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path: root/services/java/com/android/server/SystemBackupAgent.java
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2013-11-12Move some system services to their own sub package.Amith Yamasani
As a next step they can be moved into separate directories to be built as separate modules that may or may not be included in a particular configuration. Moves AppWidgetService, BackupManagerService, ClipboardService, DevicePolicyMS, and WallpaperMS. Change-Id: I33e48d070f38186819d3a1d7a4dc3984b75a9eda
2012-08-31Centralize the creation of the user system directoryAmith Yamasani
Environment.getUserSystemDirectory(int userId) Use it all relevant places that was hardcoding it. Also, wipe out the user's system directory when user is removed, otherwise old state might be transferred to a new user. Change-Id: I788ce9c4cf9624229e65efa7047bc0c019ccef0a
2012-02-10Multi-user - wallpaper serviceAmith Yamasani
- Allow each user to have their own wallpaper (live or static). - Migrate old wallpaper on upgrade. - Update SystemBackupAgent to backup/restore from primary user's new wallpaper directory. Reduce dependency on Binder.getOrigCallingUser() by passing the userId for bindService. Change-Id: I19c8c3296d3d2efa7f28f951d4b84407489e2166
2011-07-28Support full-backup encryption and global backup passwordChristopher Tate
If the user has supplied a backup password in Settings, that password is validated during the full backup process and is used as an encryption key for encoding the backed-up data itself. This is the fundamental mechanism whereby users can secure their data even against malicious parties getting physical unlocked access to their device. Technically the user-supplied password is not used as the encryption key for the backed-up data itself. What is actually done is that a random key is generated to use as the raw encryption key. THAT key, in turn, is encrypted with the user-supplied password (after random salting and key expansion with PBKDF2). The encrypted master key and a checksum are stored in the backup header. At restore time, the user supplies their password, which allows the system to decrypt the master key, which in turn allows the decryption of the backup data itself. The checksum is part of the archive in order to permit validation of the user-supplied password. The checksum is the result of running the user-supplied password through PBKDF2 with a randomly selected salt. At restore time, the proposed password is run through PBKDF2 with the salt described by the archive header. If the result does not match the archive's stated checksum, then the user has supplied the wrong decryption password. Also, suppress backup consideration for a few packages whose data is either nonexistent or inapplicable across devices or factory reset operations. Bug 4901637 Change-Id: Id0cc9d0fdfc046602b129f273d48e23b7a14df36
2011-07-06Make full backup API available to appsChristopher Tate
New methods for full backup/restore have been added to BackupAgent (still hidden): onFullBackup() and onRestoreFile(). The former is the entry point for a full app backup to adb/socket/etc: the app then writes all of its files, entire, to the output. During restore, the latter new callback is invoked, once for each file being restored. The full backup/restore interface does not use the previously-defined BackupDataInput / BackupDataOutput classes, because those classes provide an API designed for incremental key/value data structuring. Instead, a new FullBackupDataOutput class has been introduced, through which we restrict apps' abilities to write data during a full backup operation to *only* writing entire on-disk files via a new BackupAgent method called fullBackupFile(). "FullBackupAgent" exists now solely as a concrete shell class that can be instantiated in the case of apps that do not have their own BackupAgent implementations. Along with the API change, responsibility for backing up the .apk file and OBB container has been moved into the framework rather than have the application side of the transaction do it. Change-Id: I12849b06b1a6e4c44d080587c1e9828a52b70dae
2011-06-07Implement shared-storage full backup/restoreChristopher Tate
Every available shared-storage volume is backed up, tagged with its ordinal in the set of mounted shared volumes. This is an approximation of "internal + the external card". This lets us restore things to the same volume [or "equivalent" volume, in the case of a cross-model restore] as they originated on. Also fixed a bug in the handling of files/dirs with spaces in their names. Change-Id: I380019da8d0bb5b3699bd7c11eeff621a88e78c3
2011-06-01Restore from a previous full backup's tarfileChristopher Tate
Usage: adb restore [tarfilename] Restores app data [and installs the apps if necessary from the backup file] captured in a previous invocation of 'adb backup'. The user must explicitly acknowledge the action on-device before it is allowed to proceed; this prevents any "invisible" pushes of content from the host to the device. Known issues: * The settings databases and wallpaper are saved/restored, but lots of other system state is not yet captured in the full backup. This means that for practical purposes this is usable for 3rd party apps at present but not for full-system cloning/imaging. Change-Id: I0c748b645845e7c9178e30bf142857861a64efd3
2011-05-10Full local backup infrastructureChristopher Tate
