Was mistakenly assuming that Parcel::writeFileDescriptor took
ownership of the fd that was passed in. It does not!
Added some comments and a default parameter to allow the caller
to specify whether it wishes the Parcel to take ownership.
Bug: 5563374
Change-Id: I5a12f51d582bf246ce90133cce7690bb9bca93f6
Bug: 5332296
The memory dealer introduces additional delays for reclaiming
the memory owned by CursorWindows because the Binder object must
be finalized. Using ashmem instead gives CursorWindow more
direct control over the lifetime of the shared memory region.
The provider now allocates the CursorWindows and returns them
to clients with a read-only protection bit set on the ashmem
region.
Improved the encapsulation of CursorWindow. Callers shouldn't
need to care about details like how string fields are allocated.
Removed the compile-time configuration of string and numeric
storage modes to remove some dead weight.
Change-Id: I07c2bc2a9c573d7e435dcaecd269d25ea9807acd
Bug: 5332296
The code is functionally equivalent, but a little more efficient
and much easier to maintain.
Change-Id: I90670a13799df05831843a5137ab234929281b7c
This reverts commit 56c58f66b97d22fe7e7de1f7d9548bcbe1973029
This CL was causing the browser to crash when adding bookmarks, visiting the bookmarks page, and sharing pages (see bug http://b/issue?id=5369231
This is intended to absorb the cost of the IPC
to the permission controller.
Cached permission checks cost about 3us, while
full blown ones are two orders of magnitude slower.
CAVEAT: PermissionCache can only handle system
permissions safely for now, because the cache is
not purged upon global permission changes.
Change-Id: I8b8a5e71e191e3c01e8f792f253c379190eee62e
The offset that is used in the creation of the MemoryHeapBase must be saved, so
that it can be used to recreate the Heap when an IMemory object is passed
across process boundary through the binder.
Change-Id: Ie618fb5c0718e6711f55ed9235616fd801e648dc
Signed-off-by: Anu Sundararajan <sanuradha@ti.com>
Signed-off-by: Iliyan Malchev <malchev@google.com>
There are two areas that have changed to eliminate the assumption that
local jobject references are both canonical and persistent:
1. JavaBBinderHolder no longer holds onto and reuses it parent object
reference per se. Since the underlying JavaBBinder object holds a
real global ref, this was redundant anyway. Now, for purposes of its
transient need to perform JNI operations, it simply uses the current
jobject ref(s) passed during method invocation, and no longer attempts
to hold these refs beyond the scope of a single invocation.
2. Binder obituaries no longer assume that a jobject reference to a
recipient will always compare == as a 32-bit value with any future
reference to the same object. The implementation now asks Dalvik
whether object references match.
This amended patch fixes the earlier bug around races between
remote binder death cleanup and local explicit unregistration of
VM-side death recipients.
Bug 2090115
Change-Id: I70bd788a80ea953632b1f466f385ab6b78ef2913
There are two areas that have changed to eliminate the assumption that
local jobject references are both canonical and persistent:
1. JavaBBinderHolder no longer holds onto and reuses it parent object
reference per se. Since the underlying JavaBBinder object holds a
real global ref, this was redundant anyway. Now, for purposes of its
transient need to perform JNI operations, it simply uses the current
jobject ref(s) passed during method invocation, and no longer attempts
to hold these refs beyond the scope of a single invocation.
2. Binder obituaries no longer assume that a jobject reference to a
recipient will always compare == as a 32-bit value with any future
reference to the same object. The implementation now asks Dalvik
whether object references match.
Bug 2090115
Change-Id: If62edd554d0a9fbb2d2977b0cbf8ad7cc8e2e68d
let cursor window size be set per device in device resources file.
default is 1MB.
for SR, it is 2MB.
it can be set to any value (in kB) in the device resource
strings.xml file
Change-Id: I67b1d04a5c9fc18b0cd4da6184d0b814b64d89e9
This was causing stack stitching problems where a one-way call with
violations followed by a two-way call without violations was getting
the previous one-way call's violation stack stitched on to the second
caller's stack.
The solution is a little more indirect than I would've liked
(preserving the binder's onTransact flags until enforceInterface) but
was seemingly necessary to work without changing the AIDL compiler.
It should also be sufficiently cheap, since no new calls to
thread-local IPCThreadState lookups were required. The additional
work is just same-thread getter/setters on the existing
IPCThreadState.
Change-Id: I4b6db1d445c56e868e6d0d7be3ba6849f4ef23ae
Add native Parcel methods analogous to the Java versions.
Currently, these don't do much, but upcoming StrictMode work changes
the RPC calling conventions in some cases, so it's important that
everybody uses these consistently, rather than having a lot of code
trying to parse RPC responses out of Parcels themselves.
