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Magisk/docs/guides.md
2020-10-03 02:53:10 -07:00

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Developer Guides

BusyBox

Magisk ships with a feature complete BusyBox binary (including full SELinux support). The executable is located at /data/adb/magisk/busybox. Magisk's BusyBox supports runtime toggle-able "ASH Standalone Shell Mode". What this standalone mode means is that when running in the ash shell of BusyBox, every single command will directly use the applet within BusyBox, regardless of what is set as PATH. For example, commands like ls, rm, chmod will NOT use what is in PATH (in the case of Android by default it will be /system/bin/ls, /system/bin/rm, and /system/bin/chmod respectively), but will instead directly call internal BusyBox applets. This makes sure that scripts always run in a predictable environment and always have the full suite of commands no matter which Android version it is running on. To force a command not to use BusyBox, you have to call the executable with full paths.

Every single shell script running in the context of Magisk will be executed in BusyBox's ash shell with standalone mode enabled. For what is relevant to 3rd party developers, this includes all boot scripts and module installation scripts.

For those who want to use this "Standalone Mode" feature outside of Magisk, there are 2 ways to enable it:

  1. Set environment variable ASH_STANDALONE to 1
    Example: ASH_STANDALONE=1 /data/adb/magisk/busybox sh <script>
  2. Toggle with command-line options:
    /data/adb/magisk/busybox sh -o standalone <script>

To make sure all subsequent sh shell executed also runs in standalone mode, option 1 is the preferred method (and this is what Magisk and Magisk Manager internally uses) as environment variables are inherited down to child processes.

Magisk Modules

A Magisk module is a folder placed in /data/adb/modules with the structure below:

/data/adb/modules
├── .
├── .
|
├── $MODID                  <--- The folder is named with the ID of the module
│   │
│   │      *** Module Identity ***
│   │
│   ├── module.prop         <--- This file stores the metadata of the module
│   │
│   │      *** Main Contents ***
│   │
│   ├── system              <--- This folder will be mounted if skip_mount does not exists
│   │   ├── ...
│   │   ├── ...
│   │   └── ...
│   │
│   │      *** Status Flags ***
│   │
│   ├── skip_mount          <--- If exists, Magisk will NOT mount your system folder
│   ├── disable             <--- If exists, the module will be disabled
│   ├── remove              <--- If exists, the module will be removed next reboot
│   │
│   │      *** Optional Files ***
│   │
│   ├── post-fs-data.sh     <--- This script will be executed in post-fs-data
│   ├── service.sh          <--- This script will be executed in late_start service
|   ├── uninstall.sh        <--- This script will be executed when Magisk removes your module
│   ├── system.prop         <--- Properties in this file will be loaded as system properties by resetprop
│   ├── sepolicy.rule       <--- Additional custom sepolicy rules to be patched
│   │
│   │      *** Auto Generated, DO NOT MANUALLY CREATE OR MODIFY ***
│   │
│   ├── vendor              <--- A symlink to $MODID/system/vendor
│   ├── product             <--- A symlink to $MODID/system/product
│   │
│   │      *** Any additional files / folders are allowed ***
│   │
│   ├── ...
│   └── ...
|
├── another_module
│   ├── .
│   └── .
├── .
├── .

module.prop

This is the strict format of module.prop

id=<string>
name=<string>
version=<string>
versionCode=<int>
author=<string>
description=<string>
  • id has to match this regular expression: ^[a-zA-Z][a-zA-Z0-9._-]+$
    ex: ✓ a_module, ✓ a.module, ✓ module-101, ✗ a module, ✗ 1_module, ✗ -a-module
    This is the unique identifier of your module. You should not change it once published.
  • versionCode has to be an integer. This is used to compare versions
  • Others that weren't mentioned above can be any single line string.
  • Make sure to use the UNIX (LF) line break type and not the Windows (CR+LF) or Macintosh (CR) one.

Shell scripts (*.sh)

Please read the Boot Scripts section to understand the difference between post-fs-data.sh and service.sh. For most module developers, service.sh should be good enough if you just need to run a boot script.

In all scripts of your module, please use MODDIR=${0%/*} to get your module's base directory path; do NOT hardcode your module path in scripts.

system.prop

This file follows the same format as build.prop. Each line comprises of [key]=[value].

sepolicy.rule

If your module requires some additional sepolicy patches, please add those rules into this file. The module installer script and Magisk's daemon will make sure this file is copied to somewhere magiskinit can read pre-init to ensure these rules are injected properly.

