| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Something is leaving behind wipe commands in the BCB area of the /misc
partition. We don't know what is doing that. It should always be
safe to zero out that area from uncrypt, though (because if uncrypt is
running then it's got the command we want in the recovery command file
rather than the BCB).
Bug: 16715412
Change-Id: Iad01124287f13b80ff71d6371db6371f43c43211
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Bug: 17029174, 17015157
Change-Id: I1d24f3402875dfb972daa6daef0f385baeff84e9
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Bug: 17015157
Change-Id: I3c4bdcf4f11d44b617bb731a48413e3707044d1c
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If recovery is invoked with a package somewhere other than /data,
leave it alone.
Change-Id: Ief358b53df467ae24a65e30e7a631da59bf13683
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Change-Id: Ie88c49dea13cce5f4eb428e97f5a0956f2656a30
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When going into recovery mode withoug recovery command file present, uncrypt crashes
and the device gets stuck and eventually shuts down.
Check that the command file is present before trying to read from it.
Change-Id: If0192d597032be0067738e437188d92993ce56f7
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uncrypt can read a file on an encrypted filesystem and rewrite it to
the same blocks on the underlying (unencrypted) block device. This
destroys the contents of the file as far as the encrypted filesystem
is concerned, but allows the data to be read without the encryption
key if you know which blocks of the raw device to access. uncrypt
produces a "block map" file which lists the blocks that contain the file.
For unencrypted filesystem, uncrypt will produce the block map without
touching the data.
Bug: 12188746
Change-Id: Ib7259b9e14dac8af406796b429d58378a00c7c63
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