Don't emit tar blocks for directories with an invalid nonzero size. Also, if
such an entry is encountered during restore, don't actually attempt to treat
it as valid and thus skip over the next actual tar entry.
This patch also adds tracking of the data actually consumed during restore,
and reports a total at the end of stream.
Change-Id: I625173f76df3c007e899209101ff2b587841f184
...for Market App iRunner
There were a lot of serious issues with how we updated (or often didn't update)
the display and resource state when switching compatibility mode in conjunction
with restarting and updating application components. This addresses everything
I could find.
Unfortunately it does *not* fix this particular app. I am starting to think this
is just an issue in the app. This change does fix a number of other problems
I could repro, such as switching the compatibility mode of an IME.
Also a few changes here and there to get rid of $#*&^!! debug logs.
Change-Id: Ib15572eac9ec93b4b9966ddcbbc830ce9dec1317
this bug was introduced recently. it caused RefBase's weakref_impl
structure to be leaked for every RefBase object (about 20 bytes).
Change-Id: Id85e749ba04521199555dd701198edd097c313d4
Every available shared-storage volume is backed up, tagged with its
ordinal in the set of mounted shared volumes. This is an approximation
of "internal + the external card". This lets us restore things to the
same volume [or "equivalent" volume, in the case of a cross-model
restore] as they originated on.
Also fixed a bug in the handling of files/dirs with spaces in
their names.
Change-Id: I380019da8d0bb5b3699bd7c11eeff621a88e78c3
Fix a race that could cause GL commands to be executed from the wrong thread.
RefBase subclasses can now decide how they want to be destroyed.
Fix a race in SurfaceFlinger that could cause layers to be leaked forever.
Fix a race-condtion in SurfaceFlinger that could lead to a crash.
initial cherry-pick:
resolved conflicts for merge of b9783b49 to honeycomb-plus-aosp
Change-Id: I2a335e03fff219e35c18a7b0089b3a11d636576f
Usage: adb restore [tarfilename]
Restores app data [and installs the apps if necessary from the backup
file] captured in a previous invocation of 'adb backup'. The user
must explicitly acknowledge the action on-device before it is allowed
to proceed; this prevents any "invisible" pushes of content from the
host to the device.
Known issues:
* The settings databases and wallpaper are saved/restored, but lots
of other system state is not yet captured in the full backup. This
means that for practical purposes this is usable for 3rd party
apps at present but not for full-system cloning/imaging.
Change-Id: I0c748b645845e7c9178e30bf142857861a64efd3
Added a new PointerIcon API (hidden for now) for loading
pointer icons.
Fixed a starvation problem in the native Looper's sendMessage
implementation which caused new messages to be posted ahead
of old messages sent with sendMessageDelayed.
Redesigned the touch pad gestures to be defined in terms of
more fluid finger / spot movements. The objective is to reinforce
the natural mapping between fingers and spots which means there
must not be any discontinuities in spot motion relative to
the fingers.
Removed the SpotController stub and folded its responsibilities
into PointerController.
Change-Id: Ib647dbd7a57a7f30dd9c6e2c260df51d7bbdd18e
* commit 'c9cd2387b6938a6fbefc731d2177902266f2a130':
Fix a race that could cause GL commands to be executed from the wrong thread.
RefBase subclasses can now decide how they want to be destroyed.
Fix a race in SurfaceFlinger that could cause layers to be leaked forever.
Fix a race-condtion in SurfaceFlinger that could lead to a crash.
Added a timeout mechanism to EventHub and InputReader so that
InputMappers can request timeouts to perform delayed processing of
input when needed.
Change-Id: I89c1171c9326c6e413042e3ee13aa9f7f1fc0454
This adds a destroy() virtual on RefBase which
sublasses can implement. destroy() is called
in lieu of the destructor whenthe last strong
ref goes away.
Bug: 4483050
Change-Id: I8cbf6044a6fd3f01043a45592b5a60fa1e5fade2
This adds a destroy() virtual on RefBase which
sublasses can implement. destroy() is called
in lieu of the destructor whenthe last strong
ref goes away.
