Support added so init scripts can now import directories.
BUG: 22721249
Change-Id: I02b566bfb50ea84469f1ea0c6ad205435a1df286
TEST: Tested importing a folder on arm64 emulator
It is only a temporary fix. I hope the code can be moved into a member
function of class Command.
Bug: 22654233
Change-Id: I38c24fb624e54986a953f44d398b3b80c3795d24
- Get rid of log stutter, tag (executable basename) is added by
the logging routines
Bug: 17914575
Change-Id: If00eb1b915065fb52c9311648b7ada4c9e2696bd
When SELinux is in enforcing mode, any process executed by
init must have a domain transition defined. See
https://android-review.googlesource.com/108640 for details. This
prevents an executable spawned by init from remaining in init's
(very powerful) SELinux domain.
However, this is only enforced when SELinux is in enforcing mode.
During new device bringup, it's common to run an Android device
in globally permissive mode. In globally permissive mode, SELinux
denials are logged only, but otherwise ignored. If appropriate
SELinux domain transitions are not defined from init to init spawned
processes, this could cause misleading SELinux denials attributed
to init instead of the child process.
To help address these misleading denials, modify init to not spawn
processes unless a domain transition is defined. This essentially
enforces the rules in https://android-review.googlesource.com/108640
on both permissive and enforcing kernels.
While I'm here, change some "freecon()" calls to "free()", with the
long term goal of deleting freecon() entirely.
Change-Id: I3ef3a372bb85df61a3f6234cb1113cc25fc6506a
and run fsck with -f on clean shutdown instead.
With -f, fsck.f2fs always performs a full scan of the /data
partition regardless of whether the partition is clean or not.
The full scan takes more than 2 seconds on volantis-userdebug
and delays the OS boot.
With -a, the command does almost nothing when the partition
is clean and finishes within 20-30ms on volantis-userdebug.
When the partition has an error or its check point has
CP_FSCK_FLAG (aka "need_fsck"), the command does exactly the
same full scan as -f to fix it.
Bug: 21853106
Change-Id: I126263caf34c0f5bb8f5e6794454d4e72526ce38
When launched with "-bootchart <timeout>", the Android emulator appends
"androidboot.bootchart=<timeout>" to the kernel command line, which
signals /init to start bootcharting. However, the current implementation
of bootchart_init() in init/bootchart.cpp does not parse the timeout
value correctly, preventing bootcharting to be enabled on the emulator.
This bug was introduced by commit 841b263 ("Further refactoring of the
bootchart code"). Fix it to honor the "androidboot.bootchart" trigger.
Change-Id: I221fe2c2f40a3a04bd478c3a083f7723bc309c8c
Signed-off-by: Yu Ning <yu.ning@intel.com>
android_name_to_id() returns -1U on error, which causes a
crash when the following clang options are enabled:
-fsanitize=signed-integer-overflow,unsigned-integer-overflow
-ftrap-function=abort
-fsanitize-undefined-trap-on-error
Rather than returning a negative unsigned value (which doesn't
make a lot of sense, IMHO), return a positive unsigned value.
While we're here, add logging on decode_uid failures.
Bug: 21880301
Change-Id: I652e4c1daa07c7494cceca2b4e1656b9158f2604
This adds the "writepid" option that instructs init to write the child's
pid to the given filenames (such as /dev/cpuctl/bg_non_interactive/cgroup.procs
and/or /dev/cpuset/foreground/cgroup.procs).
Bug: http://b/21163745
Change-Id: I121bb22aa208bc99c4fb334eb552fdd5bcc47c1a
Shamu boots, but hammerhead doesn't. Likely cause is this change.
This reverts commit 18ae44bf3d.
Bug: 21880301
Change-Id: I490816060209c15aa07c783d05fe5b141c7c9023
Usage: system/core/init/compare-bootcharts.py base_bootchart_dir
exp_bootchart_dir
For example, here is the output where the bootanimation is changed
from "d 0 0 part2" to "c 0 0 part2":
--
process: baseline experiment (delta)
- Unit is ms (a jiffy is 10 ms on the system)
------------------------------------
/init: 50 40 (-10)
/system/bin/surfaceflinger: 4320 4470 (+150)
/system/bin/bootanimation: 6980 6990 (+10)
zygote64: 10410 10640 (+230)
zygote: 10410 10640 (+230)
system_server: 15350 15150 (-200)
bootanimation ends at: 33790 31230 (-2560)
--
In this example bootanimation is finished (estimated) 2.56 seconds sooner.
Change-Id: I39d59897c8c53d7d662676813e884b9d58feec3c
d34e407aeb removed support for
running with SELinux completely disabled. SELinux must either be
in permissive or enforcing mode now.
