tree: 59e1e5299d1048e0697253e3db55a474f6b0f652 [path history] [tgz]
  1. fuzzer/
  2. parser/
  3. sysprop/
  4. test_kill_services/
  5. test_service/
  6. test_upgrade_mte/
  7. test_utils/
  8. action.cpp
  9. action.h
  10. action_manager.cpp
  11. action_manager.h
  12. action_parser.cpp
  13. action_parser.h
  14. Android.bp
  15. Android.mk
  16. AndroidTest.xml
  17. apex_init_util.cpp
  18. apex_init_util.h
  19. block_dev_initializer.cpp
  20. block_dev_initializer.h
  21. bootchart.cpp
  22. bootchart.h
  23. builtin_arguments.h
  24. builtins.cpp
  25. builtins.h
  26. capabilities.cpp
  27. capabilities.h
  28. check_builtins.cpp
  29. check_builtins.h
  30. compare-bootcharts.py
  31. debug_ramdisk.h
  32. devices.cpp
  33. devices.h
  34. devices_test.cpp
  35. epoll.cpp
  36. epoll.h
  37. epoll_test.cpp
  38. extra_free_kbytes.sh
  39. firmware_handler.cpp
  40. firmware_handler.h
  41. firmware_handler_test.cpp
  42. first_stage_console.cpp
  43. first_stage_console.h
  44. first_stage_init.cpp
  45. first_stage_init.h
  46. first_stage_main.cpp
  47. first_stage_mount.cpp
  48. first_stage_mount.h
  49. fscrypt_init_extensions.cpp
  50. fscrypt_init_extensions.h
  51. grab-bootchart.sh
  52. host_builtin_map.py
  53. host_import_parser.cpp
  54. host_import_parser.h
  55. host_init_stubs.h
  56. host_init_verifier.cpp
  57. host_init_verifier.h
  58. import_parser.cpp
  59. import_parser.h
  60. init.cpp
  61. init.h
  62. init_test.cpp
  63. interface_utils.cpp
  64. interface_utils.h
  65. interprocess_fifo.cpp
  66. interprocess_fifo.h
  67. interprocess_fifo_test.cpp
  68. keychords.cpp
  69. keychords.h
  70. keychords_test.cpp
  71. keyword_map.h
  72. lmkd_service.cpp
  73. lmkd_service.h
  74. main.cpp
  75. modalias_handler.cpp
  76. modalias_handler.h
  77. MODULE_LICENSE_APACHE2
  78. mount_handler.cpp
  79. mount_handler.h
  80. mount_namespace.cpp
  81. mount_namespace.h
  82. NOTICE
  83. oneshot_on_test.cpp
  84. OWNERS
  85. parser.cpp
  86. parser.h
  87. perfboot.py
  88. persistent_properties.cpp
  89. persistent_properties.h
  90. persistent_properties.proto
  91. persistent_properties_test.cpp
  92. property_service.cpp
  93. property_service.h
  94. property_service.proto
  95. property_service_test.cpp
  96. property_type.cpp
  97. property_type.h
  98. property_type_test.cpp
  99. proto_utils.h
  100. README.md
  101. README.ueventd.md
  102. reboot.cpp
  103. reboot.h
  104. reboot_test.cpp
  105. reboot_utils.cpp
  106. reboot_utils.h
  107. result.h
  108. rlimit_parser.cpp
  109. rlimit_parser.h
  110. rlimit_parser_test.cpp
  111. second_stage_resources.h
  112. security.cpp
  113. security.h
  114. selabel.cpp
  115. selabel.h
  116. selinux.cpp
  117. selinux.h
  118. service.cpp
  119. service.h
  120. service_list.cpp
  121. service_list.h
  122. service_parser.cpp
  123. service_parser.h
  124. service_test.cpp
  125. service_utils.cpp
  126. service_utils.h
  127. sigchld_handler.cpp
  128. sigchld_handler.h
  129. snapuserd_transition.cpp
  130. snapuserd_transition.h
  131. subcontext.cpp
  132. subcontext.h
  133. subcontext.proto
  134. subcontext_benchmark.cpp
  135. subcontext_test.cpp
  136. switch_root.cpp
  137. switch_root.h
  138. TEST_MAPPING
  139. tokenizer.cpp
  140. tokenizer.h
  141. tokenizer_test.cpp
  142. uevent.h
  143. uevent_handler.h
  144. uevent_listener.cpp
  145. uevent_listener.h
  146. ueventd.cpp
  147. ueventd.h
  148. ueventd_parser.cpp
  149. ueventd_parser.h
  150. ueventd_parser_test.cpp
  151. ueventd_test.cpp
  152. util.cpp
  153. util.h
  154. util_test.cpp
init/README.md

Android Init Language

The Android Init Language consists of five broad classes of statements: Actions, Commands, Services, Options, and Imports.

All of these are line-oriented, consisting of tokens separated by whitespace. The c-style backslash escapes may be used to insert whitespace into a token. Double quotes may also be used to prevent whitespace from breaking text into multiple tokens. The backslash, when it is the last character on a line, may be used for line-folding.

Lines which start with a # (leading whitespace allowed) are comments.

System properties can be expanded using the syntax ${property.name}. This also works in contexts where concatenation is required, such as import /init.recovery.${ro.hardware}.rc.

Actions and Services implicitly declare a new section. All commands or options belong to the section most recently declared. Commands or options before the first section are ignored.

Services have unique names. If a second Service is defined with the same name as an existing one, it is ignored and an error message is logged.

