android_system_core/liblog/fake_log_device.cpp
Tom Cherry 9156c534e0 liblog: simplify logd 'command' functions and struct logger
There are a set of functions, such as android_logger_get_log_size()
and android_logger_get_prune_list() that talk to the logd command
socket to perform their activities.  There's a transport abstraction
layer that handles these symbols to optionally route them to other
transports, originally designed for pstore or local logger; however
these functions fundamentally only make sense for logd.

Ideally, these functions would be removed and new functions would be
added that do not depend on struct logger_list or struct logger and
more clearly indicate that they only work with logd.  For example:

android_logger_get_size(struct logger*) could be
logd_get_buffer_size(log_id_t log_id).  We would remove the need to
'open' the struct logger and make it clear that it only operates on
logd.

Since liblog is an llndk library however, we cannot change or remove
these symbols.  Since these symbols are not frequently used, it seems
acceptable to keep them as is and not introduce improved versions.
We, however, do want to simplify the code that handles them and this
change removes the transport abstraction layer that handles them.
They retain the behavior that unless the struct logger_list was opened
for logd, that the functions return -EINVAL.

The one exception to this is android_logger_clear().  If the struct
logger provided to this function was opened from a struct logger_list
that used pstore for its mode argument, this function will clear the
entire pstore log.  This function does not respect the 'logId'
parameter of the struct logger, since that would not be possible.

This change removes this android_logger_clear() behavior and makes it
strictly for logd, for symmetry with the rest of the functions and due
to the lack of clarity regarding the 'logId' parameter of its input.
The only caller of this function, logcat, will clear pstore directly.

struct logger was built to encapsulate the information needed to
connect to a logger device from the old kernel logger.  Now that we
only support reading from pstore and from logd, there is much less
information needed to be captured.  Specifically, we only need to know
the log_id and whether or not it was opened as part of a pstore or
logd 'list'.

Test: liblog-unit-test
Test: logcat -c/-g/-G/-p/-P/-S work
Test: logcat -c works with -L
Test: logcat -g/-G/-p/-P/-S continue to fail with -L
Change-Id: I2c549b6f8539de94510e223949ab209ecc40e2d0
2019-11-18 07:16:40 -08:00

