2
0
mirror of https://github.com/koreader/koreader synced 2024-11-10 01:10:34 +00:00
koreader/platform/remarkable/koreader.sh

242 lines
10 KiB
Bash
Raw Normal View History

#!/bin/sh
export LC_ALL="en_US.UTF-8"
# working directory of koreader
KOREADER_DIR="${0%/*}"
# we're always starting from our working directory
cd "${KOREADER_DIR}" || exit
# reMarkable 2 check
IFS= read -r MACHINE_TYPE <"/sys/devices/soc0/machine"
if [ "reMarkable 2.0" = "${MACHINE_TYPE}" ]; then
if [ -z "${RM2FB_SHIM}" ]; then
echo "reMarkable 2 requires RM2FB to work, visit https://github.com/ddvk/remarkable2-framebuffer for instructions how to setup"
exit 1
fi
export KO_DONT_GRAB_INPUT=1
fi
# update to new version from OTA directory
ko_update_check() {
NEWUPDATE="${KOREADER_DIR}/ota/koreader.updated.tar"
INSTALLED="${KOREADER_DIR}/ota/koreader.installed.tar"
if [ -f "${NEWUPDATE}" ]; then
# If button-listen service is running then stop it during update so that
# the update can overwite the binary
systemctl is-active --quiet button-listen
USING_BUTTON_LISTEN=$?
if [ ${USING_BUTTON_LISTEN} -eq 0 ]; then
systemctl stop button-listen
fi
./fbink -q -y -7 -pmh "Updating KOReader"
# Setup the FBInk daemon
export FBINK_NAMED_PIPE="/tmp/koreader.fbink"
rm -f "${FBINK_NAMED_PIPE}"
FBINK_PID="$(./fbink --daemon 1 %KOREADER% -q -y -6 -P 0)"
# NOTE: See frontend/ui/otamanager.lua for a few more details on how we squeeze a percentage out of tar's checkpoint feature
# NOTE: %B should always be 512 in our case, so let stat do part of the maths for us instead of using %s ;).
FILESIZE="$(stat -c %b "${NEWUPDATE}")"
BLOCKS="$((FILESIZE / 20))"
export CPOINTS="$((BLOCKS / 100))"
# shellcheck disable=SC2016
./tar xf "${NEWUPDATE}" --strip-components=1 --no-same-permissions --no-same-owner --checkpoint="${CPOINTS}" --checkpoint-action=exec='printf "%s" $((TAR_CHECKPOINT / CPOINTS)) > ${FBINK_NAMED_PIPE}'
fail=$?
kill -TERM "${FBINK_PID}"
# Cleanup behind us...
if [ "${fail}" -eq 0 ]; then
mv "${NEWUPDATE}" "${INSTALLED}"
./fbink -q -y -6 -pm "Update successful :)"
./fbink -q -y -5 -pm "KOReader will start momentarily . . ."
else
# Uh oh...
./fbink -q -y -6 -pmh "Update failed :("
./fbink -q -y -5 -pm "KOReader may fail to function properly!"
fi
rm -f "${NEWUPDATE}" # always purge newupdate to prevent update loops
unset CPOINTS FBINK_NAMED_PIPE
unset BLOCKS FILESIZE FBINK_PID
# Ensure everything is flushed to disk before we restart. This *will* stall for a while on slow storage!
busybox sync
if [ ${USING_BUTTON_LISTEN} -eq 0 ]; then
systemctl start button-listen
fi
fi
}
# NOTE: Keep doing an initial update check, in addition to one during the restart loop, so we can pickup potential updates of this very script...
