| Android Init Language |
| --------------------- |
| |
| The Android Init Language consists of five broad classes of statements: |
| Actions, Commands, Services, Options, and Imports. |
| |
| All of these are line-oriented, consisting of tokens separated by |
| whitespace. The c-style backslash escapes may be used to insert |
| whitespace into a token. Double quotes may also be used to prevent |
| whitespace from breaking text into multiple tokens. The backslash, |
| when it is the last character on a line, may be used for line-folding. |
| |
| Lines which start with a # (leading whitespace allowed) are comments. |
| |
| Actions and Services implicitly declare a new section. All commands |
| or options belong to the section most recently declared. Commands |
| or options before the first section are ignored. |
| |
| Services have unique names. If a second Service is defined |
| with the same name as an existing one, it is ignored and an error |
| message is logged. |
| |
| |
| Init .rc Files |
| -------------- |
| The init language is used in plain text files that take the .rc file |
| extension. There are typically multiple of these in multiple |
| locations on the system, described below. |
| |
| /init.rc is the primary .rc file and is loaded by the init executable |
| at the beginning of its execution. It is responsible for the initial |
| set up of the system. |
| |
| Devices that mount /system, /vendor through the first stage mount mechanism |
| load all of the files contained within the |
| /{system,vendor,odm}/etc/init/ directories immediately after loading |
| the primary /init.rc. This is explained in more details in the |
| Imports section of this file. |
| |
| Legacy devices without the first stage mount mechanism do the following: |
| 1. /init.rc imports /init.${ro.hardware}.rc which is the primary |
| vendor supplied .rc file. |
| 2. During the mount\_all command, the init executable loads all of the |
| files contained within the /{system,vendor,odm}/etc/init/ directories. |
| These directories are intended for all Actions and Services used after |
| file system mounting. |
| |
| One may specify paths in the mount\_all command line to have it import |
| .rc files at the specified paths instead of the default ones listed above. |
| This is primarily for supporting factory mode and other non-standard boot |
| modes. The three default paths should be used for the normal boot process. |
| |
| The intention of these directories is: |
| |
| 1. /system/etc/init/ is for core system items such as |
| SurfaceFlinger, MediaService, and logcatd. |
| 2. /vendor/etc/init/ is for SoC vendor items such as actions or |
| daemons needed for core SoC functionality. |
| 3. /odm/etc/init/ is for device manufacturer items such as |
| actions or daemons needed for motion sensor or other peripheral |
| functionality. |
| |
| All services whose binaries reside on the system, vendor, or odm |
| partitions should have their service entries placed into a |
| corresponding init .rc file, located in the /etc/init/ |
| directory of the partition where they reside. There is a build |
| system macro, LOCAL\_INIT\_RC, that handles this for developers. Each |
| init .rc file should additionally contain any actions associated with |
| its service. |
| |
| An example is the logcatd.rc and Android.mk files located in the |
| system/core/logcat directory. The LOCAL\_INIT\_RC macro in the |
| Android.mk file places logcatd.rc in /system/etc/init/ during the |
| build process. Init loads logcatd.rc during the mount\_all command and |
| allows the service to be run and the action to be queued when |
| appropriate. |
| |
| This break up of init .rc files according to their daemon is preferred |
| to the previously used monolithic init .rc files. This approach |
| ensures that the only service entries that init reads and the only |
| actions that init performs correspond to services whose binaries are in |
| fact present on the file system, which was not the case with the |
| monolithic init .rc files. This additionally will aid in merge |
| conflict resolution when multiple services are added to the system, as |
| each one will go into a separate file. |
| |
| There are two options "early" and "late" in mount\_all command |
| which can be set after optional paths. With "--early" set, the |
| init executable will skip mounting entries with "latemount" flag |
| and triggering fs encryption state event. With "--late" set, |
| init executable will only mount entries with "latemount" flag but skip |
| importing rc files. By default, no option is set, and mount\_all will |
| process all entries in the given fstab. |
| |
| Actions |
| ------- |
