The existing format was unreadable; putting the pid and tid first helps
somewhat. Also remove the unused qemu tracing which wasn't called anywhere.
Change-Id: I37ef3c556fe17b237ba1d8ca3216e2155ce5d0de
Currently run_transport_disconnects() are called twice. One is in
handle_offline(), another is before destroying transport.
The users of disconnect callback are listener, adb_auth_client, and
remote_sockets. All of them need only to be called once. And after
handle_offline, no new listeners, adb_auth_client, or remote_sockets
can be connected to the offlined transport. So I think we can remove
the second call to run_transport_disconnects().
Change-Id: I1ef8b6b7b5ab7ae1bad109be107c85973d65a2e3
adb push was not returning a bad exit code when write_data_file() or
write_data_link() failed. I encountered this when running the unittest
on Windows which can get into situations where stat() succeeds, but
open() fails due to pre-existing exclusive file access (which typically
doesn't exist on unix).
The same code is used by adb install, so this also fixes its error
handling.
Fixed some fd leaks and propagation of errors when reading a file.
Fixed a unittest to close temp files before reading them.
Change-Id: Ieba0026fa4c79eb0484676e4f2faaac9603ef584
Signed-off-by: Spencer Low <CompareAndSwap@gmail.com>
j is a ssize_t, which can go negative. If it goes negative,
the resulting multiplication of mItemSize*j doesn't make
any sense. Since the value is never used, just don't perform
the calculation if j < 0.
Bug: 23607865
Change-Id: I14f6f6506645d582f7d67a2e2d60ead3cb18b957
The Python 2 subprocess class doesn't use Unicode, so as a work-around
write the command line to a UTF-8 batch file and run that.
I modified the test to use u'blah' without .encode('utf-8') because the
Python docs recommend dealing with string variables like that. When
formatting a string with a unicode parameter, use u'foo' on the constant
string to make it unicode.
I also tested this on Linux and it seems to work fine (I did ls in the
middle of the test to make sure the filenames came out right, etc.).
I had to close the temporary files before adb tries to read/write them
because filesystem semantics are different on Windows (technically I
might be able to modify adb to try to open files with more permissive
share flags, but then I'm not sure if Python uses the right share flags.
Basically, I'd be opening another can of worms.).
Fixed the test to delete a temp file on the device once it is done.
Change-Id: Id0c34e26d7697fbbb47a44ae45298bed5e8c59d6
Signed-off-by: Spencer Low <CompareAndSwap@gmail.com>
The function of remote_socket_disconnect() is to make sure
the local_sockets and remote_sockets are closed when the binded
transport is disconnected. However, as we call close_all_sockets()
in handle_offline(), we don't need remote_socket_disconnect() any more.
Change-Id: I575f632d9f8703149f34e0210eb698a56e2516a9
Transport atransport objects are semi-reference counted: the input and
output threads each hold a reference. The adb disconnect command was
calling transport_unref to release a reference that it never had in the
first place. This meant that the refcount dropped to zero and the object
was deleted before either the input or output thread released its
reference. When that last thread released its reference, it wrote to
freed memory and also sometimes crashed.
This fix is to not release any unheld reference, instead it just kicks
the transport to break remote_read in output_thread. So all transport
close flow goes the following way:
output_thread (exit) -> main thread (offline the transport) ->
input thread (exit) -> main thread (destroy the transport)
Change-Id: Iad1fe718acc8716f3a79c8c22b426a1b2450452c
Turn off integer sanitization on android_memset. memset()ing is
expected to be a fast operation.
Avoid the use of the "while (size--) { }" construct, which harmlessly
underflows.
Change-Id: Ia61ff2323c759bf52df7e70b8be2fae0b0366dda
When launching the adb server (typically from adb start-server),
redirect stdout/stderr to anonymous pipes which are read by threads in
the parent process, to make error diagnosis easier.