* provide placeholder UI showing backup/restore start/stop/timeout
* don't kill the progress UI in mid stream
* tidy up the pax extended header data writing a little
Change-Id: Ife0cb78e3facb541d8327f1d5ca5fe77faa6cbca
You can now specify resource configuration variants "wNNNdp"
and "hNNNdp". These are the minimum screen width/height in "dp"
units. This allows you to do things like have your app adjust
its layout based only on the about of horizontal space available.
This introduces a new configuration change flag for screen size.
Note that this configuration change happens each time the orientation
changes. Applications often say they handle the orientation change
to avoid being restarted at a screen rotation, and this will now
cause them to be restarted. To address this, we assume the app can
handle this new config change if its target SDK version is < ICS.
Change-Id: I4acb73d82677b74092c1da9e4046a4951921f9f4
'tar' supports only 100-character paths; 'ustar' supports only
155+100 character prefix + paths; neither supports files larger
than about 8 gigabytes. We now use the POSIX.1-2001 'pax'
extended tar format for those files in the backup stream that
are too large or have too-long paths for the 'ustar' format.
Change-Id: I2f256823091deaec9b1ccea685d2344753c6cb67
This is the basic infrastructure for pulling a full(*) backup of the
device's data over an adb(**) connection to the local device. The
basic process consists of these interacting pieces:
1. The framework's BackupManagerService, which coordinates the
collection of app data and routing to the destination.
2. A new framework-provided BackupAgent implementation called
FullBackupAgent, which is instantiated in the target applications'
processes in turn, and knows how to emit a datastream that contains
all of the app's saved data files.
3. A new shell-level program called "bu" that is used to bridge from
adb to the framework's Backup Manager.
4. adb itself, which now knows how to use 'bu' to kick off a backup
operation and pull the resulting data stream to the desktop host.
5. A system-provided application that verifies with the user that
an attempted backup/restore operation is in fact expected and to
be allowed.
The full agent implementation is not used during normal operation of
the delta-based app-customized remote backup process. Instead it's
used during user-confirmed *full* backup of applications and all their
data to a local destination, e.g. via the adb connection.
The output format is 'tar'. This makes it very easy for the end
user to examine the resulting dataset, e.g. for purpose of extracting
files for debug purposes; as well as making it easy to contemplate
adding things like a direct gzip stage to the data pipeline during
backup/restore. It also makes it convenient to construct and maintain
synthetic backup datasets for testing purposes.
Within the tar format, certain artificial conventions are used.
All files are stored within top-level directories according to
their semantic origin:
apps/pkgname/a/ : Application .apk file itself
apps/pkgname/obb/: The application's associated .obb containers
apps/pkgname/f/ : The subtree rooted at the getFilesDir() location
apps/pkgname/db/ : The subtree rooted at the getDatabasePath() parent
apps/pkgname/sp/ : The subtree rooted at the getSharedPrefsFile() parent
apps/pkgname/r/ : Files stored relative to the root of the app's file tree
apps/pkgname/c/ : Reserved for the app's getCacheDir() tree; not stored.
For each package, the first entry in the tar stream is a file called
"_manifest", nominally rooted at apps/pkgname. This file contains some
metadata about the package whose data is stored in the archive.
The contents of shared storage can optionally be included in the tar
stream. It is placed in the synthetic location:
shared/...
uid/gid are ignored; app uids are assigned at install time, and the
app's data is handled from within its own execution environment, so
will automatically have the app's correct uid.
Forward-locked .apk files are never backed up. System-partition
.apk files are not backed up unless they have been overridden by a
post-factory upgrade, in which case the current .apk *is* backed up --
i.e. the .apk that matches the on-disk data. The manifest preceding
each application's portion of the tar stream provides version numbers
and signature blocks for version checking, as well as an indication
of whether the restore logic should expect to install the .apk before
extracting the data.
System packages can designate their own full backup agents. This is
to manage things like the settings provider which (a) cannot be shut
down on the fly in order to do a clean snapshot of their file trees,
and (b) manage data that is not only irrelevant but actively hostile
to non-identical devices -- CDMA telephony settings would seriously
mess up a GSM device if emplaced there blind, for example.
