This code path is effectively dead in adbd, and fastboot's dependency on
libadbd makes it hard to refactor adbd's dependencies.
Bug: http://b/150317254
Test: built and flashed aosp_walleye-eng
Change-Id: I5118136d32fdcbbd011559ed0a4a71e1dc7bf064
Add some requested logging options that can be turned on at runtime
without having to restart adbd.
Bug: http://b/141959374
Test: manual
Change-Id: Ib97acc6d199e0b91238a6758e18b7cb75f8688d9
This command will be sent by adbd to notify the client that the
connection will be over TLS.
When client connects, it will send the CNXN packet, as usual. If the
server connection has TLS enabled, it will send the A_STLS packet
(regardless of whether auth is required). At this point, the client's
only valid response is to send a A_STLS packet. Once both sides have
exchanged the A_STLS packet, both will start the TLS handshake.
If auth is required, then the client will receive a CertificateRequest
with a list of known public keys (SHA256 hash) that it can use in its
certificate. Otherwise, the list will be empty and the client can assume
that either any key will work, or none will work.
If the handshake was successful, the server will send the CNXN packet
and the usual adb protocol is resumed over TLS. If the handshake failed,
both sides will disconnect, as there's no point to retry because the
server's known keys have already been communicated.
Bug: 111434128
Test: WIP; will add to adb_test.py/adb_device.py.
Enable wireless debugging in the Settings, then 'adb connect
<ip>:<port>'. Connection should succeed if key is in keystore. Used
wireshark to check for packet encryption.
Change-Id: I3d60647491c6c6b92297e4f628707a6457fa9420
This patch introduce "service.adb.listen_addrs", a new
string type property, while keeping the old properties.
The new property added in this patch is used to listen
on UNIX domain socket "localfilesystem".
"service.adb.listen_addrs" can be used to listen on
multiple addresses, such as tcp:5555 and tcp:5556.
It is separated by ',' (comma) character.
In the process of introducing the new socket type, the
method tcp_connect is removed and combined into
socket_spec_connect.
Without specifying using the new property, adb will
try to listen on both tcp and vsock (following the
previous implementation).
Some examples of the new property value are:
- "tcp:5555"
- "vsock:5555"
- "localfilesystem:/tmp/test"
- "tcp:5555,vsock:5555"
Bug: 133378083
Test: On master-arc-dev:
adb root;
setprop service.adb.listen_addrs localfilesystem:
<path_to_socket>;
adb connect localfilesystem:<path_to_socket>;
adb -s localfilesystem:<path_to_socket> shell;
inside Chrome OS.
Test: On aosp_bluefin:
setprop service.adb.listen_addr tcp:5555;
adb connect <IP>:5555; adb shell;
Test: On aosp_bluefin:
setprop service.adb.tcp.port 5555;
adb connect <IP>:5555; adb shell;
Test: On aosp_bluefin:
setprop service.adb.listen_addrs tcp:5555,tcp:6666;
adb connect <IP>:5555; adb shell;
adb connect <IP>:6666; adb shell;
Test: On aosp_bluefin:
./adb_test;
Test: On cuttlefish:
launch_cvd;
adb -s 127.0.0.1:6520 shell;
Test: Ran host tests:
./adb_test;
./adb_integration_test_adb;
./adb_integration_test_device;
Change-Id: I8289bf0ab3305cf23ce5695ffba46845d58ef6bb
When the adb client starts the adb server, it waits until the server
reports that it's fully-initialized (via reply-fd) before executing
its adb client operation. This wait prevent that adb client from
talking to the server while it's initializing and becoming confused.
But if a *different* adb client connects to the server while it's
initializing, *that* client can temporarily observe unexpected state
while the server initializes itself. For example, such a client can
observe a device that's alive and connected as being offline while the
server connects to it.
The new socket activation support makes this race more apparent, since
in the socket activation configuration, there's no initial adb client
waiting for the server's all-clear indication and so even the first
client observes the partially-initialized server state.
This CL prevents the server accepting *any* client connection until
the server has fully initialized itself, preventing all clients, not
just the initial client, from observing a
partially-initialized server.
Test: test_adb.py; test_adb gtest binary
Test: [with socket activation] adb kill-server; adb devices
Change-Id: I5d399ee62436eee63340b6b8b0f64131ad17ac65
We regressed handling of the old host transport selection syntax, which
broke users that reimplement adb themselves (e.g. Studio via ddmlib).
Bug: https://issuetracker.google.com/140369526
Test: adb raw "host-serial:822X0028S:forward:tcp:42929;localabstract:/com.example.ndktest-0/platform-1568299082100.sock"
Test: ./test_device.py
Change-Id: Iaaec8fde952316fe9bf2a6f6c6c4a3bc9f74bf72
Previously, we were calling acquire_one_transport with all empty
parameters, which would work when only one device is connected, but fail
when there are multiple. We've already acquired a transport and put it
into the socket as part of the forward request, so just use that
directly.