Init .rc Files

The init language is used in plain text files that take the .rc file extension. There are typically multiple of these in multiple locations on the system, described below.

/system/etc/init/hw/init.rc is the primary .rc file and is loaded by the init executable at the beginning of its execution. It is responsible for the initial set up of the system.

Init loads all of the files contained within the /{system,system_ext,vendor,odm,product}/etc/init/ directories immediately after loading the primary /system/etc/init/hw/init.rc. This is explained in more details in the Imports section of this file.

Legacy devices without the first stage mount mechanism previously were able to import init scripts during mount_all, however that is deprecated and not allowed for devices launching after Q.

The intention of these directories is:

  1. /system/etc/init/ is for core system items such as SurfaceFlinger, MediaService, and logd.
  2. /vendor/etc/init/ is for SoC vendor items such as actions or daemons needed for core SoC functionality.
  3. /odm/etc/init/ is for device manufacturer items such as actions or daemons needed for motion sensor or other peripheral functionality.

All services whose binaries reside on the system, vendor, or odm partitions should have their service entries placed into a corresponding init .rc file, located in the /etc/init/ directory of the partition where they reside. There is a build system macro, LOCAL_INIT_RC, that handles this for developers. Each init .rc file should additionally contain any actions associated with its service.

An example is the userdebug logcatd.rc and Android.mk files located in the system/core/logcat directory. The LOCAL_INIT_RC macro in the Android.mk file places logcatd.rc in /system/etc/init/ during the build process. Init loads logcatd.rc during the mount_all command and allows the service to be run and the action to be queued when appropriate.

This break up of init .rc files according to their daemon is preferred to the previously used monolithic init .rc files. This approach ensures that the only service entries that init reads and the only actions that init performs correspond to services whose binaries are in fact present on the file system, which was not the case with the monolithic init .rc files. This additionally will aid in merge conflict resolution when multiple services are added to the system, as each one will go into a separate file.

Versioned RC files within APEXs

With the arrival of mainline on Android Q, the individual mainline modules carry their own init.rc files within their boundaries. Init processes these files according to the naming pattern /apex/*/etc/*rc.

Because APEX modules must run on more than one release of Android, they may require different parameters as part of the services they define. This is achieved, starting in Android T, by incorporating the SDK version information in the name of the init file. The suffix is changed from .rc to .#rc where # is the first SDK where that RC file is accepted. An init file specific to SDK=31 might be named init.31rc. With this scheme, an APEX may include multiple init files. An example is appropriate.

For an APEX module with the following files in /apex/sample-module/apex/etc/:

  1. init.rc
  2. init.32rc
  3. init.35rc

The selection rule chooses the highest .#rc value that does not exceed the SDK of the currently running system. The unadorned .rc is interpreted as sdk=0.

When this APEX is installed on a device with SDK <=31, the system will process init.rc. When installed on a device running SDK 32, 33, or 34, it will use init.32rc. When installed on a device running SDKs >= 35, it will choose init.35rc

This versioning scheme is used only for the init files within APEX modules; it does not apply to the init files stored in /system/etc/init, /vendor/etc/init, or other directories.

This naming scheme is available after Android S.

Actions

Actions are named sequences of commands. Actions have a trigger which is used to determine when the action is executed. When an event occurs which matches an action's trigger, that action is added to the tail of a to-be-executed queue (unless it is already on the queue).

Each action in the queue is dequeued in sequence and each command in that action is executed in sequence. Init handles other activities (device creation/destruction, property setting, process restarting) “between” the execution of the commands in activities.

Actions take the form of:

on <trigger> [&& <trigger>]*
   <command>
   <command>
   <command>

Actions are added to the queue and executed based on the order that the file that contains them was parsed (see the Imports section), then sequentially within an individual file.

For example if a file contains:

on boot
   setprop a 1
   setprop b 2

on boot && property:true=true
   setprop c 1
   setprop d 2

on boot
   setprop e 1
   setprop f 2

Then when the boot trigger occurs and assuming the property true equals true, then the order of the commands executed will be:

setprop a 1
setprop b 2
setprop c 1
setprop d 2
setprop e 1
setprop f 2

If the property true wasn't true when the boot was triggered, then the order of the commands executed will be:

setprop a 1
setprop b 2
setprop e 1
setprop f 2

If the property true becomes true AFTER boot was triggered, nothing will be executed. The condition boot && property:true=true will be evaluated to false because the boot trigger is a past event.

Note that when ro.property_service.async_persist_writes is true, there is no defined ordering between persistent setprops and non-persistent setprops. For example:

on boot
    setprop a 1
    setprop persist.b 2

When ro.property_service.async_persist_writes is true, triggers for these two properties may execute in any order.

Services

Services are programs which init launches and (optionally) restarts when they exit. Services take the form of:

service <name> <pathname> [ <argument> ]*
   <option>
   <option>
   ...

