wiki:Android/OSDevelopment

Version 2 (modified by Shiv Khanna, 6 years ago) ( diff )

fixed out of date reference

Android OS Development

This page provides details about the Gateworks Android BSP which is used to produce the various components of the Android OS on a Gateworks Ventana board.

Hardware Integration

LEDs and GPIOs

If you wish to manipulate hardware resources such as LED's and GPIO's you can do so with the Linux sysfs APIs:

System voltage and temperature sensors

The standard Linux hwmon sysfs APIs:

Physical Buttons (including Capacitive)

Physical buttons are handled by Linux device drivers that generate Linux input events and get mapped to Android key codes via Key Layout Files.

Therefore, you can map (or disable) these to Android Key codes in the various .kl files in use on your device.

The Android key codes typically tied to buttons are:

  • POWER
  • MENU
  • BACK
  • HOME
  • APP_SWITCH
  • SEARCH

For more information on Key Layout Files see:

GSC User Pushbutton

The Gateworks System Controller functions as a pushbutton controller for the front-panel user pushbutton available on most Ventana boards. This particular button is available as gpio-240 on Ventana boards however there is a gsc-input driver that converts GSC related interrupts, such as push-button press-and-release to Linux Input events.

By default note that the GSC is configured such that the user pushbutton is a hard reset. To configure it instead to be software controlled you need to set GSC CTRL_0 accordingly depending on the actions you wish to catch. For example:

  • Configure the pushbutton controller to just catch quick press-and-release events:
    i2cset -f -y 0 0x20 0 0x00  # disable hard reset function
    i2cset -f -y 0 0x20 11 0x01 # enable pushbutton interrupt
    

The gsc-input driver will catch all enabled GSC interrupts and emit a Linux Input event with a key-code cooresponding to a button (defined in Linux input.h). For example the GSC_IRQ_PB (pushbutton press-and-release) interrupt is mapped to BTN_0 which is defined as 0x100 (decimal 256) in input.h.

There exists a key layout file that maps the Linux input event keycodes to Android key events in /system/usr/keylayout/gsc_input.kl:

130|root@ventana:/ # cat /system/usr/keylayout/gsc_input.kl                    
# quick press-and-release (held <700ms) of front-panel pushbutton
key 256   POWER                 WAKE

# front panel pushbutton held >700ms (long-press)
key 257   HOME                  WAKE

# user-eeprom section erased after 3 quick presses
key 258   SEARCH                WAKE

# tamper event
key 259   POWER                 WAKE
  • Note that BTN_0 is hex 0x100 which is decimal 256

If for some reason you wish to use the pushbutton to capture events that the GSC does not automatically capture and report as interrupts (for example a button 'press' event instead of a quick press-and-release event, a 'button held for x seconds' event, or a 'button pressed-and-released x times in quick succession' event, you can choose to monitor gpio-240 manually with a simple application which uses the poll(2) stdlib function to block waiting for an interrupt.

For more information see:

GPIO as a Button

Any GPIO can be used as a pushbutton by using the gpio-keys or gpio-keys-polled driver. This driver will monitor a gpio's interrupt (or poll it if it has none), debounce it, and emit a Linux input event with a keycode of your choosing.

In order to use this driver you need to:

  1. add a configuration section for it in the appropriate dtsi file for the board you are using.
  2. add a keylayout file to map the Linux input device created by the gpio-keys driver to an Android key

For example, the gw51xx.dtsi can have the following section added input.h)

       /* define linux keyboard gpio-keys driver named 'gpio-button' */
       gpio: gpio-button {
               compatible = "gpio-keys";
               #address-cells = <1>;
               #size-cells = <0>;
               autorepeat;

               /* map GW51xx DIO0 IMX6 GPIO1_IO16 to linux keycode 103 (KEY_UP) */
               button@1 {
                        label = "GPIO Key Up";
                        linux,code = <103>;
                        debounce-interval = <100>;
                        gpios = <&gpio1 16 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>;
               };

               /* map GW51xx DIO1 IMX6 GPIO1__IO19 to linux keycode 109 (KEY_DOWN) */
               button@2 {
                        label = "GPIO Key Down";
                        linux,code = <108>;
                        debounce-interval = <100>;
                        gpios = <&gpio1 19 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>;
               };

               /* map GW51xx DIO2 IMX6 GPIO1__IO17 to linux keycode 106 (KEY_RIGHT) */
               button@3 {
                        label = "GPIO Key Right";
                        linux,code = <106>;
                        debounce-interval = <100>;
                        gpios = <&gpio1 17 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>;
               };

               /* map GW51xx DIO3 IMX6 GPIO1__IO18 to linux keycode 105 (KEY_LEFT) */
               button@4 {
                        label = "GPIO Key Left";
                        linux,code = <105>;
                        debounce-interval = <100>;
                        gpios = <&gpio1 18 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>;
               };
        };

  • The gpio node needs to be at the top level and its placement is arbitrary however its customary to put it in alphabetical order (thus between the chosen node and the leds node)

A keylayout file (.kl) is added to the live Android system. The keylayout files are matched by device name and in this case, the device-name is taken from the device-tree node name (gpio-button above) with a unique kernel-defined number appended. To determine the device name you can ls /sys/bus/platform/drivers/gpio-keys/gpio-button*:

root@ventana:/ # ls /sys/bus/platform/drivers/gpio-keys/gpio-button*           
/sys/bus/platform/drivers/gpio-keys/gpio-button.19

Therefore in the example above where the gpio node was named 'gpio-button' the device name is 'gpio-button.19'. This name is used as the input device name and you can see all names of input devices with:

root@ventana:/ # cat /sys/class/input/input*/name                              
gsc_input
gpio-button.19
root@ventana:/ # 

Now create a keylout file named gpio-button.19.kl with:

# map linux keycode 103 (KEY_UP) to Android DPAD_UP
key 103   DPAD_UP               WAKE
# map linux keycode 108 (KEY_RIGHT) to Android DPAD_RIGHT
key 108   DPAD_RIGHT            WAKE
# map linux keycode 106 (KEY_LEFT) to Android DPAD_LEFT
key 106   DPAD_LEFT             WAKE
# map linux keycode 105 (KEY_DOWN) to Android DPAD_DOWN
key 105   DPAD_DOWN             WAKE

And push it to your system:

adb remount
adb push gpio-button.19.kl /system/usr/keylayout/

References:

Filesystem Permissions

You can read/write files in /sys from your Android app, but only if the Linux filesystem has the correct permissions to do so. Android uses Linux filesystem permissions in the following way:

  • root user/group used only by init process (as far as we can tell)
  • system user/group used for core Android OS
  • user applications get their own unique user/group added at APK install time which will remain constant until uninstalled but will not match the same APK's user/group on another device

Therefore, if you want the OS to be able to control something (for instance backlight control) you need to ensure that user/group system has permissions for the resource (for instance /sys/class/backlight/backlight.3/brightness) for the Android Settings app or auto-brightness to adjust LCD brightness.

