| /* |
| * Copyright (C) 2010 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. |
| */ |
| |
| #include "ueventd.h" |
| |
| #include <ctype.h> |
| #include <fcntl.h> |
| #include <signal.h> |
| #include <stdio.h> |
| #include <stdlib.h> |
| #include <string.h> |
| #include <sys/wait.h> |
| |
| #include <set> |
| #include <thread> |
| |
| #include <android-base/chrono_utils.h> |
| #include <android-base/logging.h> |
| #include <android-base/properties.h> |
| #include <fstab/fstab.h> |
| #include <selinux/android.h> |
| #include <selinux/selinux.h> |
| |
| #include "devices.h" |
| #include "firmware_handler.h" |
| #include "log.h" |
| #include "selinux.h" |
| #include "uevent_listener.h" |
| #include "ueventd_parser.h" |
| #include "util.h" |
| |
| // At a high level, ueventd listens for uevent messages generated by the kernel through a netlink |
| // socket. When ueventd receives such a message it handles it by taking appropriate actions, |
| // which can typically be creating a device node in /dev, setting file permissions, setting selinux |
| // labels, etc. |
| // Ueventd also handles loading of firmware that the kernel requests, and creates symlinks for block |
| // and character devices. |
| |
| // When ueventd starts, it regenerates uevents for all currently registered devices by traversing |
| // /sys and writing 'add' to each 'uevent' file that it finds. This causes the kernel to generate |
| // and resend uevent messages for all of the currently registered devices. This is done, because |
| // ueventd would not have been running when these devices were registered and therefore was unable |
| // to receive their uevent messages and handle them appropriately. This process is known as |
| // 'cold boot'. |
| |
| // 'init' currently waits synchronously on the cold boot process of ueventd before it continues |
| // its boot process. For this reason, cold boot should be as quick as possible. One way to achieve |
| // a speed up here is to parallelize the handling of ueventd messages, which consume the bulk of the |
| // time during cold boot. |
| |
| // Handling of uevent messages has two unique properties: |
| // 1) It can be done in isolation; it doesn't need to read or write any status once it is started. |
| // 2) It uses setegid() and setfscreatecon() so either care (aka locking) must be taken to ensure |
| // that no file system operations are done while the uevent process has an abnormal egid or |
| // fscreatecon or this handling must happen in a separate process. |
| // Given the above two properties, it is best to fork() subprocesses to handle the uevents. This |
| // reduces the overhead and complexity that would be required in a solution with threads and locks. |
| // In testing, a racy multithreaded solution has the same performance as the fork() solution, so |
| // there is no reason to deal with the complexity of the former. |
| |
| // One other important caveat during the boot process is the handling of SELinux restorecon. |
| // Since many devices have child devices, calling selinux_android_restorecon() recursively for each |
| // device when its uevent is handled, results in multiple restorecon operations being done on a |
| // given file. It is more efficient to simply do restorecon recursively on /sys during cold boot, |
| // than to do restorecon on each device as its uevent is handled. This only applies to cold boot; |
| // once that has completed, restorecon is done for each device as its uevent is handled. |
| |
| // With all of the above considered, the cold boot process has the below steps: |
| // 1) ueventd regenerates uevents by doing the /sys traversal and listens to the netlink socket for |