Options

Options are modifiers to services. They affect how and when init runs the service.

capabilities [ <capability>\* ]

Set capabilities when exec‘ing this service. ‘capability’ should be a Linux capability without the “CAP_” prefix, like “NET_ADMIN” or “SETPCAP”. See http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man7/capabilities.7.html for a list of Linux capabilities. If no capabilities are provided, then behaviour depends on the user the service runs under: * if it’s root, then the service will run with all the capabitilies (note: whether the service can actually use them is controlled by selinux); * otherwise all capabilities will be dropped.

class <name> [ <name>\* ]

Specify class names for the service. All services in a named class may be started or stopped together. A service is in the class “default” if one is not specified via the class option. Additional classnames beyond the (required) first one are used to group services. The animation class should include all services necessary for both boot animation and shutdown animation. As these services can be launched very early during bootup and can run until the last stage of shutdown, access to /data partition is not guaranteed. These services can check files under /data but it should not keep files opened and should work when /data is not available.

console [<console>]

This service needs a console. The optional second parameter chooses a specific console instead of the default. The default “/dev/console” can be changed by setting the “androidboot.console” kernel parameter. In all cases the leading “/dev/” should be omitted, so “/dev/tty0” would be specified as just “console tty0”. This option connects stdin, stdout, and stderr to the console. It is mutually exclusive with the stdio_to_kmsg option, which only connects stdout and stderr to kmsg.

critical [window=<fatal crash window mins>] [target=<fatal reboot target>]

This is a device-critical service. If it exits more than four times in fatal crash window mins minutes or before boot completes, the device will reboot into fatal reboot target. The default value of fatal crash window mins is 4, and default value of fatal reboot target is ‘bootloader’. For tests, the fatal reboot can be skipped by setting property init.svc_debug.no_fatal.<service-name> to true for specified critical service.

disabled

This service will not automatically start with its class. It must be explicitly started by name or by interface name.

enter_namespace <type> <path>

Enters the namespace of type type located at path. Only network namespaces are supported with type set to “net”. Note that only one namespace of a given type may be entered.

file <path> <type>

Open a file path and pass its fd to the launched process. type must be “r”, “w” or “rw”. For native executables see libcutils android_get_control_file().

gentle_kill

This service will be sent SIGTERM instead of SIGKILL when stopped. After a 200 ms timeout, it will be sent SIGKILL.

group <groupname> [ <groupname>\* ]

Change to ‘groupname’ before exec'ing this service. Additional groupnames beyond the (required) first one are used to set the supplemental groups of the process (via setgroups()). Currently defaults to root. (??? probably should default to nobody)

interface <interface name> <instance name>

Associates this service with a list of the AIDL or HIDL services that it provides. The interface name must be a fully-qualified name and not a value name. For instance, this is used to allow servicemanager or hwservicemanager to lazily start services. When multiple interfaces are served, this tag should be used multiple times. An example of an entry for a HIDL interface is interface vendor.foo.bar@1.0::IBaz default. For an AIDL interface, use interface aidl <instance name>. The instance name for an AIDL interface is whatever is registered with servicemanager, and these can be listed with adb shell dumpsys -l.

ioprio <class> <priority>

Sets the IO priority and IO priority class for this service via the SYS_ioprio_set syscall. class must be one of “rt”, “be”, or “idle”. priority must be an integer in the range 0 - 7.

keycodes <keycode> [ <keycode>\* ]

Sets the keycodes that will trigger this service. If all of the keys corresponding to the passed keycodes are pressed at once, the service will start. This is typically used to start the bugreport service.

This option may take a property instead of a list of keycodes. In this case, only one option is provided: the property name in the typical property expansion format. The property must contain a comma separated list of keycode values or the text ‘none’ to indicate that this service does not respond to keycodes.

For example, keycodes ${some.property.name:-none} where some.property.name expands to “123,124,125”. Since keycodes are handled very early in init, only PRODUCT_DEFAULT_PROPERTY_OVERRIDES properties can be used.

memcg.limit_in_bytes <value> and memcg.limit_percent <value>

Sets the child‘s memory.limit_in_bytes to the minimum of limit_in_bytes bytes and limit_percent which is interpreted as a percentage of the size of the device’s physical memory (only if memcg is mounted). Values must be equal or greater than 0.

memcg.limit_property <value>

Sets the child's memory.limit_in_bytes to the value of the specified property (only if memcg is mounted). This property will override the values specified via memcg.limit_in_bytes and memcg.limit_percent.

memcg.soft_limit_in_bytes <value>

Sets the child's memory.soft_limit_in_bytes to the specified value (only if memcg is mounted), which must be equal or greater than 0.

memcg.swappiness <value>

Sets the child's memory.swappiness to the specified value (only if memcg is mounted), which must be equal or greater than 0.

namespace <pid|mnt>

Enter a new PID or mount namespace when forking the service.

oneshot

Do not restart the service when it exits.

onrestart

Execute a Command (see below) when service restarts.

oom_score_adjust <value>

Sets the child's /proc/self/oom_score_adj to the specified value, which must range from -1000 to 1000.

override

Indicates that this service definition is meant to override a previous definition for a service with the same name. This is typically meant for services on /odm to override those defined on /vendor. The last service definition that init parses with this keyword is the service definition will use for this service. Pay close attention to the order in which init.rc files are parsed, since it has some peculiarities for backwards compatibility reasons. The ‘imports’ section of this file has more details on the order.

priority <priority>

Scheduling priority of the service process. This value has to be in range -20 to 19. Default priority is 0. Priority is set via setpriority().

reboot_on_failure <target>

If this process cannot be started or if the process terminates with an exit code other than CLD_EXITED or an status other than ‘0’, reboot the system with the target specified in target. target takes the same format as the parameter to sys.powerctl. This is particularly intended to be used with the exec_start builtin for any must-have checks during boot.