| Actions are named sequences of commands. Actions have a trigger which |
| is used to determine when the action is executed. When an event |
| occurs which matches an action's trigger, that action is added to |
| the tail of a to-be-executed queue (unless it is already on the |
| queue). |
| |
| Each action in the queue is dequeued in sequence and each command in |
| that action is executed in sequence. Init handles other activities |
| (device creation/destruction, property setting, process restarting) |
| "between" the execution of the commands in activities. |
| |
| Actions take the form of: |
| |
| on <trigger> [&& <trigger>]* |
| <command> |
| <command> |
| <command> |
| |
| Actions are added to the queue and executed based on the order that |
| the file that contains them was parsed (see the Imports section), then |
| sequentially within an individual file. |
| |
| For example if a file contains: |
| |
| on boot |
| setprop a 1 |
| setprop b 2 |
| |
| on boot && property:true=true |
| setprop c 1 |
| setprop d 2 |
| |
| on boot |
| setprop e 1 |
| setprop f 2 |
| |
| Then when the `boot` trigger occurs and assuming the property `true` |
| equals `true`, then the order of the commands executed will be: |
| |
| setprop a 1 |
| setprop b 2 |
| setprop c 1 |
| setprop d 2 |
| setprop e 1 |
| setprop f 2 |
| |
| |
| Services |
| -------- |
| Services are programs which init launches and (optionally) restarts |
| when they exit. Services take the form of: |
| |
| service <name> <pathname> [ <argument> ]* |
| <option> |
| <option> |
| ... |
| |
| |
| Options |
| ------- |
| Options are modifiers to services. They affect how and when init |
| runs the service. |
| |
| `console [<console>]` |
| > This service needs a console. The optional second parameter chooses a |
| specific console instead of the default. The default "/dev/console" can |
| be changed by setting the "androidboot.console" kernel parameter. In |
| all cases the leading "/dev/" should be omitted, so "/dev/tty0" would be |
| specified as just "console tty0". |
| |
| `critical` |
| > This is a device-critical service. If it exits more than four times in |
| four minutes, the device will reboot into recovery mode. |
| |
| `disabled` |
| > This service will not automatically start with its class. |
| It must be explicitly started by name. |
| |
| `setenv <name> <value>` |
| > Set the environment variable _name_ to _value_ in the launched process. |
| |
| `socket <name> <type> <perm> [ <user> [ <group> [ <seclabel> ] ] ]` |
| > Create a unix domain socket named /dev/socket/_name_ and pass its fd to the |
| launched process. _type_ must be "dgram", "stream" or "seqpacket". User and |
| group default to 0. 'seclabel' is the SELinux security context for the |
| socket. It defaults to the service security context, as specified by |
| seclabel or computed based on the service executable file security context. |
| For native executables see libcutils android\_get\_control\_socket(). |
| |
| `file <path> <type>` |
| > Open a file path and pass its fd to the launched process. _type_ must be |
| "r", "w" or "rw". For native executables see libcutils |
| android\_get\_control\_file(). |
| |
| `user <username>` |
| > Change to 'username' before exec'ing this service. |
| Currently defaults to root. (??? probably should default to nobody) |
| As of Android M, processes should use this option even if they |
| require Linux capabilities. Previously, to acquire Linux |
| capabilities, a process would need to run as root, request the |
| capabilities, then drop to its desired uid. There is a new |
| mechanism through fs\_config that allows device manufacturers to add |
| Linux capabilities to specific binaries on a file system that should |
| be used instead. This mechanism is described on |
| <http://source.android.com/devices/tech/config/filesystem.html>. When |
| using this new mechanism, processes can use the user option to |
| select their desired uid without ever running as root. |
| As of Android O, processes can also request capabilities directly in their .rc |
| files. See the "capabilities" option below. |
| |
| `group <groupname> [ <groupname>\* ]` |
| > Change to 'groupname' before exec'ing this service. Additional |
| groupnames beyond the (required) first one are used to set the |
| supplemental groups of the process (via setgroups()). |
| Currently defaults to root. (??? probably should default to nobody) |
| |
| `capabilities <capability> [ <capability>\* ]` |
| > Set capabilities when exec'ing this service. 'capability' should be a Linux |
| capability without the "CAP\_" prefix, like "NET\_ADMIN" or "SETPCAP". See |
