First step of improving app screen size compatibility mode. When
running in compat mode, an application's windows are scaled up on
the screen rather than being small with 1:1 pixels.
Currently we scale the application to fill the entire screen, so
don't use an even pixel scaling. Though this may have some
negative impact on the appearance (it looks okay to me), it has a
big benefit of allowing us to now treat these apps as normal
full-screens apps and do the normal transition animations as you
move in and out and around in them.
This introduces fun stuff in the input system to take care of
modifying pointer coordinates to account for the app window
surface scaling. The input dispatcher is told about the scale
that is being applied to each window and, when there is one,
adjusts pointer events appropriately as they are being sent
to the transport.
Also modified is CompatibilityInfo, which has been greatly
simplified to not be so insane and incomprehendible. It is
now simple -- when constructed it determines if the given app
is compatible with the current screen size and density, and
that is that.
There are new APIs on ActivityManagerService to put applications
that we would traditionally consider compatible with larger screens
in compatibility mode. This is the start of a facility to have
a UI affordance for a user to switch apps in and out of
compatibility.
To test switching of modes, there is a new variation of the "am"
command to do this: am screen-compat [on|off] [package]
This mode switching has the fundamentals of restarting activities
when it is changed, though the state still needs to be persisted
and the overall mode switch cleaned up.
For the few small apps I have tested, things mostly seem to be
working well. I know of one problem with the text selection
handles being drawn at the wrong position because at some point
the window offset is being scaled incorrectly. There are
probably other similar issues around the interaction between
two windows because the different window coordinate spaces are
done in a hacky way instead of being formally integrated into
the window manager layout process.
Change-Id: Ie038e3746b448135117bd860859d74e360938557
The package manager now keeps track of whether an application is
stopped. There are new intent flags to control whether intent
filters in a stopped application will match the intent. This is
currently used in one place, sending broadcasts, so that stopped
apps can not be launched due to background processes.
The package manager during first init makes sure no applications
are in the stopped state. When new applications are installed,
that begin in the stopped state. When the activity manager is
launching a component of an application, it ensures the application
is taken out of the stopped state.
The "force stop" button in manage applications will now put an
application back in to the stopped state; it can't go back out
of the stopped state until one of its components is launched by
the activity manager.
There will probably be a few more places where we need to filter
stopped applications out of intent matches, but doing this for
broadcast is a very big first step.
This also introduces a new broadcast that is sent to an application
after it is replaced with a new .apk. But only if the app is not
in the stopped state. This makes it a lot easier for developers to
implement code to get their application back in proper running shape
after an upgrade.
Finally another new broadcast is added that is sent to a package's
installer at the first time it is launched. This allows the installer
to tell the package about it being installed only when it is first
actually used.
Change-Id: I589c53ff0e0ece868fe734ace4439c0d202dca2d
We were doubly-decreasing the task's activity count, so when selected
from recent tasks it would re-launch the last Intent rather than
switching to its current state.
Change-Id: I6e58c930a0755ae0142604d42b5cd2c668a2b492
The activity manager was not performing the layout pass on the new window,
because its app token was still hidden, because the activity manager / window
manager were still waiting for it to be ready to show.
Just ignore whether the app token is hidden for this case.
Also fixes some problems with animations, and tweaks the ViewConfiguration
values for xlarge screens.
Change-Id: Icbe9c77ba8127d1e02df2d6f27b8e86ec842e50a
This is a band-aid over the existing kludgy stopping mechanism
where the semantics of stop are different in the activity manager
than in the clients.
This change is intended to be as unobtrusive as possible, only
impacting the sleep case. I have a different change that
completely reworks how we stop activities to simply this all
a lot by unifying the semantics between the server and client.
However, it is too late in HC for such an extensive change. Later
I'll revert this one and put in the better solution.
Change-Id: Id77f2db1ec83469cdd888acb8fbc4679daa7766e
We no longer enforce permissions for applications that are accessing
their own components. This allows an application to require a permission
on one of its components that it does not itself have. This is useful
for example with the new advanced widgets, which require a system-only
permission on the implementing service to ensure the app's data stays
private but it is nice to allow the application to still touch its own
widget service.
