| _____ _____ _____ _____ __ __ _____ |
| / _ \/ __\/ _ \| _ \/ \/ \/ __\ |
| | _ <| __|| _ || | || \/ || __| |
| \__|\_/\_____/\__|__/|_____/\__ \__/\_____/ |
| |
| |
| Generating the android_filesystem_config.h |
| |
| To generate the android_filesystem_config.h file, one can choose from |
| one of two methods. The first method, is to declare |
| TARGET_ANDROID_FILESYSTEM_CONFIG_H in the device BoardConfig.mk file. This |
| variable can only have one item in it, and it is used directly as the |
| android_filesystem_config.h header when building |
| fs_config_generate_$(TARGET_DEVICE) which is used to generate fs_config_files |
| and fs_config_dirs target executable. |
| |
| The limitation with this, is that it can only be set once, thus if the device |
| has a make hierarchy, then each device needs its own file, and cannot share |
| from a common source or that common source needs to include everything from |
| both devices. |
| |
| The other way is to set TARGET_FS_CONFIG_GEN, which can be a list of |
| intermediate fs configuration files. It is a build error on any one |
| these conditions: |
| * Specify TARGET_FS_CONFIG_GEN and TARGET_ANDROID_FILESYSTEM_CONFIG_H |
| * Specify TARGET_FS_CONFIG_GEN and provide |
| $(TARGET_DEVICE_DIR)/android_filesystem_config.h |
| |
| The parsing of the config file follows the Python ConfigParser specification, |
| with the sections and fields as defined below. There are two types of sections, |
| both sections require all options to be specified. The first section type is |
| the "caps" section. |
| |
| The "caps" section follows the following syntax: |
| |
| [path] |
| mode: Octal file mode |
| user: AID_<user> |
| group: AID_<group> |
| caps: cap* |
| |
| Where: |
| |
| [path] |
| The filesystem path to configure. A path ending in / is considered a dir, |
| else its a file. |
| |
| mode: |
| A valid octal file mode of at least 3 digits. If 3 is specified, it is |
| prefixed with a 0, else mode is used as is. |
| |
| user: |
| Either the C define for a valid AID or the friendly name. For instance both |
| AID_RADIO and radio are acceptable. Note custom AIDs can be defined in the |
| AID section documented below. |
| |
| group: |
| Same as user. |
| |
| caps: |
| The name as declared in |
| system/core/include/private/android_filesystem_capability.h without the |
| leading CAP_. Mixed case is allowed. Caps can also be the raw: |
| * binary (0b0101) |
| * octal (0455) |
| * int (42) |
| * hex (0xFF) |
| For multiple caps, just separate by whitespace. |
| |
| It is an error to specify multiple sections with the same [path] in different |
| files. Note that the same file may contain sections that override the previous |
| section in Python versions <= 3.2. In Python 3.2 it's set to strict mode. |
| |
| |
| The next section type is the "AID" section, for specifying OEM specific AIDS. |
| |
| The AID section follows the following syntax: |
| |
| [AID_<name>] |
| value: <number> |
| |
| Where: |
| |
| [AID_<name>] |
| The <name> can contain characters in the set uppercase, numbers |
| and underscores. |
| |
| value: |
| A valid C style number string. Hex, octal, binary and decimal are supported. |
| See "caps" above for more details on number formatting. |
| |
| It is an error to specify multiple sections with the same [AID_<name>]. With |
| the same constraints as [path] described above. It is also an error to specify |
| multiple sections with the same value option. It is also an error to specify a |
| value that is outside of the inclusive OEM ranges: |
| * AID_OEM_RESERVED_START(2900) - AID_OEM_RESERVED_END(2999) |
| * AID_OEM_RESERVED_2_START(5000) - AID_OEM_RESERVED_2_END(5999) |
| |
| as defined by system/core/include/private/android_filesystem_config.h. |
| |
| Ordering within the TARGET_FS_CONFIG_GEN files is not relevant. The paths for files are sorted |
| like so within their respective array definition: |
| * specified path before prefix match |
| ** ie foo before f* |
| * lexicographical less than before other |
| ** ie boo before foo |
| |
| Given these paths: |
| |
| paths=['ac', 'a', 'acd', 'an', 'a*', 'aa', 'ac*'] |
| |
| The sort order would be: |
| paths=['a', 'aa', 'ac', 'acd', 'an', 'ac*', 'a*'] |
| |
| Thus the fs_config tools will match on specified paths before attempting prefix, and match on the |
| longest matching prefix. |
| |
| The declared AIDS are sorted in ascending numerical order based on the option "value". The string |
| representation of value is preserved. Both choices were made for maximum readability of the generated |
| file and to line up files. Sync lines are placed with the source file as comments in the generated |
| header file. |
| |
| For OEMs wishing to use the define AIDs in their native code, one can access the generated header |
| file like so: |
| 1. In your C code just #include "generated_oem_aid.h" and start using the declared identifiers. |
| 2. In your Makefile add this static library like so: LOCAL_STATIC_LIBRARIES := liboemaids |
| |
| Unit Tests: |
| |
| From within the fs_config directory, unit tests can be executed like so: |
| $ python -m unittest test_fs_config_generator.Tests |
| ............. |
| ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| Ran 13 tests in 0.004s |
| |
| OK |
| |
| One could also use nose if they would like: |
| $ nose2 |
| |
| To add new tests, simply add a test_<xxx> method to the test class. It will automatically |
| get picked up and added to the test suite. |