| http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man7/capabilities.7.html for a list of Linux |
| capabilities. |
| |
| `seclabel <seclabel>` |
| > Change to 'seclabel' before exec'ing this service. |
| Primarily for use by services run from the rootfs, e.g. ueventd, adbd. |
| Services on the system partition can instead use policy-defined transitions |
| based on their file security context. |
| If not specified and no transition is defined in policy, defaults to the init context. |
| |
| `oneshot` |
| > Do not restart the service when it exits. |
| |
| `class <name> [ <name>\* ]` |
| > Specify class names for the service. All services in a |
| named class may be started or stopped together. A service |
| is in the class "default" if one is not specified via the |
| class option. Additional classnames beyond the (required) first |
| one are used to group services. |
| `animation class` |
| > 'animation' class should include all services necessary for both |
| boot animation and shutdown animation. As these services can be |
| launched very early during bootup and can run until the last stage |
| of shutdown, access to /data partition is not guaranteed. These |
| services can check files under /data but it should not keep files opened |
| and should work when /data is not available. |
| |
| `onrestart` |
| > Execute a Command (see below) when service restarts. |
| |
| `writepid <file> [ <file>\* ]` |
| > Write the child's pid to the given files when it forks. Meant for |
| cgroup/cpuset usage. If no files under /dev/cpuset/ are specified, but the |
| system property 'ro.cpuset.default' is set to a non-empty cpuset name (e.g. |
| '/foreground'), then the pid is written to file /dev/cpuset/_cpuset\_name_/tasks. |
| |
| `priority <priority>` |
| > Scheduling priority of the service process. This value has to be in range |
| -20 to 19. Default priority is 0. Priority is set via setpriority(). |
| |
| `namespace <pid|mnt>` |
| > Enter a new PID or mount namespace when forking the service. |
| |
| `oom_score_adjust <value>` |
| > Sets the child's /proc/self/oom\_score\_adj to the specified value, |
| which must range from -1000 to 1000. |
| |
| `memcg.swappiness <value>` |
| > Sets the child's memory.swappiness to the specified value (only if memcg is mounted), |
| which must be equal or greater than 0. |
| |
| `memcg.soft_limit_in_bytes <value>` |
| > Sets the child's memory.soft_limit_in_bytes to the specified value (only if memcg is mounted), |
| which must be equal or greater than 0. |
| |
| `memcg.limit_in_bytes <value>` |
| > Sets the child's memory.limit_in_bytes to the specified value (only if memcg is mounted), |
| which must be equal or greater than 0. |
| |
| `shutdown <shutdown_behavior>` |
| > Set shutdown behavior of the service process. When this is not specified, |
| the service is killed during shutdown process by using SIGTERM and SIGKILL. |
| The service with shutdown_behavior of "critical" is not killed during shutdown |
| until shutdown times out. When shutdown times out, even services tagged with |
| "shutdown critical" will be killed. When the service tagged with "shutdown critical" |
| is not running when shut down starts, it will be started. |
| |
| |
| Triggers |
| -------- |
| Triggers are strings which can be used to match certain kinds of |
| events and used to cause an action to occur. |
| |
| Triggers are subdivided into event triggers and property triggers. |
| |
| Event triggers are strings triggered by the 'trigger' command or by |
| the QueueEventTrigger() function within the init executable. These |
| take the form of a simple string such as 'boot' or 'late-init'. |
| |
| Property triggers are strings triggered when a named property changes |
| value to a given new value or when a named property changes value to |
| any new value. These take the form of 'property:<name>=<value>' and |
| 'property:<name>=\*' respectively. Property triggers are additionally |
| evaluated and triggered accordingly during the initial boot phase of |
| init. |
| |
| An Action can have multiple property triggers but may only have one |
| event trigger. |
| |
| For example: |
| `on boot && property:a=b` defines an action that is only executed when |
| the 'boot' event trigger happens and the property a equals b. |
| |
| `on property:a=b && property:c=d` defines an action that is executed |
| at three times: |
| |
| 1. During initial boot if property a=b and property c=d. |
| 2. Any time that property a transitions to value b, while property c already equals d. |
| 3. Any time that property c transitions to value d, while property a already equals b. |
| |
| |
| Commands |
| -------- |
| |
| `bootchart [start|stop]` |