Each line in this file will be treated as a policy statement. For more details how a policy statement is formated, please check magiskpolicy's documentation.

The system folder

All files you want Magisk to replace/inject for you should be placed in this folder. Please read through the Magic Mount section to understand how Magisk mount your files.

Magisk Module Installer

A Magisk Module Installer is a Magisk Module packaged in a zip file that can be flashed in Magisk Manager or custom recoveries such as TWRP. An installer have the same file structure as a Magisk module (please check the previous section for more info). The simplest Magisk Module Installer is just a Magisk Module packed in a zip file, with addition to the following files:

  • update-binary: Download the latest module_installer.sh and rename/copy that script as update-binary
  • updater-script: This file should only contain the string #MAGISK

By default, update-binary will check/setup the environment, load utility functions, extract the module installer zip to where your module will be installed, and finally do some trivial tasks and cleanups, which should cover most simple modules' needs.

module.zip
│
├── META-INF
│   └── com
│       └── google
│           └── android
│               ├── update-binary      <--- The module_installer.sh you downloaded
│               └── updater-script     <--- Should only contain the string "#MAGISK"
│
├── customize.sh                       <--- (Optional, more details later)
│                                           This script will be sourced by update-binary
├── ...
├── ...  /* The rest of module's files */
│

Customization

If you need to customize the module installation process, optionally you can create a new script in the installer called customize.sh. This script will be sourced (not executed!) by update-binary after all files are extracted and default permissions and secontext are applied. This is very useful if your module includes different files based on ABI, or you need to set special permissions/secontext for some of your files (e.g. files in /system/bin).

If you need even more customization and prefer to do everything on your own, declare SKIPUNZIP=1 in customize.sh to skip the extraction and applying default permissions/secontext steps. Be aware that by doing so, your customize.sh will then be responsible to install everything by itself.

customize.sh Environment

This script will run in Magisk's BusyBox ash shell with "Standalone Mode" enabled. The following variables and shell functions are available for convenience:

Variables
  • MAGISK_VER (string): the version string of current installed Magisk (e.g. v20.0)
  • MAGISK_VER_CODE (int): the version code of current installed Magisk (e.g. 20000)
  • BOOTMODE (bool): true if the module is being installed in Magisk Manager
  • MODPATH (path): the path where your module files should be installed
  • TMPDIR (path): a place where you can temporarily store files
  • ZIPFILE (path): your module's installation zip
  • ARCH (string): the CPU architecture of the device. Value is either arm, arm64, x86, or x64
  • IS64BIT (bool): true if $ARCH is either arm64 or x64
  • API (int): the API level (Android version) of the device (e.g. 21 for Android 5.0)
Functions
ui_print <msg>
    print <msg> to console
    Avoid using 'echo' as it will not display in custom recovery's console

abort <msg>
    print error message <msg> to console and terminate installation
    Avoid using 'exit' as it will skip the termination cleanup steps

set_perm <target> <owner> <group> <permission> [context]
    if [context] is not set, the default is "u:object_r:system_file:s0"
    this function is a shorthand for the following commands:
       chown owner.group target
       chmod permission target
       chcon context target

set_perm_recursive <directory> <owner> <group> <dirpermission> <filepermission> [context]
    if [context] is not set, the default is "u:object_r:system_file:s0"
    for all files in <directory>, it will call:
       set_perm file owner group filepermission context
    for all directories in <directory> (including itself), it will call:
       set_perm dir owner group dirpermission context
Easy Replace

You can declare a list of folders you want to directly replace in the variable name REPLACE. The module installer script will pickup this variable and create .replace files for you. An example declaration:

REPLACE="
/system/app/YouTube
/system/app/Bloatware
"

The list above will result in the following files being created: $MODPATH/system/app/YouTube/.replace and $MODPATH/system/app/Bloatware/.replace

Notes

  • When your module is downloaded with Magisk Manager, update-binary will be forcefully replaced with the latest module_installer.sh to ensure all installer uses up-to-date scripts. DO NOT try to add any custom logic in update-binary as it is pointless.
  • Due to historical reasons, DO NOT add a file named install.sh in your module installer. That specific file was previously used and will be treated differently.
  • DO NOT call exit at the end of customize.sh. The module installer would want to do finalizations.

Submit Modules

You can submit a module to Magisk-Module-Repo so users can download your module directly in Magisk Manager.

