I'm looking for an Apk or something that will stop the user from resetting the device from settings app
in factory rest options.
I think that it can work that when a user goes into factory reset options it should close the settings app . ("this is a plus" unless you have some sort of password or something like it )
I have a filter on the device and if you do a reset it will go away
will making it a system app help (Ill probably have to root it)
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I am trying to make my feedback app to support fully kiosk, I have tried a lot of solutions but Nothing is completely satisfying my need. Here are the things that I found yet.
1. Make my app as Device Admin/Owner App(Lock Task) -
If we follow this link/procedure https://developer.android.com/work/dpc/dedicated-devices/lock-task-mode, some limitations are there as follows -
a. We have to factory reset all the devices where Feedback app is installed, follow some steps to make it as admin app(launcher app).
b. Installation of the app will be possible using the command line, each installation will take some line of code through cmd, which means for installing a person has to go there with the computer and connect the device with USB and then install the app using commands.
c. Update on an app will also follow the same procedure (Couldn't be performed using google play store)
d. In this case, end-user will never be able to exit from our app, restart the device would also launch the same feedback app every single time.
2. Programmatically screen pinning + programmatically volume and power button controlling. (https://github.com/mrugacz95/kiosk)
a. In this, we will make the app in screen pinning mode where all the three bottom buttons(Overview, home, recent) will be hidden/disabled. and same with the power key and volume keys.
b. So As soon user clicks on kiosk mode, a screen pinning system generated prompt would be shown to user But the biggest disadvantage of it is that app would be unpinned/unlocked as soon as the user presses overview+recent buttons together.
3. The third Case is, where all the keys are controlled including power+voulme+back+overview etc.
Only pressing home will make the app to go on the background and within seconds it will again come foreground.
So all I found up until now, is not very satisfiable.
One more Question-
Is this something to be fully controlled by MDM(Mobile Device Management)?
Any help is appreciated.
1. Make my app as Device Admin/Owner App
a. A device owner can only be installed on a newly initialized device (before an account is added). I believe this is by design : A device owner can completely lock the device down, you don't want a malicious app to be able to seize the phone of an unsuspecting user after a few "I agree" popups.
b. You don't need to install it using adb. The simplest provisioning method is via NFC : While the device shows the very first screen of the setup wizard, touch it with a tag (or another device) containing the provisioning configuration, most importantly an URL where the apk can be downloaded and a WiFi config.
Another method is via QR code (Android 7+) : tap 6 times the first setup screen. It is a bit less convenient than NFC because you usually have to provision the WiFi manually.
c. A device owner can be updated like any other app. As it can itself install or update applications without asking the user, you can implement a fully automatized self update mechanism : check for update / download / update.
2. Lock task / screen pinning
Any application can programatically enter lock task mode. How it happens depends on whether the application is white listed by a device owner app (possibly itself) :
If not, the user is prompted and must accept, they can also exit at any time. This is basically the same thing as screen pinning.
If yes, there is no popup : the user can not decline to enter, nor exit, the lock task mode.
Additionally a kiosk application can act as a launcher. A device owner (again, possibly itself) can set it without user intervention
Is this something to be fully controlled by MDM(Mobile Device Management)?
While device owner apps are usually DPC connected to a MDM console of some sort, this is not a technical requirement. How you control it is completely up to you. (I hope I understood correctly the question)
Overall, I think that the only reliable way a device can be locked in kiosk mode is to use a device owner app (separately or included in the kiosk application). The setup via NFC or QR code is actually faster than a normal device setup. It can also protect against safe mode reboot or factory reset. The only real constraint is that you can not deploy this kind of application on existing devices without wiping them first.
Make my app as Device Admin/Owner App(Lock Task) -
a. If you are making it an 'admin app' this means you have signed the device image correct? Therefore you control the full flashing of the device - you can do anything in this scenario.
b. You can actually also do ADB over WiFi after you set it up the first time
c. You can update your apps from the playstore - even launcher applications
d. This fact is the whole point of Kiosk mode. Users should not ever be able to exit the application. Only you can exit, either with a remote command or with a invisible touch combination (for example touching each of the corners of the screen in sequence twice, or other 'secret unlock code')
Programmatically screen pinning + programmatically volume and power button controlling. (https://github.com/mrugacz95/kiosk)
b. This is the opposite of 1d, it is not clear what you want if you want neither.
The third Case is, where all the keys are controlled including power+voulme+back+overview etc.
This is also the opposite of 1d, it is not clear what you want if you want neither.
We need a few more details on your deployment scenario for this app to help you out further.
I want to create a app where the user can factory reset its device. I already know that its done with the DevicePolicyManager. After the wipe, Google docs say, a reboot happens.
Calling from the primary user will cause the device to reboot, erasing all device data - including all the secondary users and their data - while booting up.
Now my question is: After reboot is it possible to avoid the set up guide of the Android System or is it even possible to still execute some code to do it for the user?
Not unless this is a personal device where you can override the default factory image. You just reset the device- even if you could set a flag somewhere to skip it, resetting the device would erase the flag.
Now if this is a personal device and you overwrite the recovery image you can use a recovery image that's already past that point. But not on a generic app.
I am making an android app. In this app I am trying to save my app from destroying on reboot or factory reset. can anyone help me out?
Apps won't get deleted if you reboot the device. About the second part(factory reset), the whole point of a factory reset is that everything on the phone will be deleted and restored to factory settings. If you want to keep your app even after that you'd have to install your own OS with the app installed as a part of it.
Also, if a reboot is somehow "destroying the app", something is very wrong with the app and you need to find out what it is.
Assuming you mean by "Save my app" that the app .apk should be still present and installed, thats impossible for a factory reset, like the name suggest its a reset.
If you want to save the settings of the app prior to rebooting, you can do that with a background service, which can be also called when the phone finishes the reboot.
I'm writing an anti theft app, and I want when sim card is changed a dialog opens on boot and tell the finder to bring back the phone. This activity must be unleavable, so he can't leave it unless the correct code is entered.
Other situation is when user send a lock SMS to the phone.
I know how a device admin can lock the phone, but lock don't tell the message and the password can't be entered. And lock may not have a password or pattern so the finder can pass it easily.
Maybe a combination of device lock and a full screen activity which disable the keyguard do the job?
In my research, without being installed at the OEM level, you can't make it 100% un-leavable, just really annoying.
In an app I wrote for businesses which use a kiosk, since we weren't at the OEM level, we just kept the menu bar hidden and set the app to be loaded whenever Home was hit. Keeping the menu bar hidden was a pain, but was achieved by making it invisible and then when re-triggered, making it go away after 1 second. It's still able to be exited by hitting the clock in that 1 second, though. :(
Is it possible to have an application run on a device in such a way that it is the only application that can ever run and also prevent the user from using the operating system at all? Tapping on the Home key or Back button would not exit the application and allow the user to have access to anything. If the device boots up, only this application would run.
This would be desirable in situations where devices are installed at a business for point of sales purpose or possibly where the device acts like a terminal in public places.
You can achieve what you're describing by writing your app to replace the home screen (Launcher). From there, you control what other apps will run.
The Android SDK has a working Launcher project you can start from.
Be careful to allow some method of running a more powerful app (even if it's just enabling ADB access) -- otherwise you could leave your device in a state of needing a factory reset before it can be modified.
Yes, you can override the back and home button behaviour.
Start app, override all buttons, and the user cant exit the app, evil, but should work in your scenario.
info here