Activities from the home package were causing tasks types to change from
application to home. This was not the intention of setting the task type
when adding an activity. This change sets the task type to the inherent
type of the first activity added. All subsequent activities added to the
task then inherent the task's type overriding the inherent type of the
task.
Fixes bug 9972495.
Change-Id: Ib77675aea790ea64d4f166af62c7138e89356c13
When stopping an activity remove it from the list of activities to
be stopped when idle. Otherwise the activity gets stopped twice, at
the point of the fix here and later when idle.
Fixes bug 9755054.
Change-Id: If8d2249b75aeb9f8b6cea2d883046f3ad4c2e067
- Make sure Home activity goes in the correct task and on the correct
stack.
- Do not allow different users to be in the same task.
- Do not set stacks aside for each user.
Fixes bug 9775492.
Change-Id: I0e7954e917aac8482a1015a36923e02914e2b692
Use the virtual screen resolution returned by getBaseDisplaySize
instead of the physical screen resolution returned by
getInitialDisplaySize. The memory required by apps will scale
with graphics buffer size, which are generally relative to the
virtual screen resolution.
Change-Id: I0476e4afad99eca2f4f56042a8dbef5b3c7889db
These new constants are a better mapping to the kind of
information that procstats is wanting to collect about
processes. In doing this, the process states are tweaked
to have a bit more information that we care about for
procstats.
This changes the format of the data printed by procstats,
so the checkin version is bumped to 2. The structure is
the same, however the codes for process states have all
changed. The new codes are, in order of precedence:
p -- persistent system process.
t -- top activity; actually any visible activity.
f -- important foreground process (ime, wallpaper, etc).
b -- important background process
u -- performing backup operation.
w -- heavy-weight process (currently not used).
s -- background process running a service.
r -- process running a receiver.
h -- process hosting home/launcher app when not on top.
l -- process hosting the last app the user was in.
a -- cached process hosting a previous activity.
c -- cached process hosting a client activity.
e -- cached process that is empty.
In addition, we are now collecting uss along with pss
data for each process, so the pss checkin entries now
have three new values at the end of the min/avg/max uss
values of that process.
With this switch to using process state constants more
fundamentally, I realized that they could actually be
used by the core oom adj code to make it a lot cleaner.
So that change has been made, that code has changed quite
radically, and lost a lot of its secondary states and flags
that it used to use in its computation, now relying on
primarily the oom_adj and proc state values for the process.
This also cleaned up a few problems -- for example for
purposes of determing the memory level of the device, if a
long-running service dropped into the cached oom_adj level,
it would start being counted as a cached process and thus
make us think that the memory state is better than it is.
Now we do this based on the proc state, which always stays
as a service regardless of what is happening like this, giving
as a more consistent view of the memory state of the device.
Making proc state a more fundamentally part of the oom adj
computation means that the values can also be more carefully
tuned in semantic meaning so the value assigned to a process
doesn't tend to change unless the semantics of the process
has really significantly changed.
For example, a process will be assigned the service state
regardless of whether that services is executing operations
in the foreground, running normally, or has been dropped to
the lru list for pruning. The top state is used for everything
related to activities visible to the user: when actually on
top, visible but not on top, currently pausing, etc.
There is a new Context.BIND_SHOWING_UI added for when system
services bind to apps, to explicitly indicate that the app
is showing UI for the system. This gives us a better metric
to determine when it is showing UI, and thus when it needs
to do a memory trim when it is no longer in that state. Without
this, services could get in bad states of continually trimming.
Finally, more HashSet containers have been changed to ArraySet,
reducing the temporary iterators created for iterating over
them.
Change-Id: I1724113f42abe7862e8aecb6faae5a7620245e89
The activity manager now keeps a new "process state" for
each process, indicating the general execution and memory
state of the process. This closely follows the out-of-memory
adjustment and scheduling class that it currently tracks,
but roles these together (plus a little more info) into one
more semantically meaningful number.
