support "sideload over ADB" mode
Rather than depending on the existence of some place to store a file
that is accessible to users on an an unbootable device (eg, a physical
sdcard, external USB drive, etc.), add support for sideloading
packages sent to the device with adb.
This change adds a "minimal adbd" which supports nothing but receiving
a package over adb (with the "adb sideload" command) and storing it to
a fixed filename in the /tmp ramdisk, from where it can be verified
and sideloaded in the usual way. This should be leave available even
on locked user-build devices.
The user can select "apply package from ADB" from the recovery menu,
which starts minimal-adb mode (shutting down any real adbd that may be
running). Once minimal-adb has received a package it exits
(restarting real adbd if appropriate) and then verification and
installation of the received package proceeds.
always initialize usb product, vendor, etc. for adb in recovery
Set these values even on non-debuggable builds, so that the mini-adb
now in recovery can work.
diff --git a/minadbd/utils.h b/minadbd/utils.h
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f70ecd2
--- /dev/null
+++ b/minadbd/utils.h
@@ -0,0 +1,68 @@
+/*
+ * Copyright (C) 2008 The Android Open Source Project
+ *
+ * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
+ * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
+ * You may obtain a copy of the License at
+ *
+ * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
+ *
+ * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
+ * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
+ * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
+ * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
+ * limitations under the License.
+ */
+#ifndef _ADB_UTILS_H
+#define _ADB_UTILS_H
+
+/* bounded buffer functions */
+
+/* all these functions are used to append data to a bounded buffer.
+ *
+ * after each operation, the buffer is guaranteed to be zero-terminated,
+ * even in the case of an overflow. they all return the new buffer position
+ * which allows one to use them in succession, only checking for overflows
+ * at the end. For example:
+ *
+ * BUFF_DECL(temp,p,end,1024);
+ * char* p;
+ *
+ * p = buff_addc(temp, end, '"');
+ * p = buff_adds(temp, end, string);
+ * p = buff_addc(temp, end, '"');
+ *
+ * if (p >= end) {
+ * overflow detected. note that 'temp' is
+ * zero-terminated for safety.
+ * }
+ * return strdup(temp);
+ */
+
+/* tries to add a character to the buffer, in case of overflow
+ * this will only write a terminating zero and return buffEnd.
+ */
+char* buff_addc (char* buff, char* buffEnd, int c);
+
+/* tries to add a string to the buffer */
+char* buff_adds (char* buff, char* buffEnd, const char* s);
+
+/* tries to add a bytes to the buffer. the input can contain zero bytes,
+ * but a terminating zero will always be appended at the end anyway
+ */
+char* buff_addb (char* buff, char* buffEnd, const void* data, int len);
+
+/* tries to add a formatted string to a bounded buffer */
+char* buff_add (char* buff, char* buffEnd, const char* format, ... );
+
+/* convenience macro used to define a bounded buffer, as well as
+ * a 'cursor' and 'end' variables all in one go.
+ *
+ * note: this doesn't place an initial terminating zero in the buffer,
+ * you need to use one of the buff_ functions for this. or simply
+ * do _cursor[0] = 0 manually.
+ */
+#define BUFF_DECL(_buff,_cursor,_end,_size) \
+ char _buff[_size], *_cursor=_buff, *_end = _cursor + (_size)
+
+#endif /* _ADB_UTILS_H */