Commit Graph

2 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Ryan Mitchell
8a891d86ab Allow for RRO internal referencing
This change allows RROs to reference their own internal resources as
expected.

Overlays are loaded as shared libraries so they can have their own
resource id space that does not conflict with the resource id space of
the target or other overlays.

References to overlay resources that override target resources now
appear as references to the target resources.

Overlay values that are inlined into the xml file specified using
android:overlayResources are now able to be used at runtime.

See go/rro-references for more information.

Bug: 135943783
Test: idmap2_tests
Test: libandroidfw_tests
Change-Id: Ie349c56d7fd3f7d94b7d595ed6d01dc6b59b6178
2019-10-17 13:09:33 -07:00
Winson
9947f1e4fa Add ResourceLoader API with .apk and .arsc support
ResourceLoaders allow inserting another .apk/.arsc into AssetManager's
resource resolution search. The effect is similar to overlays,
where a entry of >= config later in the path list will return that
ApkAsset's resource value instead.

Because loading from an .arsc is supported, which doesn't contain
any actual files, ResourceLoader exposes loadDrawable and
loadXmlResourceParser to allow an application load those files from
anywhere or create them in code.

The data being loaded is either pushed into an .apk or .arsc that
mocks itself as the package being "overlaid" and is passed in
through ResourcesProvider, an interface with static methods that
supports loading from a readable path on disk or a FileDescriptor.

The APIs are accessed through a Context's getResources(), which
has been changed to be unique per "Context-scope", which is usually
the lifetime of the Java object. The exception is that Activities
who get their Resources object persisted across recreations
maintain that logic for persisting ResourceLoaders.

Bug: 135270223

Test: atest FrameworksResourceLoaderTests

Change-Id: I6929f0828629ad39a21fa155e7fec73bd75eec7d
2019-10-10 15:41:03 -07:00