Sending RIL command on galaxy / nexus - android

I wonder how can I send commands to rild - not rild-debug.
I have root and the program may be in c / java.
I tried radiooptions
( https://github.com/mozilla-b2g/android-hardware-ril/blob/master/rild/radiooptions.c ).
but radiooptions uses rild-debug and not rild.
I tried to change to SOCKET_NAME_RIL_DEBUG to SOCKET_NAME_RIL
but the program didn't do nothing..
There is any way I can send raw RIL commands ? (Maybe directly from adb ?)
Thanks in advance.

Package:
com.android.internal.telephony
File:
com/android/internal/telephony/RIL.java
Method:
public void invokeOemRilRequestRaw(byte[] data, Message response)
To call the method, using code:
import com.android.internal.telephony.ITelephony;
ITelephony it = ITelephony.Stub.asInterface(ServiceManager.getService(Context.TELEPHONY_SERVICE));
it.invokeOemRilRequestRaw(oemReq, oemResp);
or using code(if possible):
import com.android.internal.telephony.PhoneFactory;
((PhoneBase)PhoneFactory.getDefaultPhone()).mCi.invokeOemRilRequestRaw(oemReq, oemResp);

Well, I found a way to do it with xposed:
we can find the class:
com.android.internal.telephony.RIL
find methods in it, and invoke them.

Related

Java Android Appium - how to take screenshot when telephone is connected via USB cable?

Java Android Appium - how to take screenshot when telephone is connected via USB cable ?
The following line returns "Illegal base64 character a" - is there any different solution to take a screenshot ?
File source = driver.getScreenshotAs(OutputType.FILE);
I want to invoke screenshot when test fails in Test ng listeners Class:
#Override public void onTestFailure(ITestResult result) {}
That's because there is an annoying thing Appium does when using it's driver to take a screenshot, but I'm not sure if this applies in your situation.
Can you output the Base64 in the console to check it's specific output? If the output is something like this:
"Z3Rlc2dyZXNncmdyZWFncmVzZ3Jlc2dyZWFncmVzZ3Jlc2dlaW93YWpm\n"
"ZW9ndGVzZ3Jlc2dyZ3JlYWdyZXNncmVzZ3JlYWdyZXNncmVzZ2Vpb3dh\n"
"amZlb2d0ZXNncmVzZ3JncmVhZ3Jlc2dyZXNncmVhZ3Jlc2dyZXNnZWlv\n"
"d2FqZmVvZ3Rlc2dyZXNncmdyZWFncmVzZ3Jlc2dyZWFncmVzZ3Jlc2dl\n"
"aW93YWpmZW9ndGVzZ3Jlc2dyZ3JlYWdyZXNncmVzZ3JlYWdyZXNncmVz\n"
"Z2Vpb3dhamZlb2d0ZXNncmVzZ3JncmVhZ3Jlc2dyZXNncmVhZ3Jlc2dy\n"
Then you should replace the "\n" to a blank "":
String screenshotBase64 = ((TakesScreenshot) driver).getScreenshotAs(OutputType.BASE64);
String replaceBase64 = screenshotBase64.replaceAll("\n","");
doSomethingWith(replaceBase64);

What is the purpose of using double underscore ( __ ) before the start and after the end of an file name in c?

I'm studying the android kernel as a beginner. I can read the messages thrown from the macro ERROR() inside the function main() at system/core/init/init.c using dmesg command through adb. I observed that after calling the function open_devnull_stdio() inside main(), dmesg no longer displays the messages thrown by ERROR().
To find the reason, I started digging into the declaration of open_devnull_stdio() inside system/core/init/util.c and I found this line I can't understand
static const char *name = "/dev/__null__";
Actually there was no file named __null__ inside /dev/ in the device, but there was a file named null and I was able to grab it using adb pull and it was a 0 byte (empty) file.
So why is a file name wrapped with double underscore (__) ?
Here is the link for the util.c
There is no special purpose of using double underscore before the start, after the end or both in C. From the point of view of C the file name is just a string, the operating system is free to interpret in whatever way it chooses. From the point of view of Linux, the same applies. Underscores in file names are just characters. They are not treated differently from the letters b and t.
If I guessed right and I'm reading the same file as you (it might be a good idea to link to the source code you're reading) then it should be pretty obvious what the code does on the lines after the one you mentioned. The next lines are:
if (mknod(name, S_IFCHR | 0600, (1 << 8) | 3) == 0) {
fd = open(name, O_RDWR);
unlink(name);
Which creates the null device which is then opened and immediately deleted again.
I suspect this is done so that programs can run without access to the root filesystem and still be able to open the equivalent of /dev/null.
I don't know the answer but I have an idea:
The following page shows an "strace" output where /dev/__null__ is used:
https://gist.github.com/tetsu-koba/1522515
Under Linux device files have a 33-bit (?) number which identifies the device. (At least under old Linux versions) you could delete some file in /dev and you could restore it or even create it in another directory (!) when you know the 33-bit number! (So you can delete the device /dev/sda2 and create the device (not file!) /home/myuser/sda2 instead.)
The trace in the link above shows the following three lines:
mknod("/dev/__null__", S_IFCHR|0600, makedev(1, 3)) = 0
open("/dev/__null__", O_RDWR|O_LARGEFILE) = 3
unlink("/dev/__null__") = 0
These lines will create the device file /dev/__null__ (with the 33-bit number identifying /dev/null). Then it opens that file and then it removes the file again.
Maybe this is done because the tool shall be able to run both on Linux installations where the device file "/dev/null" is present (in this case the file should not be overwritten) and on installations where that file is missing (in this case a replacement file must be created using the known 33-bit number).
As other people have pointed out this just tells it's the "null device", not a regular file called "null". null is supposed to act like an information sink, not like a normal file where you dump your data to. Hope this helps.