ko_update_check
# If an update happened, and was successful, reexec
if [ -n "${fail}" ] && [ "${fail}" -eq 0 ]; then
# By now, we know we're in the right directory, and our script name is pretty much set in stone, so we can forgo using $0
exec ./koreader.sh "${@}"
fi
# export dict directory
export STARDICT_DATA_DIR="data/dict"
# We'll want to ensure Portrait rotation to allow us to use faster blitting codepaths @ 8bpp,
# so remember the current one before fbdepth does its thing.
ORIG_FB_ROTA="$(./fbdepth -o)"
# In the same vein, swap to 8bpp,
# because 16bpp is the worst idea in the history of time, as RGB565 is generally a PITA without hardware blitting,
# and 32bpp usually gains us nothing except a performance hit (we're not Qt5 with its QPainter constraints).
# The reduced size & complexity should hopefully make things snappier,
# (and hopefully prevent the JIT from going crazy on high-density screens...).
# NOTE: Even though both pickel & Nickel appear to restore their preferred fb setup, we'll have to do it ourselves,
# as they fail to flip the grayscale flag properly. Plus, we get to play nice with every launch method that way.
# So, remember the current bitdepth, so we can restore it on exit.
ORIG_FB_BPP="$(./fbdepth -g)"
echo "Original fb settings: bitdepth = ${ORIG_FB_BPP}, rotation = ${ORIG_FB_ROTA}" >>crash.log 2>&1
# Sanity check...
case "${ORIG_FB_BPP}" in
8) ;;
16) ;;
32) ;;
*)
# Uh oh? Don't do anything...
unset ORIG_FB_BPP
;;
esac
# The actual swap is done in a function, because we can disable it in the Developer settings, and we want to honor it on restart.
ko_do_fbdepth() {
if [ -n "${KO_DONT_SET_DEPTH}" ]; then
return
fi
# Check if the swap has been disabled...
if grep -q '\["dev_startup_no_fbdepth"\] = true' 'settings.reader.lua' 2>/dev/null; then
# Swap back to the original bitdepth (in case this was a restart)
if [ -n "${ORIG_FB_BPP}" ]; then
echo "Making sure we're using the original fb bitdepth @ ${ORIG_FB_BPP}bpp & rotation @ ${ORIG_FB_ROTA}" >>crash.log 2>&1
./fbdepth -d "${ORIG_FB_BPP}" -r "${ORIG_FB_ROTA}" >>crash.log 2>&1
fi
else
# Swap to 8bpp if things look sane
if [ -n "${ORIG_FB_BPP}" ]; then
echo "Switching fb bitdepth to 8bpp & rotation to Portrait" >>crash.log 2>&1
./fbdepth -d 8 -r 1 >>crash.log 2>&1
fi
fi
}
# we keep at most 500KB worth of crash log
if [ -e crash.log ]; then
tail -c 500000 crash.log >crash.log.new
mv -f crash.log.new crash.log
fi
CRASH_COUNT=0
CRASH_TS=0
CRASH_PREV_TS=0
# Because we *want* an initial fbdepth pass ;).
RETURN_VALUE=85
while [ ${RETURN_VALUE} -ne 0 ]; do
# 85 is what we return when asking for a KOReader restart
if [ ${RETURN_VALUE} -eq 85 ]; then
# Do an update check now, so we can actually update KOReader via the "Restart KOReader" menu entry ;).
ko_update_check
# Do or double-check the fb depth switch, or restore original bitdepth if requested
ko_do_fbdepth
fi
./reader.lua "$@" >>crash.log 2>&1
RETURN_VALUE=$?
# Did we crash?
if [ ${RETURN_VALUE} -ne 0 ] && [ ${RETURN_VALUE} -ne 85 ]; then
# Increment the crash counter
CRASH_COUNT=$((CRASH_COUNT + 1))
CRASH_TS=$(date +'%s')
# Reset it to a first crash if it's been a while since our last crash...
if [ $((CRASH_TS - CRASH_PREV_TS)) -ge 20 ]; then
CRASH_COUNT=1
fi
# Check if the user requested to always abort on crash
if grep -q '\["dev_abort_on_crash"\] = true' 'settings.reader.lua' 2>/dev/null; then
ALWAYS_ABORT="true"
# In which case, make sure we pause on *every* crash
CRASH_COUNT=1
else
ALWAYS_ABORT="false"
fi
# Show a fancy bomb on screen
viewWidth=600
viewHeight=800
FONTH=16
eval "$(./fbink -e | tr ';' '\n' | grep -e viewWidth -e viewHeight -e FONTH | tr '\n' ';')"
# Compute margins & sizes relative to the screen's resolution, so we end up with a similar layout, no matter the device.
# Height @ ~56.7%, w/ a margin worth 1.5 lines
bombHeight=$((viewHeight / 2 + viewHeight / 15))
bombMargin=$((FONTH + FONTH / 2))
# With a little notice at the top of the screen, on a big gray screen of death ;).
./fbink -q -b -c -B GRAY9 -m -y 1 "Don't Panic! (Crash n°${CRASH_COUNT} -> ${RETURN_VALUE})"
if [ ${CRASH_COUNT} -eq 1 ]; then
# Warn that we're sleeping for a bit...
./fbink -q -b -O -m -y 2 "KOReader will restart in 15 sec."