This value is reported to each process as it changes, so they
can do things like tune the Dalvik garbage collector to match
the current process state.
I think I should also switch to this for process states. It
will give is more meaningful divisions of time for each process.
Also fix a problem in the activity stack where the previous
process was not being set correctly when moving between
activity stacks.
Change-Id: I598b1667dc46547f8fadae304e210c352cc9d41f
- Only log battery levels on level changes, not voltage or temp.
- Reduce the text in the start service log to only the suffix
of the service component, and a uid field.
Change-Id: I6d65e6700e021b3b005dccc90d64f36c1f97137f
The new location monitoring op is to tell us when an application
is monitoring for any location changes. It may be useful information
in addition to the more explicitly information about when location
data actually goes to the app.
Also make parts of AppOpsManager public for use by gcore. It is
not available to third party apps.
Change-Id: Ib639f704258ffdd7f3acd7567350ed2539da628a
Rename convertToOpaque to convertFromTranslucent. Add the
counterpart to Activity.convertFromTranslucent() for returning from
opaque to a translucent Activity. The caller should wait until
TranslucentConversionListener.onTranslucentConversionComplete() is
called before actually changing the background to translucent.
Change-Id: Id04b026bcc4dd8bad9a33a7af126e1bb28fb9c03
The historical data is now a more central part of the stats.
When a checkin happens, the data is not deleted, just marked
as checked in so we can continue to access it.
The default procstats dump is now a new "summary" mode that
shows a more useful set of data for all of the running processes.
By default the current and all committed states are shown; you
use "--current" to only show the current. Use "--details" to
get the previous more detailed data (which now includes detailed
process data like the per-package data).
Also tweaked uid printing to be a little more compact.
Change-Id: I5414ea7c07134ebd5dc83f6f7b9f6e30151eda85
There did not need to be one launching wakelock for each stack.
Moving it to the stack supervisor makes the logic much simpler
and fixes bug 9693439.
Change-Id: I5c9ae856540170a4d66fedb74becb6959c44dd8f
Note that we don't know the fully drawn time unless the app
tells it has finished drawing, so for apps that don't do this
we will end up just continuing to consider it to be drawing until
the next app is launched.
Change-Id: I766b71cf61b8d7324ccf239b7a44bef2518e2454
We now keep a small set of historic procstats data. Each
time you reboot a new set of data is created; each day a
new set of data is created. At most 5 sets of historic data
are kept at a time. Each checkin only prints any existing
historic data (and deletes it); checkins do not include the
current data, to keep the checkin data less noisy.
This requires a bunch of re-arranging of the way state is
maintained to allow the multiple files, and loading and
processing state from old files. Also fixed some problems
with writing/reading state.
The checkin format has been tweaked. There is a new "period"
line that tells you (1) the date/time stamp of the data,
(2) the device realtime data collection started, (3) the
device realtime data collection finished. The difference
between the last two give you the real time duration for
which the data was collected.
Also, the third field of pkgproc and pkgsvc-* can now be
abbreviated: if it is the same as the package name, it is
empty; if it is a suffix fo the package name it starts with
'.'.
Change-Id: I422875fccb627d95df7e36c183ac90056f273d83
- New Activity.reportFullyDrawn() method that applicatins can call
when they know they are fully drawn, allowing us to have better
app launch time info. This data is also included in usage stats.
- Added total and free memory data "dumpsys meminfo".
- Tuned the moderate memory levels to be more aggressive about
considering the device getting low on RAM, and thus starting
to prune RAM from processes.
- Fixed issues in processstats when reading old data as well as
resetting and other various fixes.
Change-Id: I20efe7451afb4edfa1aeec448328ba601c24d869
We now persistent the current procstats to storage
to keep them across boots. Still need to do division
and pruning across days; right now they will just keep
collecting forever.
Also fix some bugs in the checkin output.