When a full backup or restore is initiated from adb, the system will
present a confirmation UI that the user must explicitly respond to
within a short [~ 30 seconds] timeout. This is to avoid the
possibility of malicious desktop-side software secretly grabbing a copy
of all the user's data for nefarious purposes.
(*) The backup is not strictly a full mirror. In particular, the
settings database is not cloned; it is handled the same way that
it is in cloud backup/restore. This is because some settings
are actively destructive if cloned onto a different (or
especially a different-model) device: telephony settings and
AndroidID are good examples of this.
(**) On the framework side it doesn't care that it's adb; it just
sends the tar stream to a file descriptor. This can easily be
retargeted around whatever transport we might decide to use
in the future.
KNOWN ISSUES:
* the security UI is desperately ugly; no proper designs have yet
been done for it
* restore is not yet implemented
* shared storage backup is not yet implemented
* symlinks aren't yet handled, though some infrastructure for
dealing with them has been put in place.
Change-Id: Ia8347611e23b398af36ea22c36dff0a276b1ce91
Under Fedora 15 Beta, gcc 4.6.0 warns:
frameworks/base/libs/utils/RefBase.cpp: In member function
‘void android::RefBase::weakref_type::trackMe(bool, bool)’:
frameworks/base/libs/utils/RefBase.cpp:483:67: error: passing
‘const android::RefBase::weakref_impl’ as ‘this’ argument of
‘void android::RefBase::weakref_impl::trackMe(bool, bool)’
discards qualifiers [-fpermissive]
trackMe is not a const function, so don't use const in the static_cast
to a weakref_impl pointer.
Change-Id: I3c9ba73eb127985f5f54197ffecf2939c50f632c
Added a new PointerIcon API (hidden for now) for loading
pointer icons.
Fixed a starvation problem in the native Looper's sendMessage
implementation which caused new messages to be posted ahead
of old messages sent with sendMessageDelayed.
Redesigned the touch pad gestures to be defined in terms of
more fluid finger / spot movements. The objective is to reinforce
the natural mapping between fingers and spots which means there
must not be any discontinuities in spot motion relative to
the fingers.
Removed the SpotController stub and folded its responsibilities
into PointerController.
Change-Id: I5126b1e69d95252fda7f2a684c9287e239a57163
You can now specify resource configuration variants "wNNNdp"
and "hNNNdp". These are the minimum screen width/height in "dp"
units. This allows you to do things like have your app adjust
its layout based only on the about of horizontal space available.
This introduces a new configuration change flag for screen size.
Note that this configuration change happens each time the orientation
changes. Applications often say they handle the orientation change
to avoid being restarted at a screen rotation, and this will now
cause them to be restarted. To address this, we assume the app can
handle this new config change if its target SDK version is < ICS.
Change-Id: I22f8afa136b4f274423978c570fa7c9855040496
Runtime resource overlay allows unmodified applications to appear
as if they had been compiled with additional resources defined. See
libs/utils/README for more information.
This commit is the first iteration of runtime resource overlay. It
provides the actual overlay modifications and loading of trusted overlay
packages (ie residing in /vendor) targeting framework-res.apk.
This commit loads exactly one overlay package. The overlay,
if present, must target framework-res.apk and be located at
/vendor/overlay/framework/framework-res.apk.
Change-Id: If26ee7754813004a96c043dba37fbe99fa3919db
Added a timeout mechanism to EventHub and InputReader so that
InputMappers can request timeouts to perform delayed processing of
input when needed.
Change-Id: Iec2045baaf4e67690b15eef3c09a58d5cac76897
Fades out the mouse pointer:
- after 15 seconds of inactivity normally
- after 3 seconds of inactivity in lights out mode
- after a non-modifier key down
- after a touch down
Extended the native Looper to support enqueuing time delayed
messages. This is used by the PointerController to control
pointer fade timing.
Change-Id: I87792fea7dbe2d9376c78cf354fe3189a484d9da
some of the conversion operators were not using the proper
pointer type when calling incStrong/decStrong, usually it
has no bad consequences, but for some implementation
of the ref-counted object it could lead to recording the wrong
owner id.
Change-Id: If574b9069b8a4cf6e0911a992c8f095aba799995