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Android System Programming

You're reading from   Android System Programming Porting, customizing, and debugging Android HAL

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787125360
Length 470 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Roger Ye Roger Ye
Author Profile Icon Roger Ye
Roger Ye
Shen Liu Shen Liu
Author Profile Icon Shen Liu
Shen Liu
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to Android System Programming FREE CHAPTER 2. Setting Up the Development Environment 3. Discovering Kernel, HAL, and Virtual Hardware 4. Customizing the Android Emulator 5. Enabling the ARM Translator and Introducing Native Bridge 6. Debugging the Boot Up Process Using a Customized ramdisk 7. Enabling Wi-Fi on the Android Emulator 8. Creating Your Own Device on VirtualBox 9. Booting Up x86vbox Using PXE/NFS 10. Enabling Graphics 11. Enabling VirtualBox-Specific Hardware Interfaces 12. Introducing Recovery 13. Creating OTA Packages 14. Customizing and Debugging Recovery

Debugging and testing native Android applications

Since the recovery environment is a self-contained environment, both recovery and the updater are static linked so they don't depend on the C runtime shared libraries. We talked about the C runtime shared libraries in the last chapter, when we removed the dependencies from the /system folder. In such an environment, the production release may contain only recovery itself, so it is very difficult to debug the recovery or updater in such an environment.

The only way that we can identify the potential issues is to look at the log files stored in the cache partition. At runtime, recovery prints the debug messages to the /tmp/recovery.log log file. Before it prepares to reboot the system, it will store the log file to the cache partition at /recovery/last_log. If the updater is executed to update the system, it will store the log file at /recovery/last_install in...

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