Add [soc|device|product]_specific

Added three properties (soc_specific, device_specific, and
product_specific) that shows what a module is specific to.

`soc_specific: true` means that the module is specific to an SoC
(System-On-a-Chip) and thus need to be installed to vendor partition.
This has the same meaning as the old `vendor: true` setting.

`device_specific: true` means that the module is specific to the entire
hardware configuration of a device includeing the SoC and off-chip
peripherals. These modules are installed to odm partition (or /vendor/odm
when odm partition does not exist).

`product_specific: true` means that the module is specific to the
software configuration of a product such as country, network operator,
etc. These modules are installed to oem partition (or /system/oem when
oem partition does not exist). These modules are assumed to be agnostic
to hardware, so this property can't be true when either soc_specific or
device_specific is set to true.

Bug: 68187740
Test: Build. path_tests amended.
Change-Id: I44ff055d87d53b0d2676758c506060de54cbffa0
This commit is contained in:
Jiyong Park
2017-11-08 16:03:48 +09:00
parent 828001d59d
commit 2db7692a74
8 changed files with 237 additions and 19 deletions

View File

@@ -845,8 +845,12 @@ func PathForModuleInstall(ctx ModuleInstallPathContext, pathComponents ...string
var partition string
if ctx.InstallInData() {
partition = "data"
} else if ctx.InstallOnVendorPartition() {
} else if ctx.SocSpecific() {
partition = ctx.DeviceConfig().VendorPath()
} else if ctx.DeviceSpecific() {
partition = ctx.DeviceConfig().OdmPath()
} else if ctx.ProductSpecific() {
partition = ctx.DeviceConfig().OemPath()
} else {
partition = "system"
}