Bug: http://b/136198949
Test: test_device.py with multiple devices connected
Change-Id: I4d6bda45b36b71e418ecd9ead61b7379e68aa19b
adb was already using ConsumePrefix, and now we have another would-be
user in cutils. (There appears to be one place in adb that should use
ConsumeSuffix, so I'm assuming we'll want that sooner or later.)
I've kept these inline because adb and google3's versions both were, and
I'm easily led.
Test: treehugger
Change-Id: I29d99032f6f6ccbfaefece59725db8afb02a4c87
This CL adds client support to recognize the rescue mode (which will be
served by recovery image). It also allows waiting for a device to enter
rescue mode. The support for the actual rescue commands will be added in
follow-up CLs.
Bug: 128415917
Test: `adb devices` recognizes devices under rescue mode.
Test: `adb wait-for-rescue` waits for device to be in rescue mode.
Change-Id: I367d7339fe68006aba09a1e3db6370d472296676
Merged-In: I367d7339fe68006aba09a1e3db6370d472296676
(cherry picked from commit 55d407ec4a)
This CL adds client support to recognize the rescue mode (which will be
served by recovery image). It also allows waiting for a device to enter
rescue mode. The support for the actual rescue commands will be added in
follow-up CLs.
Bug: 128415917
Test: `adb devices` recognizes devices under rescue mode.
Test: `adb wait-for-rescue` waits for device to be in rescue mode.
Change-Id: I367d7339fe68006aba09a1e3db6370d472296676
Prerequisite for making `adb root` wait for the device that it told to
restart to disappear: the client needs to know which transport to wait
on.
Bug: http://b/124244488
Test: manual
Change-Id: I474559838ad7c0e961e9d2a98c902bca3b60d6c8
vsock is a socket address family for communicating into and out of
virtual machines. Addresses have a port and CID. The CID is unique to
each virtual machine on the computer. The VM host always has CID 2.
http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man7/vsock.7.html
Inside the android guest, the adb daemon hosts a vsock server with
VMADDR_CID_ANY, automatically using the guest CID. The adb server
can now connect to addresses of the form vsock:cid:port, where the CID
must be specified and the port defaults to 5555.
This is a significant speed improvement for ADB connections in
Cuttlefish, with 150-200 MB/s for `adb push` and 100-150 MB/s for
`adb pull`. It also allows removing some proxying steps from Cuttlefish,
simplifying the full connection path, and removes a dependency on the
unstable ivshmem protocol.
Commands tested against a Cuttlefish VM with CID 3:
adb connect vsock:3:5555
adb -s vsock:3:5555 shell
adb disconnect vsock:3:5555
Supporting "adb disconnect" and "adb -s" required modifying some of the
parts that parse addresses / serials.
push/pull trials with native adb vsock support in cuttlefish:
100m: 1 file pushed. 297.6 MB/s (104857600 bytes in 0.336s)
100m: 1 file pushed. 270.3 MB/s (104857600 bytes in 0.370s)
100m: 1 file pushed. 271.7 MB/s (104857600 bytes in 0.368s)
100m: 1 file pushed. 250.5 MB/s (104857600 bytes in 0.399s)
100m: 1 file pushed. 277.1 MB/s (104857600 bytes in 0.361s)
100m: 1 file pushed. 263.5 MB/s (104857600 bytes in 0.379s)
100m: 1 file pushed. 242.6 MB/s (104857600 bytes in 0.412s)
100m: 1 file pushed. 271.8 MB/s (104857600 bytes in 0.368s)
100m: 1 file pushed. 267.1 MB/s (104857600 bytes in 0.374s)
/data/local/tmp/100m: 1 file pulled. 212.8 MB/s (104857600 bytes in 0.470s)
/data/local/tmp/100m: 1 file pulled. 236.7 MB/s (104857600 bytes in 0.423s)
/data/local/tmp/100m: 1 file pulled. 201.2 MB/s (104857600 bytes in 0.497s)
/data/local/tmp/100m: 1 file pulled. 255.6 MB/s (104857600 bytes in 0.391s)
/data/local/tmp/100m: 1 file pulled. 199.6 MB/s (104857600 bytes in 0.501s)
/data/local/tmp/100m: 1 file pulled. 214.6 MB/s (104857600 bytes in 0.466s)
/data/local/tmp/100m: 1 file pulled. 254.2 MB/s (104857600 bytes in 0.393s)
/data/local/tmp/100m: 1 file pulled. 212.5 MB/s (104857600 bytes in 0.471s)
/data/local/tmp/100m: 1 file pulled. 218.9 MB/s (104857600 bytes in 0.457s)
/data/local/tmp/100m: 1 file pulled. 223.6 MB/s (104857600 bytes in 0.447s)
Bug: 121166534
Change-Id: I50f21fb5c9acafb8daa789df4e28c9e1bbbbf2ef
Test: adb connect/shell/disconnect
Let's use LOG(FATAL)/PLOG(FATAL) for actual fatal stuff.
