Clay Murphy | 18e0e46 | 2015-02-24 10:23:35 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> |
| 2 | <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"> |
| 3 | <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en"> |
| 4 | <head> |
| 5 | <title>Android 2.2 Compatibility Definition</title> |
| 6 | <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="cdd.css"/> |
| 7 | </head> |
| 8 | <body> |
| 9 | <div><img src="header.jpg" alt="Android logo"/></div> |
| 10 | <h1>Android 2.2 Compatibility Definition</h1> |
| 11 | <!--<span style="color: red; font-weight: bold;"><h2>DRAFT</h2></span>--> |
| 12 | <p>Copyright © 2010, Google Inc. All rights reserved.<br/> |
| 13 | <a href="mailto:compatibility@android.com">compatibility@android.com</a> |
| 14 | </p> |
| 15 | |
| 16 | <h2> Table of Contents</h2> |
| 17 | <div style="margin-left: 2em;"> |
| 18 | <a href="#section-1">1. Introduction</a><br/> |
| 19 | <a href="#section-2">2. Resources</a><br/> |
| 20 | <a href="#section-3">3. Software</a><br/> |
| 21 | <div style="margin-left: 2em;"> |
| 22 | <a href="#section-3.1">3.1. Managed API Compatibility</a><br/> |
| 23 | <a href="#section-3.2">3.2. Soft API Compatibility</a><br/> |
| 24 | <div style="margin-left: 2em;"> |
| 25 | <a href="#section-3.2.1">3.2.1. Permissions</a><br/> |
| 26 | <a href="#section-3.2.2">3.2.2. Build Parameters</a><br/> |
| 27 | <a href="#section-3.2.3">3.2.3. Intent Compatibility</a><br/> |
| 28 | <div style="margin-left: 2em;"> |
| 29 | <a href="#section-3.2.3.1">3.2.3.1. Core Application Intents</a><br/> |
| 30 | <a href="#section-3.2.3.2">3.2.3.2. Intent Overrides</a><br/> |
| 31 | <a href="#section-3.2.3.3">3.2.3.3. Intent Namespaces</a><br/> |
| 32 | <a href="#section-3.2.3.4">3.2.3.4. Broadcast Intents</a><br/> |
| 33 | </div> |
| 34 | </div> |
| 35 | <a href="#section-3.3">3.3. Native API Compatibility</a><br/> |
| 36 | <a href="#section-3.4">3.4. Web Compatibility</a><br/> |
| 37 | <div style="margin-left: 2em;"> |
| 38 | <a href="#section-3.4.1">3.4.1. WebView Compatibility</a><br/> |
| 39 | <a href="#section-3.4.2">3.4.2. Browser Compatibility</a><br/> |
| 40 | </div> |
| 41 | <a href="#section-3.5">3.5. API Behavioral Compatibility</a><br/> |
| 42 | <a href="#section-3.6">3.6. API Namespaces</a><br/> |
| 43 | <a href="#section-3.7">3.7. Virtual Machine Compatibility</a><br/> |
| 44 | <a href="#section-3.8">3.8. User Interface Compatibility</a><br/> |
| 45 | <div style="margin-left: 2em;"> |
| 46 | <a href="#section-3.8.1">3.8.1. Widgets</a><br/> |
| 47 | <a href="#section-3.8.2">3.8.2. Notifications</a><br/> |
| 48 | <a href="#section-3.8.3">3.8.3. Search</a><br/> |
| 49 | <a href="#section-3.8.4">3.8.4. Toasts</a><br/> |
| 50 | <a href="#section-3.8.5">3.8.5. Live Wallpapers</a><br/> |
| 51 | </div> |
| 52 | </div> |
| 53 | <a href="#section-4">4. Reference Software Compatibility</a><br/> |
| 54 | <a href="#section-5">5. Application Packaging Compatibility</a><br/> |
| 55 | <a href="#section-6">6. Multimedia Compatibility</a><br/> |
| 56 | <div style="margin-left: 2em;"> |
| 57 | <a href="#section-6.1">6.1. Media Codecs</a><br/> |
| 58 | <a href="#section-6.2">6.2. Audio Recording</a><br/> |
| 59 | <a href="#section-6.3">6.3. Audio Latency</a><br/> |
| 60 | </div> |
| 61 | <a href="#section-7">7. Developer Tool Compatibility</a><br/> |
| 62 | <a href="#section-8">8. Hardware Compatibility</a><br/> |
| 63 | <div style="margin-left: 2em;"> |
| 64 | <a href="#section-8.1">8.1. Display</a><br/> |
| 65 | <div style="margin-left: 2em;"> |
| 66 | <a href="#section-8.1.2">8.1.2. Non-Standard Display Configurations</a><br/> |
| 67 | <a href="#section-8.1.3">8.1.3. Display Metrics</a><br/> |
| 68 | <a href="#section-8.1.4">8.1.4. Declared Screen Support</a><br/> |
| 69 | </div> |
| 70 | <a href="#section-8.2">8.2. Keyboard</a><br/> |
| 71 | <a href="#section-8.3">8.3. Non-touch Navigation</a><br/> |
| 72 | <a href="#section-8.4">8.4. Screen Orientation</a><br/> |
| 73 | <a href="#section-8.5">8.5. Touchscreen input</a><br/> |
| 74 | <a href="#section-8.6">8.6. USB</a><br/> |
| 75 | <a href="#section-8.7">8.7. Navigation keys</a><br/> |
| 76 | <a href="#section-8.8">8.8. Wireless Data Networking</a><br/> |
| 77 | <a href="#section-8.9">8.9. Camera</a><br/> |
| 78 | <a href="#section-8.10">8.10. Accelerometer</a><br/> |
| 79 | <a href="#section-8.11">8.11. Compass</a><br/> |
| 80 | <a href="#section-8.12">8.12. GPS</a><br/> |
| 81 | <a href="#section-8.13">8.13. Telephony</a><br/> |
| 82 | <a href="#section-8.14">8.14. Memory and Storage</a><br/> |
| 83 | <a href="#section-8.15">8.15. Application Shared Storage</a><br/> |
| 84 | <a href="#section-8.16">8.16. Bluetooth</a><br/> |
| 85 | </div> |
| 86 | <a href="#section-9">9. Performance Compatibility</a><br/> |
| 87 | <a href="#section-10">10. Security Model Compatibility</a><br/> |
| 88 | <div style="margin-left: 2em;"> |
| 89 | <a href="#section-10.1">10.1. Permissions</a><br/> |
| 90 | <a href="#section-10.2">10.2. UID and Process Isolation</a><br/> |
| 91 | <a href="#section-10.3">10.3. Filesystem Permissions</a><br/> |
| 92 | <a href="#section-10.4">10.4. Alternate Execution Environments</a><br/> |
| 93 | </div> |
| 94 | <a href="#section-11">11. Compatibility Test Suite</a><br/> |
| 95 | <a href="#section-12">12. Updatable Software</a><br/> |
| 96 | <a href="#section-13">13. Contact Us</a><br/> |
| 97 | <a href="#appendix-A">Appendix A - Bluetooth Test Procedure</a><br/> |
| 98 | </div> |
| 99 | |
| 100 | <div style="page-break-before: always;"></div> |
| 101 | |
| 102 | <a name="section-1"></a><h2>1. Introduction</h2> |
| 103 | <p>This document enumerates the requirements that must be met in order for |
| 104 | mobile phones to be compatible with Android 2.2.</p> |
| 105 | <p>The use of "must", "must not", "required", "shall", "shall not", "should", |
| 106 | "should not", "recommended", "may" and "optional" is per the IETF standard |
| 107 | defined in RFC2119 [<a href="#resources01">Resources, 1</a>].</p> |
| 108 | <p>As used in this document, a "device implementer" or "implementer" is a |
| 109 | person or organization developing a hardware/software solution running Android |
| 110 | 2.2. A "device implementation" or "implementation" is the hardware/software |
| 111 | solution so developed.</p> |
| 112 | <p>To be considered compatible with Android 2.2, device implementations:</p> |
| 113 | <ul> |
| 114 | <li>MUST meet the requirements presented in this Compatibility Definition, |
| 115 | including any documents incorporated via reference.</li> |
| 116 | <li>MUST pass the most recent version of the Android Compatibility Test Suite |
| 117 | (CTS) available at the time of the device implementation's software is |