restart_period <seconds>

If a non-oneshot service exits, it will be restarted at its previous start time plus this period. The default value is 5s. This can be used to implement periodic services together with the timeout_period command below. For example, it may be set to 3600 to indicate that the service should run every hour or 86400 to indicate that the service should run every day. This can be set to a value shorter than 5s for example 0, but the minimum 5s delay is enforced if the restart was due to a crash. This is to rate limit persistentally crashing services. In other words, <seconds> smaller than 5 is respected only when the service exits deliverately and successfully (i.e. by calling exit(0)).

rlimit <resource> <cur> <max>

This applies the given rlimit to the service. rlimits are inherited by child processes, so this effectively applies the given rlimit to the process tree started by this service. It is parsed similarly to the setrlimit command specified below.

seclabel <seclabel>

Change to ‘seclabel’ before exec'ing this service. Primarily for use by services run from the rootfs, e.g. ueventd, adbd. Services on the system partition can instead use policy-defined transitions based on their file security context. If not specified and no transition is defined in policy, defaults to the init context.

setenv <name> <value>

Set the environment variable name to value in the launched process.

shutdown <shutdown_behavior>

Set shutdown behavior of the service process. When this is not specified, the service is killed during shutdown process by using SIGTERM and SIGKILL. The service with shutdown_behavior of “critical” is not killed during shutdown until shutdown times out. When shutdown times out, even services tagged with “shutdown critical” will be killed. When the service tagged with “shutdown critical” is not running when shut down starts, it will be started.

sigstop

Send SIGSTOP to the service immediately before exec is called. This is intended for debugging. See the below section on debugging for how this can be used.

socket <name> <type> <perm> [ <user> [ <group> [ <seclabel> ] ] ]

Create a UNIX domain socket named /dev/socket/name and pass its fd to the launched process. The socket is created synchronously when the service starts. type must be “dgram”, “stream” or “seqpacket”. type may end with “+passcred” to enable SO_PASSCRED on the socket or “+listen” to synchronously make it a listening socket. User and group default to 0. ‘seclabel’ is the SELinux security context for the socket. It defaults to the service security context, as specified by seclabel or computed based on the service executable file security context. For native executables see libcutils android_get_control_socket().

stdio_to_kmsg

Redirect stdout and stderr to /dev/kmsg_debug. This is useful for services that do not use native Android logging during early boot and whose logs messages we want to capture. This is only enabled when /dev/kmsg_debug is enabled, which is only enabled on userdebug and eng builds. This is mutually exclusive with the console option, which additionally connects stdin to the given console.

task_profiles <profile> [ <profile>\* ]

Set task profiles. Before Android U, the profiles are applied to the main thread of the service. For Android U and later, the profiles are applied to the entire service process. This is designed to replace the use of writepid option for moving a process into a cgroup.

timeout_period <seconds>

Provide a timeout after which point the service will be killed. The oneshot keyword is respected here, so oneshot services do not automatically restart, however all other services will. This is particularly useful for creating a periodic service combined with the restart_period option described above.

updatable

Mark that the service can be overridden (via the ‘override’ option) later in the boot sequence by APEXes. When a service with updatable option is started before APEXes are all activated, the execution is delayed until the activation is finished. A service that is not marked as updatable cannot be overridden by APEXes.

user <username>

Change to ‘username’ before exec'ing this service. Currently defaults to root. (??? probably should default to nobody) As of Android M, processes should use this option even if they require Linux capabilities. Previously, to acquire Linux capabilities, a process would need to run as root, request the capabilities, then drop to its desired uid. There is a new mechanism through fs_config that allows device manufacturers to add Linux capabilities to specific binaries on a file system that should be used instead. This mechanism is described on http://source.android.com/devices/tech/config/filesystem.html. When using this new mechanism, processes can use the user option to select their desired uid without ever running as root. As of Android O, processes can also request capabilities directly in their .rc files. See the “capabilities” option above.

writepid <file> [ <file>\* ]

Write the child's pid to the given files when it forks. Meant for cgroup/cpuset usage. If no files under /dev/cpuset/ are specified, but the system property ‘ro.cpuset.default’ is set to a non-empty cpuset name (e.g. ‘/foreground’), then the pid is written to file /dev/cpuset/cpuset_name/tasks. The use of this option for moving a process into a cgroup is obsolete. Please use task_profiles option instead.

Triggers

Triggers are strings which can be used to match certain kinds of events and used to cause an action to occur.

Triggers are subdivided into event triggers and property triggers.

Event triggers are strings triggered by the ‘trigger’ command or by the QueueEventTrigger() function within the init executable. These take the form of a simple string such as ‘boot’ or ‘late-init’.

Property triggers are strings triggered when a named property changes value to a given new value or when a named property changes value to any new value. These take the form of ‘property:=’ and ‘property:=*’ respectively. Property triggers are additionally evaluated and triggered accordingly during the initial boot phase of init.

An Action can have multiple property triggers but may only have one event trigger.

For example: on boot && property:a=b defines an action that is only executed when the ‘boot’ event trigger happens and the property a equals b at the moment. This will NOT be executed when the property a transitions to value b after the boot event was triggered.

on property:a=b && property:c=d defines an action that is executed at three times:

  1. During initial boot if property a=b and property c=d.
  2. Any time that property a transitions to value b, while property c already equals d.
  3. Any time that property c transitions to value d, while property a already equals b.

Trigger Sequence

Init uses the following sequence of triggers during early boot. These are the built-in triggers defined in init.cpp.

  1. early-init - The first in the sequence, triggered after cgroups has been configured but before ueventd's coldboot is complete.
  2. init - Triggered after coldboot is complete.
  3. charger - Triggered if ro.bootmode == "charger".
  4. late-init - Triggered if ro.bootmode != "charger", or via healthd triggering a boot from charging mode.