If you want a user application to be able to control something (for instance a GPIO direction/value) you need to ensure that all user/group's have access to the resource (because each Android app has a unique user/group) you need to make sure the resource has the permissions set for 'others' (ie 666 for read/write or 444 for read-only).

Permissions and ownership of devices and files are set by the following:

  • Android init - when processing *.rc files with the chown and chmod directives
  • Android ueventd - when devices appear dynamically based on configuration in /ueventd.rc and /ueventd.freescale.rc
  • /system/bin/init.sh (Gateworks Added) via chmod and chown shell commands

Android Networking Support

Network Daemon (netd)

Most networking operations are performed by the network daemon (netd) via a socket interface.

DHCP

When netlink (kernel) shows a device obtaining a link (NETDEV_CHANGE) the EthernetDataTracker detects the change and dhcpcd is launched. There is a single EthernetDataTracker object (frameworks/base/core/java/android/net/EthernetDataTracker.java) that tracks 'Ethernet' device state changes but by design it only tracks a single device which is controlled by the config_ethernet_iface_regex string property (frameworks/base/core/res/res/values/config.xml). While this is defaulted to 'eth\d' to keep it generic this does not mean it will catch interface up/down events on 'any' ethernet as expected. Instead it only monitors the last interface from /sys/class/net that matches the setting.

The interface change triggers a call to dhcp_do_request (libnetutils/dhcp_utils.c) to start the dhcp client daemon which requires a service for that specific interface be configured in init.rc. For example for eth1 you would need:

# eth1 dhcp support
service dhcpcd_eth1 /system/bin/dhcpcd -ABKL
    class main
    disabled
    oneshot

service iprenew_eth1 /system/bin/dhcpcd -n
    class main
    disabled
    oneshot

If you want to use eth1 with DHCP instead of eth0 you must change this property at build time (device/gateworks/ventana/overlay/frameworks/base/core/res/res/values/config.xml)

References:

WiFi

See Android/wireless

Android Properties

You may want to use Android properties to abstract resources such as GPIO's, backlights, uart devices etc that may vary per board so that you can use a single firmware image that works across multiple boards.

You can see examples of this in the device/gateworks/ventana/init.sh script where we create a symlink to /dev/gpsdevice for the various board-specific tty's. Another example may be to set gpio.dio0, gpio.dio1, gpio.dio2, gpio.dio3 properties to represent the numeric gpio for IMX6_DIO0-1 which vary between GW51xx/GW52xx/GW53xx/GW54xx boards.

The Gateworks Android BSP init script sets the following properties that can be used in an app:

  • gpio.dio0 - the numeric gpio assigned to DIO0 (/sys/class/gpio/gpio<n>)
  • gpio.dio1 - the numeric gpio assigned to DIO1 (/sys/class/gpio/gpio<n>)
  • gpio.dio2 - the numeric gpio assigned to DIO2 (/sys/class/gpio/gpio<n>)
  • gpio.dio3 - the numeric gpio assigned to DIO3 (/sys/class/gpio/gpio<n>)
  • gpio.can_stby

Your android app can use properties to obtain the actual gpio number used to access that function via sysfs:

  • Android Application Java API: getProperty
  • Native C Code: use property_get from system/core/include/cutils/properties.h

Here is a simple example C application showing how to use get_property to find the gpio value for a digital-io (assuming the init script above set this up) and reading the value from /sys/class/gpio:

  • external/gpio/Android.mk
    LOCAL_PATH := $(call my-dir)
    
    PRIVATE_LOCAL_CFLAGS := -O2 -g -W -Wall
    
    include $(CLEAR_VARS)
    
    LOCAL_SRC_FILES := gpio.c
    LOCAL_MODULE := gpio
    LOCAL_MODULE_TAGS := optional
    LOCAL_C_INCLUDES := $(LOCAL_PATH)/include/
    LOCAL_CFLAGS := $(PRIVATE_LOCAL_CFLAGS)
    LOCAL_STATIC_LIBRARIES := libcutils libc
    
    include $(BUILD_EXECUTABLE)
    
  • external/gpio/gpio.c
    /*
     * gpio.c - Tim Harvey <tharvey@gateworks.com>
     *
     * Simple example of how to get/set GPIO from a property
     *
     */
    
    #include <stdio.h>
    #include <stdlib.h>
    
    #include <cutils/properties.h>
    
    int main(int argc, char **argv)
    {
            char property[PROPERTY_VALUE_MAX];
            char buf[256];
            FILE *fp;
    
            if (argc < 1) {
                    fprintf(stderr, "Usage: %s <dionum>\n", argv[0]);
                    exit(1);
            }
    
            sprintf(buf, "gpio.dio%d", atoi(argv[1]));
            if (property_get(buf, property, "") == 0) {
                    fprintf(stderr, "%s property not found\n", buf);
                    exit(1);
            }
            printf("%s=gpio%d\n", buf, atoi(property));
    
            sprintf(buf, "/sys/class/gpio/gpio%d/value", atoi(property));
            fp = fopen(buf, "r");
            if (!fp) {
                    perror("fopen failed");
                    fprintf(stderr, "likely a permission issue "
                            "or invalid file if gpio was not exported\n");
                    exit(1);
            }
    
            if (fread(buf, 1, sizeof(buf), fp) > 0) {
                    printf("%d\n", atoi(buf));
            } else {
                    fprintf(stderr, "read %s failed\n", buf);
            }
    
            return 0;
    }
    

Android Boot Process and Components

Android Bootloader Script

Because the Android kernel needs some additional parameters which are not required by a standard Linux kernel, the default Ventana u-boot scripts are not sufficient for booting Android directly. The default bootscripts however anticipate this requirement and therefore always look for a /boot/6x_bootscript-ventana file on the first partition (ext fs for non-mtd block storage). If this file is present the bootloader will load it and source it (thus executing the script it contains).

This file is in device/gateworks/ventana/6x_bootscript.txt and is built by device/gateworks/bootscript.mk which uses the mkimage utility to put a u-boot image header on it.