C++ Builder WSDL client for Android

I'm having a confusing problem. I'm trying to make a Web cleint that uses WSDL.
I'm using C++ RAD Studio 10 Seattle, but the same problem occured in RAD Studio XE8(older version).
1.I create a Multi-Device Application, add one Edit component and one Button.
2.I create a WSDL Importer by changing the location of the WSDL file to : "http://www.w3schools.com/webservices/tempconvert.asmx?WSDL" and leave all other setting to default.
3.On ButtonClick event of the button I write two lines of code :
_di_TempConvertSoap Converter = GetTempConvertSoap(true,
"http://www.w3schools.com/webservices/tempconvert.asmx?WSDL");
Edit1->Text = Converter->CelsiusToFahrenheit("32");
So after these three steps I have one unit, which is the main Unit with the Form and with the button event. And one file "tempconvert.cpp" that the WSDL Importer has generated. It quite actually just translates the WSDL code to a C++ one and defines the method to communicate with the server. In my case I have two methods : FahrenheitToCelsius() and CelsiusToFahrenheit(), in the example I use CelsiusToFahrenheit().
I compile it to 32-bit Windows platform, run it and when I click the button, the result "89.6" appears in the text of the Edit component. So this is working as expected.
But when I change the target platform to "Android" and use my mobile phone "Samsung GT-I8262" with Android 4.1.2 and run the project, it just stops and exits. I debugged the problem and it stops at the first command in "tempconvert.cpp" in RegTypes() method.
// ************************************************************************
//
// This routine registers the interfaces and types exposed by the WebService.
// ************************************************************************ //
static void RegTypes()
{
/* TempConvertSoap */
InvRegistry()->RegisterInterface(__delphirtti(TempConvertSoap), L"http://www.w3schools.com/webservices/", L"utf-8");
InvRegistry()->RegisterDefaultSOAPAction(__delphirtti(TempConvertSoap), L"http://www.w3schools.com/webservices/%operationName%");
InvRegistry()->RegisterInvokeOptions(__delphirtti(TempConvertSoap), ioDocument);
/* TempConvertSoap.FahrenheitToCelsius */
InvRegistry()->RegisterMethodInfo(__delphirtti(TempConvertSoap), "FahrenheitToCelsius", "",
"[ReturnName='FahrenheitToCelsiusResult']", IS_OPTN);
/* TempConvertSoap.CelsiusToFahrenheit */
InvRegistry()->RegisterMethodInfo(__delphirtti(TempConvertSoap), "CelsiusToFahrenheit", "",
"[ReturnName='CelsiusToFahrenheitResult']", IS_OPTN);
/* TempConvertHttpPost */
InvRegistry()->RegisterInterface(__delphirtti(TempConvertHttpPost), L"http://www.w3schools.com/webservices/", L"utf-8");
InvRegistry()->RegisterDefaultSOAPAction(__delphirtti(TempConvertHttpPost), L"");
}
#pragma startup RegTypes 32
Does someone have any idea why this might be happening? I tried on two other Samsung phones and it didn't work. The error that shuts the program down is "Segmentation fault(11)", and more precisely it stops at the following line of code in "System.pas" file :
u_strFromUTF8(PUChar(Dest), MaxDestChars, DestLen, MarshaledAString(Source), SourceBytes, ErrorConv);
Here is some info that I've found about the function:
u_strFromUTF8 - function that converts a UTF-8 string to UTF-16.
UCHAR is a Byte(in Delphi), so PUCHAR is a pointer to Byte.
I cannot se what could possibly go wrong with this function which apparently only converts a string.
So my question is why does the project work on Windows 32 bit version, but on Android it throws Segmentation fault(11)?
I hope I could find a solution for this problem. I will keep looking.
Thank you,
Zdravko Donev :)
UPDATE:
I disassembled the line:
InvRegistry()->RegisterInterface(__delphirtti(TempConvertSoap), L"http://www.w3schools.com/webservices/", L"utf-16");
to get :
TInvokableClassRegistry *Class = InvRegistry();
TTypeInfo *Info = __delphirtti(TempConvertSoap);
UnicodeString Namespace = "http://www.w3schools.com/webservices/";
UnicodeString WSDLEncoding = "utf-8";
Class->RegisterInterface(Info, Namespace, WSDLEncoding);
And I saw that the problem occurs when calling InvRegistry() function, but I still haven't found the problem as I cannot reach the source code of the function.
I found a solution.
I deleted the line
#pragma startup RegTypes 32
and called the method RegTypes() on my own when I create the form and it worked.