| // the generated uevents. It writes these uevents into a queue represented by a vector. |
| // |
| // 2) ueventd forks 'n' separate uevent handler subprocesses and has each of them to handle the |
| // uevents in the queue based on a starting offset (their process number) and a stride (the total |
| // number of processes). Note that no IPC happens at this point and only const functions from |
| // DeviceHandler should be called from this context. |
| // |
| // 3) In parallel to the subprocesses handling the uevents, the main thread of ueventd calls |
| // selinux_android_restorecon() recursively on /sys/class, /sys/block, and /sys/devices. |
| // |
| // 4) Once the restorecon operation finishes, the main thread calls waitpid() to wait for all |
| // subprocess handlers to complete and exit. Once this happens, it marks coldboot as having |
| // completed. |
| // |
| // At this point, ueventd is single threaded, poll()'s and then handles any future uevents. |
| |
| // Lastly, it should be noted that uevents that occur during the coldboot process are handled |
| // without issue after the coldboot process completes. This is because the uevent listener is |
| // paused while the uevent handler and restorecon actions take place. Once coldboot completes, |
| // the uevent listener resumes in polling mode and will handle the uevents that occurred during |
| // coldboot. |
| |
| namespace android { |
| namespace init { |
| |
| class ColdBoot { |
| public: |
| ColdBoot(UeventListener& uevent_listener, DeviceHandler& device_handler) |
| : uevent_listener_(uevent_listener), |
| device_handler_(device_handler), |
| num_handler_subprocesses_(std::thread::hardware_concurrency() ?: 4) {} |
| |
| void Run(); |
| |
| private: |
| void UeventHandlerMain(unsigned int process_num, unsigned int total_processes); |
| void RegenerateUevents(); |
| void ForkSubProcesses(); |
| void DoRestoreCon(); |
| void WaitForSubProcesses(); |
| |
| UeventListener& uevent_listener_; |
| DeviceHandler& device_handler_; |
| |
| unsigned int num_handler_subprocesses_; |
| std::vector<Uevent> uevent_queue_; |
| |
| std::set<pid_t> subprocess_pids_; |
| }; |
| |
| void ColdBoot::UeventHandlerMain(unsigned int process_num, unsigned int total_processes) { |
| for (unsigned int i = process_num; i < uevent_queue_.size(); i += total_processes) { |
| auto& uevent = uevent_queue_[i]; |
| device_handler_.HandleDeviceEvent(uevent); |
| } |
| _exit(EXIT_SUCCESS); |
| } |
| |
| void ColdBoot::RegenerateUevents() { |
| uevent_listener_.RegenerateUevents([this](const Uevent& uevent) { |
| HandleFirmwareEvent(uevent); |
| |
| uevent_queue_.emplace_back(std::move(uevent)); |
| return ListenerAction::kContinue; |
| }); |
| } |
| |
| void ColdBoot::ForkSubProcesses() { |
| for (unsigned int i = 0; i < num_handler_subprocesses_; ++i) { |
| auto pid = fork(); |
| if (pid < 0) { |
| PLOG(FATAL) << "fork() failed!"; |
| } |
| |
| if (pid == 0) { |
| UeventHandlerMain(i, num_handler_subprocesses_); |
| } |
| |
| subprocess_pids_.emplace(pid); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| void ColdBoot::DoRestoreCon() { |
| selinux_android_restorecon("/sys", SELINUX_ANDROID_RESTORECON_RECURSE); |
| device_handler_.set_skip_restorecon(false); |
| } |
| |
| void ColdBoot::WaitForSubProcesses() { |
| // Treat subprocesses that crash or get stuck the same as if ueventd itself has crashed or gets |
| // stuck. |
| // |
| // When a subprocess crashes, we fatally abort from ueventd. init will restart ueventd when |
| // init reaps it, and the cold boot process will start again. If this continues to fail, then |
| // since ueventd is marked as a critical service, init will reboot to recovery. |
| // |