| > Start/stop bootcharting. These are present in the default init.rc files, |
| but bootcharting is only active if the file /data/bootchart/enabled exists; |
| otherwise bootchart start/stop are no-ops. |
| |
| `chmod <octal-mode> <path>` |
| > Change file access permissions. |
| |
| `chown <owner> <group> <path>` |
| > Change file owner and group. |
| |
| `class_start <serviceclass>` |
| > Start all services of the specified class if they are |
| not already running. See the start entry for more information on |
| starting services. |
| |
| `class_stop <serviceclass>` |
| > Stop and disable all services of the specified class if they are |
| currently running. |
| |
| `class_reset <serviceclass>` |
| > Stop all services of the specified class if they are |
| currently running, without disabling them. They can be restarted |
| later using `class_start`. |
| |
| `class_restart <serviceclass>` |
| > Restarts all services of the specified class. |
| |
| `copy <src> <dst>` |
| > Copies a file. Similar to write, but useful for binary/large |
| amounts of data. |
| Regarding to the src file, copying from symbolic link file and world-writable |
| or group-writable files are not allowed. |
| Regarding to the dst file, the default mode created is 0600 if it does not |
| exist. And it will be truncated if dst file is a normal regular file and |
| already exists. |
| |
| `domainname <name>` |
| > Set the domain name. |
| |
| `enable <servicename>` |
| > Turns a disabled service into an enabled one as if the service did not |
| specify disabled. |
| If the service is supposed to be running, it will be started now. |
| Typically used when the bootloader sets a variable that indicates a specific |
| service should be started when needed. E.g. |
| |
| on property:ro.boot.myfancyhardware=1 |
| enable my_fancy_service_for_my_fancy_hardware |
| |
| `exec [ <seclabel> [ <user> [ <group>\* ] ] ] -- <command> [ <argument>\* ]` |
| > Fork and execute command with the given arguments. The command starts |
| after "--" so that an optional security context, user, and supplementary |
| groups can be provided. No other commands will be run until this one |
| finishes. _seclabel_ can be a - to denote default. Properties are expanded |
| within _argument_. |
| Init halts executing commands until the forked process exits. |
| |
| `exec_start <service>` |
| > Start a given service and halt the processing of additional init commands |
| until it returns. The command functions similarly to the `exec` command, |
| but uses an existing service definition in place of the exec argument vector. |
| |
| `export <name> <value>` |
| > Set the environment variable _name_ equal to _value_ in the |
| global environment (which will be inherited by all processes |
| started after this command is executed) |
| |
| `hostname <name>` |
| > Set the host name. |
| |
| `ifup <interface>` |
| > Bring the network interface _interface_ online. |
| |
| `insmod [-f] <path> [<options>]` |
| > Install the module at _path_ with the specified options. |
| -f: force installation of the module even if the version of the running kernel |
| and the version of the kernel for which the module was compiled do not match. |
| |
| `load_all_props` |
| > Loads properties from /system, /vendor, et cetera. |
| This is included in the default init.rc. |
| |
| `load_persist_props` |
| > Loads persistent properties when /data has been decrypted. |
| This is included in the default init.rc. |
| |
| `loglevel <level>` |
| > Sets the kernel log level to level. Properties are expanded within _level_. |
| |
| `mkdir <path> [mode] [owner] [group]` |
| > Create a directory at _path_, optionally with the given mode, owner, and |
| group. If not provided, the directory is created with permissions 755 and |
| owned by the root user and root group. If provided, the mode, owner and group |
| will be updated if the directory exists already. |
| |
| `mount_all <fstab> [ <path> ]\* [--<option>]` |
| > Calls fs\_mgr\_mount\_all on the given fs\_mgr-format fstab and imports .rc files |
| at the specified paths (e.g., on the partitions just mounted) with optional |
| options "early" and "late". |
| Refer to the section of "Init .rc Files" for detail. |
| |
| `mount <type> <device> <dir> [ <flag>\* ] [<options>]` |
| > Attempt to mount the named device at the directory _dir_ |
| _flag_s include "ro", "rw", "remount", "noatime", ... |
| _options_ include "barrier=1", "noauto\_da\_alloc", "discard", ... as |
| a comma separated string, eg: barrier=1,noauto\_da\_alloc |
| |
| `restart <service>` |
| > Stops and restarts a running service, does nothing if the service is currently |
| restarting, otherwise, it just starts the service. |
| |
