| import io |
| import sys |
| |
| |
| # The maximum length of a log message in bytes, including the level marker and |
| # tag, is defined as LOGGER_ENTRY_MAX_PAYLOAD in |
| # platform/system/logging/liblog/include/log/log.h. As of API level 30, messages |
| # longer than this will be be truncated by logcat. This limit has already been |
| # reduced at least once in the history of Android (from 4076 to 4068 between API |
| # level 23 and 26), so leave some headroom. |
| MAX_BYTES_PER_WRITE = 4000 |
| |
| # UTF-8 uses a maximum of 4 bytes per character, so limiting text writes to this |
| # size ensures that TextIOWrapper can always avoid exceeding MAX_BYTES_PER_WRITE. |
| # However, if the actual number of bytes per character is smaller than that, |
| # then TextIOWrapper may still join multiple consecutive text writes into binary |
| # writes containing a larger number of characters. |
| MAX_CHARS_PER_WRITE = MAX_BYTES_PER_WRITE // 4 |
| |
| |
| # When embedded in an app on current versions of Android, there's no easy way to |
| # monitor the C-level stdout and stderr. The testbed comes with a .c file to |
| # redirect them to the system log using a pipe, but that wouldn't be convenient |
| # or appropriate for all apps. So we redirect at the Python level instead. |
| def init_streams(android_log_write, stdout_prio, stderr_prio): |
| if sys.executable: |
| return # Not embedded in an app. |
| |
| sys.stdout = TextLogStream( |
| android_log_write, stdout_prio, "python.stdout", errors=sys.stdout.errors) |
| sys.stderr = TextLogStream( |
| android_log_write, stderr_prio, "python.stderr", errors=sys.stderr.errors) |
| |
| |
| class TextLogStream(io.TextIOWrapper): |
| def __init__(self, android_log_write, prio, tag, **kwargs): |
| kwargs.setdefault("encoding", "UTF-8") |
| kwargs.setdefault("line_buffering", True) |
| super().__init__(BinaryLogStream(android_log_write, prio, tag), **kwargs) |
| self._CHUNK_SIZE = MAX_BYTES_PER_WRITE |
| |
| def __repr__(self): |
| return f"<TextLogStream {self.buffer.tag!r}>" |
| |
| def write(self, s): |
| if not isinstance(s, str): |
| raise TypeError( |
| f"write() argument must be str, not {type(s).__name__}") |
| |
| # In case `s` is a str subclass that writes itself to stdout or stderr |
| # when we call its methods, convert it to an actual str. |
| s = str.__str__(s) |
| |
| # We want to emit one log message per line wherever possible, so split |
| # the string before sending it to the superclass. Note that |
| # "".splitlines() == [], so nothing will be logged for an empty string. |
| for line in s.splitlines(keepends=True): |
| while line: |
| super().write(line[:MAX_CHARS_PER_WRITE]) |
| line = line[MAX_CHARS_PER_WRITE:] |
| |
| return len(s) |
| |
| |
| class BinaryLogStream(io.RawIOBase): |
| def __init__(self, android_log_write, prio, tag): |
| self.android_log_write = android_log_write |
| self.prio = prio |
| self.tag = tag |
| |
| def __repr__(self): |
| return f"<BinaryLogStream {self.tag!r}>" |
| |
| def writable(self): |
| return True |
| |
| def write(self, b): |
| if type(b) is not bytes: |
| try: |
| b = bytes(memoryview(b)) |
| except TypeError: |
| raise TypeError( |
| f"write() argument must be bytes-like, not {type(b).__name__}" |
| ) from None |
| |
| # Writing an empty string to the stream should have no effect. |
| if b: |
| # Encode null bytes using "modified UTF-8" to avoid truncating the |
| # message. This should not affect the return value, as the caller |
| # may be expecting it to match the length of the input. |
| self.android_log_write(self.prio, self.tag, |
| b.replace(b"\x00", b"\xc0\x80")) |
| |
| return len(b) |