- New feature to "am monitor" to have it automatically launch
gdbserv for you when a crash/ANR happens, and tell you how to
run the client.
- Update dumpstate to match new location of binder debug logs
- Various commented out logs that are being used to track down
issues.
Change-Id: Ia5dd0cd2df983a1fc6be697642a4590aa02a26a5
Don't kill processes for excessive wake lock use, even if they
are in the background, as long as they have running services.
Also fix some problems with this, such as not noting the kill
in battery stats.
And add killing of processes for cpu usage as well, along with
some optimizations to computing CPU usage.
And fix BatteryWaster to be better behaving for testing these
cases.
Add new "monitor" command to am to watch as the activity manager
does stuff (so we can catch things at the point of ANR).
Finally some miscellaneous debug output for the stuff here, as
well as in progress debugging of an ANR.
Change-Id: Ib32f55ca50fb7486b4be4eb5e695f8f60c882cd1
Some applications are setting the MIME type field for an http:
intent, which is technically wrong because the recipient opening
the URI will get the MIME type from the header. This was hitting
a bug when we compute the intent filter when setting the
preferred activity, where we have to set both the MIME type and
data URI for the intent filter. (For file: and content: URIs
only the MIME type is needed, since these can be opened directly
through ContentResolver so everyone is presumed to be able to
handle them.)
Change-Id: Ia7025e6859e9c90997bf56c2c80f225fca7a2007
Tell the broadcast receiver whether it is getting an initial sticky value,
so it will be quiet about attempts to do ordered broadcast stuff.
Note that the original bug being reported was not actually a crash, just
an error log. So all we are doing here is making the log quieter.
Change-Id: Iaf1b718d82093ec1197142410a64feff47eb3859
Clean up error handling and reporting in "am".
Make the usage message for "am" more informative.
Make it easier to turn on logging in GoogleHttpClient.
The am command is now the one that takes care of opening the target file,
handling the opened file descriptor to the process that will be profiled.
This allows you to send profile data to anywhere the shell can access, and
avoids any problems coming up from the target process trying to open the
file.
Now we have a 5-second time after home is pressed, during which
only the home app (and the status bar) can switch to another app.
After that time, any start activity requests that occurred will
be executed, to allow things like alarms to be displayed. Also
if during that time the user launches another app, the pending
starts will be executed without resuming their activities and
the one they started placed at the top and executed.