Obsolete RLE 565 logo is used nowhere,
because 565 framebuffer isn't used for years.
It's not necessary to keep this thing alive anymore.
Change-Id: Ie61e168790f791230530cd3eb1c68b1f7344c9a7
Add an optional argument to the socket option for specifying
a SELinux security context for the socket. Normally the socket
security context is automatically computed from the service security
context or set using the seclabel option, but this facility allows
dealing with two scenarios that cannot be addressed using the existing
mechanisms:
1) Use of logwrapper to wrap a service.
In this case, init cannot determine the service security context
as it does not directly execute it and we do not want logwrapper
to run in the same domain as the service.
2) Situations where a service has multiple sockets and we want to
label them distinctly.
Change-Id: I7ae9088c326a2140e56a8044bfb21a91505aea11
Signed-off-by: Stephen Smalley <sds@tycho.nsa.gov>
This is a set of changes to the init property service
implementation to apply a SELinux check over who can
change what properties. Also included control hooks
for the 'ctl' keys.
Change-Id: I5a18809bf5536f6459a36b6bf0d622b9f5061aa0
Signed-off-by: rpcraig <rpcraig@tycho.ncsc.mil>
To support runtime policy management, add support for reloading
policy from /data/system. This can be triggered by setting the
selinux.loadpolicy property to 1, whether from init.rc after
mounting /data or from the system_server (e.g. upon invocation of
a new device admin API for provisioning policy). ueventd and
installd are restarted upon policy reloads to pick up the new
policy configurations relevant to their operation.
Change-Id: I97479aecef8cec23b32f60e09cc778cc5520b691
Signed-off-by: Stephen Smalley <sds@tycho.nsa.gov>
Adds an SVC_RESTART state that's used for an explicit "restart" of a
running service. This retains the traditional restart behavior for
critical and oneshot services (previously altered by 7e36edd8), whereby
these services are "simply restarted" instead of counting as a crash (for a
critical serivce) or going into the disabled state (for a oneshot service).
Add SE Android support for init and ueventd.
init:
- Load policy at boot.
- Set the security context for service daemons and their sockets.
- New built-in commands: setcon, setenforce, restorecon, setsebool.
- New option for services: seclabel.
ueventd:
- Set the security context for device directories and nodes.
Change-Id: I98ed752cde503c94d99dfa5b5a47e3c33db16aac
The class_reset command used to reset services that had been set to
"disabled" in the init.rc file to a non-disabled state. Now, if the
service was originally set to "disabled", have the reset command set
it back to disabled. Otherwise, set it to the "reset" state as it
currently does.
Change-Id: I0c10582e46a8e443d4748d9d893ae762b19b653a
These are the changes to init and init.rc necessary to
support booting with and encrypted /data filesystem.
A corresponding change to init.<device>.rc goes along
with this change.
Change-Id: I0c7e2cc39568358014a82e317735c0eae14dd683
This keyword will cause init to wait a few seconds before exec'ing
the target binary. Maybe only useful for hacks and debugging.
Change-Id: I85caa0bcbc0be7e48bd21eb9e31e039c0740c8d5
To add arguments dynamically to a service, start the service like so:
setprop ctl.start service_to_run:arg1 arg2 arg3...
To start a service with *no* dynamic arguments, start the service normally:
setprop ctl.start service_to_run
Dynamic arguments are only supported on 'oneshot' services
Signed-off-by: San Mehat <san@google.com>
The 'args' array *must* be the last entry in the structure.
This fixes a longstanding issue (apparently since tc3) where
a service with an argument would corrupt the heap. The more
arguments, the more corruption :|. This will probably also end up
making key-code bound services more reliable (ie: bugreports triggered
via the keyboard)
Signed-off-by: San Mehat <san@google.com>