| `restorecon <path> [ <path>\* ]` |
| > Restore the file named by _path_ to the security context specified |
| in the file\_contexts configuration. |
| Not required for directories created by the init.rc as these are |
| automatically labeled correctly by init. |
| |
| `restorecon_recursive <path> [ <path>\* ]` |
| > Recursively restore the directory tree named by _path_ to the |
| security contexts specified in the file\_contexts configuration. |
| |
| `rm <path>` |
| > Calls unlink(2) on the given path. You might want to |
| use "exec -- rm ..." instead (provided the system partition is |
| already mounted). |
| |
| `rmdir <path>` |
| > Calls rmdir(2) on the given path. |
| |
| `setprop <name> <value>` |
| > Set system property _name_ to _value_. Properties are expanded |
| within _value_. |
| |
| `setrlimit <resource> <cur> <max>` |
| > Set the rlimit for a resource. |
| |
| `start <service>` |
| > Start a service running if it is not already running. |
| Note that this is _not_ synchronous, and even if it were, there is |
| no guarantee that the operating system's scheduler will execute the |
| service sufficiently to guarantee anything about the service's status. |
| |
| > This creates an important consequence that if the service offers |
| functionality to other services, such as providing a |
| communication channel, simply starting this service before those |
| services is _not_ sufficient to guarantee that the channel has |
| been set up before those services ask for it. There must be a |
| separate mechanism to make any such guarantees. |
| |
| `stop <service>` |
| > Stop a service from running if it is currently running. |
| |
| `swapon_all <fstab>` |
| > Calls fs\_mgr\_swapon\_all on the given fstab file. |
| |
| `symlink <target> <path>` |
| > Create a symbolic link at _path_ with the value _target_ |
| |
| `sysclktz <mins_west_of_gmt>` |
| > Set the system clock base (0 if system clock ticks in GMT) |
| |
| `trigger <event>` |
| > Trigger an event. Used to queue an action from another |
| action. |
| |
| `umount <path>` |
| > Unmount the filesystem mounted at that path. |
| |
| `verity_load_state` |
| > Internal implementation detail used to load dm-verity state. |
| |
| `verity_update_state <mount-point>` |
| > Internal implementation detail used to update dm-verity state and |
| set the partition._mount-point_.verified properties used by adb remount |
| because fs\_mgr can't set them directly itself. |
| |
| `wait <path> [ <timeout> ]` |
| > Poll for the existence of the given file and return when found, |
| or the timeout has been reached. If timeout is not specified it |
| currently defaults to five seconds. |
| |
| `wait_for_prop <name> <value>` |
| > Wait for system property _name_ to be _value_. Properties are expanded |
| within _value_. If property _name_ is already set to _value_, continue |
| immediately. |
| |
| `write <path> <content>` |
| > Open the file at _path_ and write a string to it with write(2). |
| If the file does not exist, it will be created. If it does exist, |
| it will be truncated. Properties are expanded within _content_. |
| |
| |
| Imports |
| ------- |
| `import <path>` |
| > Parse an init config file, extending the current configuration. |
| If _path_ is a directory, each file in the directory is parsed as |
| a config file. It is not recursive, nested directories will |
| not be parsed. |
| |
| The import keyword is not a command, but rather its own section, |
| meaning that it does not happen as part of an Action, but rather, |
| imports are handled as a file is being parsed and follow the below logic. |
| |
| There are only three times where the init executable imports .rc files: |
| |
| 1. When it imports /init.rc or the script indicated by the property |
| `ro.boot.init_rc` during initial boot. |
| 2. When it imports /{system,vendor,odm}/etc/init/ for first stage mount |
| devices immediately after importing /init.rc. |
| 3. When it imports /{system,vendor,odm}/etc/init/ or .rc files at specified |
| paths during mount_all. |
| |
| The order that files are imported is a bit complex for legacy reasons |
| and to keep backwards compatibility. It is not strictly guaranteed. |
| |
| The only correct way to guarantee that a command has been run before a |
| different command is to either 1) place it in an Action with an |
| earlier executed trigger, or 2) place it in an Action with the same |
| trigger within the same file at an earlier line. |
| |
| Nonetheless, the defacto order for first stage mount devices is: |
| 1. /init.rc is parsed then recursively each of its imports are |
| parsed. |
| 2. The contents of /system/etc/init/ are alphabetized and parsed |