| 118 | completed. (The CTS is available as part of the Android Open Source Project [<a |
| 119 | href="#resources02">Resources, 2</a>].) The CTS tests many, but not all, of the |
| 120 | components outlined in this document.</li> |
| 121 | </ul> |
| 122 | <p>Where this definition or the CTS is silent, ambiguous, or incomplete, it is |
| 123 | the responsibility of the device implementer to ensure compatibility with |
| 124 | existing implementations. For this reason, the Android Open Source Project [<a |
| 125 | href="#resources03">Resources, 3</a>] is both the reference and preferred |
| 126 | implementation of Android. Device implementers are strongly encouraged to base |
| 127 | their implementations on the "upstream" source code available from the Android |
| 128 | Open Source Project. While some components can hypothetically be replaced with |
| 129 | alternate implementations this practice is strongly discouraged, as passing |
| 130 | the CTS tests will become substantially more difficult. It is the |
| 131 | implementer's responsibility to ensure full behavioral compatibility with the |
| 132 | standard Android implementation, including and beyond the Compatibility Test |
| 133 | Suite. Finally, note that certain component substitutions and modifications |
| 134 | are explicitly forbidden by this document.</p> |
| 135 | |
| 136 | <a name="section-2"></a><h2>2. Resources</h2> |
| 137 | <ol> |
| 138 | <a name="resources01"></a><li>IETF RFC2119 Requirement Levels: <a href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2119.txt">http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2119.txt</a></li> |
| 139 | <a name="resources02"></a><li>Android Compatibility Program Overview: <a href="http://source.android.com/compatibility/index.html">http://source.android.com/compatibility/index.html</a></li> |
| 140 | <a name="resources03"></a><li>Android Open Source Project: <a href="http://source.android.com/">http://source.android.com/</a></li> |
| 141 | <a name="resources04"></a><li>API definitions and documentation: <a href="http://developer.android.com/reference/packages.html">http://developer.android.com/reference/packages.html</a></li> |
| 142 | <a name="resources05"></a><li>Android Permissions reference: <a href="http://developer.android.com/reference/android/Manifest.permission.html">http://developer.android.com/reference/android/Manifest.permission.html</a></li> |
| 143 | <a name="resources06"></a><li>android.os.Build reference: <a href="http://developer.android.com/reference/android/os/Build.html">http://developer.android.com/reference/android/os/Build.html</a></li> |
| 144 | <a name="resources07"></a><li>Android 2.2 allowed version strings: <a href="http://source.android.com/compatibility/2.2/versions.html">http://source.android.com/compatibility/2.2/versions.html</a></li> |
| 145 | <a name="resources08"></a><li>android.webkit.WebView class: <a href="http://developer.android.com/reference/android/webkit/WebView.html">http://developer.android.com/reference/android/webkit/WebView.html</a></li> |
| 146 | <a name="resources09"></a><li>HTML5: <a href="http://www.whatwg.org/specs/web-apps/current-work/multipage/">http://www.whatwg.org/specs/web-apps/current-work/multipage/</a></li> |
| 147 | <a name="resources10"></a><li>Dalvik Virtual Machine specification: available in the Android source code, at dalvik/docs</li> |
| 148 | <a name="resources11"></a><li>AppWidgets: <a href="http://developer.android.com/guide/practices/ui_guidelines/widget_design.html">http://developer.android.com/guide/practices/ui_guidelines/widget_design.html</a></li> |
| 149 | <a name="resources12"></a><li>Notifications: <a href="http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/ui/notifiers/notifications.html">http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/ui/notifiers/notifications.html</a></li> |
| 150 | <a name="resources13"></a><li>Application Resources: <a href="http://code.google.com/android/reference/available-resources.html">http://code.google.com/android/reference/available-resources.html</a></li> |
| 151 | <a name="resources14"></a><li>Status Bar icon style guide: <a href="http://developer.android.com/guide/practices/ui_guidelines/icon_design.html#statusbarstructure">http://developer.android.com/guide/practices/ui_guideline /icon_design.html#statusbarstructure</a></li> |
| 152 | <a name="resources15"></a><li>Search Manager: <a href="http://developer.android.com/reference/android/app/SearchManager.html">http://developer.android.com/reference/android/app/SearchManager.html</a></li> |
| 153 | <a name="resources16"></a><li>Toasts: <a href="http://developer.android.com/reference/android/widget/Toast.html">http://developer.android.com/reference/android/widget/Toast.html</a></li> |
| 154 | <a name="resources17"></a><li>Live Wallpapers: <a href="http://developer.android.com/resources/articles/live-wallpapers.html">http://developer.android.com/resources/articles/live-wallpapers.html</a></li> |
| 155 | <a name="resources18"></a><li>Apps for Android: <a href="http://code.google.com/p/apps-for-android">http://code.google.com/p/apps-for-android</a></li> |
| 156 | <a name="resources19"></a><li>Reference tool documentation (for adb, aapt, ddms): <a href="http://developer.android.com/guide/developing/tools/index.html">http://developer.android.com/guide/developing/tools/index.html</a></li> |
| 157 | <a name="resources20"></a><li>Android apk file description: <a href="http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/fundamentals.html">http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/fundamentals.html</a></li> |
| 158 | <a name="resources21"></a><li>Manifest files: <a href="http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/manifest/manifest-intro.html">http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/manifest/manifest-intro.html</a></li> |
| 159 | <a name="resources22"></a><li>Monkey testing tool: <a href="http://developer.android.com/guide/developing/tools/monkey.html">http://developer.android.com/guide/developing/tools/monkey.html</a></li> |
| 160 | <a name="resources23"></a><li>Android Hardware Features List: <a href="http://developer.android.com/reference/android/content/pm/PackageManager.html">http://developer.android.com/reference/android/content/pm/PackageManager.html</a></li> |
| 161 | <a name="resources24"></a><li>Supporting Multiple Screens: <a href="http://developer.android.com/guide/practices/screens_support.html">http://developer.android.com/guide/practices/screens_support.html</a></li> |
| 162 | <a name="resources25"></a><li>android.content.res.Configuration: <a href="http://developer.android.com/reference/android/content/res/Configuration.html">http://developer.android.com/reference/android/content/res/Configuration.html</a></li> |