fi
# U+1F4A3, the hard way, because we can't use \u or \U escape sequences...
# shellcheck disable=SC2039,SC3003
Various Wi-Fi QoL improvements (#6424) * Revamped most actions that require an internet connection to a new/fixed backend that allows forwarding the initial action and running it automatically once connected. (i.e., it'll allow you to set "Action when Wi-Fi is off" to "turn_on", and whatch stuff connect and do what you wanted automatically without having to re-click anywhere instead of showing you a Wi-Fi prompt and then not doing anything without any other feedback). * Speaking of, fixed the "turn_on" beforeWifi action to, well, actually work. It's no longer marked as experimental. * Consistently use "Wi-Fi" everywhere. * On Kobo/Cervantes/Sony, implemented a "Kill Wi-Fi connection when inactive" system that will automatically disconnect from Wi-Fi after sustained *network* inactivity (i.e., you can keep reading, it'll eventually turn off on its own). This should be smart and flexible enough not to murder Wi-Fi while you need it, while still not keeping it uselessly on and murdering your battery. (i.e., enable that + turn Wi-Fi on when off and enjoy never having to bother about Wi-Fi ever again). * Made sending `NetworkConnected` / `NetworkDisconnected` events consistent (they were only being sent... sometimes, which made relying on 'em somewhat problematic). * restoreWifiAsync is now only run when really needed (i.e., we no longer stomp on an existing working connection just for the hell of it). * We no longer attempt to kill a bogus non-existent Wi-Fi connection when going to suspend, we only do it when it's actually needed. * Every method of enabling Wi-Fi will now properly tear down Wi-Fi on failure, instead of leaving it in an undefined state. * Fixed an issue in the fancy crash screen on Kobo/reMarkable that could sometime lead to the log excerpt being missing. * Worked-around a number of sneaky issues related to low-level Wi-Fi/DHCP/DNS handling on Kobo (see the lengthy comments [below](https://github.com/koreader/koreader/pull/6424#issuecomment-663881059) for details). Fix #6421 Incidentally, this should also fix the inconsistencies experienced re: Wi-Fi behavior in Nickel when toggling between KOReader and Nickel (use NM/KFMon, and run a current FW for best results). * For developers, this involves various cleanups around NetworkMgr and NetworkListener. Documentation is in-line, above the concerned functions.
2020-07-27 01:39:06 +00:00
./fbink -q -b -O -m -t regular=./fonts/freefont/FreeSerif.ttf,px=${bombHeight},top=${bombMargin} -- $'\xf0\x9f\x92\xa3'
