POSIX seems to have chosen open_memstream() over the BSD variant. We
want something for Dalvik that will work on both GNU/Linux and Android,
so this is open_memstream() implemented in terms of BSD funopen().
For Windows there's just a stub that calls abort().
I'm putting this in libcutils since it seems inappropriate for bionic
(which provides the BSD alternatives) but isn't Dalvik-specific.
Merge commit '62f39c105af8789fd9308fa6a5b91f0963a7c59b'
* commit '62f39c105af8789fd9308fa6a5b91f0963a7c59b':
adb: Add "adb disconnect" command for disconnecting TCP/IP devices.
Add support for Acer devices
adb: Add USB Vendor IDs for LG and Huawei
Add NOTICE file and license tag for adb
adb: Clean up argument passing for create_service_thread()
Revert "adb: Another attempted workaround for the adb disconnect problem."
libsysutils: Fix some bugs in NetlinkListener and NetlinkEvent
added SuperH atomic support to libcutils
asocket_connect()
asocket_accept()
asocket_read()
asocket_write()
These calls are similar to the regular syscalls, but can be aborted with:
asocket_abort()
Calling close() on a regular POSIX socket does not abort blocked syscalls on
that socket in other threads.
After calling asocket_abort() the socket cannot be reused.
Call asocket_destory() *after* all threads have finished with the socket to
finish closing the socket and free the asocket structure.
The helper is implemented by setting the socket non-blocking to initiate
syscalls connect(), accept(), read(), write(), then using a blocking poll()
on both the primary socket and a local pipe. This makes the poll() abortable
by writing a byte to the local pipe in asocket_abort().
asocket_create() sets the fd to non-blocking mode. It must not be changed to
blocking mode.
Using asocket will triple the number of file descriptors required per
socket, due to the local pipe. It may be possible to use a global pipe per
process rather than per socket, but we have not been able to come up with a
race-free implementation yet.
All functions except asocket_init() and asocket_destroy() are thread safe.
asocket_connect()
asocket_accept()
asocket_read()
asocket_write()
These calls are similar to the regular syscalls, but can be aborted with:
asocket_abort()
Calling close() on a regular POSIX socket does not abort blocked syscalls on
that socket in other threads.
After calling asocket_abort() the socket cannot be reused.
Call asocket_destory() *after* all threads have finished with the socket to
finish closing the socket and free the asocket structure.
The helper is implemented by setting the socket non-blocking to initiate
syscalls connect(), accept(), read(), write(), then using a blocking poll()
on both the primary socket and a local pipe. This makes the poll() abortable
by writing a byte to the local pipe in asocket_abort().
asocket_create() sets the fd to non-blocking mode. It must not be changed to
blocking mode.
Using asocket will triple the number of file descriptors required per
socket, due to the local pipe. It may be possible to use a global pipe per
process rather than per socket, but we have not been able to come up with a
race-free implementation yet.
All functions except asocket_init() and asocket_destroy() are thread safe.
Merge commit '414ff7d98ac8d7610a26206335954ad15f43f3ac'
* commit '414ff7d98ac8d7610a26206335954ad15f43f3ac':
Move fdevent from libcutils into adb directory. ADB is the only client of this API, and I intend to modify it extensively to clean its codebase soon.