The Android bootscript does the following things in general:

  • configure GPU memory allocation kernel params (using mem_mb set dynamically by U-Boot)
  • detect display devices and configure kernel params accordingly
  • detect boot device and configure kernel params accordingly

There are some U-Boot env variables that the bootscript can use for various overrides (mainly because there isn't a foolproof way of detecting display devices and boot devices):

  • console - device to use as kernel console (you can unset this to disable kernel console which increases boot time)
  • baudrate - baudrate to use for kernel console device
  • panel - display (or displays in prioritized order) which can a list of the following:
    • Hannstar-XGA (for 10" 1024x768 Freescale MXC-LVDS1 display with a egalax touch controller at i2c 0x04)
    • AUO-G070VW01 (for 7" 800x480 display with a tsc2007 touch controller at i2c 0x49)
    • HDMI (for HDMI display where linux framebuffer mode can be specified in the 'hdmi' env var but defaults to 1080x720M@60. Other options for 'hdmi' var include 1920x1080M@60, 640x480M60 and others your monitor may support from /sys/class/graphics/fb0/modes)
    • If not specified, the above displays will attempt to be detected by simply seeing if an i2c device responds on their touchscreens slave address. Note that some HDMI monitors may have slave devices that match these
    • Please see setting display in bootloader at this link.
  • fs - the filesystem used on the storage device (defaults to ext2)
  • disk - the device number for the disk type (defaults to 0)
  • dtype - the storage type which can be one of usb, mmc, sata
    • this is set by the latest Gateworks U-Boot default scripts to avoid detection
    • if not specified will be the first device that has a boot/uImage file
  • bootdev - the boot device passed to Android which can be one of: fsl-ehci.0 (USB OTG), fsl-ehci.1 (USB EHCI), sdhci-esdhc-imx.2, ahci.0

For the best understanding of how the boot script works you can view the source here

Because the kernel, bootscript, device-tree files, and initial ramdisk are stored in the BOOT partition you can update the bootscriptmanually as follows via adb:

bootable/bootloader/uboot-imx/tools/mkimage -A arm -O linux -T script -C none -a 0 -e 0 -n "boot script" -d \
  device/gateworks/ventana/6x_bootscript.txt 6x_bootscript-ventana
adb remount
adb push 6x_bootscript-ventana /boot/boot/
adb reboot

Android Init Script

Android has its own init system that differs from the init systems used across various Unix and Linux distributions. The Android init.rc script syntax allows some simple primitives for launching applications (either one-shot or persistent), setting ownership and permissions, and setting properties. This is useful for things that are common to all devices your firmware will run on and things that should be setup once (or defaulted) at boot.

For example, if you want your application to be able to control LED brightness you can do either of the following:

  • init.rc: add the following to device/gateworks/ventana/init.rc 'on boot' section:
    # set permissions for user leds (using Android init syntax)
    chown system system /sys/class/leds/user1/brightness
    chown system system /sys/class/leds/user2/brightness
    chown system system /sys/class/leds/user3/brightness
    chmod 0660 /sys/class/leds/user1/brightness
    chmod 0660 /sys/class/leds/user2/brightness
    chmod 0660 /sys/class/leds/user3/brightness
    

The init.rc file for the Gateworks Ventana Android BSP can be found here.

Because the Android init application runs from a Linux inital ramdisk (initrd), if you modify init.rc you need to do a toplevel 'make' to rebuild the ramdisk.img, apply a U-Boot header to it with 'mkimage' and update it on your BOOT partition.

References:

Android Init Shell Script

Because the Android init system does not allow for complex syntax supporting decision making logic (ie if/then/else clauses) we configured init.rc to run a shell script during late boot to handle more complex board-specific tasks.

You can find the init.sh script here.

Because this script is installed in the SYSTEM partition under /system/bin/init.sh you can update it via adb (after making sure to remount /system as read/write):

adb remount
adb push device/gateworks/ventana/init.sh /system/bin/init.sh
adb shell chmod 0777 /system/bin/init.sh
adb reboot

Our init script sets some android properties to describe the hardware in a non board-specific way so that you can use properties in your app to allow it to run on a variety of Gateworks boards. See here for more details on properties.

Android Kernel

The Android kernel is a Linux kernel with a few additional patches which have not made it into mainline Linux yet.

Because there is no userspace daemon such as udev which monitors Linux hotplug events and loads kernel modules on demand typically the kernel has no modules. This is not a hard rule however and if you want to prune down the kernel to reduce boot time you can remove support that is not required for your application and/or load kernel driver modules from init.rc init.sh or some other mechanism after the OS is fully booted.

Because the kernel, bootscript, device-tree files, and initial ramdisk are stored in the BOOT partition you can update the kernel and dtbs manually as follows via adb:

adb remount
adb push kernel_imx/arch/arm/boot/uImage /boot/boot/uImage
for i in `ls kernel_imx/arch/arm/boot/dts/imx6*gw*.dtb`; do adb push $i /boot/boot; done
adb reboot

External Storage

The Gateworks Android BSP supports a number of storage mediums that can be classified as internal or external storage. External storage can be provided by physical media, like an SD card or USB, that is for temporary file storage and data transfer. The physical media may remain with the device for an extended period of time, but is not tied to the device and may be removed.

Android Storage Framework

While linux level external storage support comes built into the kernel packaged with the Android OS, there are a combination of services started at boot time that perform staging operations to prepare the media before exposing it to apps. These framework services as they pertain to external storage are described below.

  • Vold - Mounting of physical external storage volumes is handled by Vold, which monitors device node paths and mounts when a device has been inserted and/or detected by the kernel.
  • sdcard Daemon - Performs permission fixups to make newly mounted external storage available to Android userspace and applications with the READ/WRITE_EXTERNAL_STORAGE permissions.
  • MediaScanner - Crawls through the various filesystems that the Android OS has mounted successfully and makes the media files on them available to Android apps via special request intents (e.g. Gallery, Wallpaperpicker, etc.)

Adding Support for External Storage

The steps for adding support for a new external storage device as they pertain to the Gateworks Android BSP are defined below:

  1. Add Vold device line in fstab_nand and/or fstab_block

Depending on whether your boot device was passed as a flash or block device from the bootloader to the kernel command line, either the fstab_nand or fstab_block file will be parsed by Vold to handle how the external storage will be mounted. Adding a new device will require an additional line of the format:

<src> <mnt_point> <type> <mnt_flags> <fs_mgr_flags>

  • src - The kernel sysfs path where the device node exists (usually mounted at /sys). The path must start with /.
  • mnt_point - Filesystem path where the volume should be mounted (usually auto).
  • type - The type of the filesystem on the volume. For external cards, this is usually vfat.
  • mnt_flags - Vold ignores this field and it should be set to defaults
  • fs_mgr_flags - Vold ignores any lines in the unified fstab that do not include the voldmanaged= flag in this field. This flag must be followed by a label describing the card, and a partition number or the word auto. Other possible flags are nonremovable, encryptable=sdcard, noemulatedsd, and encryptable=userdata.