| 163 | <a name="resources26"></a><li>android.util.DisplayMetrics: <a href="http://developer.android.com/reference/android/util/DisplayMetrics.html">http://developer.android.com/reference/android/util/DisplayMetrics.html</a></li> |
| 164 | <a name="resources27"></a><li>android.hardware.Camera: <a href="http://developer.android.com/reference/android/hardware/Camera.html">http://developer.android.com/reference/android/hardware/Camera.html</a></li> |
| 165 | <a name="resources28"></a><li>Sensor coordinate space: <a href="http://developer.android.com/reference/android/hardware/SensorEvent.html">http://developer.android.com/reference/android/hardware/SensorEvent.html</a></li> |
| 166 | <a name="resources29"></a><li>Android Security and Permissions reference: <a href="http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/security/security.html">http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/security/security.html</a></li> |
| 167 | <a name="resources30"></a><li>Bluetooth API: <a href="http://developer.android.com/reference/android/bluetooth/package-summary.html">http://developer.android.com/reference/android/bluetooth/package-summary.html</a></li> |
| 168 | </ol> |
| 169 | <p>Many of these resources are derived directly or indirectly from the Android |
| 170 | 2.2 SDK, and will be functionally identical to the information in that SDK's |
| 171 | documentation. In any cases where this Compatibility Definition or the |
| 172 | Compatibility Test Suite disagrees with the SDK documentation, the SDK |
| 173 | documentation is considered authoritative. Any technical details provided in |
| 174 | the references included above are considered by inclusion to be part of this |
| 175 | Compatibility Definition.</p> |
| 176 | |
| 177 | <a name="section-3"></a><h2>3. Software</h2> |
| 178 | <p>The Android platform includes a set of managed APIs, a set of native APIs, |
| 179 | and a body of so-called "soft" APIs such as the Intent system and |
| 180 | web-application APIs. This section details the hard and soft APIs that are |
| 181 | integral to compatibility, as well as certain other relevant technical and |
| 182 | user interface behaviors. Device implementations MUST comply with all the |
| 183 | requirements in this section.</p> |
| 184 | |
| 185 | <a name="section-3.1"></a><h3>3.1. Managed API Compatibility</h3> |
| 186 | <p>The managed (Dalvik-based) execution environment is the primary vehicle for |
| 187 | Android applications. The Android application programming interface (API) is |
| 188 | the set of Android platform interfaces exposed to applications running in the |
| 189 | managed VM environment. Device implementations MUST provide complete |
| 190 | implementations, including all documented behaviors, of any documented API |
| 191 | exposed by the Android 2.2 SDK [<a href="#resources04">Resources, 4</a>].</p> |
| 192 | <p>Device implementations MUST NOT omit any managed APIs, alter API interfaces |
| 193 | or signatures, deviate from the documented behavior, or include no-ops, except |
| 194 | where specifically allowed by this Compatibility Definition.</p> |
| 195 | |
| 196 | <a name="section-3.2"></a><h3>3.2. Soft API Compatibility</h3> |
| 197 | <p>In addition to the managed APIs from Section 3.1, Android also includes a |
| 198 | significant runtime-only "soft" API, in the form of such things such as |
| 199 | Intents, permissions, and similar aspects of Android applications that cannot |
| 200 | be enforced at application compile time. This section details the "soft" APIs |
| 201 | and system behaviors required for compatibility with Android 2.2. Device |
| 202 | implementations MUST meet all the requirements presented in this section.</p> |
| 203 | <a name="section-3.2.1"></a><h4>3.2.1. Permissions</h4> |
| 204 | <p>Device implementers MUST support and enforce all permission constants as |
| 205 | documented by the Permission reference page [<a |
| 206 | href="#resources05">Resources, 5</a>]. Note that Section 10 lists additional |
| 207 | requirements related to the Android security model.</p> |
| 208 | <a name="section-3.2.2"></a><h4>3.2.2. Build Parameters</h4> |
| 209 | <p>The Android APIs include a number of constants on the <code>android.os.Build</code> |
| 210 | class [<a href="#resources06">Resources, 6</a>] that are intended to describe |
| 211 | the current device. To provide consistent, meaningful values across device |
| 212 | implementations, the table below includes additional restrictions on the |
| 213 | formats of these values to which device implementations MUST conform.</p> |
| 214 | <table> |
| 215 | <tbody> |
| 216 | <tr> |
| 217 | <td><b>Parameter</b></td> |
| 218 | <td><b>Comments</b></td> |
| 219 | </tr> |
| 220 | <tr> |
| 221 | <td>android.os.Build.VERSION.RELEASE</td> |
| 222 | <td>The version of the currently-executing Android system, in human-readable |
| 223 | format. This field MUST have one of the string values defined in [<a |
| 224 | href="#resources07">Resources, 7</a>].</td> |
| 225 | </tr> |
| 226 | <tr> |
| 227 | <td>android.os.Build.VERSION.SDK</td> |
| 228 | <td>The version of the currently-executing Android system, in a format |
| 229 | accessible to third-party application code. For Android 2.2, this field MUST have |
| 230 | the integer value 8.</td> |
| 231 | </tr> |
| 232 | <tr> |
| 233 | <td>android.os.Build.VERSION.INCREMENTAL</td> |
| 234 | <td>A value chosen by the device implementer designating the specific build of |
| 235 | the currently-executing Android system, in human-readable format. This value |
| 236 | MUST NOT be re-used for different builds made available to end users. A typical use |
| 237 | of this field is to indicate which build number or source-control change |
| 238 | identifier was used to generate the build. There are no requirements on the |
| 239 | specific format of this field, except that it MUST NOT be null or the empty |
| 240 | string ("").</td> |
| 241 | </tr> |
| 242 | <tr> |
| 243 | <td>android.os.Build.BOARD</td> |
| 244 | <td>A value chosen by the device implementer identifying the specific internal |
| 245 | hardware used by the device, in human-readable format. A possible use of this |
| 246 | field is to indicate the specific revision of the board powering the device. |
| 247 | There are no requirements on the specific format of this field, except that it |
| 248 | MUST NOT be null or the empty string ("").</td> |
| 249 | </tr> |
| 250 | <tr> |
| 251 | <td>android.os.Build.BRAND</td> |
| 252 | <td>A value chosen by the device implementer identifying the name of the |
| 253 | company, organization, individual, etc. who produced the device, in |
| 254 | human-readable format. A possible use of this field is to indicate the OEM |