As a summary, the current convention that Java Binder services use is
to prepend the reply Parcel with an int32 signaling the exception
status:
0: no exception
-1: Security exception
-2: Bad Parcelable
-3: ...
-4: ...
-5: ...
... followed by Parceled String if the exception code is non-zero.
With an upcoming change, it'll be the case that a response Parcel can,
non-exceptionally return rich data in the header, and also return data
to the caller. The important thing to note in this new case is that
the first int32 in the reply parcel *will not be zero*, so anybody
manually checking for it with reply.readInt32() will get false
negative failures.
Short summary: If you're calling into a Java service and manually
checking the exception status with reply.readInt32(), change it to
reply.readExceptionCode().
Change-Id: I23f9a0e53a8cfbbd9759242cfde16723641afe04
Merge commit 'efcf68aa1fd7fcfd52cf3d2837ed8db8e797194b'
* commit 'efcf68aa1fd7fcfd52cf3d2837ed8db8e797194b':
Start of work on passing around StrictMode policy over Binder calls.
This is (intendend to be) a no-op change.
At this stage, Binder RPCs just have an additional uint32 passed around
in the header, right before the interface name. But nothing is actually
done with them yet. That value should right now always be 0.
This now boots and seems to work.
Change-Id: I135b7c84f07575e6b9717fef2424d301a450df7b
To allow use of the native CursorWindow class outside of the core framework jni
Change-Id: I72e8dcb91a2c691130c33cdfd9a25d343da1c592
Signed-off-by: Mike Lockwood <lockwood@android.com>
Merge commit '8a8658a5de261c2da72d431940877bd054bc9837' into froyo-plus-aosp
* commit '8a8658a5de261c2da72d431940877bd054bc9837':
Make static versions of libutils and libbinder.
Fix some small static-initialization-order issues (and a static-
initializers-missing issue) that result from doing so. The static
libraries don't actually get used for anything real at the moment --
they're used for perf tests of bug 2660235.
Bug: 2660235
Change-Id: Iee2f38f79cc93b395e8d0a5a144ed92461f5ada0
The META* macros are useful outside of the framework
for other systems implementing Binder interfaces, but
they depend upon the android namespace. This includes
the appropriate namespace operations, which should be
sane even in that android namespace.
Change-Id: If600156c65191f51f487d0ee301d9f9f532b263d
get rid off the MAP_ONCE flag is MemoryHeapBase (as well as it's functionality),
this feature should not be used anymore.
the software renderer was incorrectly using the default ctor which set MAP_ONCE,
causing the leak. the software renderer itself is incorrectly used while coming
back from sleep.
Change-Id: I123621f8d140550b864f352bbcd8a5729db12b57
Add a Flattenable interface to libutils which can be used to flatten
an object into bytestream + filedescriptor stream.
Parcel is modified to handle Flattenable. And GraphicBuffer implements
Flattenable.
Except for the overlay classes libui is now independent of libbinder.
At some point the implementation became complicated because of
SurfaceFlinger's special needs, since we are now relying on gralloc
we can go back to much simpler MemoryDealer.
Removed HeapInterface and AllocatorInterface, since those don't need
to be paramterized anymore. Merged SimpleMemory and Allocation.
Made SimplisticAllocator non virtual.
Removed MemoryDealer flags (READ_ONLY, PAGE_ALIGNED)
Removed a lot of unneeded code.
This is a very simply implementation: upon receiving an IPC, if the handling
thread is at a background priority (the driver will have taken care of
propagating this from the calling thread), then stick it in to the background
scheduling group. Plus an API to turn this off for the process, which is
used by the system process.
This also pulls some of the code for managing scheduling classes out of
the Process JNI wrappers and in to some convenience methods in thread.h.
MemoryDealer, like all other subclasses of RefBase,MUST NOT BE stack-allocated, a protected destructor prohibits stack-allocation while allowing the baseclass to properly invoke the subclass' destructor once the refcount drops to 0.
- make sure that all binder Bn classes define a ctor and dtor in their respective library.
This avoids duplication of the ctor/dtor in libraries where these objects are instantiated.
This is also cleaner, should we want these ctor/dtor to do something one day.
- same change as above for some Bp classes and various other non-binder classes
- moved the definition of CHECK_INTERFACE() in IInterface.h instead of having it everywhere.
- improved the CHECK_INTERFACE() macro so it calls a single method in Parcel, instead of inlining its code everywhere
- IBinder::getInterfaceDescriptor() now returns a "const String16&" instead of String16, which saves calls to String16 and ~String16
- implemented a cache for BpBinder::getInterfaceDescriptor(), since this does an IPC. HOWEVER, this method never seems to be called.
The cache makes BpBinder bigger, so we need to figure out if we need this method at all.