- Collect data at better times.
- Collect per-thread CPU usage as soon as possible after the ANR, and print
in log.
- Based on new per-thread CPU usage, limit the number of processes we
collect stacks from to not include inactive not interesting procs.
- Improve the way ProcessStats compute and reports its data.
Change-Id: I12b17fb47d593d175be69bb792c1f57179bf4fdf
This was originally written as an in-case-we-need-it facility, but was
never actually used in production. It also soaked up a surprising amount
of cpu on occasion, as well as doing sketchy things like demoting the
system_server's primary looper thread to the background cgroup at times.
Change-Id: I9a81a8d1e9caea9e0a1277d97785fe96add438d7
The kernel threads are appended to the usual /data/anr/traces.txt file
and dropboxed along with the usual Dalvik stack dumps.
Change-Id: I120f1f5ee54c965efe9ac0c7f40fdef56385f1fa
NOTE: this change depends on the kernel publishing /proc/$PID/stack
This gives us a snapshot of what the system process was doing after 30 seconds
of apparent inactivity as well as after 1 minute, to help distinguishing actual
deadlocks from too-slow progress, livelock, etc.
Change-Id: I19758861d1b25f298e88788e8f1c7ec7bf828823
Use new observer before rebooting and shutting down.
Add some unit tests for unmount and shutdown code paths
Fix registering/unregistering part in MountService
Use ShutdownThread in PowerManager.reboot()
Add reboot support to ShutdownThread.
Remove MountService code from PowerManagerService.java and Power.java.
Clean shutdown/reboot is handled exclusively by ShutdownThread now.
Change-Id: Iefb157451d3d9c426cb431707b870a873c09123d
Capture stack traces from the system process using the same
mechanism as ANRs (which will initialize traces.txt, etc).
Also record the watchdog reset in the dropbox for uploading.
Bug: 2475557
We can now locate event log tag definitions in individual packages
(and java constants for the tag numbers get auto-generated), so move
all the tags used by the system server into the package.
Applications can now declare that they support small, normal, or
large screens. Resource selection can also be done based on these
sizes. By default, pre-Donut apps are false for small and large,
and Donut or later apps are assumed to support all sizes. In either
case they can use <supports-screens> in their manifest to declare
what they actually support.