| 255 | and/or carrier who sold the device. There are no requirements on the specific |
| 256 | format of this field, except that it MUST NOT be null or the empty string |
| 257 | ("").</td> |
| 258 | </tr> |
| 259 | <tr> |
| 260 | <td>android.os.Build.DEVICE</td> |
| 261 | <td>A value chosen by the device implementer identifying the specific |
| 262 | configuration or revision of the body (sometimes called "industrial design") |
| 263 | of the device. There are no requirements on the specific format of this field, |
| 264 | except that it MUST NOT be null or the empty string ("").</td> |
| 265 | </tr> |
| 266 | <tr> |
| 267 | <td>android.os.Build.FINGERPRINT</td> |
| 268 | <td>A string that uniquely identifies this build. It SHOULD be reasonably |
| 269 | human-readable. It MUST follow this template: |
| 270 | <br/><code>$(BRAND)/$(PRODUCT)/$(DEVICE)/$(BOARD):$(VERSION.RELEASE)/$(ID)/$(VERSION.INCREMENTAL):$(TYPE)/$(TAGS)</code><br/> |
| 271 | For example: |
| 272 | <br/><code>acme/mydevice/generic/generic:2.2/ERC77/3359:userdebug/test-keys</code><br/> |
| 273 | The fingerprint MUST NOT include whitespace characters. If other fields included in the |
| 274 | template above have whitespace characters, they MUST be replaced in the build |
| 275 | fingerprint with another character, such as the underscore ("_") character.</td> |
| 276 | </tr> |
| 277 | <tr> |
| 278 | <td>android.os.Build.HOST</td> |
| 279 | <td>A string that uniquely identifies the host the build was built on, in |
| 280 | human readable format. There are no requirements on the specific format of |
| 281 | this field, except that it MUST NOT be null or the empty string ("").</td> |
| 282 | </tr> |
| 283 | <tr> |
| 284 | <td>android.os.Build.ID</td> |
| 285 | <td>An identifier chosen by the device implementer to refer to a specific |
| 286 | release, in human readable format. This field can be the same as |
| 287 | android.os.Build.VERSION.INCREMENTAL, but SHOULD be a value sufficiently |
| 288 | meaningful for end users to distinguish between software builds. There are no |
| 289 | requirements on the specific format of this field, except that it MUST NOT be |
| 290 | null or the empty string ("").</td> |
| 291 | </tr> |
| 292 | <tr> |
| 293 | <td>android.os.Build.MODEL</td> |
| 294 | <td>A value chosen by the device implementer containing the name of the device |
| 295 | as known to the end user. This SHOULD be the same name under which the device |
| 296 | is marketed and sold to end users. There are no requirements on the specific |
| 297 | format of this field, except that it MUST NOT be null or the empty string |
| 298 | ("").</td> |
| 299 | </tr> |
| 300 | <tr> |
| 301 | <td>android.os.Build.PRODUCT</td> |
| 302 | <td>A value chosen by the device implementer containing the development name |
| 303 | or code name of the device. MUST be human-readable, but is not necessarily |
| 304 | intended for view by end users. There are no requirements on the specific |
| 305 | format of this field, except that it MUST NOT be null or the empty string |
| 306 | ("").</td> |
| 307 | </tr> |
| 308 | <tr> |
| 309 | <td>android.os.Build.TAGS</td> |
| 310 | <td>A comma-separated list of tags chosen by the device implementer that |
| 311 | further distinguish the build. For example, "unsigned,debug". This field MUST |
| 312 | NOT be null or the empty string (""), but a single tag (such as "release") is |
| 313 | fine.</td> |
| 314 | </tr> |
| 315 | <tr> |
| 316 | <td>android.os.Build.TIME</td> |
| 317 | <td>A value representing the timestamp of when the build occurred.</td> |
| 318 | </tr> |
| 319 | <tr> |
| 320 | <td>android.os.Build.TYPE</td> |
| 321 | <td>A value chosen by the device implementer specifying the runtime |
| 322 | configuration of the build. This field SHOULD have one of the values |
| 323 | corresponding to the three typical Android runtime configurations: "user", |
| 324 | "userdebug", or "eng".</td> |
| 325 | </tr> |
| 326 | <tr> |
| 327 | <td>android.os.Build.USER</td> |
| 328 | <td>A name or user ID of the user (or automated user) that generated the |
| 329 | build. There are no requirements on the specific format of this field, except |
| 330 | that it MUST NOT be null or the empty string ("").</td> |
| 331 | </tr> |
| 332 | </tbody> |
| 333 | </table> |
| 334 | <a name="section-3.2.3"></a><h4>3.2.3. Intent Compatibility</h4> |
| 335 | <p>Android uses Intents to achieve loosely-coupled integration between |
| 336 | applications. This section describes requirements related to the Intent |
| 337 | patterns that MUST be honored by device implementations. By "honored", it is |
| 338 | meant that the device implementer MUST provide an Android Activity or Service |
| 339 | that specifies a matching Intent filter and binds to and implements correct |
| 340 | behavior for each specified Intent pattern.</p> |
| 341 | <a name="section-3.2.3.1"></a><h4>3.2.3.1. Core Application Intents</h4> |
| 342 | <p>The Android upstream project defines a number of core applications, such as |
| 343 | a phone dialer, calendar, contacts book, music player, and so on. Device |
| 344 | implementers MAY replace these applications with alternative versions.</p> |
| 345 | <p>However, any such alternative versions MUST honor the same Intent patterns |
| 346 | provided by the upstream project. For example, if a device contains an |
| 347 | alternative music player, it must still honor the Intent pattern issued by |
| 348 | third-party applications to pick a song.</p> |
| 349 | <p>The following applications are considered core Android system |
| 350 | applications:</p> |
| 351 | <ul> |
| 352 | <li>Desk Clock</li> |
| 353 | <li>Browser</li> |
| 354 | <li>Calendar</li> |
| 355 | <li>Calculator</li> |
| 356 | <li>Camera</li> |
| 357 | <li>Contacts</li> |
| 358 | <li>Email</li> |
| 359 | <li>Gallery</li> |
| 360 | <li>GlobalSearch</li> |
| 361 | <li>Launcher</li> |
| 362 | <li>LivePicker (that is, the Live Wallpaper picker application; MAY be omitted |
| 363 | if the device does not support Live Wallpapers, per Section 3.8.5.)</li> |
| 364 | <li>Messaging (AKA "Mms")</li> |
| 365 | <li>Music</li> |
| 366 | <li>Phone</li> |
| 367 | <li>Settings</li> |
| 368 | <li>SoundRecorder</li> |
| 369 | </ul> |
| 370 | <p>The core Android system applications include various Activity, or Service |
| 371 | components that are considered "public". |
| 372 | That is, the attribute "android:exported" may be absent, or may have the value |
| 373 | "true".</p> |
| 374 | <p>For every Activity or Service defined |
| 375 | in one of the core Android system apps that is not marked as non-public via an |
| 376 | android:exported attribute with the value "false", device implementations MUST |