If there is an error during adb start-server, the output looks like:
> adb start-server
* daemon not running. starting it now on port 5037 *
error: could not blah # from server process
could not read ok from ADB Server # from launch_server
* failed to start daemon * # from adb_connect
error: cannot connect to daemon # from adb_commandline
Fix handle-leaks in launch_server by using new unique_handle class
that is based on std::unique_ptr.
In the server, close stdin and redirect to adb.log *before* sending the
ACK, so that any errors are reported early instead of after the ACK.
Change-Id: I943881210a0ea9458fc36851339f916c3d6a0830
Signed-off-by: Spencer Low <CompareAndSwap@gmail.com>
It is reported by tsan as a double checked locking. But I think
it is not a real data race. Because I think the old code is able
to make sure t->kick() is only called once, and the caller of
kick_transport is not relying on the side-effect of calling
t->kick().
But as it is not perf critical, I don't mind breaking the double
checked locking pattern.
Bug: 23385662
Change-Id: Ie3597dd56bb514117c3865d2afcfd7c115731a78
If s->peer->enqueue() failed, s may be freed. So we should use
saved_xxx instead of s->xxx before verifying the return value.
Change-Id: I6c072406dceb98e2d02798d0dcdc428fa99e66fb
- sniff for PID in kernel log messages if available
- properly deal with klogd watermark in face of modified output
- deal more stringently with priority tag, must have [ following
- suppress process-name stutter in tag that can happen
- do not use : to demark tag if within [ ]
Mediatek-special change that adds <printk_state>(<cpu>)[<pid>:<comm>]
as a prefix to the printk messages. Along the lines of (simplified
for entertainment purposes, YMMV):
char tbuf[50]; /* printk prefix */
int this_cpu = smp_processor_id();
char state = __raw_get_cpu_var(printk_state);
unsigned tlen = snprintf(tbuf, sizeof(tbuf), "%c(%x)[%d:%s]",
state, this_cpu, current->pid, current->comm);
Bug: 23517551
Change-Id: I568e25c5aa6d8474835454a0e83b19c2921b7985
Call abort() on undefined or sketchy integer behavior.
Protects against integer overflow attacks.
Tested on Nexus 5 and Nexus 9 with no obvious problems.
Change-Id: I6cb28b4a0f5feed69ea472dfac8804fb0bf99719
As far as I can see, all asockets operations happen in fdevent_loop()
in the main thread, excepting close_all_sockets(). Instead of adding
lock and ref_count for each asocket, a simpler way would be moving
close_all_sockets() from input_thread to the main thread.
In input_thread(), there are two path to break the loop and call
close_all_sockets(). One path is when receiving offline A_SYNC, which
is sent by the main thread. The other path is when read_packet
fails, which I believe is almost not possible and doesn't matter
(Because t->fd is closed just before t is freed.). So I move
close_all_sockets() to handle_offline() in the main thread.
the socket_list_lock in sockets.cpp could be removed. But I prefer
to leave it for the following changes.
Bug: 6558362
Change-Id: I5da23f60a67a331262c62693b9b127fe2689c799
Hash functions rely on overflow behavior, so whitelist them.
ATRACE_TAG_NOT_READY: use an unsigned constant when shifting bits.
Otherwise, the value overflows on shift. The users of this constant
assign it to a uint64_t variable.
Change-Id: I21c437ce2083525e906c3ead3259ec34a1ef4b66
The error was this:
system/core/adb/usb_osx.cpp:203:74: error: values of type 'UInt32' should not
be used as format arguments; add an explicit cast to 'unsigned int' instead
[-Werror,-Wformat]
snprintf(devpathBuf, sizeof(devpathBuf), "usb:%" PRIu32 "X", locationId);
~~~ ^~~~~~~~~~
(unsigned int)
Which seems to be because on LP64 UInt32 is "unsigned int" but on LP32 it was
"unsigned long". We don't have to care about LP32, so -- if we can -- we're
probably better off just using uint32_t instead of UInt32.
Change-Id: I576f76cf2016ee59caccbc317ef74b6e8d71d722