Remaining triggers are configured in init.rc and are not built-in. The default sequence for these is specified under the “on late-init” event in init.rc. Actions internal to init.rc have been omitted.

  1. early-fs - Start vold.
  2. fs - Vold is up. Mount partitions not marked as first-stage or latemounted.
  3. post-fs - Configure anything dependent on early mounts.
  4. late-fs - Mount partitions marked as latemounted.
  5. post-fs-data - Mount and configure /data; set up encryption. /metadata is reformatted here if it couldn't mount in first-stage init.
  6. zygote-start - Start the zygote.
  7. early-boot - After zygote has started.
  8. boot - After early-boot actions have completed.

Commands

bootchart [start|stop]

Start/stop bootcharting. These are present in the default init.rc files, but bootcharting is only active if the file /data/bootchart/enabled exists; otherwise bootchart start/stop are no-ops.

chmod <octal-mode> <path>

Change file access permissions.

chown <owner> <group> <path>

Change file owner and group.

class_start <serviceclass>

Start all services of the specified class if they are not already running. See the start entry for more information on starting services.

class_stop <serviceclass>

Stop and disable all services of the specified class if they are currently running.

class_reset <serviceclass>

Stop all services of the specified class if they are currently running, without disabling them. They can be restarted later using class_start.

class_restart [--only-enabled] <serviceclass>

Restarts all services of the specified class. If --only-enabled is specified, then disabled services are skipped.

copy <src> <dst>

Copies a file. Similar to write, but useful for binary/large amounts of data. Regarding to the src file, copying from symbolic link file and world-writable or group-writable files are not allowed. Regarding to the dst file, the default mode created is 0600 if it does not exist. And it will be truncated if dst file is a normal regular file and already exists.

copy_per_line <src> <dst>

Copies a file line by line. Similar to copy, but useful for dst is a sysfs node that doesn't handle multiple lines of data.

domainname <name>

Set the domain name.

enable <servicename>

Turns a disabled service into an enabled one as if the service did not specify disabled. If the service is supposed to be running, it will be started now. Typically used when the bootloader sets a variable that indicates a specific service should be started when needed. E.g.

on property:ro.boot.myfancyhardware=1
    enable my_fancy_service_for_my_fancy_hardware

exec [ <seclabel> [ <user> [ <group>\* ] ] ] -- <command> [ <argument>\* ]

Fork and execute command with the given arguments. The command starts after “--” so that an optional security context, user, and supplementary groups can be provided. No other commands will be run until this one finishes. seclabel can be a - to denote default. Properties are expanded within argument. Init halts executing commands until the forked process exits.

exec_background [ <seclabel> [ <user> [ <group>\* ] ] ] -- <command> [ <argument>\* ]

Fork and execute command with the given arguments. This is handled similarly to the exec command. The difference is that init does not halt executing commands until the process exits for exec_background.

exec_start <service>

Start a given service and halt the processing of additional init commands until it returns. The command functions similarly to the exec command, but uses an existing service definition in place of the exec argument vector.

export <name> <value>

Set the environment variable name equal to value in the global environment (which will be inherited by all processes started after this command is executed)

hostname <name>

Set the host name.

ifup <interface>

Bring the network interface interface online.

insmod [-f] <path> [<options>]

Install the module at path with the specified options. -f: force installation of the module even if the version of the running kernel and the version of the kernel for which the module was compiled do not match.

interface_start <name>
interface_restart <name>
interface_stop <name>

Find the service that provides the interface name if it exists and run the start, restart, or stop commands on it respectively. name may be either a fully qualified HIDL name, in which case it is specified as <interface>/<instance>, or an AIDL name, in which case it is specified as aidl/<interface> for example android.hardware.secure_element@1.1::ISecureElement/eSE1 or aidl/aidl_lazy_test_1.

Note that these commands only act on interfaces specified by the interface service option, not on interfaces registered at runtime.

Example usage of these commands:
interface_start android.hardware.secure_element@1.1::ISecureElement/eSE1 will start the HIDL Service that provides the android.hardware.secure_element@1.1 and eSI1 instance.
interface_start aidl/aidl_lazy_test_1 will start the AIDL service that provides the aidl_lazy_test_1 interface.

load_exports <path>

Open the file at path and export global environment variables declared there. Each line must be in the format export <name> <value>, as described above.

load_system_props

(This action is deprecated and no-op.)

load_persist_props

Loads persistent properties when /data has been decrypted. This is included in the default init.rc.

loglevel <level>

Sets init's log level to the integer level, from 7 (all logging) to 0 (fatal logging only). The numeric values correspond to the kernel log levels, but this command does not affect the kernel log level. Use the write command to write to /proc/sys/kernel/printk to change that. Properties are expanded within level.

mark_post_data

Used to mark the point right after /data is mounted.

mkdir <path> [<mode>] [<owner>] [<group>] [encryption=<action>] [key=<key>]

Create a directory at path, optionally with the given mode, owner, and group. If not provided, the directory is created with permissions 755 and owned by the root user and root group. If provided, the mode, owner and group will be updated if the directory exists already. If the directory does not exist, it will receive the security context from the current SELinux policy or its parent if not specified in the policy. If the directory exists, its security context will not be changed (even if different from the policy).

action can be one of:

  • None: take no encryption action; directory will be encrypted if parent is.
  • Require: encrypt directory, abort boot process if encryption fails
  • Attempt: try to set an encryption policy, but continue if it fails
  • DeleteIfNecessary: recursively delete directory if necessary to set encryption policy.

key can be one of:

  • ref: use the systemwide DE key
  • per_boot_ref: use the key freshly generated on each boot.

mount_all [ <fstab> ] [--<option>]

Calls fs_mgr_mount_all on the given fs_mgr-format fstab with optional options “early” and “late”. With “--early” set, the init executable will skip mounting entries with “latemount” flag and triggering fs encryption state event. With “--late” set, init executable will only mount entries with “latemount” flag. By default, no option is set, and mount_all will process all entries in the given fstab. If the fstab parameter is not specified, fstab.${ro.boot.fstab_suffix}, fstab.${ro.hardware} or fstab.${ro.hardware.platform} will be scanned for under /odm/etc, /vendor/etc, or / at runtime, in that order.

mount <type> <device> <dir> [ <flag>\* ] [<options>]

Attempt to mount the named device at the directory dir _flag_s include “ro”, “rw”, “remount”, “noatime”, ... options include “barrier=1”, “noauto_da_alloc”, “discard”, ... as a comma separated string, e.g. barrier=1,noauto_da_alloc

perform_apex_config [--bootstrap]

Performs tasks after APEXes are mounted. For example, creates data directories for the mounted APEXes, parses config file(s) from them, and updates linker configurations. Intended to be used only once when apexd notifies the mount event by setting apexd.status to ready. Use --bootstrap when invoking in the bootstrap mount namespace.

restart [--only-if-running] <service>

Stops and restarts a running service, does nothing if the service is currently restarting, otherwise, it just starts the service. If “--only-if-running” is specified, the service is only restarted if it is already running.

restorecon <path> [ <path>\* ]

Restore the file named by path to the security context specified in the file_contexts configuration. Not required for directories created by the init.rc as these are automatically labeled correctly by init.

restorecon_recursive <path> [ <path>\* ]

Recursively restore the directory tree named by path to the security contexts specified in the file_contexts configuration.

rm <path>

Calls unlink(2) on the given path. You might want to use “exec -- rm ...” instead (provided the system partition is already mounted).

rmdir <path>

Calls rmdir(2) on the given path.

readahead <file|dir> [--fully]

Calls readahead(2) on the file or files within given directory. Use option --fully to read the full file content.

setprop <name> <value>

Set system property name to value. Properties are expanded within value.

setrlimit <resource> <cur> <max>

Set the rlimit for a resource. This applies to all processes launched after the limit is set. It is intended to be set early in init and applied globally. resource is best specified using its text representation (‘cpu’, ‘rtio’, etc or ‘RLIM_CPU’, ‘RLIM_RTIO’, etc). It also may be specified as the int value that the resource enum corresponds to. cur and max can be ‘unlimited’ or ‘-1’ to indicate an infinite rlimit.

start <service>

Start a service running if it is not already running. Note that this is not synchronous, and even if it were, there is no guarantee that the operating system‘s scheduler will execute the service sufficiently to guarantee anything about the service’s status. See the exec_start command for a synchronous version of start.

This creates an important consequence that if the service offers functionality to other services, such as providing a communication channel, simply starting this service before those services is not sufficient to guarantee that the channel has been set up before those services ask for it. There must be a separate mechanism to make any such guarantees.

stop <service>

Stop a service from running if it is currently running.

swapon_all [ <fstab> ]

Calls fs_mgr_swapon_all on the given fstab file. If the fstab parameter is not specified, fstab.${ro.boot.fstab_suffix}, fstab.${ro.hardware} or fstab.${ro.hardware.platform} will be scanned for under /odm/etc, /vendor/etc, or / at runtime, in that order.

symlink <target> <path>

Create a symbolic link at path with the value target

sysclktz <minutes_west_of_gmt>

Set the system clock base (0 if system clock ticks in GMT)

trigger <event>

Trigger an event. Used to queue an action from another action.

umount <path>

Unmount the filesystem mounted at that path.

umount_all [ <fstab> ]

Calls fs_mgr_umount_all on the given fstab file. If the fstab parameter is not specified, fstab.${ro.boot.fstab_suffix}, fstab.${ro.hardware} or fstab.${ro.hardware.platform} will be scanned for under /odm/etc, /vendor/etc, or / at runtime, in that order.

verity_update_state

Internal implementation detail used to update dm-verity state and set the partition.mount-point.verified properties used by adb remount because fs_mgr can't set them directly itself. This is required since Android 12, because CtsNativeVerifiedBootTestCases will read property “partition.${partition}.verified.hash_alg” to check that sha1 is not used. See https://r.android.com/1546980 for more details.

wait <path> [ <timeout> ]

Poll for the existence of the given file and return when found, or the timeout has been reached. If timeout is not specified it currently defaults to five seconds. The timeout value can be fractional seconds, specified in floating point notation.

wait_for_prop <name> <value>

Wait for system property name to be value. Properties are expanded within value. If property name is already set to value, continue immediately.

write <path> <content>

Open the file at path and write a string to it with write(2). If the file does not exist, it will be created. If it does exist, it will be truncated. Properties are expanded within content.

Imports

import <path>

Parse an init config file, extending the current configuration. If path is a directory, each file in the directory is parsed as a config file. It is not recursive, nested directories will not be parsed.

The import keyword is not a command, but rather its own section, meaning that it does not happen as part of an Action, but rather, imports are handled as a file is being parsed and follow the below logic.

