Open GoogleCodeExporter opened 9 years ago
Honestly I am not sure...Need somone that knows unix a bit better to provide
insight into whether or not the same functionality could be done without find...
Original comment by Stericso...@gmail.com
on 28 Feb 2012 at 2:34
You can take the output of ls -l command and then parse it in java. I can't
think of a better solution though
Original comment by thuanb...@gmail.com
on 15 Sep 2012 at 10:54
Come on, really?
if (!somefile.getAbsolutePath().equals(somefile.getCanonicalPath())) {
// symbolic link
}
8-)
Original comment by xxx...@gmail.com
on 5 Oct 2012 at 10:10
Oh I almost forgot...
http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/nio/file/Files.html#isSymbolicLink
%28java.nio.file.Path%29
If you are wanting something that walks a directory tree (like find does),
there is always this:
http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/essential/io/walk.html
Original comment by xxx...@gmail.com
on 5 Oct 2012 at 10:31
Hahahaha, I'll add that in. I had no idea that getcanonicalPath resolved the
symlinks.
Original comment by Stericso...@gmail.com
on 5 Oct 2012 at 10:31
@xxxajk: Are you sure you understand RootTools? Doing it in Java means we need
read-access on that file in DalvikVM.
Original comment by domschuermann@gmail.com
on 6 Oct 2012 at 8:59
Yes, I understand it... and if you don't got read access, you know then that
you don't have read permissions, therefore, you can actually get permission
info from it with a try/catch as an added bonus ;-)
Original comment by xxx...@gmail.com
on 6 Oct 2012 at 12:57
One other thing about the above links... Those won't apply to android 'till it
gets the compatibility, however nothing stops us from using jni and some java
wrapper code to provide the same thing. I don't see why we would even need to
do some of these things via shell either, when we could simply bundle in a lib
(.so) that could do the missing things for us and wrap it with java methods...
If you don't know C, I do, and it would be about as easy as barrowing code
right from busybox internals and doing a small lib. If you worry about platform
differences (ARM/MIPS/X86/etc), that's easy to solve as well.
Original comment by xxx...@gmail.com
on 6 Oct 2012 at 1:04
I don't really understand your proposed method.
1. Files.isSymbolicLink is JDK 7 and not in Android
2. If you do your method from comment 3, what do you want to do if an exception
is thrown? chmod the file to get it readable in DalvikVM?
Original comment by domschuermann@gmail.com
on 6 Oct 2012 at 1:13
to comment 8: We do it on a shell to get root access. A shell is opened, then
su is executed and then you have a shell with root access where you can run
binaries (wg busybox, toolbox).
There are some reimplementations of binaries, that comes to close to having an
actual lib (see https://github.com/Fusion/NativeTools).
I would like to have it as a lib, but I don't see a way to get root access that
way.
Original comment by domschuermann@gmail.com
on 6 Oct 2012 at 1:17
su -c dalvikvm -jar our_utility.jar some.class.that.implementsrun
Original comment by xxx...@gmail.com
on 6 Oct 2012 at 4:00
Just to sum up the above, incase it isn't obvious, you can use sockets to
communicate back and forth between our_utility.jar and the app, and you can do
many at once, thus solving the multithread problem as described in Issue 23 :-)
Original comment by xxx...@gmail.com
on 6 Oct 2012 at 4:06
The issue in issue 23 is not an issue with multithreading so to speak but an
issue with how the class Shell is implemented. Currently it only hold one
implementation of a root shell at a time. (you can see that is is held as a
class variable and thus only one instance is allowed)
The solution to issue 23 is to allow for the instantiation of the shell class
and to not set the rootshell as a class variable. Easy enough to do, I just
have not had the time to complete it yet.
Also, we don't need something that walks the directory tree, since getSymlinks
doesn't walk the directory tree anyways, at least in practice it shouldn't be
used to do so. We could loop through every file in a directory and determine
the symlink for each file and then build the file containing the symlinks in
the given directory. Simply put, I used find because it was an easy way to get
what I needed to get done...Not the most robust solution, but it did it's job.
Original comment by Stericso...@gmail.com
on 6 Oct 2012 at 9:50
Also, after further researching it seems to be suggested that a mismatch when
comparing the absolute path and the Canonical Path is not a guarantee that it
is a symbolic link (See this post here
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/813710/java-1-6-determine-symbolic-links)
That being said, suggesting a replacement for an accurate method for a faster,
less accurate method, seems to be ill advised based on the principle of getting
it right the first time every time.
With that said I would have to look into this further to determine the cases
that the mismatch would be because of something other than a symbolic link and
what the probability of that occurring actually is. I will look into this a bit
more and see about using the method you have mentioned.
Original comment by Stericso...@gmail.com
on 6 Oct 2012 at 11:42
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
domschuermann@gmail.com
on 28 Feb 2012 at 1:33