| 377 | include a compontent of the same type implementing the same Intent filter |
| 378 | patterns as the core Android system app.</p> |
| 379 | <p>In other words, a device implementation MAY replace core Android system |
| 380 | apps; however, if it does, the device implementation MUST support all Intent |
| 381 | patterns defined by each core Android system app being replaced.</p> |
| 382 | <a name="section-3.2.3.2"></a><h4>3.2.3.2. Intent Overrides</h4> |
| 383 | <p>As Android is an extensible platform, device implementers MUST allow each |
| 384 | Intent pattern referenced in Section 3.2.3.1 to be overridden by third-party |
| 385 | applications. The upstream Android open source project allows this by default; |
| 386 | device implementers MUST NOT attach special privileges to system applications' |
| 387 | use of these Intent patterns, or prevent third-party applications from binding |
| 388 | to and assuming control of these patterns. This prohibition specifically |
| 389 | includes but is not limited to disabling the "Chooser" user interface which |
| 390 | allows the user to select between multiple applications which all handle the |
| 391 | same Intent pattern.</p> |
| 392 | <a name="section-3.2.3.3"></a><h4>3.2.3.3. Intent Namespaces</h4> |
| 393 | <p>Device implementers MUST NOT include any Android component that honors any |
| 394 | new Intent or Broadcast Intent patterns using an ACTION, CATEGORY, or other |
| 395 | key string in the android.* namespace. Device implementers MUST NOT include |
| 396 | any Android components that honor any new Intent or Broadcast Intent patterns |
| 397 | using an ACTION, CATEGORY, or other key string in a package space belonging to |
| 398 | another organization. Device implementers MUST NOT alter or extend any of the |
| 399 | Intent patterns used by the core apps listed in Section 3.2.3.1.</p> |
| 400 | <p>This prohibition is analogous to that specified for Java language classes |
| 401 | in Section 3.6.</p> |
| 402 | <a name="section-3.2.3.4"></a><h4>3.2.3.4. Broadcast Intents</h4> |
| 403 | <p>Third-party applications rely on the platform to broadcast certain Intents |
| 404 | to notify them of changes in the hardware or software environment. |
| 405 | Android-compatible devices MUST broadcast the public broadcast Intents in |
| 406 | response to appropriate system events. Broadcast Intents are described in the |
| 407 | SDK documentation.</p> |
| 408 | |
| 409 | <a name="section-3.3"></a><h3>3.3. Native API Compatibility</h3> |
| 410 | <p>Managed code running in Dalvik can call into native code provided in the |
| 411 | application .apk file as an ELF .so file compiled for the appropriate device |
| 412 | hardware architecture. Device implementations MUST include support for code |
| 413 | running in the managed environment to call into native code, using the |
| 414 | standard Java Native Interface (JNI) semantics. The following APIs MUST be |
| 415 | available to native code:</p> |
| 416 | <ul> |
| 417 | <li>libc (C library)</li> |
| 418 | <li>libm (math library)</li> |
| 419 | <li>JNI interface</li> |
| 420 | <li>libz (Zlib compression)</li> |
| 421 | <li>liblog (Android logging)</li> |
| 422 | <li>Minimal support for C++</li> |
| 423 | <li>Support for OpenGL, as described below</li> |
| 424 | </ul> |
| 425 | <p>Device implementations MUST support OpenGL ES 1.0. Devices that lack |
| 426 | hardware acceleration MUST implement OpenGL ES 1.0 using a software renderer. |
| 427 | Device implementations SHOULD implement as much of OpenGL ES 1.1 as the device |
| 428 | hardware supports. Device implementations SHOULD provide an implementation |
| 429 | for OpenGL ES 2.0, if the hardware is capable of reasonable performance on |
| 430 | those APIs.</p> |
| 431 | <p>These libraries MUST be source-compatible (i.e. header compatible) and |
| 432 | binary-compatible (for a given processor architecture) with the versions |
| 433 | provided in Bionic by the Android Open Source project. Since the Bionic |
| 434 | implementations are not fully compatible with other implementations such as |
| 435 | the GNU C library, device implementers SHOULD use the Android implementation. |
| 436 | If device implementers use a different implementation of these libraries, they |
| 437 | MUST ensure header, binary, and behavioral compatibility.</p> |
| 438 | <p>Device implementations MUST accurately report the native Application Binary |
| 439 | Interface (ABI) supported by the device, via the |
| 440 | <code>android.os.Build.CPU_ABI</code> API. The ABI MUST be one of the entries |
| 441 | documented in the latest version of the Android NDK, in the file |
| 442 | <code>docs/CPU-ARCH-ABIS.txt</code>. Note that additional releases of the |
| 443 | Android NDK may introduce support for additional ABIs.</p> |
| 444 | <p>Native code compatibility is challenging. For this reason, it should be |
| 445 | repeated that device implementers are VERY strongly encouraged to use the |
| 446 | upstream implementations of the libraries listed above to help ensure |
| 447 | compatibility.</p> |
| 448 | |
| 449 | <a name="section-3.4"></a><h3>3.4. Web Compatibility</h3> |
| 450 | <p>Many developers and applications rely on the behavior of the |
| 451 | <code>android.webkit.WebView</code> class [<a |
| 452 | href="#resources08">Resources, 8</a>] |
| 453 | for their user interfaces, so the WebView implementation must be |
| 454 | compatible across Android implementations. Similarly, a full web experience is |
| 455 | central to the Android user experience. Device implementations MUST include a |
| 456 | version of <code>android.webkit.WebView</code> consistent with the upstream |
| 457 | Android software, and MUST include a modern HTML5-capable browser, as |
| 458 | described below.</p> |
| 459 | <a name="section-3.4.1"></a><h4>3.4.1. WebView Compatibility</h4> |
| 460 | <p>The Android Open Source implementation uses the WebKit rendering engine to |
| 461 | implement the <code>android.webkit.WebView</code>. Because it is not feasible |
| 462 | to develop a comprehensive test suite for a web rendering system, device |
| 463 | implementers MUST use the specific upstream build of WebKit in the WebView |
| 464 | implementation. Specifically:</p> |
| 465 | <ul> |
| 466 | <li>Device implementations' <code>android.webkit.WebView</code> |
| 467 | implementations MUST be based on the 533.1 WebKit build from the upstream |
| 468 | Android Open Source tree for Android 2.2. This build includes a specific set |
| 469 | of functionality and security fixes for the WebView. Device implementers MAY |
| 470 | include customizations to the WebKit implementation; however, any such |