There are only three times where the init executable imports .rc files:

  1. When it imports /system/etc/init/hw/init.rc or the script indicated by the property ro.boot.init_rc during initial boot.
  2. When it imports /{system,system_ext,vendor,odm,product}/etc/init/ immediately after importing /system/etc/init/hw/init.rc.
  3. (Deprecated) When it imports /{system,vendor,odm}/etc/init/ or .rc files at specified paths during mount_all, not allowed for devices launching after Q.

The order that files are imported is a bit complex for legacy reasons. The below is guaranteed:

  1. /system/etc/init/hw/init.rc is parsed then recursively each of its imports are parsed.
  2. The contents of /system/etc/init/ are alphabetized and parsed sequentially, with imports happening recursively after each file is parsed.
  3. Step 2 is repeated for /system_ext/etc/init, /vendor/etc/init, /odm/etc/init, /product/etc/init

The below pseudocode may explain this more clearly:

fn Import(file)
  Parse(file)
  for (import : file.imports)
    Import(import)

Import(/system/etc/init/hw/init.rc)
Directories = [/system/etc/init, /system_ext/etc/init, /vendor/etc/init, /odm/etc/init, /product/etc/init]
for (directory : Directories)
  files = <Alphabetical order of directory's contents>
  for (file : files)
    Import(file)

Actions are executed in the order that they are parsed. For example the post-fs-data action(s) in /system/etc/init/hw/init.rc are always the first post-fs-data action(s) to be executed in order of how they appear in that file. Then the post-fs-data actions of the imports of /system/etc/init/hw/init.rc in the order that they're imported, etc.

Properties

Init provides state information with the following properties.

init.svc.<name>

State of a named service (“stopped”, “stopping”, “running”, “restarting”)

dev.mnt.dev.<mount_point>, dev.mnt.blk.<mount_point>, dev.mnt.rootdisk.<mount_point>

Block device base name associated with a mount_point. The mount_point has / replaced by . and if referencing the root mount point “/”, it will use “/root”. dev.mnt.dev.<mount_point> indicates a block device attached to filesystems. (e.g., dm-N or sdaN/mmcblk0pN to access /sys/fs/ext4/${dev.mnt.dev.<mount_point>}/)

dev.mnt.blk.<mount_point> indicates the disk partition to the above block device. (e.g., sdaN / mmcblk0pN to access /sys/class/block/${dev.mnt.blk.<mount_point>}/)

dev.mnt.rootdisk.<mount_point> indicates the root disk to contain the above disk partition. (e.g., sda / mmcblk0 to access /sys/class/block/${dev.mnt.rootdisk.<mount_point>}/queue)

Init responds to properties that begin with ctl.. These properties take the format of ctl.[<target>_]<command> and the value of the system property is used as a parameter. The target is optional and specifies the service option that value is meant to match with. There is only one option for target, interface which indicates that value will refer to an interface that a service provides and not the service name itself.

For example:

SetProperty("ctl.start", "logd") will run the start command on logd.

SetProperty("ctl.interface_start", "aidl/aidl_lazy_test_1") will run the start command on the service that exposes the aidl aidl_lazy_test_1 interface.

Note that these properties are only settable; they will have no value when read.

The commands are listed below.

start
restart
stop
These are equivalent to using the start, restart, and stop commands on the service specified by the value of the property.

oneshot_on and oneshot_off will turn on or off the oneshot flag for the service specified by the value of the property. This is particularly intended for services that are conditionally lazy HALs. When they are lazy HALs, oneshot must be on, otherwise oneshot should be off.

sigstop_on and sigstop_off will turn on or off the sigstop feature for the service specified by the value of the property. See the Debugging init section below for more details about this feature.

Boot timing

Init records some boot timing information in system properties.

ro.boottime.init

Time after boot in ns (via the CLOCK_BOOTTIME clock) at which the first stage of init started.

ro.boottime.init.first_stage

How long in ns it took to run first stage.

ro.boottime.init.selinux

How long in ns it took to run SELinux stage.

ro.boottime.init.modules

How long in ms it took to load kernel modules.

ro.boottime.init.cold_boot_wait

How long init waited for ueventd's coldboot phase to end.

ro.boottime.<service-name>

Time after boot in ns (via the CLOCK_BOOTTIME clock) that the service was first started.

Bootcharting

This version of init contains code to perform “bootcharting”: generating log files that can be later processed by the tools provided by http://www.bootchart.org/.

On the emulator, use the -bootchart timeout option to boot with bootcharting activated for timeout seconds.

On a device:

adb shell 'touch /data/bootchart/enabled'

Don‘t forget to delete this file when you’re done collecting data!

The log files are written to /data/bootchart/. A script is provided to retrieve them and create a bootchart.tgz file that can be used with the bootchart command-line utility:

sudo apt-get install pybootchartgui
# grab-bootchart.sh uses $ANDROID_SERIAL.
$ANDROID_BUILD_TOP/system/core/init/grab-bootchart.sh

One thing to watch for is that the bootchart will show init as if it started running at 0s. You'll have to look at dmesg to work out when the kernel actually started init.