This is the basic infrastructure for pulling a full(*) backup of the device's data over an adb(**) connection to the local device. The basic process consists of these interacting pieces: 1. The framework's BackupManagerService, which coordinates the collection of app data and routing to the destination. 2. A new framework-provided BackupAgent implementation called FullBackupAgent, which is instantiated in the target applications' processes in turn, and knows how to emit a datastream that contains all of the app's saved data files. 3. A new shell-level program called "bu" that is used to bridge from adb to the framework's Backup Manager. 4. adb itself, which now knows how to use 'bu' to kick off a backup operation and pull the resulting data stream to the desktop host. 5. A system-provided application that verifies with the user that an attempted backup/restore operation is in fact expected and to be allowed. The full agent implementation is not used during normal operation of the delta-based app-customized remote backup process. Instead it's used during user-confirmed *full* backup of applications and all their data to a local destination, e.g. via the adb connection. The output format is 'tar'. This makes it very easy for the end user to examine the resulting dataset, e.g. for purpose of extracting files for debug purposes; as well as making it easy to contemplate adding things like a direct gzip stage to the data pipeline during backup/restore. It also makes it convenient to construct and maintain synthetic backup datasets for testing purposes. Within the tar format, certain artificial conventions are used. All files are stored within top-level directories according to their semantic origin: apps/pkgname/a/ : Application .apk file itself apps/pkgname/obb/: The application's associated .obb containers apps/pkgname/f/ : The subtree rooted at the getFilesDir() location apps/pkgname/db/ : The subtree rooted at the getDatabasePath() parent apps/pkgname/sp/ : The subtree rooted at the getSharedPrefsFile() parent apps/pkgname/r/ : Files stored relative to the root of the app's file tree apps/pkgname/c/ : Reserved for the app's getCacheDir() tree; not stored. For each package, the first entry in the tar stream is a file called "_manifest", nominally rooted at apps/pkgname. This file contains some metadata about the package whose data is stored in the archive. The contents of shared storage can optionally be included in the tar stream. It is placed in the synthetic location: shared/... uid/gid are ignored; app uids are assigned at install time, and the app's data is handled from within its own execution environment, so will automatically have the app's correct uid. Forward-locked .apk files are never backed up. System-partition .apk files are not backed up unless they have been overridden by a post-factory upgrade, in which case the current .apk *is* backed up -- i.e. the .apk that matches the on-disk data. The manifest preceding each application's portion of the tar stream provides version numbers and signature blocks for version checking, as well as an indication of whether the restore logic should expect to install the .apk before extracting the data. System packages can designate their own full backup agents. This is to manage things like the settings provider which (a) cannot be shut down on the fly in order to do a clean snapshot of their file trees, and (b) manage data that is not only irrelevant but actively hostile to non-identical devices -- CDMA telephony settings would seriously mess up a GSM device if emplaced there blind, for example. When a full backup or restore is initiated from adb, the system will present a confirmation UI that the user must explicitly respond to within a short [~ 30 seconds] timeout. This is to avoid the possibility of malicious desktop-side software secretly grabbing a copy of all the user's data for nefarious purposes. (*) The backup is not strictly a full mirror. In particular, the settings database is not cloned; it is handled the same way that it is in cloud backup/restore. This is because some settings are actively destructive if cloned onto a different (or especially a different-model) device: telephony settings and AndroidID are good examples of this. (**) On the framework side it doesn't care that it's adb; it just sends the tar stream to a file descriptor. This can easily be retargeted around whatever transport we might decide to use in the future. KNOWN ISSUES: * the security UI is desperately ugly; no proper designs have yet been done for it * restore is not yet implemented * shared storage backup is not yet implemented * symlinks aren't yet handled, though some infrastructure for dealing with them has been put in place. Change-Id: Ia8347611e23b398af36ea22c36dff0a276b1ce91
2011-02-17Start window manager refactoring.Dianne Hackborn
Move all of the pieces into a new com.android.server.wm package. Change-Id: I942b7bcfb84ee0f843f47d58e55ffc5a93c0da94
2010-12-13Don't restore wildly wrong sized wallpapersChristopher Tate
If the dimensions of the original are sufficiently different from the device's preferred dimensions, just don't restore the image. This avoids bad letterboxing / clipping on e.g. phone <-> tablet data migration. The expansion/shrinkage ratios used here allow restores of saved wallpaper images among HVGA devices, among WVGA variants, and among tablets; but skip restoring wallpapers across those categories (where severe clipping or letterboxing would occur). Bug 3261863 Change-Id: I75e75d6401d18f1df10d75796ee04e21d2302cfa
2010-03-29API CHANGE: rename BackupHelperAgent => BackupAgentHelper per API CouncilChristopher Tate
Part of bug #2545514 Change-Id: Ic775e3b942c485252149c1b6c15c88517fa4e3e5
2010-03-05Refactor android.backup => android.app.backupChristopher Tate
Change-Id: I0b21316ff890d7f3c7d4b82837bb60670724c2e8
2010-03-01Switch the services library to using the new SlogJoe Onorato
2009-11-11Don't back up system wallpapers.Dan Egnor
2009-09-20Handle restore of the original naive wallpaper backup schemaChristopher Tate
2009-08-05First bit of wallpaper work.Dianne Hackborn
This is mostly refactoring, adding a new WallpaperManager class that takes care of the old wallpaper APIs on Context, so we don't need to pollute Context with various new wallpaper APIs as they are needed. Also adds the first little definition of a wallpaper service, which is not yet used or useful.
2009-07-29Only restore the bits for wallpapers that aren't built in.Joe Onorato