I want to create an application that will enable to record screen behavior as a video that will be save programmatically on the device. Can any one help me for this ?
Fortunately, this is not possible, except perhaps on rooted devices, for obvious privacy and security reasons. An app cannot record what other apps show on the screen.
For a rooted device you can take screenshots and make a video based on those screenshots using FFMPEG or JavaCV.
Actually this topic have been discussed several times.
Here's an example of How to get root access and get your screenshot.
if (Environment.MEDIA_MOUNTED.equals(Environment
.getExternalStorageState())) {
// we check if external storage is\ available, otherwise
// display an error message to the user using Toast Message
File sdCard = Environment.getExternalStorageDirectory();
File directory = new File(sdCard.getAbsolutePath() + "/ScreenShots");
directory.mkdirs();
String filename = "screenshot_jpeg_" + i + ".png";
File yourFile = new File(directory, filename);
try {
Process sh = Runtime.getRuntime().exec("su", null, null);
OutputStream os = sh.getOutputStream();
os.write(("/system/bin/screencap -p " + "/sdcard/ScreenShots/" + filename).getBytes("ASCII"));
os.flush();
os.close();
sh.waitFor();
i++;
} catch (Exception e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
You can check other solutions on the following topic and here for FFMPEG
Related
I'm using the openFileOutput() to create a new txt file. I need the file to be visible from other applications (as well as from a PC when the Android device is connected via USB. Ive tried using .setReadable(true); but this does not seem valid. Please advise how I should declare the file is visible / public.
try {
textIncoming.append("saving");
final String STORETEXT = "test.txt";
OutputStreamWriter out = new OutputStreamWriter(openFileOutput(STORETEXT, 0));
out.setReadable(true);
out.write("testing");
out.close();
}
catch (Throwable t) {
textIncoming.append("not saving");
}
Ive changed my program to use getExternalStoragePublicDirectory(Environment.DIRECTORY_DOCUMENTS), but for some reason it returns a path /storage/emulated/0/Documents, and I cant even find this folder on the device. Ive looked at the files on the android device using ES file explorer but cant find the folder or file I'm trying to create (Plus I want these in an documents folder on the SD card, so it seems that its not giving me a pointer to the SD card at all, and not creating the folder, and not creating the file. Following is my updated code, please advise
String root = Environment.getExternalStoragePublicDirectory(Environment.DIRECTORY_DOCUMENTS).toString();
File myDir = new File(root + "/Saved_Receipts");
myDir.mkdirs();
Random generator = new Random();
int n = 10000;
n = generator.nextInt(n);
String fname = "DRcpt-" + n + ".xml";
textIncoming.append(root);
File file = new File(myDir, fname);
if (file.exists()) {
file.delete();
}
try {
FileOutputStream out = new FileOutputStream(file);
out.flush();
out.close();
}
catch (Exception e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
Save it to sdcard if you want anyone to be able to read it.
This android documentation should tell you what you need to do.
https://developer.android.com/guide/topics/data/data-storage.html#filesExternal
openFileOutput() documentation says:
Open a private file
So the file that it creates won't be visible to other apps, unless you copy it to another directory that is visible. In that case, you have to save your data in what's called "external storage" which is shared with other apps. Use the code at this link.
Does anybody know how to save screenshot taken from real android device by appium+selenium to device local storage?
Here I have method which can take screenshot from device and save it to PC storage.
But how to set path to save them on real device folder (e.g. deviceName\tablet\GUI\screenshots\screenshot.jpg ...or other way),
taking into account that code should run on PC.
p.s. My app is hybrid so I make switch context to "NATIVE_APP" and then back to WEBVIEW.
public static void getScreenshot(String screenName) throws IOException {
String contextName = AppiumConfigurationTest.driver.getContext();
AppiumConfigurationTest.driver.context("NATIVE_APP");
String Screenshotpath = "C:\\!automation\\build\\reports\\gui_screen_capture\\";
File screenShot = AppiumConfigurationTest.driver.getScreenshotAs(OutputType.FILE);
FileUtils.copyFile(screenShot, new File(Screenshotpath + screenName+"_ " + "." + "jpg"));
AppiumConfigurationTest.driver.context(contextName);
}
You can execute adb command from your code, in which case this shall help you :
adb shell screencap -p /sdcard/screen.png
Note : Saving the screenshots on laptop with different named tests/build is better than saving them on devices.
File scrFile = ((TakesScreenshot) appiumDriver).getScreenshotAs(OutputType.FILE);
BufferedImage originalImage=null;
try {
originalImage= ImageIO.read(((TakesScreenshot) appiumDriver).getScreenshotAs(OutputType.FILE));
}
catch(Exception e) {
System.out.println("\n\n\n\nbuffered image" + originalImage +"\n\n\n\n\n\n");
Thread.sleep(5000);
e.printStackTrace();
}
System.out.println("buffered image" + originalImage);
BufferedImage.TYPE_INT_ARGB : originalImage.getType();
BufferedImage resizedImage = CommonUtilities.resizeImage(originalImage, IMG_HEIGHT, IMG_WIDTH);
ImageIO.write(resizedImage, "jpg", new File(path + "/"+ testCaseId + "/img/" + index + ".jpg"));
I am writing an app to create a folder on my Nexus 5 and then write a text file inside the folder.