An example line for a uSD host controller would be: /devices/soc0/soc.0/2100000.aips-bus/2198000.usdhc/mmc_host* auto vfat defaults voldmanaged=extsd:auto

  1. Add storage element to storage_list.xml

The device-specific storage_list.xml configuration file (found under $ANDROID_BUILD_TOP/device/gateworks/ventana/overlay/frameworks/base/core/res/res/xml/), defines the attributes and constraints of storage devices. The <StorageList> element contains one or more <storage> elements, exactly one of which should be marked primary. <storage> attributes include:

  • mountPoint: filesystem path of this mount.
  • storageDescription: string resource that describes this mount.
  • primary: true if this mount is the primary external storage.
  • removable: true if this mount has removable media, such as a physical SD card.
  • emulated: true if this mount is emulated and is backed by internal storage, possibly using a FUSE daemon.
  • mtp-reserve: number of MB of storage that MTP should reserve for free storage. Only used when mount is marked as emulated.
  • allowMassStorage: true if this mount can be shared via USB mass storage.
  • maxFileSize: maximum file size in MB.

An example <storage> element to accompany the fstab line above would be:

<storage android:mountPoint="/storage/extsd"
         android:storageDescription="@string/storage_sd_card"
         android:primary="false"
         android:removable="true" />
  1. Add mkdir calls in init.rc

In the init.rc file found under $ANDROID_BUILD_TOP/device/gateworks/ventana/ add the following lines in the on init section:

mkdir /mnt/media_rw/extsd 0766 media_rw media_rw
mkdir /storage/extsd 0766 root root
  1. Append to the SECONDARY_STORAGE var in init.rc

Defined in the same init.rc is the SECONDARY_STORAGE variable which is a : delimited list of external paths that the Android framework's MediaStore will parse. Append your storage device to this declaration line: export SECONDARY_STORAGE /storage/extsd:/storage/extsd1:/storage/udisk:/storage/udisk1:/storage/sata

  1. Add sdcard fuse service in init.rc

Towards the end of the same init.rc file is a series of service declaration lines. Adding these fuse services will emulate a case-insensitive, permissionless filesystem backed by the storage device regardless of filesystem type, as long as the filesystem is understood by the kernel. Following the same uSD example:

# virtual sdcard daemon running as media_rw (1023)
service fuse_extsd /system/bin/sdcard -u 1023 -g 1023 -w 1023 -d /mnt/media_rw/extsd /storage/extsd
    class late_start
    disabled

Security-Enhanced Linux (SELinux)

SELinux is a mandatory access control (MAC) system for the Linux OS. Sockets, Files, and Processes all have labels in SELinux. A label takes the form of user:role:type:mls_level. Rules are applied to labels and take the form allow domains types:classes permissions. The file_contexts file assigns labels to files via regular expression matches. Filesystems must be built to include SELinux filesystem attributes. The restorecon userspace application applies policies to a running kernel, which is usually done as one of the first things in system init. Android has been phasing in more robust security measures with each release. SELinux is a Linux kernel security module that provides a mechanism for supporting access control security policies, including the United States Department of Defense-style mandatory access controls (MAC). SELinux started being used for Android 3.x (Jellybean) in a permissive mode, and in enforcing mode for Android 4.x (Kitkat).

While troubleshooting it may be useful to disable SELiux which you can do in the following ways:

  • add selinux=0 to the kernel cmdline (requires CONFIG_SECURITY_SELINUX_BOOTPARAM=y in kernel config)
  • setenforce 0 on cmdline

SELinux policy files are compiled into the sepolicy which exists in the root of the ramdisk on the BOOT partition. This is created from rules defined in files in paths from BOARD_SEPOLICY_DIRS defined in BoardConfig.mk. The ventana specific policies are located in device/gateworks/ventana/sepolicy.

Additionally policies can be found in external/sepolicy which is a collection of common policy files used by Linux distros.

SELinux denials errors output as kernel error messages prefixed with "avc: ". For example:

$ adb shell su -c dmesg | grep "avc: "
[   62.658290] type=1400 audit(1443478068.109:5): avc:  denied  { setgid } for  pid=1155 comm="hostapd" capability=6  scontext=u:r:netd:s0 tcontext=u:r:netd:s0 tclass=capability permissive=0
[   62.675542] type=1400 audit(1443478068.129:6): avc:  denied  { setgid } for  pid=1155 comm="hostapd" capability=6  scontext=u:r:netd:s0 tcontext=u:r:netd:s0 tclass=capability permissive=0
[   62.692514] type=1400 audit(1443478068.149:7): avc:  denied  { add_name } for  pid=1155 comm="hostapd" name="1010" scontext=u:r:netd:s0 tcontext=u:object_r:cgroup:s0 tclass=dir permissive=0
[   62.709701] type=1400 audit(1443478068.169:8): avc:  denied  { setuid } for  pid=1155 comm="hostapd" capability=7  scontext=u:r:netd:s0 tcontext=u:r:netd:s0 tclass=capability permissive=0
  • above the 'hostapd' process exec'd by netd is trying to setgid/setuid and failed

The audit2allow tool from the policycoreutils package can take these denials and converts them into corresponding SELinux policy statements:

sudo apt-get install policycoreutils
adb shell su -c dmesg | grep "avc: " | audit2allow # show rules
adb shell su -c dmesg | grep "avc: " | audit2allow -p out/target/product/ventana/root/sepolicy # analyze against current policy

For example when the above netd/hostapd violations are run through audit2allow this shows the following additions could be made to fix the violations:

#============= netd ==============
allow netd cgroup:dir add_name;
allow netd self:capability { setuid setgid };

The ls -Z command will show you file contexts and similarly the ps -Z command will show you process contexts.

You can find the processed policies with comments detailing their source in $OUTDIR/obj/ETC/sepolicy_intermediates/policy.conf which is built from the external/sepolicy project.

During development you can rebuild the sepolicy (which verifies your rules and configuration) via mmm external/sepolicy. You can rebuild and update your ramdisk with a something like:

mmm external/sepolicy && mkbootfs out/target/product/ventana/root | minigzip > out/target/product/ventana/ramdisk.img && \
mkimage -A arm -O linux -T ramdisk -n "RAM Disk" -d out/target/product/ventana/ramdisk.img \
out/target/product/ventana/boot/boot/uramdisk.img && \
adb remount && \
adb push out/target/product/ventana/boot/boot/uramdisk.img /boot/boot/uramdisk.img && \
adb reboot

Be aware, that because this does not rebuild the system filesystem, any rule changes will not take effect without a manual restorecon <file>.

Adding New Files

The process for injecting files into a SELinux filesystem includes the following:

  1. Properly apply security labels (mentioned above) in device/gateworks/ventana/sepolicy/file_contexts
  2. Create a .te policy file under device/gateworks/ventana/sepolicy/
  3. Add the .te file to the policy list in device/gateworks/ventana/BoardConfig.mk
  4. Apply proper user.group ownership in system/core/include/private/android_file_config.h

References:

Partitions

The flash storage space on an Android device typically contains the following partitions.

