When an app has already been started, and a ContentProvider component
is enabled with DONT_KILL_APP, use the existing ProcessRecord to
install the provider.
Bug: 11118692
Change-Id: I990f18b337eb19768ee1db895f1e2eb982046cce
mProvider is HashMap<ProviderKey, ProviderClientRecord>. String
is not correct object for KEY. Complete removal using iterator.
Bug: 11086495
Change-Id: I51e4576544ef02ede6f96938689dd4e43ec6eb4f
For the new documents work, we're only interested in the subset of
ContentProviders that actually implement DocumentsContract. Instead
of returning all providers, add <intent-filter> support to make it
easier to limit the set of returned ProviderInfo.
Define a well-known action for DocumentsProviders, and start using it
when querying for roots. Continue supporting the old <meta-data>
approach until all apps have been updated.
Bug: 8599233
Change-Id: I05f049bba21311f5421738002f99ee214447c909
The entry to map the post notification op
to a permission is at the wrong offset
within the sOpPerms array. This patch
fixes the issue.
Change-Id: Ia241d274e484b6a24edbfb17b87bb887b61f1ee1
Signed-off-by: rpcraig <rpcraig@tycho.ncsc.mil>
Not enough time to fix everything, so instead we'll make it a warning
in this release and finish up turning it into a target-SDK based
exception in the next release.
Change-Id: I5aae64a1225a145f03ba4162238b53d5e401aba2
Apps that run components in separate processes, especially that
host providers in separate processes, can hit a race condition
where two processes simultaneously discover that the files/cache
dir must be created, then each calls mkdirs(). One of these will
fail not because the dir couldn't be created, but because it lost
the race and mkdirs() returned false to signal that it already
existed -- and this was assumed to be a hard failure.
We now recheck existence after a mkdirs() failure to discern this
case and proceed appropriately.
Bug 10515463
Change-Id: I13fbdd838921223f75ab11faa47291c82b21c650
All ContentProvider calls are currently blocking, making it hard for
an app to recover when a remote provider is wedged. This change adds
hidden support to ContentProviderClient to timeout remote calls,
treating them as ANRs. This behavior is disabled by default.
Update DocumentsUI to use a 20 second timeout whenever interacting
with a storage provider.
Bug: 10993301, 10819461, 10852518
Change-Id: I10fa3c425c6a7225fff9cb7a0a07659028230cd3
- the old TimePicker widget is still there for obvious layout compatibility reasons
- add a new delegate implementation for having a new UI based on a radial picker
- use the new delegate only for the TimePickerDialog (which does not need to be
the same)
- added support for Theming and light/dark Themes
- added support for I18N (hour formatting and time separator and also position of
AM/PM indicator coming from Unicode CLDR)
- added support for RTL
- verified support for Keyboard
- verified that CTS tests for TimePicker are passing (for both the legacy and the
new widgets)
Also added a new HapticFeedbackConstants.CLOCK_TICK and its related code for
enabling ticks vibration.
Change-Id: Ib9b53a152bd9e97383dc391ef8c26da91217298f
- Calling build() on a Style now goes through the same
codepath as calling build() on the Builder.
- Documented new constants and unhidden classes.
- Fixed crash in Action.clone().
Bug: 10112103
Bug: 10461196
Change-Id: I08cd94790b538a361ccf8ff3682f6a86a7812b95
Now when memory low, if a service's process is above
a selected pss, then the process is not allowed to go
in to the service a list.
Also simplified the normal meminfo details dump to not
include the shared dirty and shared clean sizes by
default, since these can be very confusing. You will
still get to see them with the "-a" flag.
Finally some small steps to better managing service
processes in the LRU list, so hopefully we can some
day be better about letting them drop down in the list
when there isn't really much interesting happening in
the process. Not yet used at this point.
Change-Id: I654bfd6d05de2a63120185ebb15ffda8cbeb5dac
Change our Intent flag to indicate that a Uri permission grant is
persistable, but don't actually persist it until explicitly taken by
the receiving app. This prevents apps from spamming each other if
persisted permissions aren't really required.
Remember the last time a persisted grant was taken by an app, and
use this to prune away the oldest grants when the number of grants
grows too large. Allow apps to query persisted grants they are
holding, and allow them to release previously persisted grants. Add
public UriPermission class to return grant details and timestamp.
Track various permission strengths separately, and combine together
after each mutation pass. Persistable grants are currently treated
like global grants, but they could be moved to have owners in the
future. Require that grant holders trying to extend a persistable
permission actually hold a persistable permission themselves.
Bug: 10835779
Change-Id: I95b2f797c04ce7fd2612f9a644685dbd44e03759