665 lines
17 KiB
C++

/*
* Copyright (C) 2008-2014 The Android Open Source Project
*
* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
* you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
* You may obtain a copy of the License at
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
* See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
* limitations under the License.
*/
/*
* Intercepts log messages intended for the Android log device.
* Messages are printed to stderr.
*/
#include "fake_log_device.h"
#include <ctype.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#if !defined(_WIN32)
#include <pthread.h>
#endif
#include <stdint.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <time.h>
#include <android/log.h>
#include "log_portability.h"
#define kMaxTagLen 16 /* from the long-dead utils/Log.cpp */
#define kTagSetSize 16 /* arbitrary */
#if 0
#define TRACE(...) printf("fake_log_device: " __VA_ARGS__)
#else
#define TRACE(...) ((void)0)
#endif
/* from the long-dead utils/Log.cpp */
typedef enum {
FORMAT_OFF = 0,
FORMAT_BRIEF,
FORMAT_PROCESS,
FORMAT_TAG,
FORMAT_THREAD,
FORMAT_RAW,
FORMAT_TIME,
FORMAT_THREADTIME,
FORMAT_LONG
} LogFormat;
/*
* Log driver state.
*/
typedef struct LogState {
/* the fake fd that's seen by the user */
int fakeFd;
/* a printable name for this fake device */
char debugName[sizeof("/dev/log/security")];
/* nonzero if this is a binary log */
int isBinary;
/* global minimum priority */
int globalMinPriority;
/* output format */
LogFormat outputFormat;
/* tags and priorities */
struct {
char tag[kMaxTagLen];
int minPriority;
} tagSet[kTagSetSize];
} LogState;
#if !defined(_WIN32)
/*
* Locking. Since we're emulating a device, we need to be prepared
* to have multiple callers at the same time. This lock is used
* to both protect the fd list and to prevent LogStates from being
* freed out from under a user.
*/
static pthread_mutex_t fakeLogDeviceLock = PTHREAD_MUTEX_INITIALIZER;
static void lock() {
/*
* If we trigger a signal handler in the middle of locked activity and the
* signal handler logs a message, we could get into a deadlock state.
*/
pthread_mutex_lock(&fakeLogDeviceLock);
}
static void unlock() {
pthread_mutex_unlock(&fakeLogDeviceLock);
}
#else // !defined(_WIN32)
#define lock() ((void)0)
#define unlock() ((void)0)
#endif // !defined(_WIN32)
/*
* File descriptor management.
*/
#define FAKE_FD_BASE 10000
#define MAX_OPEN_LOGS 8
static LogState openLogTable[MAX_OPEN_LOGS];
/*
* Allocate an fd and associate a new LogState with it.
* The fd is available via the fakeFd field of the return value.
*/
static LogState* createLogState() {
size_t i;
for (i = 0; i < (sizeof(openLogTable) / sizeof(openLogTable[0])); i++) {
if (openLogTable[i].fakeFd == 0) {
openLogTable[i].fakeFd = FAKE_FD_BASE + i;
return &openLogTable[i];
}
}
return NULL;
}
/*
* Translate an fd to a LogState.
*/
static LogState* fdToLogState(int fd) {
if (fd >= FAKE_FD_BASE && fd < FAKE_FD_BASE + MAX_OPEN_LOGS) {
return &openLogTable[fd - FAKE_FD_BASE];
}
return NULL;
}
/*
* Unregister the fake fd and free the memory it pointed to.
*/
static void deleteFakeFd(int fd) {
LogState* ls;
lock();
ls = fdToLogState(fd);
if (ls != NULL) {
memset(&openLogTable[fd - FAKE_FD_BASE], 0, sizeof(openLogTable[0]));
}
unlock();
}
/*
* Configure logging based on ANDROID_LOG_TAGS environment variable. We
* need to parse a string that looks like
*
* *:v jdwp:d dalvikvm:d dalvikvm-gc:i dalvikvmi:i
*
* The tag (or '*' for the global level) comes first, followed by a colon
* and a letter indicating the minimum priority level we're expected to log.
* This can be used to reveal or conceal logs with specific tags.
*
* We also want to check ANDROID_PRINTF_LOG to determine how the output
* will look.
*/
static void configureInitialState(const char* pathName, LogState* logState) {