  • Follow the instructions in the previous section to create a valid installer for your module.
  • Create README.md (filename should be exactly the same) containing all info for your module. If you are not familiar with the Markdown syntax, the Markdown Cheat Sheet will be handy.
  • Create a repository with your personal GitHub account, and upload your module installer to the repo
  • Create a request for submission via this link: submission

Module Tricks

Remove Files

How to remove a file systemless-ly? To actually make the file disappear is complicated (possible, not worth the effort). Replacing it with a dummy file should be good enough! Create an empty file with the same name and place it in the same path within a module, it shall replace your target file with a dummy file.

Remove Folders

Same as mentioned above, actually making the folder disappear is not worth the effort. Replacing it with an empty folder should be good enough! A handy trick for module developers is to add the folder you want to remove into the REPLACE list within customize.sh. If your module doesn't provide a corresponding folder, it will create an empty folder, and automatically add .replace into the empty folder so the dummy folder will properly replace the one in /system.

Boot Scripts

In Magisk, you can run boot scripts in 2 different modes: post-fs-data and late_start service mode.

  • post-fs-data mode
    • This stage is BLOCKING. Boot process is paused before execution is done, or 10 seconds has passed.
    • Scripts run before any modules are mounted. This allows a module developer to dynamically adjust their modules before it gets mounted.
    • This stage happens before Zygote is started, which pretty much means everything in Android
    • Run scripts in this mode only if necessary!
  • late_start service mode
    • This stage is NON-BLOCKING. Your script runs in parallel along with the booting process.
    • This is the recommended stage to run most scripts!

In Magisk, there are also 2 kinds of scripts: general scripts and module scripts.

  • General Scripts
    • Placed in /data/adb/post-fs-data.d or /data/adb/service.d
    • Only executed if the script is executable (execution permissions, chmod +x script.sh)
    • Scripts in post-fs-data.d runs in post-fs-data mode, and scripts in service.d runs in late_start service mode.
    • Modules should NOT add general scripts since it violates encapsulation
  • Module Scripts
    • Placed in the folder of the module
    • Only executed if the module is enabled
    • post-fs-data.sh runs in post-fs-data mode, and service.sh runs in late_start service mode.
    • Modules require boot scripts should ONLY use module scripts instead of general scripts

These scripts will run in Magisk's BusyBox ash shell with "Standalone Mode" enabled.

Root Directory Overlay System

Since / is read-only on system-as-root devices, Magisk provides an overlay system to enable developers to replace files in rootdir or add new *.rc scripts. This feature is designed mostly for custom kernel developers.

Overlay files shall be placed in the overlay.d folder in boot image ramdisk, and they follow these rules:

  1. All *.rc files in overlay.d will be read and concatenated AFTER init.rc
  2. Existing files can be replaced by files located at the same relative path
  3. Files that correspond to a non-existing file will be ignored

In order to have additional files which you want to reference in your custom *.rc scripts, add them in overlay.d/sbin. The 3 rules above does not apply to everything in this specific folder, as they will directly be copied to Magisk's internal tmpfs directory (which used to always be located at /sbin).

Due to changes in Android 11, the /sbin folder is no longer guaranteed to exist. In that case, Magisk randomly generates the tmpfs folder. Every occurrence of the pattern ${MAGISKTMP} in your *.rc scripts will be replaced with the Magisk tmpfs folder when magiskinit injects it into init.rc. This also works on pre Android 11 devices as ${MAGISKTMP} will simply be replaced with /sbin in this case, so the best practice is to NEVER hardcode /sbin in your *.rc scripts when referencing additional files.

Here is an example of how to setup overlay.d with custom *.rc script:

ramdisk
│
├── overlay.d
│   ├── sbin
│   │   ├── libfoo.ko      <--- These 2 files will be copied
│   │   └── myscript.sh    <--- to Magisk's tmpfs directory
│   ├── custom.rc          <--- This file will be injected into init.rc
│   ├── res
│   │   └── random.png     <--- This file will replace /res/random.png
│   └── new_file           <--- This file will be ignored because
│                               /new_file does not exist
├── res
│   └── random.png         <--- This file will be replaced by
│                               /overlay.d/res/random.png
├── ...
├── ...  /* The rest of initramfs files */
│

Here is an example of the custom.rc:

# Use ${MAGISKTMP} to refer to Magisk's tmpfs directory

on early-init
    setprop sys.example.foo bar
    insmod ${MAGISKTMP}/libfoo.ko
    start myservice

service myservice ${MAGISKTMP}/myscript.sh
    oneshot