The actual maximum length will depend on the version of the shell
protocol being used, and any additional parameters being passed through
(e.g. TERM=xterm-256color). This should be able to be raised to 64K for
devices with commit 3d2904c (L-MR1 and above), but that'll require some
plumbing.
Bug: http://b/20467103
Change-Id: Idf0c46af5b18b854110aba58df13a53297d2475f
Background
==========
On Windows, if you run "adb shell exit" in a loop in two windows,
eventually the adb client will be unable to connect to the adb server. I
think connect() is returning WSAEADDRINUSE: "Only one usage of each
socket address (protocol/network address/port) is normally permitted.
(10048)". The Windows System Event Log may also show Event 4227, Tcpip.
Netstat output is filled with:
# for the adb server
TCP 127.0.0.1:5037 127.0.0.1:65523 TIME_WAIT
# for the adb client
TCP 127.0.0.1:65523 127.0.0.1:5037 TIME_WAIT
The error probably means that the client is running out of free
address:port pairs.
The first netstat line is unavoidable, but the second line exists
because the adb client is not waiting for orderly/graceful shutdown of
the socket, and that is apparently required on Windows to get rid of the
second line. For more info, see
https://github.com/CompareAndSwap/SocketCloseTest .
This is exacerbated by the fact that "adb shell exit" makes 4 socket
connections to the adb server: 1) host:version, 2) host:features, 3)
host:version (again), 4) shell:exit. Also exacerbating is the fact that
the adb protocol is length-prefixed so the client typically does not
have to 'read() until zero' which effectively waits for orderly/graceful
shutdown.
The Fix
=======
Introduce a function, ReadOrderlyShutdown(), that should be called in
the adb client to wait for the server to close its socket, before
closing the client socket.
I reviewed all code where the adb client makes a connection to the adb
server and added ReadOrderlyShutdown() when it made sense. I wasn't able
to add it to the following:
* interactive_shell: this doesn't matter because this is interactive and
thus can't be run fast enough to use up ports.
* adb sideload: I couldn't get enough test coverage and I don't think
this is being called frequently enough to be a problem.
* send_shell_command, backup, adb_connect_command, adb shell, adb
exec-out, install_multiple_app, adb_send_emulator_command: These
already wait for server socket shutdown since they already call
recv() until zero.
* restore, adb exec-in: protocol design can't have the server close
first.
* adb start-server: no fd is actually returned
* create_local_service_socket, local_connect_arbitrary_ports,
connect_device: probably called rarely enough not to be a problem.
Also in this change
===================
* Clarify comments in when adb_shutdown() is called before exit().
* add some missing adb_close() in adb sideload.
* Fixup error handling and comments in adb_send_emulator_command().
* Make SyncConnection::SendQuit return a success boolean.
* Add unittest for adb emu kill command. This gets code coverage over
this very careful piece of code.
Change-Id: Iad0b1336f5b74186af2cd35f7ea827d0fa77a17c
Signed-off-by: Spencer Low <CompareAndSwap@gmail.com>
Always use LOG() for debug tracing.
Remove useless D_lock. I believe it is useless to lock just before and after fprintf.
I verified the log output both on host and on device. The output looks fine to me.
Change-Id: I96ccfe408ff56864361551afe9ad464d197ae104
We can double the speed of "adb sync" (on N9) if we increase SYNC_DATA_MAX
from 64KiB to 256KiB. This change doesn't do that, because I still haven't
managed to plumb through the information about whether we're a new adb/adbd
to file_sync_client.cpp and file_sync_service.cpp. But this is already a big
change with a lot of cleanup, so let's do the cleanup and worry about the
intended change another day...
This change does improve performance somewhat by halving the number of
lstat(2) calls made on the client side, and ensuring that most packets are
sent with a single write. This has the pleasing result of making the null
sync on an AOSP N9 go from just over 300ms to around 100ms, which means it
now seems instantaneous (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mental_chronometry).
Change-Id: If9f6d4c1f93ec752b95f71211bbbb1c513045166
This patch factors out a lot of the basic protocol code: sending OKAY,
sending FAIL, and sending a length-prefixed string.
ADB_TRACE has been non-optional for a long time, so let's just remove
the #ifs.
Also actually build the device tracker test tool (and remove its duplicate).
Bug: http://b/20666660
Change-Id: I6c7d59f18707bdc62ca69dea45547617f9f31fc6
* sysdeps.h should always be included first.
* TRACE_TAG needs to be defined before anything is included.
* Some files were missing copyright headers.
* Save precious bytes on my SSD by removing useless whitespace.
Change-Id: I88980e6e00b5be1093806cf286740d9e4a033b94
I keep trying to clean things up and needing std::strings. Might as
well just do this now.
usb_linux_client.c is going to stay as C because GCC isn't smart
enough to deal with the designated initializers it uses (though for
some reason it is in C mode).
The Darwin files are staying as C because I don't have a way to test
that they build.
The Windows files are staying as C because while I can actually build
for them, it's slow and painful.
Change-Id: I75367d29205a9049d34460032b3bb36384f43941
Renamed readx/writex to ReadFdExactly/WriteFdExactly respectively.
These read/write a full fixed-size buffer. If the whole buffer cannot
be read/written, these functions return an error.
Rename write_string to WriteStringFully.
Move the TEMP_FAILURE_RETRY definition in sysdeps.h out of the
!Windows section. It seems Windows won't actually interrupt a call,
but it's easier to just define it than to #ifdef each call.
Change-Id: Ia8ddffa2a52764a2f9a281c96c937660e002b9b9