| 471 | customizations MUST NOT alter the behavior of the WebView, including rendering |
| 472 | behavior.</li> |
| 473 | <li>The user agent string reported by the WebView MUST be in this format:<br/> |
| 474 | <code>Mozilla/5.0 (Linux; U; Android $(VERSION); $(LOCALE); $(MODEL) Build/$(BUILD)) AppleWebKit/533.1 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/4.0 Mobile Safari/533.1</code> |
| 475 | <ul> |
| 476 | <li>The value of the $(VERSION) string MUST be the same as the value for <code>android.os.Build.VERSION.RELEASE</code></li> |
| 477 | <li>The value of the $(LOCALE) string SHOULD follow the ISO conventions for country code and language, and SHOULD refer to the current configured locale of the device</li> |
| 478 | <li>The value of the $(MODEL) string MUST be the same as the value for <code>android.os.Build.MODEL</code></li> |
| 479 | <li>The value of the $(BUILD) string MUST be the same as the value for <code>android.os.Build.ID</code></li> |
| 480 | </ul></li> |
| 481 | </ul> |
| 482 | <p>The WebView configuration MUST include support for the HTML5 database, |
| 483 | application cache, and geolocation APIs [<a href="#resources09">Resources, |
| 484 | 9</a>]. The WebView MUST include support for the HTML5 |
| 485 | <code><video></code> tag. HTML5 APIs, like all JavaScript APIs, MUST be |
| 486 | disabled by default in a WebView, unless the developer explicitly enables them |
| 487 | via the usual Android APIs.</p> |
| 488 | <a name="section-3.4.2"></a><h4>3.4.2. Browser Compatibility</h4> |
| 489 | <p>Device implementations MUST include a standalone Browser application for |
| 490 | general user web browsing. The standalone Browser MAY be based on an |
| 491 | browser technology other than WebKit. However, even if an alternate Browser |
| 492 | application is shipped, the <code>android.webkit.WebView</code> component |
| 493 | provided to third-party applications MUST be based on WebKit, as described in |
| 494 | Section 3.4.1.</p> |
| 495 | <p>Implementations MAY ship a custom user agent string in the standalone |
| 496 | Browser application.</p> |
| 497 | <p>The standalone Browser application (whether based on the upstream |
| 498 | WebKit Browser application or a third-party replacement) SHOULD include support |
| 499 | for as much of HTML5 [<a href="#resources09">Resources, 9</a>] as possible. |
| 500 | Minimally, device implementations MUST support HTML5 geolocation, application |
| 501 | cache, and database APIs and the <video> tag in standalone the Browser |
| 502 | application.</p> |
| 503 | |
| 504 | <a name="section-3.5"></a><h3>3.5. API Behavioral Compatibility</h3> |
| 505 | <p>The behaviors of each of the API types (managed, soft, native, and web) |
| 506 | must be consistent with the preferred implementation of the upstream Android |
| 507 | open-source project [<a href="#resources03">Resources, 3</a>]. Some specific areas |
| 508 | of compatibility are:</p> |
| 509 | <ul> |
| 510 | <li>Devices MUST NOT change the behavior or meaning of a standard Intent</li> |
| 511 | <li>Devices MUST NOT alter the lifecycle or lifecycle semantics of a particular type of system component (such as Service, Activity, ContentProvider, etc.)</li> |
| 512 | <li>Devices MUST NOT change the semantics of a particular permission</li> |
| 513 | </ul> |
| 514 | <p>The above list is not comprehensive, and the onus is on device implementers |
| 515 | to ensure behavioral compatibility. For this reason, device implementers |
| 516 | SHOULD use the source code available via the Android Open Source Project where |
| 517 | possible, rather than re-implement significant parts of the system.</p> |
| 518 | <p>The Compatibility Test Suite (CTS) tests significant portions of the |
| 519 | platform for behavioral compatibility, but not all. It is the responsibility |
| 520 | of the implementer to ensure behavioral compatibility with the Android Open |
| 521 | Source Project.</p> |
| 522 | |
| 523 | <a name="section-3.6"></a><h3>3.6. API Namespaces</h3> |
| 524 | <p>Android follows the package and class namespace conventions defined by the |
| 525 | Java programming language. To ensure compatibility with third-party |
| 526 | applications, device implementers MUST NOT make any prohibited modifications |
| 527 | (see below) to these package namespaces:</p> |
| 528 | <ul> |
| 529 | <li>java.*</li> |
| 530 | <li>javax.*</li> |
| 531 | <li>sun.*</li> |
| 532 | <li>android.*</li> |
| 533 | <li>com.android.*</li> |
| 534 | </ul> |
| 535 | <p>Prohibited modifications include:</p> |
| 536 | <ul> |
| 537 | <li>Device implementations MUST NOT modify the publicly exposed APIs on the |
| 538 | Android platform by changing any method or class signatures, or by removing |
| 539 | classes or class fields.</li> |
| 540 | <li>Device implementers MAY modify the underlying implementation of the APIs, |
| 541 | but such modifications MUST NOT impact the stated behavior and Java-language |
| 542 | signature of any publicly exposed APIs.</li> |
| 543 | <li>Device implementers MUST NOT add any publicly exposed elements (such as |
| 544 | classes or interfaces, or fields or methods to existing classes or interfaces) |
| 545 | to the APIs above.</li> |
| 546 | </ul> |
| 547 | <p>A "publicly exposed element" is any construct which is not decorated with |
| 548 | the "@hide" marker in the upstream Android source code. In other words, device |
| 549 | implementers MUST NOT expose new APIs or alter existing APIs in the namespaces |
| 550 | noted above. Device implementers MAY make internal-only modifications, but |
| 551 | those modifications MUST NOT be advertised or otherwise exposed to |
| 552 | developers.</p> |
| 553 | <p>Device implementers MAY add custom APIs, but any such APIs MUST NOT be in a |
| 554 | namespace owned by or referring to another organization. For instance, device |
| 555 | implementers MUST NOT add APIs to the com.google.* or similar namespace; only |
| 556 | Google may do so. Similarly, Google MUST NOT add APIs to other companies' |
| 557 | namespaces.</p> |
| 558 | <p>If a device implementer proposes to improve one of the package namespaces |
| 559 | above (such as by adding useful new functionality to an existing API, or |
| 560 | adding a new API), the implementer SHOULD visit source.android.com and begin |
| 561 | the process for contributing changes and code, according to the information on |
| 562 | that site.</p> |
| 563 | <p>Note that the restrictions above correspond to standard conventions for |
| 564 | naming APIs in the Java programming language; this section simply aims to |
| 565 | reinforce those conventions and make them binding through inclusion in this |
| 566 | compatibility definition.</p> |
| 567 | |