Remove unnecessary calls to is_selinux_enabled(). It always returns
true now.
Change-Id: Ife3156b74b13b2e590afe4accf716fc7776567e5
read_file() used to append a new line character to the end of the buffer it
returns, because parse_config() isn't able to cope with input that's not
'\n'-terminated. Fix read_file() to be less insane, and push the workarounds
into the parse_config() callers.
Longer term we should rewrite parse_config().
Change-Id: Ie9d9a7adcd33b66621726aef20c4b8cc51c08be7
Helped debug a problem where the N9 bootloader incorrectly
concatenated the various command lines.
Bug: http://b/20906691
Change-Id: I0580b06f4185129c7eedf0bdf74b5ce17f88bf9c
Remove support for androidboot.selinux=disabled. Running with SELinux
disabled is not a supported configuration anymore. SELinux must be
in enforcing in shipping devices, but we also support permissive for
userdebug/eng builds.
Don't try security_setenforce() if we're already in enforcing mode.
A kernel compiled without CONFIG_SECURITY_SELINUX_DEVELOP does
not have a permissive mode, so the kernel will already be enforcing
once the policy is loaded.
Bug: 19702273
Change-Id: I07525a017ddb682020ec0d42e56a2702c053bdeb
Don't double mount /dev and its subdirectories anymore. Instead, the
first stage init is solely responsible for mounting it.
Don't have init prepare the property space. This is the responsibility
of the second stage init.
Don't have SELinux use the property space to determine how we should
be running. Instead, create a new function and extract the data we
need directly from /proc/cmdline. SELinux needs this information in
the first stage init process where the property service isn't available.
Change-Id: I5b4f3bec79463a7381a68f30bdda78b5cc122a96
SELinux provides it's own /dev/null character device at
/sys/fs/selinux/null. This character device is exactly the same
as /dev/null, including the same major/minor numbers, and can
be used wherever /dev/null is used.
Use /sys/fs/selinux/null instead of trying to create our own
/dev/__null__ device. This moves us one step closer to eliminating
all uses of mknod() by init.
/sys/fs/selinux/null is only available once the /sys/fs/selinux filesystem
is mounted. It's not available to the first stage init, so we
still have to fall back to mknod then.
Change-Id: Ic733767ea6220a130537de33cc478ae79578ce20
The first stage init mounts /proc and /sys, and then the second
stage init also mounts /proc and /sys on top of the existing mount.
Only mount these two directories once, in the first stage init.
Not yet fixed: the double mounting of /dev. Removing the double
mounting doesn't work right now because both init stages are trying
to create a property space, and if the double mount of /dev goes away,
the property service in the second stage init fails to work.
Change-Id: I13719027a47526d074390c2b1a605ad99fb43a8f
write_file() returned -errno on error, not -1. Callers who check for
-1 would falsely believe that the write was successful when it wasn't.
Fixup write_file so that it return -1 on error consistent
with other functions.
Change-Id: Ic51aaf8678d8d97b2606bd171f11b3b11f642e39
Not just because it's what the cool kids are doing --- it also lets us
simplify the inner loop and decouple it from whatever systems want to
be woken to perform some activity if there's data to be read on some fd.
Currently this is just used to clean up the existing signal handling,
keychord, and property service code.
Change-Id: I4d7541a2c4386957ad877df69e3be08b96a7dec5
All the code that was being delayed does is create a socket. We can
do that straight away, avoid the overhead, and simplify our main loop.
The keychord fd, on the other hand, seems a little tricky. It looks
like /dev/keychord isn't immediately available, at least not on N9;
we have to wait for ueventd to set us up the bomb.
Change-Id: I020e75b8e4b233497707f0a3cbbb6038b714161f
We can set it up earlier, and error reporting like this helped me find
the SELinux problem with the last change to this code.
Change-Id: If0f38bc5ff0465c4030e2d39d34f31f49b2d8487
This reverts commit b862bd00a4.
This change was fine but an earlier change it depended on was broken.
That change has been fixed and resubmitted.
Bug: http://b/19702273
Change-Id: I17e565721026e48e2a73526f729f2481d4d6edb5
This reverts commit 4217374611.
It turns out that the kernel passes any unrecognized arguments on to init,
and (at least) N6 and N9 have such arguments. My lazy check of argc was
thus insufficient to recognize what stage of init we were in, so we'd
skip to stage 2 and not set up SELinux. And apparently you can get a
very long way with SELinux off... We'll fix that in a later change.
Bug: 19702273
Change-Id: I43b3fb722fed35dd217cb529cbcac9a29aff4e4b