The above part is working just fine. I am writting using the following code:
Creating the folder:
File sdCard1 = Environment.getExternalStorageDirectory();
File dir = new File(sdCard1.getAbsolutePath() + "/SmsApp");
if (dir.isDirectory())
{
String[] children = dir.list();
for (int i = 0; i < children.length; i++)
{
new File(dir, children[i]).delete();
}
}
File sdCard = Environment.getExternalStorageDirectory();
directory = new File (sdCard.getAbsolutePath() + "/SmsApp");
directory.mkdirs();
And writing the string to text file.
public void writeToText(String texttosave)
{
File sdCard = Environment.getExternalStorageDirectory();
File logFile = new File(sdCard.getAbsolutePath() + "/SmsApp" + "/smsrawdata.file");
if (!logFile.exists())
{
try
{
logFile.createNewFile();
}
catch (IOException e)
{
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
try
{
BufferedWriter buf = new BufferedWriter(new FileWriter(logFile, true));
buf.append(texttosave);
buf.newLine();
buf.close();
}
catch (IOException e)
{
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
Text file is showing up properly on my phone but when I am trying to access the same folder on phone I can't see the folder at all.
I thought it would be the same for other app on play store that creates a folder but then everything gets created and then I can see them on Windows Explorer.
Am I doing something wrong in the code part for it not to show on my Computer but show only on my phone. I am using ES File Explorer to see files on my phone.
Please let me know if someone else is having the same problem.
Thanks!
Your pc will communicate with the media store about files. Not directly with the sdcard or external memory. If the media store does not know about your file your pc can not see it. You forgot to tell the store that you created a file. For every new file you should invoke the media scanner for that file. You are not the first one who happens this so the problem has been reported many times. You only need to add a few lines of code which you will find easily searching this site for invoking media scanner on new file. If you switch off/on your device the file will be known soon too.
I have a problem with creating a folder and a file on the sdcard.
Here's the code:
File folder = new File(Environment.getExternalStoragePublicDirectory(Environment.DIRECTORY_DOWNLOADS).toString() + "/folder");
boolean success;
if (!folder.exists()) {
success = folder.mkdirs();
}
File obdt = new File(folder, "file.txt");
try {
success = obdt.createNewFile();
} catch (IOException e1) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
e1.printStackTrace();
}
With this code I expect to create the folderfolder in the Download folder of the sdcard and in this the file file. I want that the user can access the file. So I want to put it in a shared folder.
The success variable is true and when I run the code again the folder already exists and doesnt come in the if-block.
But I can't see the created folder and file on the sdcard in file explorer.
Info:getExternalStoragePublicDirectory(Environment.DIRECTORY_DOWNLOADS).toString() returns storage/sdcard/Download
I work with a Galaxy Nexus.
Damn! :)
Now I solved my problem...I was misunderstanding the operation of creating files in the file system.
When I spoke of file explorer I meant the file explorer of the operating system and NOT the file explorer in the DDMS :).
I thought when I create a file I will see it in the file explorer of the operating system but when the device is connected to the PC the files can only be seen in the DDMS file explorer.
Sorry I'm new to Android ;)
When the App is running standalone without PC connection and afterwards I connect with the PC I see the created files and folders of course :)
Thanks for help
Any errors from logcat?
Else: try something like Log.I("PATHNAME",folder.absolutePath()); and then look in your logcat to make sure where you are creating the folder where you think it is.
If you haven't done so already, you will need to give your app the correct permission to write to the SD Card by adding the line below to your Manifest:
<uses-permission android:name="android.permission.WRITE_EXTERNAL_STORAGE" />
If you have already done that see if :
File obdt = new File(/sdcard/folder/file.txt)
try {
success = obdt.createNewFile();
} catch (IOException e1) {
e1.printStackTrace();
}
works.
You cannot see the folder/file in explorer? Maybe it is because the MediaScanner is active, but not adding your files. You can do this in your program or switch the Media Scanner of somewhere in your phone settings.
MediaScanner
Trigger MediaScanner
Try this out.