Add a Windows error(3) and move folks who didn't really mean "abort"
fatal over to it. Also get rid of syntax_error which wasn't adding a
lot of value, and most of the places it was adding "usage: " didn't seem
entirely appropriate anyway.
In particular, we seemed to have confused fastdeploy.cpp into aborting
in most user error cases, and none of the reviewers noticed. Clearly
we'd all lost track of far too many options.
(I've also cleaned up a few random instances of fprintf(3) + exit(2).)
Bug: N/A
Test: manual
Change-Id: I3e8440848a24e30d928de9eded505916bc324786
The code was passing an fd from adb_open() to android::base::ReadFdToString() which actually
takes a C-Runtime fd (on Windows), so it wasn't working.
The fix is to use APIs that deal with C-Runtime fds:
* unix_open()
* android::base::unique_fd
* unix_lseek() (added in this change)
I also removed an unnecessary call to GetProcessId() since we already have the process id
from the structure returned by CreateProcess().
Test: adb start-server on Win10 and Ubuntu (with a failing server)
Test: mma
Change-Id: Id6e2dd5532a02fe5d9caf96aa007a1b3434a0b59
Signed-off-by: Spencer Low <CompareAndSwap@gmail.com>
Also fix adb's version number to match.
See build/soong/README.md for more information.
Test: cd system/core/fastboot; mma
Test: fastboot --version
Test: adb --version
Test: out/host/linux-x86/nativetest/fastboot_test/fastboot_test
Test: out/host/linux-x86/nativetest64/fastboot_test/fastboot_test
Change-Id: I65ea39af9183c602e84f3bc0e4a0d066a30fc464
Previously, we were returning the result of SendOkay/SendFail in a few
places after handling a host request, which is incorrect for two
reasons. First, the return type of SendOkay/SendFail is bool, and
handle_host_request was expected to return 0 on success. Second, we
don't care if the SendOkay fails; if we got to that point, we're done
with the request, regardless of whether we succeeded to report our
result. The result of this was a spurious failure result reported after
the initial result, which was ignored by the adb client.
Test: manually straced adb server
Test: python test_adb.py
Test: python test_device.py
Change-Id: I7d45ba527e1faccbbae5b15e7a0d1557b0a84858
adb was using a custom unique_fd closer that didn't have an
implementation for fdsan, which meant that none of our FDs were
actually tracked. Guard this behind ifdefs so that we only use this
on Windows, and delete our implementation of Pipe in favor of the one
in libbase while we're at it. libbase's implementation always sets
O_CLOEXEC, so fix up the instance of Pipe that doesn't expect that.
Test: mma
Test: adb start-server
Test: debuggerd `pidof adbd`
Change-Id: Ic29d641a2f93fb42384b00c51775048c8bcbe152
The daemon-side reverse functions depended on handle_forward_request:
move them back instead of duplicating the logic we had in
handle_host_request. Accomplish what we originally wanted to do in this
change by changing the transport argument of handle_forward_request to a
std::function that acquires a transport, either via
acquire_one_transport or immediately returning a value that we already
have.
As a side effect, fix a bug where we would emit spurious errors for host
service requests.
Bug: http://b/112009742
Test: echo "001chost:connect:127.0.0.1:5555" | nc localhost 5037
Test: python test_device.py
Test: python test_adb.py
Change-Id: Iccc555575df6dbd7de10382854c4ea2c6f4beeaa
Also, fix error reporting when forward fails because we can't get a
transport, because there's either zero, or more than one transport that
matches the request.
Bug: http://b/111021517
Bug: http://b/111374366
Change-Id: Ia4c3bf6215c3ff4e9023ba1af556f5b10463bd6d
Test: manual
This change gets rid of most malloc/calloc/free calls. The future is
now!
Bug: None
Test: test_device.py
Change-Id: Iccfe3bd4fe45a0319bd9f23b8cbff4c7070c9f4d
Add two states: connecting and authorizing, to disambiguate the offline
and unauthorized states, respectively.
Previously, devices would transition as follows:
offline -> unauthorized -> offline -> online
offline -> unauthorized (when actually unauthorized)
With this patch:
connecting -> authorizing -> online
connecting -> authorizing -> unauthorized (when actually unauthorized)
This allows test automation and the like to distinguish between offline
devices, unauthorized devices, and working devices without having to
do retry loops with arbitrary sleeps on their end.
