Android Init Language --------------------- The Android Init Language consists of four broad classes of statements, which are Actions, Commands, Services, and Options. 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. 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. Actions and Services have unique names. If a second Action or Service is declared with the same name as an existing one, it is ignored as an error. (??? should we override instead) Actions ------- Actions are named sequences of commands. Actions have a trigger which is used to determine when the action should occur. 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> <command> <command> <command> 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. critical This is a device-critical service. If it exits more than four times in four minutes, the device will reboot into recovery mode. disabled This service will not automatically start with its class. It must be explicitly started by name. setenv <name> <value> Set the environment variable <name> to <value> in the launched process. socket <name> <type> <perm> [ <user> [ <group> ] ] Create a unix domain socket named /dev/socket/<name> and pass its fd to the launched process. <type> must be "dgram", "stream" or "seqpacket". User and group default to 0. user <username> Change to username before exec'ing this service. Currently defaults to root. (??? probably should default to nobody) Currently, if your process requires linux capabilities then you cannot use this command. You must instead request the capabilities in-process while still root, and then drop to your desired uid. 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) oneshot Do not restart the service when it exits. class <name> Specify a class name 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. onrestart Execute a Command (see below) when service restarts. Triggers -------- Triggers are strings which can be used to match certain kinds of events and used to cause an action to occur. boot This is the first trigger that will occur when init starts (after /init.conf is loaded) <name>=<value> Triggers of this form occur when the property <name> is set to the specific value <value>. device-added-<path> device-removed-<path> Triggers of these forms occur when a device node is added or removed. service-exited-<name> Triggers of this form occur when the specified service exits. Commands -------- exec <path> [ <argument> ]* Fork and execute a program (<path>). This will block until the program completes execution. It is best to avoid exec as unlike the builtin commands, it runs the risk of getting init "stuck". (??? maybe there should be a timeout?) 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) ifup <interface> Bring the network interface <interface> online. import <filename> Parse an init config file, extending the current configuration. hostname <name> Set the host name. chdir <directory> Change working directory. chmod <octal-mode> <path> Change file access permissions. chown <owner> <group> <path> Change file owner and group. chroot <directory> Change process root directory. class_start <serviceclass> Start all services of the specified class if they are not already running. class_stop <serviceclass> Stop all services of the specified class if they are currently running. domainname <name> Set the domain name. insmod <path> Install the module at <path> mkdir <path> [mode] [owner] [group] 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. mount <type> <device> <dir> [ <mountoption> ]* Attempt to mount the named device at the directory <dir> <device> may be of the form mtd@name to specify a mtd block device by name. <mountoption>s include "ro", "rw", "remount", "noatime", ... setkey TBD setprop <name> <value> Set system property <name> to <value>. setrlimit <resource> <cur> <max> Set the rlimit for a resource. start <service> Start a service running if it is not already running. stop <service> Stop a service from running if it is currently running. symlink <target> <path> Create a symbolic link at <path> with the value <target> sysclktz <mins_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. write <path> <string> [ <string> ]* Open the file at <path> and write one or more strings to it with write(2) Properties ---------- Init updates some system properties to provide some insight into what it's doing: init.action Equal to the name of the action currently being executed or "" if none init.command Equal to the command being executed or "" if none. init.svc.<name> State of a named service ("stopped", "running", "restarting") Example init.conf ----------------- # not complete -- just providing some examples of usage # on boot export PATH /sbin:/system/sbin:/system/bin export LD_LIBRARY_PATH /system/lib mkdir /dev mkdir /proc mkdir /sys mount tmpfs tmpfs /dev mkdir /dev/pts mkdir /dev/socket mount devpts devpts /dev/pts mount proc proc /proc mount sysfs sysfs /sys write /proc/cpu/alignment 4 ifup lo hostname localhost domainname localhost mount yaffs2 mtd@system /system mount yaffs2 mtd@userdata /data import /system/etc/init.conf class_start default service adbd /sbin/adbd user adb group adb service usbd /system/bin/usbd -r user usbd group usbd socket usbd 666 service zygote /system/bin/app_process -Xzygote /system/bin --zygote socket zygote 666 service runtime /system/bin/runtime user system group system on device-added-/dev/compass start akmd on device-removed-/dev/compass stop akmd service akmd /sbin/akmd disabled user akmd group akmd Debugging notes --------------- By default, programs executed by init will drop stdout and stderr into /dev/null. To help with debugging, you can execute your program via the Andoird program logwrapper. This will redirect stdout/stderr into the Android logging system (accessed via logcat). For example service akmd /system/bin/logwrapper /sbin/akmd