| 568 | <a name="section-3.7"></a><h3>3.7. Virtual Machine Compatibility</h3> |
| 569 | <p>Device implementations MUST support the full Dalvik Executable (DEX) |
| 570 | bytecode specification and Dalvik Virtual Machine semantics [<a |
| 571 | href="#resources10">Resources, 10</a>].</p> |
| 572 | <p>Device implementations with screens classified as medium- or low-density |
| 573 | MUST configure Dalvik to allocate at least 16MB of memory to each application. |
| 574 | Device implementations with screens classified as high-density MUST configure |
| 575 | Dalvik to allocate at least 24MB of memory to each application. Note that |
| 576 | device implementations MAY allocate more memory than these figures.</p> |
| 577 | |
| 578 | <a name="section-3.8"></a><h3>3.8. User Interface Compatibility</h3> |
| 579 | <p>The Android platform includes some developer APIs that allow developers to |
| 580 | hook into the system user interface. Device implementations MUST incorporate |
| 581 | these standard UI APIs into custom user interfaces they develop, as explained |
| 582 | below.</p> |
| 583 | <a name="section-3.8.1"></a><h4>3.8.1. Widgets</h4> |
| 584 | <p>Android defines a component type and corresponding API and lifecycle that |
| 585 | allows applications to expose an "AppWidget" to the end user [<a |
| 586 | href="#resources11">Resources, 11</a>]. |
| 587 | The Android Open Source reference release includes a Launcher application that |
| 588 | includes user interface elements allowing the user to add, view, and remove |
| 589 | AppWidgets from the home screen.</p> |
| 590 | <p>Device implementers MAY substitute an alternative to the reference Launcher |
| 591 | (i.e. home screen). Alternative Launchers SHOULD include built-in support for |
| 592 | AppWidgets, and expose user interface elements to add, configure, view, and remove |
| 593 | AppWidgets directly within the Launcher. Alternative Launchers MAY omit these |
| 594 | user interface elements; however, if they are omitted, the device implementer |
| 595 | MUST provide a separate application accessible from the Launcher that allows |
| 596 | users to add, configure, view, and remove AppWidgets.</p> |
| 597 | <a name="section-3.8.2"></a><h4>3.8.2. Notifications</h4> |
| 598 | <p>Android includes APIs that allow developers to notify users of notable |
| 599 | events [<a href="#resources12">Resources, 12</a>]. Device implementers MUST provide support for each |
| 600 | class of notification so defined; specifically: sounds, vibration, light and |
| 601 | status bar.</p> |
| 602 | <p>Additionally, the implementation MUST correctly render all resources |
| 603 | (icons, sound files, etc.) provided for in the APIs [<a |
| 604 | href="#resources13">Resources, 13</a>], or in the |
| 605 | Status Bar icon style guide [<a href="#resources14">Resources, 14</a>]. Device implementers MAY provide |
| 606 | an alternative user experience for notifications than that provided by the |
| 607 | reference Android Open Source implementation; however, such alternative |
| 608 | notification systems MUST support existing notification resources, as |
| 609 | above.</p> |
| 610 | <a name="section-3.8.3"></a><h4>3.8.3. Search</h4> |
| 611 | <p>Android includes APIs [<a href="#resources15">Resources, 15</a>] that allow developers to incorporate |
| 612 | search into their applications, and expose their application's data into the |
| 613 | global system search. Generally speaking, this functionality consists of a |
| 614 | single, system-wide user interface that allows users to enter queries, |
| 615 | displays suggestions as users type, and displays results. The Android APIs |
| 616 | allow developers to reuse this interface to provide search within their own |
| 617 | apps, and allow developers to supply results to the common global search user |
| 618 | interface.</p> |
| 619 | <p>Device implementations MUST include a single, shared, system-wide search |
| 620 | user interface capable of real-time suggestions in response to user input. |
| 621 | Device implementations MUST implement the APIs that allow developers to reuse |
| 622 | this user interface to provide search within their own applications. Device |
| 623 | implementations MUST implement the APIs that allow third-party applications to |
| 624 | add suggestions to the search box when it is run in global search mode. If no |
| 625 | third-party applications are installed that make use of this functionality, |
| 626 | the default behavior SHOULD be to display web search engine results and |
| 627 | suggestions.</p> |
| 628 | <p>Device implementations MAY ship alternate search user interfaces, but |
| 629 | SHOULD include a hard or soft dedicated search button, that can be used at any |
| 630 | time within any app to invoke the search framework, with the behavior provided |
| 631 | for in the API documentation.</p> |
| 632 | <a name="section-3.8.4"></a><h4>3.8.4. Toasts</h4> |
| 633 | <p>Applications can use the "Toast" API (defined in [<a |
| 634 | href="#resources16">Resources, 16</a>]) to |
| 635 | display short non-modal strings to the end user, that disappear after a brief |
| 636 | period of time. Device implementations MUST display Toasts from applications |
| 637 | to end users in some high-visibility manner.</p> |
| 638 | <a name="section-3.8.5"></a><h4>3.8.5. Live Wallpapers</h4> |
| 639 | <p>Android defines a component type and corresponding API and lifecycle that |
| 640 | allows applications to expose one or more "Live Wallpapers" to the end user |
| 641 | [<a href="#resources17">Resources, 17</a>]. Live Wallpapers are animations, |
| 642 | patterns, or similar images with limited input capabilities that display as a |
| 643 | wallpaper, behind other applications.</p> |
| 644 | <p>Hardware is considered capable of reliably running live wallpapers if it |
| 645 | can run all live wallpapers, with no limitations on functionality, at a |
| 646 | reasonable framerate with no adverse affects on other applications. If |
| 647 | limitations in the hardware cause wallpapers and/or applications to crash, |
| 648 | malfunction, consume excessive CPU or battery power, or run at unacceptably |
| 649 | low frame rates, the hardware is considered incapable of running live |
| 650 | wallpaper. As an example, some live wallpapers may use an Open GL 1.0 or 2.0 |
| 651 | context to render their content. Live wallpaper will not run reliably on |
| 652 | hardware that does not support multiple OpenGL contexts because the live |
| 653 | wallpaper use of an OpenGL context may conflict with other applications that |
| 654 | also use an OpenGL context. </p> |
| 655 | <p>Device implementations capable of running live wallpapers reliably as |