# And then print the tail end of the log on the bottom of the screen...
crashLog="$(tail -n 25 crash.log | sed -e 's/\t/ /g')"
# The idea for the margins being to leave enough room for an fbink -Z bar, small horizontal margins, and a font size based on what 6pt looked like @ 265dpi
Various Wi-Fi QoL improvements (#6424) * Revamped most actions that require an internet connection to a new/fixed backend that allows forwarding the initial action and running it automatically once connected. (i.e., it'll allow you to set "Action when Wi-Fi is off" to "turn_on", and whatch stuff connect and do what you wanted automatically without having to re-click anywhere instead of showing you a Wi-Fi prompt and then not doing anything without any other feedback). * Speaking of, fixed the "turn_on" beforeWifi action to, well, actually work. It's no longer marked as experimental. * Consistently use "Wi-Fi" everywhere. * On Kobo/Cervantes/Sony, implemented a "Kill Wi-Fi connection when inactive" system that will automatically disconnect from Wi-Fi after sustained *network* inactivity (i.e., you can keep reading, it'll eventually turn off on its own). This should be smart and flexible enough not to murder Wi-Fi while you need it, while still not keeping it uselessly on and murdering your battery. (i.e., enable that + turn Wi-Fi on when off and enjoy never having to bother about Wi-Fi ever again). * Made sending `NetworkConnected` / `NetworkDisconnected` events consistent (they were only being sent... sometimes, which made relying on 'em somewhat problematic). * restoreWifiAsync is now only run when really needed (i.e., we no longer stomp on an existing working connection just for the hell of it). * We no longer attempt to kill a bogus non-existent Wi-Fi connection when going to suspend, we only do it when it's actually needed. * Every method of enabling Wi-Fi will now properly tear down Wi-Fi on failure, instead of leaving it in an undefined state. * Fixed an issue in the fancy crash screen on Kobo/reMarkable that could sometime lead to the log excerpt being missing. * Worked-around a number of sneaky issues related to low-level Wi-Fi/DHCP/DNS handling on Kobo (see the lengthy comments [below](https://github.com/koreader/koreader/pull/6424#issuecomment-663881059) for details). Fix #6421 Incidentally, this should also fix the inconsistencies experienced re: Wi-Fi behavior in Nickel when toggling between KOReader and Nickel (use NM/KFMon, and run a current FW for best results). * For developers, this involves various cleanups around NetworkMgr and NetworkListener. Documentation is in-line, above the concerned functions.
2020-07-27 01:39:06 +00:00
./fbink -q -b -O -t regular=./fonts/droid/DroidSansMono.ttf,top=$((viewHeight / 2 + FONTH * 2 + FONTH / 2)),left=$((viewWidth / 60)),right=$((viewWidth / 60)),px=$((viewHeight / 64)) -- "${crashLog}"
# So far, we hadn't triggered an actual screen refresh, do that now, to make sure everything is bundled in a single flashing refresh.
./fbink -q -f -s
# Cue a lemming's faceplant sound effect!
{
echo "!!!!"
echo "Uh oh, something went awry... (Crash n°${CRASH_COUNT}: $(date +'%x @ %X'))"
echo "Running on Linux $(uname -r) ($(uname -v))"
} >>crash.log 2>&1
if [ ${CRASH_COUNT} -lt 5 ] && [ "${ALWAYS_ABORT}" = "false" ]; then
echo "Attempting to restart KOReader . . ." >>crash.log 2>&1
echo "!!!!" >>crash.log 2>&1
fi
# Pause a bit if it's the first crash in a while, so that it actually has a chance of getting noticed ;).
if [ ${CRASH_COUNT} -eq 1 ]; then
sleep 15
fi
# Cycle the last crash timestamp
CRASH_PREV_TS=${CRASH_TS}
# But if we've crashed more than 5 consecutive times, exit, because we wouldn't want to be stuck in a loop...
# NOTE: No need to check for ALWAYS_ABORT, CRASH_COUNT will always be 1 when it's true ;).
if [ ${CRASH_COUNT} -ge 5 ]; then
echo "Too many consecutive crashes, aborting . . ." >>crash.log 2>&1
echo "!!!! ! !!!!" >>crash.log 2>&1
break
fi
# If the user requested to always abort on crash, do so.
if [ "${ALWAYS_ABORT}" = "true" ]; then
echo "Aborting . . ." >>crash.log 2>&1
echo "!!!! ! !!!!" >>crash.log 2>&1
break
fi
else
# Reset the crash counter if that was a sane exit/restart
CRASH_COUNT=0
fi
done
# Restore original fb bitdepth if need be...
# Since we also (almost) always enforce Portrait, we also have to restore the original rotation no matter what ;).
if [ -n "${ORIG_FB_BPP}" ]; then
echo "Restoring original fb bitdepth @ ${ORIG_FB_BPP}bpp & rotation @ ${ORIG_FB_ROTA}" >>crash.log 2>&1
./fbdepth -d "${ORIG_FB_BPP}" -r "${ORIG_FB_ROTA}" >>crash.log 2>&1
else
echo "Restoring original fb rotation @ ${ORIG_FB_ROTA}" >>crash.log 2>&1
./fbdepth -r "${ORIG_FB_ROTA}" >>crash.log 2>&1
fi
exit ${RETURN_VALUE}