  • BOOT: /boot - contains bootscript/kernel/ramdisk that boots Android init
  • RECOVERY: /recovery - contains bootscript/kernel/ramdisk that boots an Android recovery image who's function is very device/vendor specific
  • SYSTEM: /system ro - the system ROM
  • DATA: /data - user data - this is where your apps and app data are stored and where you want the most space
  • CACHE: /cache - used for various (unclear) OS caching (including downloading apps from play store)
  • MISC: /misc - a tiny partition used by recovery to stash some information away about what its doing in case the device is restarted while the OTA package is being applied
  • VENDOR: /device - for vendor specific files

The creation of the partitions is controlled by build/core/Makefile.

The mounting of the partitions is controlled by Android's init application by the mount_all command in init.rc which is passed a file containing device and mountpoint information. This is all done in the ramdisk and the mount_all is typically called from the 'on fs' hook as the last step in init.

The storage device partitioning is taken care of with whatever script you use to image android onto a specific device:

  • device/gateworks/ventana/mksdcard.sh - for block storage devices such as USB/mSATA/MMC. The partition sizes are baked into the script
  • device/gateworks/ventana/ubi/ubinize.ini - for NAND ubi volume creation of ubi image

References:

BOOT partition

The BOOT partition is very device specific and typically contains a kernel and ramdisk containing the Android init system (/sbin/init, init.rc and its includes) and processes early init until the mounting of the other filesystems. When filesystems are mounted this may be mounted to /boot

The files have on our boot partition use are:

  • 6x_bootscript-ventana - bootscript that sets up the kernel cmdline (including android specific parameters) and loads/executes kernel
  • uImage - kernel (zImage wrapped in a uboot image header)
  • imx6*gw*.dtb - kernel devicetree blobs
  • uramdisk.img - initial ramdisk (compressed cpio archive wrapped in a uboot image header)

ramdisk.img / uramdisk.img

The boot ramdisk is the initial filesystem loaded by the bootloader into memory and passed to the kernel via a kernel parameter. It is a Linux kernel initramfs or initial ramdisk (see Documentation/early-userspace/buffer-format.txt) which is based around the 'newc' or 'crc' CPIO formats and therefore can be created with the cpio utility.

It is created by build/core/Makefile using (MKBOOTFS) out/host/linux-x86/bin/mkbootfs (built from system/core/cpio/mkbootfs.c) with the following command:

mkbootfs out/target/product/ventana/root | minigzip > out/target/product/ventana/ramdisk.img

It is built from $(OUTPUT_DIR)/boot and deps are setup on all files in that dir other than prebuilt files, copied headers, generated sources, and default installed modules.

To install files onto the ramdisk make sure they get copied to the root/ directory of the product output folder:

  • from ventana.mk or imx6.mk add a file to PRODUCT_COPY_FILES destined for root/:
    PRODUCT_COPY_FILES += device/gateworks/ventana/foo:root/foo
    
  • from a module Android.mk you can set LOCAL_MODULE_PATH to TARGET_ROOT_OUT to put it in root/:
    LOCAL_MODULE_PATH := $(TARGET_ROOT_OUT)
    

If changes are made you may need to remove the images to force dependency checks prior to rebuilding:

rm -rf out/target/product/ventana/boot/boot/uramdisk.img \
 out/target/product/ventana/ramdisk.img
make

A typical list of files on a ramdisk:

  • default.prop
  • proc - mountpoint
  • dev - mountpoint
  • init.rc - config for init
  • init - android init application
  • sys - mountpoint
  • init.goldfish.rc
  • sbin/adbd - android debug bridge daemon
  • system - mountpoint
  • data mountpoint

Because its loaded by uboot, a uImage header is wrapped around it by 'mkimage' creating uramdisk.img from ramdisk.img. This is not part of the core/build system but instead done vi device/gateworks/ramdisk.mk

To extract a ramdisk.img from a uramdisk.img you need to take off the 64-byte U-Boot header:

dd if=uramdisk.img of=ramdisk.img bs=1 skip=64

To extract a ramdisk.img (which is a gzipped CPIO archive):

mkdir root; cd root; zcat ../ramdisk.img | cpio -i

To list the contents of a ramdisk.img (which is a gzipped CPIO archive):

zcat ramdisk.img | cpio -t

To create a ramdisk.img from a directory:

find . | cpio -o -H newc -O ../ramdisk.cpio; gzip -f ../ramdisk.cpio; mv ../ramdisk.cpio.gz ../ramdisk.img

To add a U-Boot header to a ramdisk.img:

mkimage -A arm -O linux -T ramdisk -n "RAM Disk" -d ramdisk.img uramdisk.img

A nice one-liner for re-packaging a uramdisk.img from out/target/product/ventana/root and pushing it to a target over adb:

mkbootfs out/target/product/ventana/root | minigzip > out/target/product/ventana/ramdisk.img && \
mkimage -A arm -O linux -T ramdisk -n "RAM Disk" -d out/target/product/ventana/ramdisk.img \
out/target/product/ventana/boot/boot/uramdisk.img && \
adb remount
adb push out/target/product/ventana/boot/boot/uramdisk.img /boot/boot/uramdisk.img && \
adb reboot

RECOVERY partition

The recovery partition is very device specific and works the same way as the BOOT partition in order to boot a system with some sort of recovery tools or mechanism for restoring a system ROM. Typically this works by booting this instead of BOOT if the user is holding a key down (usually home+power on a mobile device) during powerup and typically (in the case of phones at least) presents the user with a very rudimentary text based menu using vol up/down and power button to move and select menu items allowing you to do things like:

  • erase cache
  • create backups
  • install ROM's

A recovery.img is a bootable image with the same layout/format as the boot image (see above).

Typically the ramdisk will have a few more files such as graphics resources and a different init script/app.

SYSTEM partition

The SYSTEM partition (ext4 for block devs, ubifs for NAND devs) is mounted to /system read-only and contains the base Android OS minus installed apps and data (which go to the DATA partition mounted read-write to /data). This is what is considered the Android ROM.

This is built from core/build/Makefile by creating a ramdisk image of out/target/product/<product>/system. The permissions of the files in /system is controlled by system/core/include/private/android_filesystem_config.h (do not forget to set permissions here for new files or at least check that they are configured properly through wildcards)

The dependencies on rebuilding system.img are the files in $(PRODUCT_OUT)/installed-files.txt

To add files use PRODUCT_COPY_FILES with a destination of system/:

PRODUCT_COPY_FILES += device/gateworks/ventana/foo:system/foo

The system partition uses an ext4 filesystem image system.img, created using a helper script 'out/host/linux-x86/bin/mkuserimg.sh <sourcedir> <output-file> ext4 <mountpoint> <size> <fc>' which does the following:

make_ext4fs  -S out/target/product/ventana/root/file_contexts -l 398458880 -a system out/target/product/ventana/obj/PACKAGING/systemimage_intermediates/system.img out/target/product/ventana/system

This in turn uses the out/host/linux-x86/bin/make_ext4fs tool built from system/extras/ext4_utils/make_ext4fs.c

make_ext4fs [ -l <len> ] [ -j <journal size> ] [ -b <block_size> ]
    [ -g <blocks per group> ] [ -i <inodes> ] [ -I <inode size> ]
    [ -L <label> ] [ -f ] [ -a <android mountpoint> ]
    [ -S file_contexts ]
    [ -z | -s ] [ -w ] [ -c ] [ -J ] [ -v ]
    <filename> [<directory>]

DATA partition

The DATA partition (ext4 for block devs, ubifs for NAND devs) is where all user apps/data/settings are stored and is mounted read/write to /data. Initially its empty and formatting it is the equivalent of a 'factory wipe' on an Android device. If you wanted to pre-install apps but allow them to be removable, you would do that here.

