Every IBinder object can accept a new transaction to tell it that
it might want to reload system properties, and in the process
anyone can register a callback to be executed when this happens.
Use this to reload the trace property.
This is very much ONLY for debugging.
Change-Id: I55c67c46f8f3fa9073bef0dfaab4577ed1d47eb4
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
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.
- 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.