Change-Id: I5d61930a083816919545870039ad191314ed48c6
...when the device's physical orientation is portrait.
We now hold off on computing app token orientation while preparing
to open or close app tokens.
Also clean up a few other little issues.
Change-Id: Iae125a975c7706fb4d068c872fd172e69854ff15
Now recents is updated every time an activity is resumed. This
should ensure the recent list is more consistent, in the face of
pressing back or things crashing.
Change-Id: Ibf59419014e549fac55f18633185edcb5ffcaa3c
Also issue #3281400: Rotating a retained instance fragment leaks the fragment manager
And turn off fragment debug logging.
Change-Id: Ibdd7db82bb35618021bcba421ba92ced7cd691c2
Also know as:
Issue #3272051 Contacts edit view: Tapping the in-app back button
results in a forward transition
Yeah more complexity in deciding which animation to use.
Also reduce complexity in deciding which app's animation set to use,
to balance things out (and make it have less stupid behavior).
Change-Id: I78c6c5c5249a96206f7e03ce587c1dcb9a7dc14f
The goal is to fix a bunch of fragment-related bugs caused by various
things trying to do fragment transactions after onPause()... which
currently throws an exception, since this is after the activity's state
has been saved so the new fragment state can be lost.
The basic change is relatively simple -- we now consider processes
hosting paused or stopping activities to be unkillable, and the client
code now does the onSaveInstanceState() as part of stopping the
activity.
For compatibility, if an app's targetSdkVersion is < HONEYCOMB, the
client side will still call onSaveInstanceState() prior to onPause()
and just hold on to that state until it needs to report it in once
being stopped.
Also included here is a change to generate thumbnails by taking
screenshots. The code for generating thumbnails by re-rendering
the view hierarchy is thus removed.
Change-Id: Iac1191646bd3cadbfe65779297795f22edf7e74a
What this adds:
- A new Intent activity flag to completely replace an existing task.
- A new Intent activity flag to bring the current home task up behind
a new task being started/brought to the foreground.
- New versions of startActivity() that take an array of Intents to be
started, allowing applications to start a task in a specific state.
- A public moveTaskToFront() method on ActivityManager, with a new flag
that allows the caller to have the task moved to the front with the
current home task immediately behind it.
Change-Id: Ie8028d09acffb5349d98043c67676daba09f75c8
We now decide whether to use a bitmap background based on whether the
window's drawing is hardware accelerated. To do this, there is a new
"state_accelerated" that state list drawables can be parameterized on,
and the standard window background uses this to select a solid color
or bitmap drawable as appropriate.
Introduces a little hackery to have wm preview windows pretend like
they are hardware accelerated even if they aren't, so the preview looks
closer to the actual app.
Also Add a DialogWhenLarge variation for the light theme.
Change-Id: I215a79d5df65ba3eed52ab363cade9d8218a6588
- Activity manager now prints the pid doing a startActivity request.
- Package manager now remembers messages about problems it has parsing
packages.xml.
Change-Id: I11a75aa3953dbfa5dd41cfbdf69116c764ec228f
...that Market took over the screen after signing into a Google account
Don't warn the user about a new activity coming up on an activity that
is finishing.
Change-Id: I573073139d42a485473d0c8a7df450c1a23c35c3
The activity manager looks for cases where one app launches immediately
after another. If this happens, a brief toast is shown telling the user
when app is actually running and what was originally starting.
Change-Id: If94cf5bd393dd0bc0f09789dae044fde1386c481
It would grant the permission to the temporary ActivityRecord,
not the real one, so it never got cleaned up.
Also allow granting of permissions to services because... well,
it would be really really useful. And it introduces some
refactoring that we'll need to support cut/paste.
Change-Id: If521f509042e7baad7f5dc9bec84b6ba0d90ba09
Introdude a new ActivityStack class that holds all of the
state and management of a stack of activities. Paves the way
for having multiple activity stacks, though at this point
there should be no change in functionality and the activity
manager is still assuming there is only one stack.
Change-Id: Iea4859a24c9269061043755ec58a615028d4183b