New implementation of AssetManager/ResTable
The multiwindow model and Resources-per-activity model that came in N puts greater demands on AssetManagers. They are created whenever window dimensions change, which can be frequently. There is a need to be able to cheaply create a new AssetManager for each Activity, which shares a lot of underlying state. In order to make the creation of AssetManagers cheap, we need a new implementation of the native AssetManager and ResTable to support immutable representations of APKs. This new data structure/class is ApkAssets. ApkAssets have the same functionality of an AssetManager, except that they operate on a single APK, and they do not do any caching. Once loaded, they are immutable. ApkAssets will be exposed as a Java object, with its implementation in native code. The existing Java StringBlock will be owned by ApkAssets, which means that Strings can be shared across AssetManagers. ApkAssets can be cached by the ResourcesManager. Creating an AssetManager requires only a list of ApkAssets and a configuration. AssetManager2 (named with the suffix '2' for now while transitioning to the new implementation) caches bags that are accessed. Since ApkAssets are expected to be kept around longer, they do more validation of the resource table, which cause slower load times. Measured on an angler-userdebug, loading the framework assets takes 11ms with ApkAssets, and 2ms with the old AssetManager implementation. The tradeoff is that there does not need to be any security checks once an ApkAssets is loaded, and regular resource retrieval is faster. Measured on an angler-userdebug, accessing resource (android:string/ok) with many locales takes 18us with AssetManager2, and 19us with AssetManager (this is per resource, so these add up). Test: make libandroidfw_tests Change-Id: Id0e57ee828f17008891fe3741935a9be8830b01d
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