CACHE partition

The CACHE partition is a read/write partition (ext4 for block devs, or ubifs for NAND devs) and is a general purpose storage area. I'm not clear how usable this is by apps, or if it is only usable by the base OS and Google Apps (I have to think its usable by anything that wants it). I do know that the Play Store uses this area for temporary downloads thus if you severely limit the size you cripple the ability to download large apps. I also am not clear on the size requirements or recomendations for partitioning schemes. We size this to 512MB which I got from other IMX6 Android BSP's.

VENDOR partition

The VENDOR partition (ext4 for block devs, or ubifs for NAND devs) is mounted to /device as readonly and is apparently where vendors should put their add-on apps/drivers(kernel-modules)/etc. I'm not sure I understand the point of this vs the vendors adding them into the SYSTEM partition. This is unused by Freescale but still created with 10MB of space

MISC partition

The VENDOR partition (ext4 for block devs, or ubifs for NAND devs) is mounted to /misc as read/write and is used by recovery to stash some information away about what it's doing in case the device is restarted while the OTA package is being applied.

Android System UI Info

Some common questions and answers regarding the Android OS UI:

  1. how do I disable the 'Navigation Bar'?
    • The Navigation bar is the bar at the bottom of the screen reserved for soft buttons for back, home, and recent apps
    • You can disable it at build time for the entire OS by setting 'config_showNavigationBar' property to false in device/gateworks/ventana/overlay/frameworks/base/core/res/res/values/config.xml
    • You can disable within an application at runtime as well - see here
  2. Why is the Android Launch showing the dock bar on the right and the Google Search bar on the left instead of a typical top and bottom layout?
    • This has to do with the Launcher application layout configuration. By default its configured to use this layout if the smallest width is not at least 720dp (Device Independent Pixels) which is a function of your resolution (which Android obtains from the Linux framebuffer info) and the defined dpi (declared in ro.sf_lcd_density in the init script)

Android Touchscreen calibration

The Android AOSP code does not have any built-in support for x/y point calibration which is often needed for touchscreen hardware. This means that touchscreen controller drivers must calibrate the points before sending them to the Linux input subsystem.

In order to avoid placing similar calibration code in various touchscreen drivers Gateworks added basic 5point calibration support to the Android InputReader class (commit). If you are using a touchscreen not officially supported by Gateworks you should manually calibrate by doing the following:

  • boot to Android with a touchscreen driver providing linux input events (Note that may need an Input Device Configuration (IDC) file)
  • build and install the TSCalibration2.apk. For example:
    mmm packages/apps/TSCalibration2/
    adb install out/target/product/ventana/system/priv-app/TSCalibration2.apk
    adb shell "mkdir /data/misc/tscal; chown system.misc /data/misc/tscal; chmod 771 /data/misc/tscal"
    
    • see below regarding how to enable ADB for a development host without needing touchscreen access
  • launch TSCalibration2 and perform the 5 point calibration
    adb shell am start -a android.intent.action.MAIN -n org.zeroxlab.util.tscal/.TSCalibration
    # send an ESCAPE key to escape out of the Launcher's first boot help
    adb shell input keyevent 82
    
    • to unlock the screen and dismiss any first-boot help dialogs from Launcher you will likely need to temporarily install a USB mouse or use the input shell command to send specific key events
  • sync the filesystem and powercycle
    sync
    
    • if the /data/misc/tscal/pointercal file existed at bootup it will be re-read on change and you do not need to restart

References:

Android shell

Handy commands you can enter via the shell over adb or serial console (Note you can use 'adb shell <command>' to execute shell commands over the Android Debug Bridge):

  • input:
    • send power button event:
      input keyevent 26
      
    • unlock screen
      input keyevent 82
      
  • pm (package management):
    • display installed packages
      pm list packages -f
      
    • clear app data
      pm clear <packagename>
      

Using the Android build system

The Android build system consists of a set of makefiles and scripts that can build the entire OS image or build specific directories at a time.

See also:

Build environment setup

In order to use the build system you must source the scripts into your shell environment (commonly referred to as 'activating the shell'). This must be done for each and every shell you wish to build with:

# activate shell for building Android OS
. ./build/env_setup.sh

Secondly, you must select a target device and BUILDTYPE (one of eng, user, or userdebug). For the Gateworks ventana you would use 'ventana-eng', or 'ventana-user' for example:

# configure for building User build for Ventana
lunch ventana-user

Build shell commands

Once in an activated shell (see above) you can use the following common aliases to build:

Make Targets - Here is a list of different make targets you can use to build different parts of the system:

  • make - build OS
  • make clean - clean everything
  • make dist - build OTA and dist files in DIST_OUT directory (defaults to out/dist)
  • make modules - show a list of submodules that can be built by themselves
  • make <local_module> - make a specific module by name (not the directory of the module but the name assigned by LOCAL_MODULE - use 'make modules' to show a list)
  • make clean-<local_module> - clean a specific module

Helper macros and functions - There are some helper macros and functions that are installed when you source envsetup.sh. They are documented at the top of envesetup.sh, but here is information about a few of them:

  • croot - change directory to the top of the tree
  • m - execute 'make' from the top of the tree (even if your current directory is somewhere else)
  • mm - builds all of the modules in the current directory
  • mmm <dir1> ... - build all of the modules in the supplied directories
  • cgrep <pattern> - grep on all local C/C++ files
  • jgrep <pattern> - grep on all local Java files
  • resgrep <pattern> - grep on all local res/*.xml files
  • godir <filename> - go to the directory containing a file

Modules and Android.mk

Android modules are projects in the build tree that contain an Android.mk file. These are scanned by the build system. Each Android.mk file declares one or more modules by defining a few vars:

  • LOCAL_MODULE: module name
  • LOCAL_MODULE_TAGS: defines which build variants this module should be installed in. (see here). Use 'user' for final build only, 'eng' for eng build only, 'optional' for all (technically only if the module is listed in the PRODUCT_PACKAGES). You can remove this completely to make it not built at all.
  • LOCAL_MODULE_PATH: the directory where to install compiled objects (TARGET_OUT_SHARED_LIBARIES would be the 'lib' subdir in the system folder)
  • LOCAL-SRC_FILES: the *.c files
  • LOCAL_C_INCLUDES: additional include dirs (relative to topdir)
  • LOCAL_SHARED_LIBARIES: names of libs to include (like liblog, libcutils, libtinyalsa, libdl, etc)
  • if building a *.so 'include $(BUILD_SHARED_LIBARY)'

see also:

Conditional builds

It is common to wrap the modules around ifdefs to conditionally enable it based on defines from BoardConfig.mk. For example the Freescale ALSA module for i.MX in hardware/imx/alsa/Android.mk:

ifeq ($(strip $(BOARD_USES_ALSA_AUDIO)),true)

LOCAL_PATH := $(call my-dir)

include $(CLEAR_VARS)
LOCAL_MODULE := audio.primary.$(TARGET_BOARD_PLATFORM)
LOCAL_MODULE_PATH := $(TARGET_OUT_SHARED_LIBRARIES)/hw
LOCAL_SRC_FILES := tinyalsa_hal.c
LOCAL_C_INCLUDES += \
        external/tinyalsa/include \
        system/media/audio_utils/include \
        system/media/audio_effects/include
LOCAL_SHARED_LIBRARIES := liblog libcutils libtinyalsa libaudioutils libdl
LOCAL_MODULE_TAGS := optional
include $(BUILD_SHARED_LIBRARY)

endif

Install data

If you wish to create a module that copies data files not built from source then you can eliminate the LOCAL_C_INCLUDES and LOCAL_SHARED_LIBRARIES and include $(BUILD_PREBUILT) such as:

LOCAL_PATH := $(call my-dir)

include $(CLEAR_VARS)
LOCAL_MODULE       := wpa_supplicant_overlay.conf
LOCAL_MODULE_TAGS  := optional
LOCAL_MODULE_CLASS := ETC
LOCAL_SRC_FILES    := $(LOCAL_MODULE)
LOCAL_MODULE_PATH  := $(TARGET_OUT_ETC)/wifi
include $(BUILD_PREBUILT)
  • example from device/fsl/common/wifi/Android.mk

Reference:

Install pre-built application (APK)

An APK (Android application PacKage) is an application file ready for installation in an Android device. It is a compressed ZIP archive in the JAR format and is what is distributed to Android users for installation in their smartphones and tablets.

If you have APK's that you wish to pre-install you can do so by creating an Android.mk file that installs the apk to the system partition by including the $(BUILD_PREBUILT) make file.

Example Android.mk:

LOCAL_PATH := $(call my-dir)

include $(CLEAR_VARS)
LOCAL_MODULE_TAGS := optional
LOCAL_MODULE := MyApp
LOCAL_SRC_FILES := myapp.apk
LOCAL_MODULE_CLASS := APPS
LOCAL_MODULE_SUFFIX := $(COMMON_ANDROID_PACKAGE_SUFFIX)
# tell dexopt not to try resigning the apks
LOCAL_CERTIFICATE := PRESIGNED
include $(BUILD_PREBUILT)

Building a stand-alone-app within the Android build system

If you are developing your own Android application, you can built it easily in the android BSP directory and use adb to quickly update it on the target.

For example, on your development host in the Gateworks Android BSP directory:

# activate your shell
source build/envsetup.sh
# configure build type
lunch ventana-eng
# rebuild your app (replace external/can-test with the directory to your app containing an Android.mk)
mmm external/can-test/

Note that if your application is fairly self-contained and not tightly coupled with the OS, you may wish to use Android Studio to develop it outside of the Android OS build system. See Android/AppDevelopment for more info.

Android Hello World Executable C File

As a full example consider a simple 'helloworld' application.

  1. Create helloworld.c file (create a helloworld directory in the external directory)
    • external/helloworld/helloworld.c
      #include <stdio.h>
      #include <stdlib.h>
      
      
      int main(int argc, char **argv)
      {
              printf("Hello World \n");
              return 0;
      }
      
      
  1. Create an Android.mk file
    • external/helloworld/Android.mk
      LOCAL_PATH := $(call my-dir)
      
      PRIVATE_LOCAL_CFLAGS := -O2 -g -W -Wall
      
      include $(CLEAR_VARS)
      
      LOCAL_SRC_FILES := helloworld.c
      LOCAL_MODULE := helloworld
      LOCAL_MODULE_TAGS := optional
      LOCAL_C_INCLUDES := $(LOCAL_PATH)/include/
      LOCAL_CFLAGS := $(PRIVATE_LOCAL_CFLAGS)
      LOCAL_STATIC_LIBRARIES := libcutils libc
      
      include $(BUILD_EXECUTABLE)
      
  1. Compile the file (using an activated shell - Note: A full build must have been compiled prior to this...)
    • compile by directory (or you could compile by module via 'make helloworld' however this takes longer as it needs to scan the directories for module names)
      $ mmm external/helloworld
      ============================================
      PLATFORM_VERSION_CODENAME=REL
      PLATFORM_VERSION=4.4.3
      TARGET_PRODUCT=ventana
      TARGET_BUILD_VARIANT=user
      TARGET_BUILD_TYPE=release
      TARGET_BUILD_APPS=
      TARGET_ARCH=arm
      TARGET_ARCH_VARIANT=armv7-a-neon
      TARGET_CPU_VARIANT=cortex-a9
      HOST_ARCH=x86
      HOST_OS=linux
      HOST_OS_EXTRA=Linux-3.13.0-43-generic-x86_64-with-Ubuntu-14.04-trusty
      HOST_BUILD_TYPE=release
      BUILD_ID=2.0.0
      OUT_DIR=out
      ============================================
      .....
      
      Import includes file: out/target/product/ventana/obj/EXECUTABLES/helloworld_intermediates/import_includes
      target thumb C: helloworld <= external/helloworld/helloworld.c
      external/helloworld/helloworld.c: In function 'main':
      external/helloworld/helloworld.c:5:14: warning: unused parameter 'argc' [-Wunused-parameter]
      external/helloworld/helloworld.c:5:27: warning: unused parameter 'argv' [-Wunused-parameter]
      target Executable: helloworld (out/target/product/ventana/obj/EXECUTABLES/helloworld_intermediates/LINKED/helloworld)
      target Symbolic: helloworld (out/target/product/ventana/symbols/system/bin/helloworld)
      Export includes file: external/helloworld/Android.mk -- out/target/product/ventana/obj/EXECUTABLES/helloworld_intermediates/export_includes
      target Strip: helloworld (out/target/product/ventana/obj/EXECUTABLES/helloworld_intermediates/helloworld)
      Install: out/target/product/ventana/system/bin/helloworld
      
  1. Copy exectuable file over to running Android system and run it. For example, the executable was put in the location as defined by the output of the log above: out/target/product/ventana/obj/EXECUTABLES/helloworld_intermediates/LINKED/helloworld. An example location to put the file on a running Android system on the Gateworks SBC would be /data/system. Use wget or use adb push ADB Push Example
    • use wget on target
      root@ventana:/data/system # busybox wget http://xxx.xx.xx.11/helloworld              
      Connecting to 172.24.10.11 (172.24.10.11:80)
      helloworld               100% |*******************************| 87972   0:00:00 ETA
      root@ventana:/data/system # chmod 777 helloworld                                     
      root@ventana:/data/system # ./helloworld                               
      Hello World 
      

Customizing your target device using overlays

The Android build system uses an overlay system that allows files to be replaced on a per-target device basis. This is commonly done to do things like adjust layout specific resources or background wallpapers for a specific device.