Change-Id: I4dd9317dbe2ee0642af8f2f0be1f2bd9c4055e80
Setting the focus to the top activity on the home stack when
changing stack. This got lost when setting the stack to the foreground
no longer set automatically set focus.
Fixes first half of bug 9580068.
Change-Id: Ic9a662579399c052e0f0992651a32094f4aa62d0
The activity manager now uses some heuristics to try to
sample PSS data from processes so that it can get enough
data to over reasonable time have something useful, without
doing it too aggressively.
The current policy is:
1. Whenever a significant global change happens (memory state,
sceen on or off), we collect PSS from all processes; this will
not happen more than every 10 minutes.
2. When all activities become idle, we will collect PSS from the
current top process; this will not happen more than every 2
minutes per process.
3. We will sample the top-most process's PSS every 5 minutes.
4. When an process's oom adj changes and it has been more than
30 minutes since PSS has been collected from it, we will
collect a new PSS sample.
5. If a process changes from service A to service B (meaning it
has been running a service for a long time), we will collect
a PSS sample from it.
6. If someone explicitly requests PSS data (for running services
UI or dumpsys), record that.
Also:
- Finish moving the procstats output all to the new format.
- Record information about processes being killed due to excessive
wake locks or CPU use in procstats.
- Rework how we structure common vs. per-package process stats to
make it simpler to deal with.
- Optimize the Debug.getPss() implementation (we use it a lot now).
Should probably optimize it further at some point.
Change-Id: I179f1f7ae5852c7e567de4127d8457b50d27e0f0
I made the power manager more rigid, not allowing different uids
to use the same wake lock. This never should happen. I would
guess there is somewhere that the activity manager is acquiring
the wake lock without clearing the calling identity... but it is
hard to follow all the paths this may happen in. So here we add
some checks when acquiring/releasing the wake lock to make sure
it is being done as the system uid.
Also:
- Protect the new activity stack calls with a permission, and
make sure to clear the calling uid once past that.
- Collect uid data from process stats so we can correctly
associate CPU use with a uid even if we don't know about the
pid for some reason.
- Fix battery stats dump commands to clear calling uid before
executing so they aren't broken.
Change-Id: I0030d4f7b614e3270d794ecfc3669139a5703ce9
This and the old isHighEndGfx() is set up through a
device configuration, rather than trying to compute it
automatically.
Change-Id: Ibc95c05791023a7ae6c88555b75bb61f2b613991
Completely reworked how it manages its data, since trying
to keep track of all of the possible pss data with the old
data structures would have made it huge. Now we have a sparse
data structure for pss and process times. (Will switch service
times over to it soon.)
Currently the only thing that collects pss data is running
"dumpsys meminfo". More will be added later.
Modified checkin output to also scale better as more distinct
data categories are added, and added output of pss data. Now
instead of dumping every possible entry as a comma-separated
list, it dumps a comma-separated list of only the entries with
data, tagged with the state they go with.
Also fixed some problems in the checkin reporting of batterystats
(it needs to escape commas), added checkin reporting of the history
list, fixed parsing of kernel wake locks to strip quotes, fixed
wake lock name that the sync manager generates to be more sane.
Change-Id: Ibf4010838a9f685ebe1d93aff86c064ccc52b861
One problem this turned up is, because FastPrintWriter does
its own buffering, a lot of code that used to use PrintWriter
would fail -- if it pointed to a StringWriter, there was no
buffering, so it could just immediately get the result. Now
you need to first flush the FastPrintWriter.
Also added some new constructors to specify the size of buffer
that FastPrintWriter should use.
Change-Id: If48cd28d7be0b6b3278bbb69a8357e6ce88cf54a
The determination for whether to launch home after an app dies
did not include whether the app would have returned home on exit.
This fixes that by checking what the app would naturally return to.
Fixes bug 9466261.
Change-Id: Ife6e895b9ef8c11b0a7f470d3eac4e88e763930b