...current process has android.permission.WAKE_LOCK
When updating a system app, we would actually uninstall the package
of the system app, which also meant removing its uid...! It was just
luck that we would get the same uid when installing the update after
that. During that time, if anyone tried to do anything related to
that uid, it would be unknown.
This change tweaks how we go about replacing system apps by making
it more like normal apps -- to make this work, if we need to disable
the system app, we generate a new PackageSetting from the current
system app and replace it into our data structures, so we can update
that without trashing the current correct information about the (still
actually there) system app.
Also fixed a problem where we were not killing the currently running
app before installing, like we do when updating a normal application.
And fixed a problem where we were not deleting the /data .apk when
uninstalling a system app update.
And added a new option to the "pm" command to clear the data associated
with an app.
Change-Id: I0e879677849aa42950a3c360bf78ad820e87674b
Rewrote interceptKeyBeforeQueueing to make the handling more systematic.
Behavior should be identical except:
- We never pass keys to applications when the screen is off and the keyguard
is not showing (the proximity sensor turned off the screen).
Previously we passed all non-wake keys through in this case which
caused a bug on Crespo where the screen would come back on if a soft key
was held at the time of power off because the resulting key up event
would sneak in just before the keyguard was shown. It would then be
passed through to the dispatcher which would poke user activity and
wake up the screen.
- We propagate the key flags when broadcasting media keys which
ensures that recipients can tell when the key is canceled.
- We ignore endcall or power if canceled (shouldn't happen anyways).
Changed the input dispatcher to not poke user activity for canceled
events since they are synthetic and should not wake the device.
Changed the lock screen so that it does not poke the wake lock when the
grab handle is released. This fixes a bug where the screen would come
back on immediately if the power went off while the user was holding
one of the grab handles because the sliding tab would receive an up
event after screen turned off and release the grab handles.
Bug: 3144874
Change-Id: Iebb91e10592b4ef2de4b1dd3a2e1e4254aacb697
Bug: 3306953
Previously with BrowserProvider1 all bookmarks were considered
visited URLs. Updated Browser.getAllVisitedUrls to match that behavior
when using BrowserProvider2
Change-Id: I15e6e4e91af4e7d1b21860aabf4ce5a5c6a9d81e
Add the missing wifi disable broadcast and also send out
supplicant disconnect on shutdown.
Added unit test cases.
Bug: 3294055
Change-Id: Ia56a8ec9d17784c5aac5b8b369c04837f9057c54
Allow a non-epidited ignore-backoff op to pass through
an expidited backed off op.
To do this, I first refactored the complicated if statement:
if (best == null
|| ((bestSyncableIsUnknownAndNotARetry == syncableIsUnknownAndNotARetry)
? (best.expedited == op.expedited
? opRunTime < bestRunTime
: op.expedited)
: syncableIsUnknownAndNotARetry)) {
best = op;
bestSyncableIsUnknownAndNotARetry = syncableIsUnknownAndNotARetry;
bestRunTime = opRunTime;
}
Into a more readable:
boolean setBest = false;
if (best == null) {
setBest = true;
} else if (bestSyncableIsUnknownAndNotARetry == syncableIsUnknownAndNotARetry) {
if (best.expedited == op.expedited) {
if (opRunTime < bestRunTime) {
// if both have same level, earlier time wins
setBest = true;
}
} else {
if (op.expedited) {
setBest = true;
}
}
} else {
if (syncableIsUnknownAndNotARetry) {
setBest = true;
}
}
if (setBest) {
best = op;
bestSyncableIsUnknownAndNotARetry = syncableIsUnknownAndNotARetry;
bestRunTime = opRunTime;
}
The refactoring was all done automatically with IntelliJ to avoid human error
in the conversion.
After verifying this code still behaved as expected including the error
condition in the bug, I added handling for the cases when a non-expidited op
may override an expedited op if certain conditions occur, specificaly, if the
expidited op is backed off and the non-expidited op is not.
Finally, refactored to make it testable and added tests and logging.
Bug: 3128963
Change-Id: I131cbcec6073ea5fe425f6b5aa88ca56c02b6598
Prior to this change, saveInstanceState would
call directly to Activity.onSaveInstanceState(),
rather than performSaveInstanceState().
This meant that saveManagdDialogs() was not called,
so Activities running under a LocalActivityManager
do not get their dialogs restored on configuration changes.
Change-Id: Id45110a8716a86958c14f4b1ea5a84c9cdf107f1
This fix improves the performance by caching the string that should
be returned, and reuse it next time if possible.
This will make it faster to switch between activities, approximately
half the time to create the new view when changing from landscape to
portrait. Also, the time for starting a new application is be reduced
as WindowState.toString is being called thousands of times in this
case.
Change-Id: I2b8b9bc1e251d1af43b6c85f049c01452f2573a2
Layers require that drawing methods potentially
draw in more than one bitmaps.
To handle this this patch offers the following:
- move all drawing methods to use Drawable
- Drawables are now handled by GcSnapshot since
its the one handling the layers
- moved Canvas_Delegate.createCustomGraphics to
GcSnapshot which does not expose the Graphics2D
objects anymore so its draw() methods are the only
way to draw.
- handles creating layers in GcSnapshot.save() and
blitting them in restore()
Other changes:
- Clean up the create/save API in GcSnapshot
- Fixed drawing bitmaps with alpha and other
composite modes.
Change-Id: I1e230087493d044a10de71f4b6d29083e3f3bf64
It's not easy to determine if this
is possible, so instead apps should
attempt a format and handle errors
in the format request.
Change-Id: I078a208b849e71ef3fb6b5970a9111ece4a2d201
Only stretch the placeholder image in one dimension. This closer matches
what the desktop browsers seem to do.
Bug: 3125797
Change-Id: Id0a395c4b784d0b7368e1c7ba6544b25903430bb
If writeString8 is called with the following sequence:
writeString8(String8(""));
writeString8(String8("TempString"));
Then in the readString8, the 2nd String i.e. "TempString" is not read,
instead an empty string is read.
The bug comes because of the write call for String8("") where there are
no String bytes present. In the write Statement, an extra ‘\0’ is
written. During the Marshalling, Following bytes are written:
1 2 3 4 5 ...
0x0 0x0 0xB ‘T’ ‘e’ ...
The readString8 function has a check that, if String length is 0, don’t
read anything. So the first byte is read as the length for the first
string. The second byte i.e. ‘\0’ is read as the length for the second
string and hence the second string becomes empty too.
Change-Id: Id7acc0c80ae16e77be4331f1ddf69ea87e758420