static const int kDevLogLen = sizeof("/dev/log/") - 1;
strncpy(logState->debugName, pathName, sizeof(logState->debugName));
logState->debugName[sizeof(logState->debugName) - 1] = '\0';
/* identify binary logs */
if (!strcmp(pathName + kDevLogLen, "events") || !strcmp(pathName + kDevLogLen, "security")) {
logState->isBinary = 1;
}
/* global min priority defaults to "info" level */
logState->globalMinPriority = ANDROID_LOG_INFO;
/*
* This is based on the the long-dead utils/Log.cpp code.
*/
const char* tags = getenv("ANDROID_LOG_TAGS");
TRACE("Found ANDROID_LOG_TAGS='%s'\n", tags);
if (tags != NULL) {
int entry = 0;
while (*tags != '\0') {
char tagName[kMaxTagLen];
int i, minPrio;
while (isspace(*tags)) tags++;
i = 0;
while (*tags != '\0' && !isspace(*tags) && *tags != ':' && i < kMaxTagLen) {
tagName[i++] = *tags++;
}
if (i == kMaxTagLen) {
TRACE("ERROR: env tag too long (%d chars max)\n", kMaxTagLen - 1);
return;
}
tagName[i] = '\0';
/* default priority, if there's no ":" part; also zero out '*' */
minPrio = ANDROID_LOG_VERBOSE;
if (tagName[0] == '*' && tagName[1] == '\0') {
minPrio = ANDROID_LOG_DEBUG;
tagName[0] = '\0';
}
if (*tags == ':') {
tags++;
if (*tags >= '0' && *tags <= '9') {
if (*tags >= ('0' + ANDROID_LOG_SILENT))
minPrio = ANDROID_LOG_VERBOSE;
else
minPrio = *tags - '\0';
} else {
switch (*tags) {
case 'v':
minPrio = ANDROID_LOG_VERBOSE;
break;
case 'd':
minPrio = ANDROID_LOG_DEBUG;
break;
case 'i':
minPrio = ANDROID_LOG_INFO;
break;
case 'w':
minPrio = ANDROID_LOG_WARN;
break;
case 'e':
minPrio = ANDROID_LOG_ERROR;
break;
case 'f':
minPrio = ANDROID_LOG_FATAL;
break;
case 's':
minPrio = ANDROID_LOG_SILENT;
break;
default:
minPrio = ANDROID_LOG_DEFAULT;
break;
}
}
tags++;
if (*tags != '\0' && !isspace(*tags)) {
TRACE("ERROR: garbage in tag env; expected whitespace\n");
TRACE(" env='%s'\n", tags);
return;
}
}
if (tagName[0] == 0) {
logState->globalMinPriority = minPrio;
TRACE("+++ global min prio %d\n", logState->globalMinPriority);
} else {
logState->tagSet[entry].minPriority = minPrio;
strcpy(logState->tagSet[entry].tag, tagName);
TRACE("+++ entry %d: %s:%d\n", entry, logState->tagSet[entry].tag,
logState->tagSet[entry].minPriority);
entry++;
}
}
}
/*
* Taken from the long-dead utils/Log.cpp
*/
const char* fstr = getenv("ANDROID_PRINTF_LOG");
LogFormat format;
if (fstr == NULL) {
format = FORMAT_BRIEF;
} else {
if (strcmp(fstr, "brief") == 0)
format = FORMAT_BRIEF;
else if (strcmp(fstr, "process") == 0)
format = FORMAT_PROCESS;
else if (strcmp(fstr, "tag") == 0)
format = FORMAT_PROCESS;
else if (strcmp(fstr, "thread") == 0)
format = FORMAT_PROCESS;
else if (strcmp(fstr, "raw") == 0)
format = FORMAT_PROCESS;
else if (strcmp(fstr, "time") == 0)
format = FORMAT_PROCESS;
else if (strcmp(fstr, "long") == 0)
format = FORMAT_PROCESS;
else
format = (LogFormat)atoi(fstr); // really?!
}
logState->outputFormat = format;
}
/*
* Return a human-readable string for the priority level. Always returns
* a valid string.
*/
static const char* getPriorityString(int priority) {
/* the first character of each string should be unique */
static const char* priorityStrings[] = {"Verbose", "Debug", "Info", "Warn", "Error", "Assert"};
int idx;
idx = (int)priority - (int)ANDROID_LOG_VERBOSE;
if (idx < 0 || idx >= (int)(sizeof(priorityStrings) / sizeof(priorityStrings[0])))
return "?unknown?";
return priorityStrings[idx];
}
#if defined(_WIN32)
/*
* WIN32 does not have writev().
* Make up something to replace it.
*/
static ssize_t fake_writev(int fd, const struct iovec* iov, int iovcnt) {
ssize_t result = 0;
const struct iovec* end = iov + iovcnt;
for (; iov < end; iov++) {
ssize_t w = write(fd, iov->iov_base, iov->iov_len);
if (w != (ssize_t)iov->iov_len) {
if (w < 0) return w;
return result + w;
}
result += w;
}
return result;
}
#define writev fake_writev
#endif
/*