Comparing two bootcharts

A handy script named compare-bootcharts.py can be used to compare the start/end time of selected processes. The aforementioned grab-bootchart.sh will leave a bootchart tarball named bootchart.tgz at /tmp/android-bootchart. If two such tarballs are preserved on the host machine under different directories, the script can list the timestamps differences. For example:

Usage: system/core/init/compare-bootcharts.py base-bootchart-dir exp-bootchart-dir

process: baseline experiment (delta) - Unit is ms (a jiffy is 10 ms on the system)
------------------------------------
/init: 50 40 (-10)
/system/bin/surfaceflinger: 4320 4470 (+150)
/system/bin/bootanimation: 6980 6990 (+10)
zygote64: 10410 10640 (+230)
zygote: 10410 10640 (+230)
system_server: 15350 15150 (-200)
bootanimation ends at: 33790 31230 (-2560)

Systrace

Systrace (http://developer.android.com/tools/help/systrace.html) can be used for obtaining performance analysis reports during boot time on userdebug or eng builds.

Here is an example of trace events of “wm” and “am” categories:

$ANDROID_BUILD_TOP/external/chromium-trace/systrace.py \
      wm am --boot

This command will cause the device to reboot. After the device is rebooted and the boot sequence has finished, the trace report is obtained from the device and written as trace.html on the host by hitting Ctrl+C.

Limitation: recording trace events is started after persistent properties are loaded, so the trace events that are emitted before that are not recorded. Several services such as vold, surfaceflinger, and servicemanager are affected by this limitation since they are started before persistent properties are loaded. Zygote initialization and the processes that are forked from the zygote are not affected.

Debugging init

When a service starts from init, it may fail to execv() the service. This is not typical, and may point to an error happening in the linker as the new service is started. The linker in Android prints its logs to logd and stderr, so they are visible in logcat. If the error is encountered before it is possible to access logcat, the stdio_to_kmsg service option may be used to direct the logs that the linker prints to stderr to kmsg, where they can be read via a serial port.

Launching init services without init is not recommended as init sets up a significant amount of environment (user, groups, security label, capabilities, etc) that is hard to replicate manually.

If it is required to debug a service from its very start, the sigstop service option is added. This option will send SIGSTOP to a service immediately before calling exec. This gives a window where developers can attach a debugger, strace, etc before continuing the service with SIGCONT.

This flag can also be dynamically controlled via the ctl.sigstop_on and ctl.sigstop_off properties.

Below is an example of dynamically debugging logd via the above:

stop logd
setprop ctl.sigstop_on logd
start logd
ps -e | grep logd
> logd          4343     1   18156   1684 do_signal_stop 538280 T init
gdbclient.py -p 4343
b main
c
c
c
> Breakpoint 1, main (argc=1, argv=0x7ff8c9a488) at system/core/logd/main.cpp:427

Below is an example of doing the same but with strace

stop logd
setprop ctl.sigstop_on logd
start logd
ps -e | grep logd
> logd          4343     1   18156   1684 do_signal_stop 538280 T init
strace -p 4343

(From a different shell)
kill -SIGCONT 4343

> strace runs

Host Init Script Verification

Init scripts are checked for correctness during build time. Specifically the below is checked.

  1. Well formatted action, service and import sections, e.g. no actions without a preceding ‘on’ line, and no extraneous lines after an ‘import’ statement.
  2. All commands map to a valid keyword and the argument count is within the correct range.
  3. All service options are valid. This is stricter than how commands are checked as the service options' arguments are fully parsed, e.g. UIDs and GIDs must resolve.

There are other parts of init scripts that are only parsed at runtime and therefore not checked during build time, among them are the below.

  1. The validity of the arguments of commands, e.g. no checking if file paths actually exist, if SELinux would permit the operation, or if the UIDs and GIDs resolve.
  2. No checking if a service exists or has a valid SELinux domain defined
  3. No checking if a service has not been previously defined in a different init script.

Early Init Boot Sequence

The early init boot sequence is broken up into three stages: first stage init, SELinux setup, and second stage init.

First stage init is responsible for setting up the bare minimum requirements to load the rest of the system. Specifically this includes mounting /dev, /proc, mounting ‘early mount’ partitions (which needs to include all partitions that contain system code, for example system and vendor), and moving the system.img mount to / for devices with a ramdisk.

Note that in Android Q, system.img always contains TARGET_ROOT_OUT and always is mounted at / by the time first stage init finishes. Android Q will also require dynamic partitions and therefore will require using a ramdisk to boot Android. The recovery ramdisk can be used to boot to Android instead of a dedicated ramdisk as well.

First stage init has three variations depending on the device configuration:

  1. For system-as-root devices, first stage init is part of /system/bin/init and a symlink at /init points to /system/bin/init for backwards compatibility. These devices do not need to do anything to mount system.img, since it is by definition already mounted as the rootfs by the kernel.

  2. For devices with a ramdisk, first stage init is a static executable located at /init. These devices mount system.img as /system then perform a switch root operation to move the mount at /system to /. The contents of the ramdisk are freed after mounting has completed.

  3. For devices that use recovery as a ramdisk, first stage init it contained within the shared init located at /init within the recovery ramdisk. These devices first switch root to /first_stage_ramdisk to remove the recovery components from the environment, then proceed the same as 2). Note that the decision to boot normally into Android instead of booting into recovery mode is made if androidboot.force_normal_boot=1 is present in the kernel commandline, or in bootconfig with Android S and later.

Once first stage init finishes it execs /system/bin/init with the “selinux_setup” argument. This phase is where SELinux is optionally compiled and loaded onto the system. selinux.cpp contains more information on the specifics of this process.

Lastly once that phase finishes, it execs /system/bin/init again with the “second_stage” argument. At this point the main phase of init runs and continues the boot process via the init.rc scripts.