error with pymtp to work on python 3

I want to access a android device from python to download some photos.
libmtp works from the CLI.
Than pymtp. It's been around for a while but it's designed for python 2 and i'm using python 3. Meanwhile fixed several minor issues but i'm stuck at an error from function get_filelisting
specially this section:
ret = []
next = files
while next:
ret.append(next.contents)
if (next(next.contents) is None):
break
next = next(next.contents)
The error is related to the "next".
That section looks strange to me, i've been coding in python for a while but i'm new to ctypes. Tried a lot of variants, they all failed. The "next" could be confusing with python buildin function so i renamed it to nextpointer and came to this code:
ret = []
nextpointer = files
while nextpointer:
ret.append(nextpointer.contents)
nextpointer = nextpointer.contents.next
It seems to work but did it work by accident ? does it have any design flaws ? Could anyone with experience on python ctypes confirm this a solution ? Any suggestion welcome.
From python2.7 documentation
next(iterator[, default])
Retrieve the next item from the iterator by calling its next() method. If default is given, it is returned if the iterator is
exhausted, otherwise StopIteration is raised.
from python3 documentation
next(iterator[, default])
Retrieve the next item from the iterator by calling its __next__() method. If default is given, it is returned if the iterator is
exhausted, otherwise StopIteration is raised.
Notice that next() method was removed from python3 but the function still exists.
This is all I can say about the next function and .next()/__next__() methods.
I downloaded the pymtp module and get_filelisting() is slightly different from what you posted in your ported code, here it is:
ret = []
next = files
while next:
ret.append(next.contents)
if (next.contents.next == None):
break
next = next.contents.next
If none of this helped you (which probably didn't :D), the version of pymtp library that I am using is 0.0.6 download using pip.

Storing android adb shell screencap as variable

Making an app at the moment for my personal use (rooted) and it requires getting certain pixels colors from the screen. I was trying to accomplish this through the Runtime.
Process p = Runtime.getRuntime().exec("screencap");
p.waitFor();
InputStream is = p.getInputStream()
BitmapFactory.decodeStream(is);
and I get factory returned null.
but if I dump the process to my sd card through adb -d shell screencap /sdcard/ss.dump and access it from my app
BitmapFactory.decodeFile("/sdcard/ss.dump");
all goes well.
So it there anyway to dump the stream straight into BitmapFactory within my app?
Thanks SO and please excuse the generally laziness/shortcuts of the example code.
This might help if not too far off your intended path. (I think you are using node / javascript). I spawned the ADB.EXE command producing a stream (and being 'jailed' on Windows the program must transform the stream to account for linefeed ending differences. So with that, I have working the following:
exports.capture = function(filename) {
// you'll need to map your requirement (decodeStream) instead
// of streaming to a file
var strm = fs.createWriteStream(path);
var cv = new Convert();
cv.pipe(strm);
var capture = spawn(cmd, args);
capture.stdout.on('data', function(data) {
cv.write(data);
});
capture.stdout.on('exit', function(data) {
cv.end();
});
}
To explain the process, spawn is running the ADB command, on windows, CR-LF are inserted (being a PNG stream), and stream is chunked / piped through a fs-transformation. Others on the web have described the process as adb.exe shell screencap -p | sed 's/\r$//' > output.file. And it does work. To be clear the conversion is CR-CR-LF => LF for us window jailed birds. And if you don't want to implement a SED and not use javascript regular expressions converting binary->strings->binary, you may follow my path. There is probably a simpler way, I just don't know what it is...
So, Convert() is an object with methods that converts the byte stream on the fly.
See the codewind blog link is: http://codewinds.com/blog/2013-08-20-nodejs-transform-streams.html to build your convert.
When using screencap from inside an app you must use su, i.e. root. When you do this via adb it runs under a different user id, which has more permissions than a normal Android app.
There are several examples how to use screencap, e.g. here.

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