Previously, adb was assuming a fixed maximum packet size of 1024 bytes
(the value for an endpoint connected via USB 3.0). When connected to an
endpoint that has an actual maximum packet size of 512 bytes (i.e.
every single device over USB 2.0), the following could occur:
device sends amessage with 512 byte payload
client reads amessage
client tries to read payload with a length of 1024
In this scenario, the kernel will block, waiting for an additional
packet which won't arrive until something else gets sent across the
wire, which will result in the previous read failing, and the new
packet being dropped.
Bug: http://b/37783561
Test: python test_device.py on linux/darwin, with native/libusb
Change-Id: I556f5344945e22dd1533b076f662a97eea24628e
When device goes offline, user usually has to manually replug the
usb device. This patch tries to solve two offline situations, all
because when adb on host is killed, the adbd on device is not notified.
1. When adb server is killed while pushing a large file to device,
the device is still reading the unfinished large message. So the
device thinks of the CNXN message as part of the previous unfinished
message, so it doesn't reply and the device is in offline state.
The solution is to add a write_msg_lock in atransport struct. And it
kicks the transport only after sending a whole message. By kicking
all transports before exit, we ensure that we don't write part of
a message to any device. So next time we start adb server, the device
should be waiting for a new message.
2. When adb server is killed while pulling a large file from device,
the device is still trying to send the unfinished large message. So
adb on host usually reads data with EOVERFLOW error. This is because
adb on host is reading less than one packet sent from device.
The solution is to use buffered read on host. The max packet size
of bulk transactions in USB 3.0 is 1024 bytes. By preparing an at least
1024 bytes buffer when reading, EOVERFLOW no longer occurs. And teach
adb host to ignore wrong messages.
To be safe, this patch doesn't change any logic on device.
Bug: http://b/32952319
Test: run python -m unittest -q test_device.DeviceOfflineTest
Test: on linux/mac/windows with bullhead, ryu.
Change-Id: Ib149d30028a62a6f03857b8a95ab5a1d6e9b9c4e
Add a 'host-features' command to get the features of the currently
running host adb server. Abuse it to report libusb status.
Bug: http://b/34983123
Test: adb host-features; adb kill-server; ADB_LIBUSB=1 adb start-server; adb host-features
Change-Id: I0e8d503a2dbdff9002ebb6ce8a298498a9421422
Add a libusb-based implementation alongside the existing native
implementations, controlled by the ADB_LIBUSB environment variable.
Windows will need more work for the usb driver.
Bug: http://b/31321337
Test: python test_device.py on linux/darwin, with ADB_LIBUSB=0 and 1
Change-Id: Ib68fb2c6c05475eae3ff4cc19f55802a6f489bb7
Fix broken kick_transport test, and make it not access atransport
internal variables.
Bug: 25935458
Change-Id: I91b4d32a222b2f369f801bbe3903acac9c8ea4f7
Always use LOG() for debug tracing.
Remove useless D_lock. I believe it is useless to lock just before and after fprintf.
I verified the log output both on host and on device. The output looks fine to me.
Change-Id: I96ccfe408ff56864361551afe9ad464d197ae104
First, HOST is always 0 in adbd, which matches ADB_HOST=0.
Second, HOST is always 1 when adb_main is called, which matches ADB_HOST=1.
For adb client that doesn't call adb_main, it never touches local_init(),
init_transport_registration() and fdevent_loop(). So the changes in adb.cpp,
services.cpp and transport_local.cpp do nothing with it.
As a conclusion, I think we can remove HOST and use ADB_HOST instead.
Change-Id: Ide0e0eca7468b6c3c130f6b50974406280678b2e
The reason behing this change is to increase the adb push/pull speed
with reduceing the number of packets sent between the host and the
device because the communication is heavily bound by packet latency.
The change maintains two way compatibility in the communication
protocol with negotiating a packet size between the target and the
host with the CONNECT packets.
After this change the push/pull speeds improved significantly
(measured from Linux-x86_64 with 100MB of data):
| Old push | Old pull || New push | New pull |
-----------------------------------------------------------
Hammerhead | 4.6 MB/s | 3.9 MB/s || 13.1 MB/s | 16.5 MB/s |
-----------------------------------------------------------
Volantis | 6.0 MB/s | 6.2 MS/s || 25.9 MB/s | 29.0 MB/s |
-----------------------------------------------------------
Fugu | 6.0 MB/s | 5.1 MB/s || 27.9 MB/s | 33.2 MB/s |
-----------------------------------------------------------
Change-Id: Id9625de31266e43394289e325c7e7e473379c5d8
* sysdeps.h should always be included first.
* TRACE_TAG needs to be defined before anything is included.
* Some files were missing copyright headers.
* Save precious bytes on my SSD by removing useless whitespace.
Change-Id: I88980e6e00b5be1093806cf286740d9e4a033b94
I keep trying to clean things up and needing std::strings. Might as
well just do this now.
usb_linux_client.c is going to stay as C because GCC isn't smart
enough to deal with the designated initializers it uses (though for
some reason it is in C mode).
The Darwin files are staying as C because I don't have a way to test
that they build.
The Windows files are staying as C because while I can actually build
for them, it's slow and painful.
Change-Id: I75367d29205a9049d34460032b3bb36384f43941