* Write a filtered log message to stderr.
*
* Log format parsing taken from the long-dead utils/Log.cpp.
*/
static void showLog(LogState* state, int logPrio, const char* tag, const char* msg) {
#if !defined(_WIN32)
struct tm tmBuf;
#endif
struct tm* ptm;
char timeBuf[32];
char prefixBuf[128], suffixBuf[128];
char priChar;
time_t when;
#if !defined(_WIN32)
pid_t pid, tid;
#else
uint32_t pid, tid;
#endif
TRACE("LOG %d: %s %s", logPrio, tag, msg);
priChar = getPriorityString(logPrio)[0];
when = time(NULL);
pid = tid = getpid(); // find gettid()?
/*
* Get the current date/time in pretty form
*
* It's often useful when examining a log with "less" to jump to
* a specific point in the file by searching for the date/time stamp.
* For this reason it's very annoying to have regexp meta characters
* in the time stamp. Don't use forward slashes, parenthesis,
* brackets, asterisks, or other special chars here.
*/
#if !defined(_WIN32)
ptm = localtime_r(&when, &tmBuf);
#else
ptm = localtime(&when);
#endif
// strftime(timeBuf, sizeof(timeBuf), "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S", ptm);
strftime(timeBuf, sizeof(timeBuf), "%m-%d %H:%M:%S", ptm);
/*
* Construct a buffer containing the log header and log message.
*/
size_t prefixLen, suffixLen;
switch (state->outputFormat) {
case FORMAT_TAG:
prefixLen = snprintf(prefixBuf, sizeof(prefixBuf), "%c/%-8s: ", priChar, tag);
strcpy(suffixBuf, "\n");
suffixLen = 1;
break;
case FORMAT_PROCESS:
prefixLen = snprintf(prefixBuf, sizeof(prefixBuf), "%c(%5d) ", priChar, pid);
suffixLen = snprintf(suffixBuf, sizeof(suffixBuf), " (%s)\n", tag);
break;
case FORMAT_THREAD:
prefixLen = snprintf(prefixBuf, sizeof(prefixBuf), "%c(%5d:%5d) ", priChar, pid, tid);
strcpy(suffixBuf, "\n");
suffixLen = 1;
break;
case FORMAT_RAW:
prefixBuf[0] = 0;
prefixLen = 0;
strcpy(suffixBuf, "\n");
suffixLen = 1;
break;
case FORMAT_TIME:
prefixLen = snprintf(prefixBuf, sizeof(prefixBuf), "%s %-8s\n\t", timeBuf, tag);
strcpy(suffixBuf, "\n");
suffixLen = 1;
break;
case FORMAT_THREADTIME:
prefixLen = snprintf(prefixBuf, sizeof(prefixBuf), "%s %5d %5d %c %-8s \n\t", timeBuf, pid,
tid, priChar, tag);
strcpy(suffixBuf, "\n");
suffixLen = 1;
break;
case FORMAT_LONG:
prefixLen = snprintf(prefixBuf, sizeof(prefixBuf), "[ %s %5d:%5d %c/%-8s ]\n", timeBuf, pid,
tid, priChar, tag);
strcpy(suffixBuf, "\n\n");
suffixLen = 2;
break;
default:
prefixLen = snprintf(prefixBuf, sizeof(prefixBuf), "%c/%-8s(%5d): ", priChar, tag, pid);
strcpy(suffixBuf, "\n");
suffixLen = 1;
break;
}
/*
* Figure out how many lines there will be.
*/
const char* end = msg + strlen(msg);
size_t numLines = 0;
const char* p = msg;
while (p < end) {
if (*p++ == '\n') numLines++;
}
if (p > msg && *(p - 1) != '\n') {
numLines++;
}
/*
* Create an array of iovecs large enough to write all of
* the lines with a prefix and a suffix.
*/
const size_t INLINE_VECS = 64;
const size_t MAX_LINES = ((size_t)~0) / (3 * sizeof(struct iovec*));
struct iovec stackVec[INLINE_VECS];
struct iovec* vec = stackVec;
size_t numVecs;
if (numLines > MAX_LINES) numLines = MAX_LINES;
numVecs = numLines * 3; // 3 iovecs per line.
if (numVecs > INLINE_VECS) {
vec = (struct iovec*)malloc(sizeof(struct iovec) * numVecs);
if (vec == NULL) {
msg = "LOG: write failed, no memory";
numVecs = INLINE_VECS;
numLines = numVecs / 3;
vec = stackVec;
}
}
/*
* Fill in the iovec pointers.
*/
p = msg;
struct iovec* v = vec;
int totalLen = 0;
while (numLines > 0 && p < end) {
if (prefixLen > 0) {
v->iov_base = prefixBuf;
v->iov_len = prefixLen;
totalLen += prefixLen;
v++;
}
const char* start = p;
while (p < end && *p != '\n') {
p++;
}
if ((p - start) > 0) {
v->iov_base = (void*)start;
v->iov_len = p - start;
totalLen += p - start;
v++;
}
if (*p == '\n') p++;
if (suffixLen > 0) {
v->iov_base = suffixBuf;
v->iov_len = suffixLen;
totalLen += suffixLen;
v++;
}
numLines -= 1;