There are two types of overaly directories that affect a product:

  • PRODUCT_PACKAGE_OVERLAYS: used by a particular product
  • DEVICE_PACKAGE_OVERLAYS: used several products that share a common device model The PRODUCT_PACKAGE_OVERLAYS will override the DEVICE_PACKAGE_OVERLAYS if they contain same resources.

If your product's .mk file defines one of these, any resource file present there will override the resource from the original directory.

Some examples of where the Gateworks Ventana target uses this:

  • device/gateworks/ventana/overlay/frameworks/base/core/res/res/values/config.xml - override some of the framework base configuration such as to specify eth0 as the ethernet device to monitor link state on for the DHCP service
  • device/gateworks/ventana/overlay/packages/apps/Settings/res/values/config.xml - add additional strings used for Settings application

Android Debug Bridge (ADB)

Android uses a client/server application for remote debugging referred to as the Android Debug Bridge or adb. This can run over a variety of interconnects including serial, USB, and TCP/IP.

Common useful adb usages:

  • adb shell - open a shell on target
  • adb reboot bootloader ;# reboot to bootloader
  • adb reboot recovery ;# reboot to recovery
  • adb push <local> <remote> ;# copy file to device (/mnt/sdcard is sdcard)
  • adb pull <remote> <local>
  • adb remount - remote /system r/w
  • adb devices - list devices
  • adb logcat -s <tag> ;# show log for elements having <tag>
  • adb logcat -s <tag1>:* <tag2>:* ;# show log for both tag1 and tag2
  • adb shell screencap -p | perl -pe 's/\x0D\x0A/\x0A/g' > screen.png # take a screenshot

ADB security

The ADB Daemon (adbd) typically operates with security in place (ro.adb.secure=1) such that the android target device must grant permissions for devices to operate over ADB.

Notes:

  • ro.adb.secure=1 # enables security"
  • ~/.android/adbkey.pub is your public key on your Linux development host
  • /data/misc/adb/adb_keys is where they are stored on android target

Granting access for a specific host:

  • When the Android device is unlocked, any connection to a development host running adbd will throw up a dialog asking if you want to allow access (you can check a box to make it permanent)
  • If you have serial console, you can add access manually:
    1. Get your public key from your development host (*This key is unique for your system - this is only an example*):
      $ cat ~/.android/adbkey.pub 
      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 tharvey@tharvey-gwt.0.0-ga
      
    2. append it to /data/misc/adb/adb_keys via shell on target Android device over serial-console
      root@ventana:/ # echo "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 tharvey@tharvey-gwtgateworks" >> /data/misc/adb/adb_keys
      

Reference:

Installing adb on PC

You have several options for installing adb on a Linux / Mac / Windows PC:

  • install from a downloadable package
    • Ubuntu 13.10 and above:
      sudo apt-get install android-tools-adb
      
    • Ubuntu 12.04, 11.10, 11.04 - the latest android tools package is 4.1.1 which has adb v1.0.29 which will does not support the per device authentication mechanism added in Jellybean 4.2+. You can update to the v4.2.2 package containing adb v1.0.31 using a community ppa from https://launchpad.net/~nilarimogard/+archive/webupd8:
      sudo add-apt-repository ppa:nilarimogard/webupd8
      sudo apt-get update
      sudo apt-get install android-tools-adb android-tools-fastboot
      
      • if you have updated be sure to restart the adb server
  • install the Android SDK
  • build from source

Common issues:

  • adb devices shows device as 'offline': you have not authenticated the device - go to the target device, unlock it and select 'ok' to the authentication dialog
  • adb devices shows device as 'unauthorized': you need to enable Settings->Developer options->USB debugging
  • adb devices shows device as '???????????? no permissions: this is a usb device permissions issue - restart server as root: adb kill-server; sudo adb start-server

adb over USB OTG

Probably the most common use of adb is to use it over a USB OTG connection. For example, you can connect a PC Host USB port to the USB OTG (microUSB) connector on a Ventana board.

Note that to use adb over USB OTG to communicate with an Android Jellybean (4.2+) target device you must:

  • enable USB debugging: Developer options -> USB debugging
  • Authenticate the host device (your PC): When you connect and are not on the lockscreen, you will be presented with a USB Debugging Authentication dialog. You must select 'OK' to allow debugging and you can optionally check the box to remember this device so you don't have to authenticate it every time (in the Developer options -> USB debugging menu you can also revoke prior remembered authentications)

adb over TCP/IP network

To use adb over TCP/IP networking you need to configure the port on the target device either via a serial console, or by using an adb shell from another method such as usb.

On Android Target Device:

setprop service.adb.tcp.port 5555
stop adbd
start adbd

On host PC:

adb connect <ip>
# authenticate the request on the target device
adb logcat ...

Note that an authentication dialog will appear on the Android target device (as long as it not on the lockscreen) after the adb connect - be sure to authenticate or the device will be offline.

References:

Target device filesystem manipulation via adb

If you wish to manipulate files on the target device you must make sure that the filesystem is mounted with read/write permissions.

For the 'system' partition you can do this using the 'adb remount' command, however note that this only works for 'eng' builds

Using adb to push your code to your target

To push a newly built file to target (ie the cantest app):

# push the newly built exe to the target (make sure you push it somewhere you have write permissions for)
adb push out/target/product/ventana/system/bin/cantest /data
adb reboot
  • Note that adb push pushes the file contents AND the file permissions from the development host to the target. Therefore, bue sure to check the file permissions once onto the target.

Note that filesystem permissions apply, so you need to make sure you are pushing to a filesystem that is writable. The /data partition for example is writable, but by default /system is not. If you wish to remount /system read/write you can use adb remount before pushing:

adb remount

Note that adb can also sync your development output directory with your target which is very handy if you want to push all changes (providing your using the android build system to properly build and install files into the output directory):

adb remount
adb sync
adb reboot

Note that {{adb sync}}} only works for the system and data partition. If you wish to sync udpdates to the boot partition (kernel, bootscript, dtbs, ramdisk) you can do that with the following command:

adb remount
for i in `ls out/target/product/ventana/boot/boot`; do \
  adb push out/target/product/ventana/boot/boot/$i /boot/boot; \
done
adb reboot
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