Bug: http://b/79257434
Test: adb_test
Test: adbd_test
Test: manually plugging in a device with `while true; do adb shell echo foo; done`
Change-Id: I036d9b593b51a27a59ac3fc57da966fd52658567
This change adds a callback that is invoked exactly once, either when
the connection is fully established (i.e. CNXN packets have been sent
and received) or the atransport object is deleted before that (because
the connection failed).
This helps in distinguishing between successful and failing connections
for TCP. Especially when there is some kind of port
forwarding/multiplexing in between (like an SSH tunnel or SSLH proxy).
Bug: 74411879
Test: adb connect chromebook:22 (which runs an sslh tunnel to adbd).
either succeeds or fails, but not fake-succeeds.
Change-Id: I7e826c6f5d4c30338a03b2d376a857ac5d05672a
Host services are attempted after handle_host_request, which means that
failing to find a transport to give to handle_forward_request shouldn't
send an error over to the other end.
Bug: http://b/78294734
Test: `adb track-devices` with multiple devices connected
Change-Id: I46c89cc1894b51d48fea7d4e629b1d57f73e3fd6
Plumb the transport that we received the adb reverse request on through
to reverse_service, instead of trying to get a unique transport on
devices that have multiple active transports (e.g. a device with USB
(even unplugged) connected via TCP).
Bug: http://b/37066218
Bug: http://b/71898863
Test: `echo foo | nc -l 12345 & adb reverse tcp:12345 tcp:12345; adb shell nc localhost 12345` on a device connected via TCP
Change-Id: Iae199ae787f2e344126bbcacca8544cfc9844a4c
Switch from using std::string as the type we use to hold our payload in
apacket to a custom reimplementation that doesn't zero initialize. This
improves bulk transfer throughput in the adb_benchmark microbenchmark
on walleye by ~20%.
Test: adb shell taskset f0 /data/benchmarktest64/adb_benchmark/adb_benchmark
Change-Id: Ibad797701eb1460c9321b0400c5b167b89b2b4d0
Rename the existing Connection to BlockingConnection, add a nonblocking
Connection, and add an adapter between the two, to enable future work
to reduce the impedance mismatch from implementing a blocking interface
on top of nonblocking primitives.
While we're here, delete A_SYNC, and remove one layer of pipes when
sending a packet (replacing it with a condition variable when using
BlockingConnectionAdapter).
Test: python test_device.py, manually plugging/unplugging devices
Change-Id: Ieac2bf937471d9d494075575f07e53b589aba20a
Rearrange some files while we're doing this.
Bug: http://b/71721338
Test: manually ran adb on windows
Change-Id: Ie47bda82279e4b9521505ad0353bf9ef649fc7d7
We don't actually need to use quick_exit to avoid calling static
destructors, since we have -Wexit-time-destructors to guarantee we
don't actually have any, and this precludes the use of asan's exit time
leak checking, so switch back to atexit/exit.
Test: ASAN_OPTIONS=detect_leaks=1:leak_check_at_exit=1 adb server nodaemon with a manually inserted leak
Change-Id: Id8178913f64cb02c820c5073351369a9e4d8c74d
Switch asocket over to taking a std::string instead of apacket* for
data. This allows us to remove asocket specific fields from apacket*.
Test: python test_device.py with x86_64 emulator, walleye
Test: adb_test on host
Change-Id: I9d157ff331a75ba49a54fdd4194e3f6cdff722f4
The checksum is unnecessary. Improves adb performance by 40% on USB2.
Test: new adb works with new + old adbd, old adb works with new adbd
bug 67327728
Change-Id: I761d8a5a62deaea9bbb092ea9926b2d6d312f00d
This logic appears to be racy, and it shouldn't actually be needed, if
our devices follow the USB spec. Use libusb_set_interface_alt_setting
on device initialization as well, to add one more thing that should
reset the data toggles.
Bug: http://b/32952319
Test: python test_device.py
Change-Id: I392198af3d72c524b893e5056afa2b4617cea49c
Extend device selection to allow selecting a specific transport via
monotonically increasing identifier (visible in devices -l).
This is useful when using multiple devices (like hikey960...) that
have identical bogus serial numbers like 0123456789ABCDEF.
Bug: http://b/37043226
Test: adb -t {1, 2, 9999999} {get-serialno, shell, features}
Change-Id: I55e5dc5a406a4eeee0012e39b52e8cd232e608a6
Move the invocation of adb_notify_device_scan_complete to
the end of device_connected, where we decrement connecting_devices.
Also, create a dedicated thread for handling hotplug events, instead of
reusing the main thread for this, since the main thread blocks until
device scan is complete.
Test: `adb kill-server; adb devices`
Change-Id: Ia73b1a57538174282a48ef73ab0a3e58152d6f83