I want to allow user to install my app directly from my web-site, not through the Android market.
I'm working on a specific non-phone android device, which can't be connected to the Android market.
how can I accomplish such a thing ?
The device can download the APK files like a normal file. After that, the user can open it and gets prompted to install it by checking the apps permissions. This required the unknown source preference (Preferences->Applications->Development usually) to be checked.
If you want to create some sort of drive-by-download/install: Thats not possible for (obvious) security reasons.
Related
On Android can users choose to install any apps permanently?
And if so how does this work? I know when you first get an Android there are pre-installed apps that are permanent and you cant uninstall them but is there anyway in which we can permanently install apps ourselves?
What you're looking for is a 'system app'.
The apps installed on your Android devices can be broadly categorized as system apps or user apps, based on their installation location. The user apps are just all your normal app installations through the Google Play Store, Amazon Appstore or sideloading. These go into the /data partition of your Android phone, which is the part of the internal memory made available for user data and apps.
System apps are basically the apps that come pre-installed with your ROM. In a standard Android user environment, the user doesn’t have write access to the /system partition and thus, installing or uninstalling system apps directly isn’t possible. The process isn’t as hard as it may sound. However, there is a catch.
In order to install an app as a system app on your Android device, your device must either be _root_ed, or have a custom recovery installed (or both).
Here's how to install an app as a system app
By permanantly, I assume installing them as System Apps.
For that, you might need to root your phone. Google "installing android app as system app" and you will get a lot of answers. This is one sample
As the question is generic, so I am not adding the steps.
Easy way- If you don't uninstall an app, it will stay there permanantly. In addition, you can use additional security for preventing accidental uninstallation.
I need to setup an environment in an android device where only white listed apps are allowed to launch. The environment should
prevent user from installing new app and uninstalling existing app
prevent access to settings
prevent access to file directory
The Owner App are supposed to allow
download of white listed APK from a designated server within it's network
user can update white listed APK by downloading and installing it
user can launch multiple white listed app
I have looked through Android's Device Ownership and Screen Pinning references and APIs but couldn't find a solution to my above stated problem. Any pointers?
What do you think of this? http://www.andreas-schrade.de/2015/02/16/android-tutorial-how-to-create-a-kiosk-mode-in-android/
UPDATE:
Well, I've decided to use vendor like MobileIron. Thanks for the input regardlessly =)
The device my Android app is running does not have Playstore on it. The plan is to pre-install the software when shipping the device. I am now looking for a strategy to upgrade the application.
I found this useful link to install an Android app from the apk file:
Android: install .apk programmatically
I am thinking I will use this logic to auto-upgrade my app. I am wondering if it is even possible. I am thinking the upgrade will first try to uninstall existing version but will fail as the executable is still running and the file may be locked. Is there a better way? Regards.
Peter, we've just implemented the same thing.
Users have the software pre-installed on their device and we host update APK's on the companies servers.
From the app they can then check for updates where we have a WCF service which extracts the APK file (essentially a .zip) and returns the manifest details. From there we have the version of the APK and can compare it against the local version.
If the user decides to upgrade they can download the APK and you can automatically launch it. At which point the user will be told the application is going to be updated. There are no file locks etc, the app will just close and restart using the new version.
Note: Downgrading is not "automatic". The user would have to first uninstall the app. For upgrades, however, it's a simple case of downloading and launching the APK version (the user will be told they need to allow installations from unknown sources if this is not checked).
You have a couple of options, depending upon your target system.
Use the link you posted. This will provide the user with a traditional install dialog, whereby the user can choose to install or not. You should avoid doing that automatically, as APKs can be large and you might irritate the user if they don't want updates.
You can install updates magically, but you will require the firmware signing key (or possibly root, but I haven't tested that). That will not ask for consent from the user. You will need to add additional code using reflection to access the installation methods of Android. If you go this way, you should build an opt-out/in mechanism.
If your app is open-source, F-Droid would solve the problem for you.
F-Droid is an installable catalogue of FOSS (Free and Open Source
Software) applications for the Android platform. The client makes it
easy to browse, install, and keep track of updates on your device.
Mainly, it updates your app when necessary. (Or just have a look at its source code for inspiration on how to do it).
Yes but as far as I remember only if you had Root privileges in order to have access to the INSTALL_PACKAGES permission.
I'm developing a remote-control application for Android.
I want to be able to lock/unlock the screen.
To do this there are two ways:
Making the app a Device Administrator.
Using PowerManager.goToSleep(), which requires the DEVICE_POWER permission, which is a system permission.
So eclipse tells me "this permission is only granted to system apps".
I really need this and some other system permissions in my app, as it's a remote control app that must be able to control system features.
From the support page:
Uploading System Applications
Most developers will not need to upload system applications and may ignore this section. System applications may come pre-installed on certain devices and may or may not already be published in the Play store.
If you need to upload a system application and encounter an error message when doing so, please contact us. Please be sure to select the Publishing issues and distribution option.
If I'm understanding it right, It's possible to make a system application. how?
I'm developing a remote-control application for Android
Fortunately, this is not possible, except perhaps if you run as root, or you download the Android source code, modify it, and roll it into your own ROM mod.
If I'm understanding it right, It's possible to make a system application. how?
Build your own ROM mod. Sign the app with the same signing key as is used to sign your ROM mod. Put your app in your ROM mod. Install your ROM mod on your device.
This, of course, will limit your app's distribution to those devices running your ROM mod.
A lot of “system” permissions are really SIGNATURE_OR_SYSTEM permissions. For those, you need to do one of the following:
After building the APK, install it as a system app.
Sign the app with the same key as the Android distribution on your device.
For the first option, you would need to be root on your device. Regular APKs reside in /data/app, while system APKs need to be placed in a different folder (on Android 6 and 7 it’s /system/priv-app, earlier versions may differ). However, this is not very suitable for an app to be distributed to end users, especially if your target audience is not very tech-savvy.
For the second option, you need to build Android from source for your target device. If you sign the app with the same key as your Android build, then users running that build of Android can install it in the usual manner.
I have a question. How can I make an Android app installation to work similar as works installation from the official App Store for Android? (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mobile_software_distribution_platforms) Do I need to have Root access? Or should it be a special version of Android where App Store will work as Google Play? Currently, I’m only able to install applications as “Unknown Sources”, where my application downloads the apk File and calls a system installation window where user confirms the installation. The problem here is that the file to be installed can be copied (even just a brief moment). It may be ok for free applications or the ones with server authentication (log/pas) but for paid apps it could be a problem.
Even if you install the app and delete the APK, it's still very easy to recover the APK of an installed application. The only way you can really protect your app is by using in-app licensing checks or locking the app to a certain device by using the device's id.
Further, on unrooted devices, you can not install apps outside of the Google Play store, unless you enable installation from unknown sources. To get around that restriction -- and to allow auto-updating or silent installation -- you will need to root and install a modified package manager.