Status Update
Comments
ja...@google.com <ja...@google.com>
ra...@google.com <ra...@google.com>
ap...@google.com <ap...@google.com> #2
1. Have you saw crash in real device or only in simulators?
2. Do you use dynamic feature for language ID?
ap...@google.com <ap...@google.com> #3
Tested on Android 12 Emulator with custom executor, but cannot repro this issue.
ap...@google.com <ap...@google.com> #4
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Second crash in the description is from a real device. Experienced it myself on two different Xiaomi phones, plus lots of crashes from users in the Google Play console.
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Dynamic features are not used in the application.
As a wild guess, I have downgraded build tools from 31.0.0 to 30.0.3, compileSdk from 31 to 30, and moved all work with Language ID to the service in a separate process (just to be sure that crash can kill secondary process instead of main). This combination is in beta for 2 days by now and I don't see any SIGSEGV crashes.
ap...@google.com <ap...@google.com> #5
Hmm, I feel the crash might be something related to separate/secondary process.
I also changed compileSdk and targetSDK to 31 but still cannot repro this issue.
ap...@google.com <ap...@google.com> #6
On the contrary, there was no separate process before, when crashes started.
In the new build (with the aforementioned changes) I can see SIGSEGV crash, but only one instead of dozens and it has a bit different backtrace:
signal 11 (SIGSEGV), code 1 (SEGV_MAPERR)
liblanguage_id_jni.so (offset 0x11e000)
backtrace:
#00 pc 000000000003c7c0 /data/app/azagroup.reedy-mF7zTu2bv_ELlbFArwNgqA==/split_config.arm64_v8a.apk!lib/arm64-v8a/liblanguage_id_jni.so (offset 0x11e000)
#00 pc 000000000003b960 /data/app/azagroup.reedy-mF7zTu2bv_ELlbFArwNgqA==/split_config.arm64_v8a.apk!lib/arm64-v8a/liblanguage_id_jni.so (offset 0x11e000)
#00 pc 000000000003bb48 /data/app/azagroup.reedy-mF7zTu2bv_ELlbFArwNgqA==/split_config.arm64_v8a.apk!lib/arm64-v8a/liblanguage_id_jni.so (offset 0x11e000)
#00 pc 000000000003bafc /data/app/azagroup.reedy-mF7zTu2bv_ELlbFArwNgqA==/split_config.arm64_v8a.apk!lib/arm64-v8a/liblanguage_id_jni.so (offset 0x11e000)
#00 pc 0000000000036c98 /data/app/azagroup.reedy-mF7zTu2bv_ELlbFArwNgqA==/split_config.arm64_v8a.apk!lib/arm64-v8a/liblanguage_id_jni.so (offset 0x11e000)
#00 pc 0000000000032714 /data/app/azagroup.reedy-mF7zTu2bv_ELlbFArwNgqA==/split_config.arm64_v8a.apk!lib/arm64-v8a/liblanguage_id_jni.so (offset 0x11e000)
#00 pc 0000000000031cac /data/app/azagroup.reedy-mF7zTu2bv_ELlbFArwNgqA==/split_config.arm64_v8a.apk!lib/arm64-v8a/liblanguage_id_jni.so (offset 0x11e000)
#00 pc 0000000000057438 /data/app/azagroup.reedy-mF7zTu2bv_ELlbFArwNgqA==/oat/arm64/base.odex (offset 0x57000)
Description
val constraints = Constraints.Builder()
.setRequiresCharging(true)
.setRequiredNetworkType(NetworkType.CONNECTED)
.build()
The default parameters approach is trivial using a data class and named parameters could be used when being constructed.
data class Constraints(
val requiredNetworkType: NetworkType = NetworkType.NOT_REQUIRED,
val requiresCharging: Boolean = false
)
val constraints = Constraints(requiredNetworkType = NetworkType.METERED)
For converting the builder from java to a more idiomatic Kotlin, we could also write a function that uses a method with a receiver on the builder.
inline fun constraints(builder: Constraints.Builder.() -> Unit): Constraints {
return Constraints.Builder().apply { builder() }.build()
}
val constraints = constraints {
setRequiredNetworkType(NetworkType.CONNECTED)
setRequiresCharging(true)
}
The naming of these could probably be renamed, just a nicer way to write builder like classes in kotlin.