| // When a subprocess gets stuck, keep ueventd spinning waiting for it. init has a timeout for |
| // cold boot and will reboot to the bootloader if ueventd does not complete in time. |
| while (!subprocess_pids_.empty()) { |
| int status; |
| pid_t pid = TEMP_FAILURE_RETRY(waitpid(-1, &status, 0)); |
| if (pid == -1) { |
| PLOG(ERROR) << "waitpid() failed"; |
| continue; |
| } |
| |
| auto it = std::find(subprocess_pids_.begin(), subprocess_pids_.end(), pid); |
| if (it == subprocess_pids_.end()) continue; |
| |
| if (WIFEXITED(status)) { |
| if (WEXITSTATUS(status) == EXIT_SUCCESS) { |
| subprocess_pids_.erase(it); |
| } else { |
| LOG(FATAL) << "subprocess exited with status " << WEXITSTATUS(status); |
| } |
| } else if (WIFSIGNALED(status)) { |
| LOG(FATAL) << "subprocess killed by signal " << WTERMSIG(status); |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| void ColdBoot::Run() { |
| android::base::Timer cold_boot_timer; |
| |
| RegenerateUevents(); |
| |
| ForkSubProcesses(); |
| |
| DoRestoreCon(); |
| |
| WaitForSubProcesses(); |
| |
| close(open(COLDBOOT_DONE, O_WRONLY | O_CREAT | O_CLOEXEC, 0000)); |
| LOG(INFO) << "Coldboot took " << cold_boot_timer.duration().count() / 1000.0f << " seconds"; |
| } |
| |
| DeviceHandler CreateDeviceHandler() { |
| Parser parser; |
| |
| std::vector<Subsystem> subsystems; |
| parser.AddSectionParser("subsystem", std::make_unique<SubsystemParser>(&subsystems)); |
| |
| using namespace std::placeholders; |
| std::vector<SysfsPermissions> sysfs_permissions; |
| std::vector<Permissions> dev_permissions; |
| parser.AddSingleLineParser("/sys/", |
| std::bind(ParsePermissionsLine, _1, &sysfs_permissions, nullptr)); |
| parser.AddSingleLineParser("/dev/", |
| std::bind(ParsePermissionsLine, _1, nullptr, &dev_permissions)); |
| |
| parser.ParseConfig("/ueventd.rc"); |
| parser.ParseConfig("/vendor/ueventd.rc"); |
| parser.ParseConfig("/odm/ueventd.rc"); |
| |
| /* |
| * keep the current product name base configuration so |
| * we remain backwards compatible and allow it to override |
| * everything |
| * TODO: cleanup platform ueventd.rc to remove vendor specific |
| * device node entries (b/34968103) |
| */ |
| std::string hardware = android::base::GetProperty("ro.hardware", ""); |
| parser.ParseConfig("/ueventd." + hardware + ".rc"); |
| |
| auto boot_devices = fs_mgr_get_boot_devices(); |
| return DeviceHandler(std::move(dev_permissions), std::move(sysfs_permissions), |
| std::move(subsystems), std::move(boot_devices), true); |
| } |
| |
| int ueventd_main(int argc, char** argv) { |
| /* |
| * init sets the umask to 077 for forked processes. We need to |
| * create files with exact permissions, without modification by |
| * the umask. |
| */ |
| umask(000); |
| |
| InitKernelLogging(argv); |
| |
| LOG(INFO) << "ueventd started!"; |
| |
| SelinuxSetupKernelLogging(); |
| SelabelInitialize(); |
| |
| DeviceHandler device_handler = CreateDeviceHandler(); |
| UeventListener uevent_listener; |
| |
| if (access(COLDBOOT_DONE, F_OK) != 0) { |
| ColdBoot cold_boot(uevent_listener, device_handler); |
| cold_boot.Run(); |
| } |
| |
| // We use waitpid() in ColdBoot, so we can't ignore SIGCHLD until now. |
| signal(SIGCHLD, SIG_IGN); |
| // Reap and pending children that exited between the last call to waitpid() and setting SIG_IGN |
| // for SIGCHLD above. |
| while (waitpid(-1, nullptr, WNOHANG) > 0) { |
| } |
| |
| uevent_listener.Poll([&device_handler](const Uevent& uevent) { |
| HandleFirmwareEvent(uevent); |
| device_handler.HandleDeviceEvent(uevent); |
| return ListenerAction::kContinue; |
| }); |
| |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| } // namespace init |
| } // namespace android |