6.3 KiB
The Recovery Image
Quick turn-around testing
-
Devices using recovery-as-boot (e.g. Pixels, which set BOARD_USES_RECOVERY_AS_BOOT)
# After setting up environment and lunch. m -j bootimage adb reboot bootloader # Pixel devices don't support booting into recovery mode with `fastboot boot`. fastboot flash boot # Manually choose `Recovery mode` from bootloader menu.
-
Devices with a separate recovery image (e.g. Nexus)
# After setting up environment and lunch. mm -j && m ramdisk-nodeps && m recoveryimage-nodeps adb reboot bootloader # To boot into the new recovery image without flashing the recovery partition: fastboot boot $ANDROID_PRODUCT_OUT/recovery.img
Running the tests
# After setting up environment and lunch.
mmma -j bootable/recovery
# Running the tests on device (under normal boot).
adb root
adb sync data
# 32-bit device
adb shell /data/nativetest/recovery_unit_test/recovery_unit_test
# Or 64-bit device
adb shell /data/nativetest64/recovery_unit_test/recovery_unit_test
Running the manual tests
recovery-refresh
and recovery-persist
executables exist only on systems without
/cache partition. And we need to follow special steps to run tests for them.
-
Execute the test on an A/B device first. The test should fail but it will log some contents to pmsg.
-
Reboot the device immediately and run the test again. The test should save the contents of pmsg buffer into /data/misc/recovery/inject.txt. Test will pass if this file has expected contents.
Using adb
under recovery
When running recovery image from debuggable builds (i.e. -eng
or -userdebug
build variants, or
ro.debuggable=1
in /prop.default
), adbd
service is enabled and started by default, which
allows adb
communication. A device should be listed under adb devices
, either in recovery
or
sideload
state.
$ adb devices
List of devices attached
1234567890abcdef recovery
Although /system/bin/adbd
is built from the same code base as the one in the normal boot, only a
subset of adb
commands are meaningful under recovery, such as adb root
, adb shell
, adb push
,
adb pull
etc. Since Android Q, adb shell
no longer requires manually mounting /system
from
recovery menu.
Troubleshooting
adb devices
doesn't show the device.
$ adb devices
List of devices attached
- Ensure
adbd
is built and running.
By default, adbd
is always included into recovery image, as /system/bin/adbd
. init
starts
adbd
service automatically only in debuggable builds. This behavior is controlled by the recovery
specific /init.rc
, whose source code is at bootable/recovery/etc/init.rc
.
The best way to confirm a running adbd
is by checking the serial output, which shows a service
start log as below.
[ 18.961986] c1 1 init: starting service 'adbd'...
- Ensure USB gadget has been enabled.
If adbd
service has been started but device not shown under adb devices
, use lsusb(8)
(on
host) to check if the device is visible to the host.
bootable/recovery/etc/init.rc
disables Android USB gadget (via sysfs) as part of the fs
action
trigger, and will only re-enable it in debuggable builds (the on property
rule will always run
after on fs
).
on fs
write /sys/class/android_usb/android0/enable 0
# Always start adbd on userdebug and eng builds
on property:ro.debuggable=1
write /sys/class/android_usb/android0/enable 1
start adbd
If device is using configfs, check if configfs has been properly set up in init rc scripts. See the example configuration for Pixel 2 devices. Note that the flag set via sysfs (i.e. the one above) is no-op when using configfs.
adb devices
shows the device, but in unauthorized
state.
$ adb devices
List of devices attached
1234567890abcdef unauthorized
recovery image doesn't honor the USB debugging toggle and the authorizations added under normal boot (because such authorization data stays in /data, which recovery doesn't mount), nor does it support authorizing a host device under recovery. We can use one of the following options instead.
- Option 1 (Recommended): Authorize a host device with adb vendor keys.
For debuggable builds, an RSA keypair can be used to authorize a host device that has the private
key. The public key, defined via PRODUCT_ADB_KEYS
, will be copied to /adb_keys
. When starting
the host-side adbd
, make sure the filename (or the directory) of the matching private key has been
added to $ADB_VENDOR_KEYS
.
$ export ADB_VENDOR_KEYS=/path/to/adb/private/key
$ adb kill-server
$ adb devices
-user
builds filter out PRODUCT_ADB_KEYS
, so no /adb_keys
will be included there.
Note that this mechanism applies to both of normal boot and recovery modes.
- Option 2: Allow
adbd
to connect without authentication.adbd
is compiled withALLOW_ADBD_NO_AUTH
(only on debuggable builds).ro.adb.secure
has a value of0
.
Both of the two conditions need to be satisfied. Although ro.adb.secure
is a runtime property, its
value is set at build time (written into /prop.default
). It defaults to 1
on -user
builds, and
0
for other build variants. The value is overridable via PRODUCT_DEFAULT_PROPERTY_OVERRIDES
.
Localization of the background texts
The recovery image supports localization of several background texts, e.g. installing, error,
factory reset warnings, etc. For devices using xxhdpi
and xxxhdpi
, the build system generates
these localization images dynamically since android-10 when building the recovery image. While
the static images under res-*dpi/images/ is used for other display resolutions and as a
backup.
Check the invocation of the image_generator tool in the makefile. And the detailed usage of the image_generator is documented here.