File dir = new File(Environment.getExternalStorageDirectory()
+ "/XXX/Wallpapers/");
File[] files = dir.listFiles();
if (files == null)
{
int numberOfImages = 0;
BitmapDrawable drawable = (BitmapDrawable) imageView
.getDrawable();
Bitmap bitmap = drawable.getBitmap();
File sdCardDirectory = Environment
.getExternalStorageDirectory();
new File(sdCardDirectory + "/XXX/Wallpapers/").mkdirs();
File image = new File(sdCardDirectory
+ "/XXX/Wallpapers/Sample" + numberOfImages + ".JPG");
boolean success = false;
FileOutputStream outStream;
try {
outStream = new FileOutputStream(image);
bitmap.compress(Bitmap.CompressFormat.JPEG, 100, outStream);
outStream.flush();
outStream.close();
success = true;
} catch (FileNotFoundException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
} catch (IOException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
if (success) {
Toast.makeText(
getApplicationContext(),
"Image saved successfully in Sdcard/XXX/Wallpapers",
Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
} else {
Toast.makeText(getApplicationContext(),
"Error during image saving", Toast.LENGTH_LONG)
.show();
}
Dont forget to add permission in manifest
<uses-permission android:name="android.permission.WRITE_EXTERNAL_STORAGE" />
Apparently there is a known bug in MTP.
Issue 195362
All phones using MTP instead of USB Mass storage do not properly show the list of files when that phone is connected to a computer using a USB cable. Android apps running on the device also cannot see these files.
It is actually as old as 2012
I've encountered the same problem: created files and folders don't show immediately after being written to sdcard, despite the file being flushed and closed !!
They don't show on your computer over USB or a file explorer on the phone.
I observed three things:
if the absolute path of the file starts with /storage/emulated/0/ it doesn't mean it'll be on your sdcard - it could be on your main storage instead.
if you wait around 5 minutes, the files do begin to show over USB (i.e. Windows explorer and built-in file explorer)
if you use adb shell ls /sdcard from terminal, then the file does show! you could use adb pull ... to get the file immediately. You could probably use DDMS too.
Code I used was:
Gson gson = new GsonBuilder().setPrettyPrinting().create();
String json = gson.toJson(myArrayList);
try {
File externalDir = getExternalStorageDirectory();
File newFile = new File(externalDir, "myfile.txt");
FileOutputStream os = new FileOutputStream(newFile);
os.write(json.getBytes());
os.flush();
os.close();
Timber.i("saved file to %s",newFile.getAbsoluteFile().toString());
}catch (Exception ex)
{
Toast.makeText(getApplicationContext(), "Save to private external storage failed. Error message is " + ex.getMessage(), Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
}
and
Gson gson = new GsonBuilder().setPrettyPrinting().create();
String json = gson.toJson(myArrayList);
try {
File externalDir = getExternalStorageDirectory();
File newFile = new File(externalDir, "myfile.txt");
FileWriter fw = new FileWriter(newFile);
fw.write(json);
fw.flush();
fw.close();
Timber.i("saved file to %s",newFile.getAbsoluteFile().toString());
}catch (Exception ex)
{
Toast.makeText(getApplicationContext(), "Save to private external storage failed. Error message is " + ex.getMessage(), Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
}
why is it like this? Seems like another one of those "Android-isms" that you have to suffer through the first time you experience it.
I'm lost here.
I create files using this (stripped) code :
File dir = getBaseContext().getDir(dirPath, MODE_WORLD_WRITEABLE);
try {
File file = new File(dir, fileName);
FileOutputStream fous = new FileOutputStream(file);
fous.write(data);
fous.flush();
fous.close();
long l = file.length();
Log.i("PpCameraActivity", "File size : " + l);
} catch (IOException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
Toast.makeText(getBaseContext(), "Error while trying to write photo file", Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
}
I can verify with logcat that my file seems to be created (it has a not null lenght). But I cannot see it when I connect my android device to my PC.
So... where is my file ? Is it hidden ? Erased ?
EDIT : I'm now trying to write on the SDCard specifically, using this :
File root = Environment.getExternalStorageDirectory();
File jpegFile = new File(root.getAbsolutePath() + "/myApplication/" + filePath);
try {
jpegFile.mkdirs();
FileOutputStream fous = new FileOutputStream(jpegFile);
fous.write(data);
fous.flush();
fous.close();
Log.i("PpCameraActivity", "File written : " + jpegFile.getAbsolutePath());
Toast.makeText(getBaseContext(), "File written : " + jpegFile.getAbsolutePath(), Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
long l = jpegFile.length();
Log.i("PpCameraActivity", "File size : " + l);
} catch (IOException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
Toast.makeText(getBaseContext(), "Error while trying to write photo file", Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
}
But I get a FileNotFoundException on the FileOutputStream creation...
OK found it.
Not an Android problem but just my error (not the first time) : mkdirs must be applied to the parent file, not the file I want to write...
So, for people interested :
Access the sd card using
File root = Environment.getExternalStorageDirectory();
Don't forget to require this permission
WRITE_EXTERNAL_STORAGE
Then make, as usual, mkdirs and file creation.
And don't forget : the android device cannot write on the sdard while it is mounted on you PC.
You probably aren't writing to the SD card, and the SD contents are all you can see from a USB connection.
Try something like this: http://androidgps.blogspot.com/2008/09/writing-to-sd-card-in-android.html (just the first thing that came up when I searched for "Android write to SD card").