blob: 2ec8b29808de2199368f67ca9770d5de7403e8db [file] [log] [blame]
#!/bin/bash
#
# Copyright (C) 2009 The Android Open Source Project
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
# You may obtain a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.
#
# This tool checks the integrity of the optimized dex files on a single
# Android device connected to your computer.
#
# Brief HOW-TO:
#
# 1. Disconnect all but one device from USB.
# 2. Set up a standard shell environment (envsetup.sh, lunch, etc.).
# 3. Run "adb root" if necessary to ensure read permission on
# /data/dalvik-cache. If in doubt, run the command. Power users may
# also use "su" followed by "chmod 777 /data/dalvik-cache".
# 4. Run this script, e.g. from the build root, "dalvik/tools/dexcheck".
#
# If all of the dex files are okay, you will just see a series of
# lines written to your shell window naming each of the files. If
# there is a problem, though, you will see something like this:
#
# system@app@Maps.apk@classes.dex
# Failure in system@app@Maps.apk@classes.dex: ERROR: DEX parse failed
#
# When this happens, the log ("adb logcat") will generally have at
# least a little more information about the dex level of the problem.
# However, any error at all usually indicates some form of lower level
# filesystem or filesystem cache corruption.
#
# Get the list of files. Use "sed" to drop the trailing carriage return.
files=`adb shell "cd /data/dalvik-cache; echo *" | sed -e s/.$//`
if [ "$files" = "*" ]; then
echo 'ERROR: commands must run as root on device (try "adb root" first?)'
exit 1
fi
failure=0
# Check each file in turn. This is much faster with "dexdump -c", but that
# flag was not available in 1.6 and earlier.
#
# The dexdump found in older builds does not stop on checksum failures and
# will likely crash.
for file in $files; do
echo $file
errout=`adb shell "dexdump /data/dalvik-cache/$file > dev/null"`
errcount=`echo $errout | wc -w` > /dev/null
if [ $errcount != "0" ]; then
echo " Failure in $file: $errout"
failure=1
fi
done
exit $failure