| sequentially, with imports happening recursively after each file is |
| parsed. |
| 3. Step 2 is repeated for /vendor/etc/init then /odm/etc/init |
| |
| The below pseudocode may explain this more clearly: |
| |
| fn Import(file) |
| Parse(file) |
| for (import : file.imports) |
| Import(import) |
| |
| Import(/init.rc) |
| Directories = [/system/etc/init, /vendor/etc/init, /odm/etc/init] |
| for (directory : Directories) |
| files = <Alphabetical order of directory's contents> |
| for (file : files) |
| Import(file) |
| |
| |
| Properties |
| ---------- |
| Init provides information about the services that it is responsible |
| for via the below properties. |
| |
| `init.svc.<name>` |
| > State of a named service ("stopped", "stopping", "running", "restarting") |
| |
| |
| Boot timing |
| ----------- |
| Init records some boot timing information in system properties. |
| |
| `ro.boottime.init` |
| > Time after boot in ns (via the CLOCK\_BOOTTIME clock) at which the first |
| stage of init started. |
| |
| `ro.boottime.init.selinux` |
| > How long it took the first stage to initialize SELinux. |
| |
| `ro.boottime.init.cold_boot_wait` |
| > How long init waited for ueventd's coldboot phase to end. |
| |
| `ro.boottime.<service-name>` |
| > Time after boot in ns (via the CLOCK\_BOOTTIME clock) that the service was |
| first started. |
| |
| |
| Bootcharting |
| ------------ |
| This version of init contains code to perform "bootcharting": generating log |
| files that can be later processed by the tools provided by <http://www.bootchart.org/>. |
| |
| On the emulator, use the -bootchart _timeout_ option to boot with bootcharting |
| activated for _timeout_ seconds. |
| |
| On a device: |
| |
| adb shell 'touch /data/bootchart/enabled' |
| |
| Don't forget to delete this file when you're done collecting data! |
| |
| The log files are written to /data/bootchart/. A script is provided to |
| retrieve them and create a bootchart.tgz file that can be used with the |
| bootchart command-line utility: |
| |
| sudo apt-get install pybootchartgui |
| # grab-bootchart.sh uses $ANDROID_SERIAL. |
| $ANDROID_BUILD_TOP/system/core/init/grab-bootchart.sh |
| |
| One thing to watch for is that the bootchart will show init as if it started |
| running at 0s. You'll have to look at dmesg to work out when the kernel |
| actually started init. |
| |
| |
| Comparing two bootcharts |
| ------------------------ |
| A handy script named compare-bootcharts.py can be used to compare the |
| start/end time of selected processes. The aforementioned grab-bootchart.sh |
| will leave a bootchart tarball named bootchart.tgz at /tmp/android-bootchart. |
| If two such barballs are preserved on the host machine under different |
| directories, the script can list the timestamps differences. For example: |
| |
| Usage: system/core/init/compare-bootcharts.py _base-bootchart-dir_ _exp-bootchart-dir_ |
| |
| 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) |
| |
| |
| Systrace |
| -------- |
| Systrace (<http://developer.android.com/tools/help/systrace.html>) can be |
| used for obtaining performance analysis reports during boot |
| time on userdebug or eng builds. |
| |
| Here is an example of trace events of "wm" and "am" categories: |
| |
| $ANDROID_BUILD_TOP/external/chromium-trace/systrace.py \ |
| wm am --boot |
| |
| This command will cause the device to reboot. After the device is rebooted and |
| the boot sequence has finished, the trace report is obtained from the device |
| and written as trace.html on the host by hitting Ctrl+C. |
| |
| Limitation: recording trace events is started after persistent properties are loaded, so |
| the trace events that are emitted before that are not recorded. Several |
| services such as vold, surfaceflinger, and servicemanager are affected by this |
| limitation since they are started before persistent properties are loaded. |
| Zygote initialization and the processes that are forked from the zygote are not |
| affected. |
| |
| |
| Debugging init |
| -------------- |
| By default, programs executed by init will drop stdout and stderr into |
| /dev/null. To help with debugging, you can execute your program via the |
| Android program logwrapper. This will redirect stdout/stderr into the |
| Android logging system (accessed via logcat). |
| |
| For example |
| service akmd /system/bin/logwrapper /sbin/akmd |
| |
| For quicker turnaround when working on init itself, use: |
| |
| mm -j && |
| m ramdisk-nodeps && |
| m bootimage-nodeps && |
| adb reboot bootloader && |
| fastboot boot $ANDROID_PRODUCT_OUT/boot.img |
| |
| Alternatively, use the emulator: |
| |
| emulator -partition-size 1024 \ |
| -verbose -show-kernel -no-window |