}
/*
* Write the entire message to the log file with a single writev() call.
* We need to use this rather than a collection of printf()s on a FILE*
* because of multi-threading and multi-process issues.
*
* If the file was not opened with O_APPEND, this will produce interleaved
* output when called on the same file from multiple processes.
*
* If the file descriptor is actually a network socket, the writev()
* call may return with a partial write. Putting the writev() call in
* a loop can result in interleaved data. This can be alleviated
* somewhat by wrapping the writev call in the Mutex.
*/
for (;;) {
int cc = writev(fileno(stderr), vec, v - vec);
if (cc == totalLen) break;
if (cc < 0) {
if (errno == EINTR) continue;
/* can't really log the failure; for now, throw out a stderr */
fprintf(stderr, "+++ LOG: write failed (errno=%d)\n", errno);
break;
} else {
/* shouldn't happen when writing to file or tty */
fprintf(stderr, "+++ LOG: write partial (%d of %d)\n", cc, totalLen);
break;
}
}
/* if we allocated storage for the iovecs, free it */
if (vec != stackVec) free(vec);
}
/*
* Receive a log message. We happen to know that "vector" has three parts:
*
* priority (1 byte)
* tag (N bytes -- null-terminated ASCII string)
* message (N bytes -- null-terminated ASCII string)
*/
ssize_t fakeLogWritev(int fd, const struct iovec* vector, int count) {
LogState* state;
/* Make sure that no-one frees the LogState while we're using it.
* Also guarantees that only one thread is in showLog() at a given
* time (if it matters).
*/
lock();
state = fdToLogState(fd);
if (state == NULL) {
errno = EBADF;
unlock();
return -1;
}
if (state->isBinary) {
TRACE("%s: ignoring binary log\n", state->debugName);
unlock();
int len = 0;
for (int i = 0; i < count; ++i) {
len += vector[i].iov_len;
}
return len;
}
if (count != 3) {
TRACE("%s: writevLog with count=%d not expected\n", state->debugName, count);
unlock();
return -1;
}
/* pull out the three fields */
int logPrio = *(const char*)vector[0].iov_base;
const char* tag = (const char*)vector[1].iov_base;
const char* msg = (const char*)vector[2].iov_base;
/* see if this log tag is configured */
int i;
int minPrio = state->globalMinPriority;
for (i = 0; i < kTagSetSize; i++) {
if (state->tagSet[i].minPriority == ANDROID_LOG_UNKNOWN)
break; /* reached end of configured values */
if (strcmp(state->tagSet[i].tag, tag) == 0) {
minPrio = state->tagSet[i].minPriority;
break;
}
}
if (logPrio >= minPrio) {
showLog(state, logPrio, tag, msg);
}
unlock();
int len = 0;
for (i = 0; i < count; ++i) {
len += vector[i].iov_len;
}
return len;
}
/*
* Free up our state and close the fake descriptor.
*
* The logger API has no means or need to 'stop' or 'close' using the logs,
* and as such, there is no way for that 'stop' or 'close' to translate into
* a close operation to the fake log handler. fakeLogClose is provided for
* completeness only.
*
* We have no intention of adding a log close operation as it would complicate
* every user of the logging API with no gain since the only valid place to
* call is in the exit handler. Logging can continue in the exit handler to
* help debug HOST tools ...
*/
int fakeLogClose(int fd) {
deleteFakeFd(fd);
return 0;
}
/*
* Open a log output device and return a fake fd.
*/
int fakeLogOpen(const char* pathName) {
LogState* logState;
int fd = -1;
lock();
logState = createLogState();
if (logState != NULL) {
configureInitialState(pathName, logState);
fd = logState->fakeFd;
} else {
errno = ENFILE;
}
unlock();
return fd;
}
int __android_log_is_loggable(int prio, const char*, int def) {
int logLevel = def;
return logLevel >= 0 && prio >= logLevel;
}
int __android_log_is_loggable_len(int prio, const char*, size_t, int def) {
int logLevel = def;
return logLevel >= 0 && prio >= logLevel;
}
int __android_log_is_debuggable() {
return 1;
}