static Result<Success> do_chmod(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
mode_t mode = get_mode(args[1].c_str());
if (fchmodat(AT_FDCWD, args[2].c_str(), mode, AT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW) < 0) {
return ErrnoError() << "fchmodat() failed";
2008-10-21 16:00:00 +02:00
}
return Success();
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}
static Result<Success> do_restorecon(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
int ret = 0;
struct flag_type {const char* name; int value;};
static const flag_type flags[] = {
{"--recursive", SELINUX_ANDROID_RESTORECON_RECURSE},
{"--skip-ce", SELINUX_ANDROID_RESTORECON_SKIPCE},
{"--cross-filesystems", SELINUX_ANDROID_RESTORECON_CROSS_FILESYSTEMS},
{0, 0}
};
int flag = 0;
bool in_flags = true;
for (size_t i = 1; i < args.size(); ++i) {
if (android::base::StartsWith(args[i], "--")) {
if (!in_flags) {
return Error() << "flags must precede paths";
}
bool found = false;
for (size_t j = 0; flags[j].name; ++j) {
if (args[i] == flags[j].name) {
flag |= flags[j].value;
found = true;
break;
}
}
if (!found) {
return Error() << "bad flag " << args[i];
}
} else {
in_flags = false;
if (selinux_android_restorecon(args[i].c_str(), flag) < 0) {
ret = errno;
}
}
}
if (ret) return ErrnoError() << "selinux_android_restorecon() failed";
return Success();
}
static Result<Success> do_restorecon_recursive(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
std::vector<std::string> non_const_args(args.args);
non_const_args.insert(std::next(non_const_args.begin()), "--recursive");
return do_restorecon({std::move(non_const_args), args.context});
}
static Result<Success> do_loglevel(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
// TODO: support names instead/as well?
int log_level = -1;
android::base::ParseInt(args[1], &log_level);
android::base::LogSeverity severity;
switch (log_level) {
case 7: severity = android::base::DEBUG; break;
case 6: severity = android::base::INFO; break;
case 5:
case 4: severity = android::base::WARNING; break;
case 3: severity = android::base::ERROR; break;
case 2:
case 1:
case 0: severity = android::base::FATAL; break;
default:
return Error() << "invalid log level " << log_level;
}
android::base::SetMinimumLogSeverity(severity);
return Success();
2008-10-21 16:00:00 +02:00
}
static Result<Success> do_load_persist_props(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
load_persist_props();
return Success();
}
static Result<Success> do_load_system_props(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
load_system_props();
return Success();
}
static Result<Success> do_wait(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
auto timeout = kCommandRetryTimeout;
if (args.size() == 3) {
int timeout_int;
if (!android::base::ParseInt(args[2], &timeout_int)) {
return Error() << "failed to parse timeout";
}
timeout = std::chrono::seconds(timeout_int);
}
if (wait_for_file(args[1].c_str(), timeout) != 0) {
return Error() << "wait_for_file() failed";
}
return Success();
}
static Result<Success> do_wait_for_prop(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
const char* name = args[1].c_str();
const char* value = args[2].c_str();
size_t value_len = strlen(value);
if (!is_legal_property_name(name)) {
return Error() << "is_legal_property_name(" << name << ") failed";
}
if (value_len >= PROP_VALUE_MAX) {
return Error() << "value too long";
}
if (!start_waiting_for_property(name, value)) {
return Error() << "already waiting for a property";
}
return Success();
}
static bool is_file_crypto() {
return android::base::GetProperty("ro.crypto.type", "") == "file";
}
static Result<Success> do_installkey(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
if (!is_file_crypto()) return Success();
auto unencrypted_dir = args[1] + e4crypt_unencrypted_folder;
if (!make_dir(unencrypted_dir, 0700) && errno != EEXIST) {
return ErrnoError() << "Failed to create " << unencrypted_dir;
}
std::vector<std::string> exec_args = {"exec", "/system/bin/vdc", "--wait", "cryptfs",
"enablefilecrypto"};
return do_exec({std::move(exec_args), args.context});
}
static Result<Success> do_init_user0(const BuiltinArguments& args) {
std::vector<std::string> exec_args = {"exec", "/system/bin/vdc", "--wait", "cryptfs",
"init_user0"};
return do_exec({std::move(exec_args), args.context});
}
const BuiltinFunctionMap::Map& BuiltinFunctionMap::map() const {
constexpr std::size_t kMax = std::numeric_limits<std::size_t>::max();
// clang-format off
static const Map builtin_functions = {
{"bootchart", {1, 1, {false, do_bootchart}}},
{"chmod", {2, 2, {true, do_chmod}}},
{"chown", {2, 3, {true, do_chown}}},
{"class_reset", {1, 1, {false, do_class_reset}}},
{"class_restart", {1, 1, {false, do_class_restart}}},
{"class_start", {1, 1, {false, do_class_start}}},
{"class_stop", {1, 1, {false, do_class_stop}}},
{"copy", {2, 2, {true, do_copy}}},
{"domainname", {1, 1, {true, do_domainname}}},
{"enable", {1, 1, {false, do_enable}}},
{"exec", {1, kMax, {false, do_exec}}},
{"exec_background", {1, kMax, {false, do_exec_background}}},
{"exec_start", {1, 1, {false, do_exec_start}}},
{"export", {2, 2, {false, do_export}}},
{"hostname", {1, 1, {true, do_hostname}}},
{"ifup", {1, 1, {true, do_ifup}}},
{"init_user0", {0, 0, {false, do_init_user0}}},
{"insmod", {1, kMax, {true, do_insmod}}},
{"installkey", {1, 1, {false, do_installkey}}},
{"load_persist_props", {0, 0, {false, do_load_persist_props}}},
{"load_system_props", {0, 0, {false, do_load_system_props}}},
{"loglevel", {1, 1, {false, do_loglevel}}},
{"mkdir", {1, 4, {true, do_mkdir}}},
{"mount_all", {1, kMax, {false, do_mount_all}}},
{"mount", {3, kMax, {false, do_mount}}},
{"umount", {1, 1, {false, do_umount}}},
{"readahead", {1, 2, {true, do_readahead}}},
{"restart", {1, 1, {false, do_restart}}},
{"restorecon", {1, kMax, {true, do_restorecon}}},
{"restorecon_recursive", {1, kMax, {true, do_restorecon_recursive}}},
{"rm", {1, 1, {true, do_rm}}},
{"rmdir", {1, 1, {true, do_rmdir}}},
{"setprop", {2, 2, {true, do_setprop}}},
{"setrlimit", {3, 3, {false, do_setrlimit}}},
{"start", {1, 1, {false, do_start}}},
{"stop", {1, 1, {false, do_stop}}},
{"swapon_all", {1, 1, {false, do_swapon_all}}},
{"symlink", {2, 2, {true, do_symlink}}},
{"sysclktz", {1, 1, {false, do_sysclktz}}},
{"trigger", {1, 1, {false, do_trigger}}},
{"verity_load_state", {0, 0, {false, do_verity_load_state}}},
{"verity_update_state", {0, 0, {false, do_verity_update_state}}},
{"wait", {1, 2, {true, do_wait}}},
{"wait_for_prop", {2, 2, {false, do_wait_for_prop}}},
{"write", {2, 2, {true, do_write}}},
};
// clang-format on
return builtin_functions;
}
} // namespace init
} // namespace android