In previous implementations, proc_monitor checks whether the mount namespace of an app is actually separated from zygote using a list generated at startup.
However, for some unknown reason, some devices (e.g. Samsung) has multiple zygote servers running in the background.
This means that app processes spawned from the unlisted zygotes are not checked whether the separation is done or not, causing MagiskHide unmount stuffs in the namespace of zygote, and since zygote is the "mother" of all apps, all apps will no longer have root access.
Since I'm not sure of the reason why multiple zygotes exists, so instead of checking the namespace against a list, compare the current namespace against the parent process's namespace.
This will make sure the namespace is NOT the same as the parent process, which is supposed to be the zygote server.
It's not important to check the return value of unlink(2) or even verify
that the file exists. If this code is running, it means the system has
rebooted, and thus the update file, if any, should be removed so that
MagiskManager doesn't keep displaying the same message. We also handle
this before we handle "disable" so that disabled modules don't keep
requesting a reboot to update.
Unlike other common OEMs, Samsung use uppper case partition name.
e.g: /dev/block/platform/11120000.ufs/by-name/SYSTEM
This will cause setup_block() fails to find a match partition.
Thus, we should use strcasecmp instead of strcmp.
Signed-off-by: msdx321 <msdx321@gmail.com>
This fixes an issue where if /system or /vendor was already mounted
prior to magiskinit running, then they would get unmounted.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Gunnerson <andrewgunnerson@gmail.com>