| 656 | described above SHOULD implement live wallpapers. Device implementations |
| 657 | determined to not run live wallpapers reliably as described above MUST NOT |
| 658 | implement live wallpapers.</p> |
| 659 | |
| 660 | <a name="section-4"></a><h2>4. Reference Software Compatibility</h2> |
| 661 | <p>Device implementers MUST test implementation compatibility using the |
| 662 | following open-source applications:</p> |
| 663 | <ul> |
| 664 | <li>Calculator (included in SDK)</li> |
| 665 | <li>Lunar Lander (included in SDK)</li> |
| 666 | <li>The "Apps for Android" applications [<a href="#resources18">Resources, 18</a>].</li> |
| 667 | <li>Replica Island (available in Android Market; only required for device |
| 668 | implementations that support with OpenGL ES 2.0)</li> |
| 669 | </ul> |
| 670 | <p>Each app above MUST launch and behave correctly on the implementation, for |
| 671 | the implementation to be considered compatible.</p> |
| 672 | <p>Additionally, device implementations MUST test each menu item (including all |
| 673 | sub-menus) of each of these smoke-test applications:</p> |
| 674 | <ul> |
| 675 | <li>ApiDemos (included in SDK)</li> |
| 676 | <li>ManualSmokeTests (included in CTS)</li> |
| 677 | </ul> |
| 678 | <p>Each test case in the applications above MUST run correctly on the device |
| 679 | implementation.</p> |
| 680 | |
| 681 | <a name="section-5"></a><h2>5. Application Packaging Compatibility</h2> |
| 682 | <p>Device implementations MUST install and run Android ".apk" files as |
| 683 | generated by the "aapt" tool included in the official Android SDK [<a |
| 684 | href="#resources19">Resources, 19</a>].</p> |
| 685 | <p>Devices implementations MUST NOT extend either the .apk [<a |
| 686 | href="#resources20">Resources, 20</a>], Android Manifest [<a |
| 687 | href="#resources21">Resources, 21</a>], |
| 688 | or Dalvik bytecode [<a href="#resources10">Resources, 10</a>] formats in such |
| 689 | a way that would prevent those files from |
| 690 | installing and running correctly on other compatible devices. Device |
| 691 | implementers SHOULD use the reference upstream implementation of Dalvik, and |
| 692 | the reference implementation's package management system.</p> |
| 693 | |
| 694 | <a name="section-6"></a><h2>6. Multimedia Compatibility</h2> |
| 695 | <p>Device implementations MUST fully implement all multimedia APIs. Device |
| 696 | implementations MUST include support for all multimedia codecs described |
| 697 | below, and SHOULD meet the sound processing guidelines described below.</p> |
| 698 | <a name="section-6.1"></a><h3>6.1. Media Codecs</h3> |
| 699 | <p>Device implementations MUST support the following multimedia codecs. All of |
| 700 | these codecs are provided as software implementations in the preferred Android |
| 701 | implementation from the Android Open Source Project.</p> |
| 702 | <p>Please note that neither Google nor the Open Handset Alliance make any |
| 703 | representation that these codecs are unencumbered by third-party patents. |
| 704 | Those intending to use this source code in hardware or software products are |
| 705 | advised that implementations of this code, including in open source software |
| 706 | or shareware, may require patent licenses from the relevant patent |
| 707 | holders.</p> |
| 708 | <table><tbody> |
| 709 | <tr> |
| 710 | <td rowspan="11"><b>Audio</b></td> |
| 711 | </tr> |
| 712 | <tr> |
| 713 | <td><b>Name</b></td> |
| 714 | <td><b>Encoder</b></td> |
| 715 | <td><b>Decoder</b></td> |
| 716 | <td><b>Details</b></td> |
| 717 | <td><b>File/Container Format</b></td> |
| 718 | </tr> |
| 719 | <tr> |
| 720 | <td>AAC LC/LTP</td> |
| 721 | <td> </td> |
| 722 | <td>X</td> |
| 723 | <td rowspan="3">Mono/Stereo content in any combination of standard bit rates up to 160 kbps and sampling rates between 8 to 48kHz</td> |
| 724 | <td rowspan="3">3GPP (.3gp) and MPEG-4 (.mp4, .m4a). No support for raw AAC (.aac)</td> |
| 725 | </tr> |
| 726 | <tr> |
| 727 | <td>HE-AACv1 (AAC+)</td> |
| 728 | <td> </td> |
| 729 | <td>X</td> |
| 730 | </tr> |
| 731 | <tr> |
| 732 | <td>HE-AACv2 (enhanced AAC+)</td> |
| 733 | <td> </td> |
| 734 | <td>X</td> |
| 735 | </tr> |
| 736 | <tr> |
| 737 | <td>AMR-NB</td> |
| 738 | <td>X</td> |
| 739 | <td>X</td> |
| 740 | <td>4.75 to 12.2 kbps sampled @ 8kHz</td> |
| 741 | <td>3GPP (.3gp)</td> |
| 742 | </tr> |
| 743 | <tr> |
| 744 | <td>AMR-WB</td> |
| 745 | <td> </td> |
| 746 | <td>X</td> |
| 747 | <td>9 rates from 6.60 kbit/s to 23.85 kbit/s sampled @ 16kHz</td> |
| 748 | <td>3GPP (.3gp)</td> |
| 749 | </tr> |
| 750 | <tr> |
| 751 | <td>MP3</td> |
| 752 | <td> </td> |
| 753 | <td>X</td> |
| 754 | <td>Mono/Stereo 8-320Kbps constant (CBR) or variable bit-rate (VBR)</td> |
| 755 | <td>MP3 (.mp3)</td> |
| 756 | </tr> |
| 757 | <tr> |
| 758 | <td>MIDI</td> |
| 759 | <td> </td> |
| 760 | <td>X</td> |
| 761 | <td>MIDI Type 0 and 1. DLS Version 1 and 2. XMF and Mobile XMF. Support for ringtone formats RTTTL/RTX, OTA, and iMelody</td> |
| 762 | <td>Type 0 and 1 (.mid, .xmf, .mxmf). Also RTTTL/RTX (.rtttl, .rtx), OTA (.ota), and iMelody (.imy)</td> |
| 763 | </tr> |
| 764 | <tr> |
| 765 | <td>Ogg Vorbis</td> |
| 766 | <td> </td> |
| 767 | <td>X</td> |
| 768 | <td> </td> |
| 769 | <td>Ogg (.ogg)</td> |
| 770 | </tr> |
| 771 | <tr> |
| 772 | <td>PCM</td> |
| 773 | <td> </td> |
| 774 | <td>X</td> |
| 775 | <td>8- and 16-bit linear PCM (rates up to limit of hardware)</td> |
| 776 | <td>WAVE (.wav)</td> |
| 777 | </tr> |
| 778 | <tr> |
| 779 | <td rowspan="5"><b>Image</b></td> |
| 780 | </tr> |
| 781 | <tr> |
| 782 | <td>JPEG</td> |
| 783 | <td>X</td> |
| 784 | <td>X</td> |
| 785 | <td>base+progressive</td> |
| 786 | <td> </td> |
| 787 | </tr> |
| 788 | <tr> |
| 789 | <td>GIF</td> |
| 790 | <td> </td> |
| 791 | <td>X</td> |
| 792 | <td> </td> |
| 793 | <td> </td> |
| 794 | </tr> |
| 795 | <tr> |
| 796 | <td>PNG</td> |
| 797 | <td>X</td> |
| 798 | <td>X</td> |
| 799 | <td> </td> |
| 800 | <td> </td> |
| 801 | </tr> |
| 802 | <tr> |
| 803 | <td>BMP</td> |
| 804 | <td> </td> |
| 805 | <td>X</td> |
| 806 | <td> </td> |
| 807 | <td> </td> |
| 808 | </tr> |
| 809 | <tr> |
| 810 | <td rowspan="4"><b>Video</b></td> |
| 811 | </tr> |
| 812 | <tr> |
| 813 | <td>H.263</td> |
| 814 | <td>X</td> |
| 815 | <td>X</td> |
| 816 | <td> </td> |
| 817 | <td>3GPP (.3gp) files</td> |
| 818 | </tr> |
| 819 | <tr> |
| 820 | <td>H.264</td> |
| 821 | <td> </td> |
| 822 | <td>X</td> |
| 823 | <td> </td> |
| 824 | <td>3GPP (.3gp) and MPEG-4 (.mp4) files</td> |
| 825 | </tr> |
| 826 | <tr> |
| 827 | <td>MPEG4 Simple Profile</td> |
| 828 | <td> </td> |
| 829 | <td>X</td> |
| 830 | <td> </td> |
| 831 | <td>3GPP (.3gp) file</td> |
| 832 | </tr> |
| 833 | </tbody> |
| 834 | </table> |
| 835 | <p>Note that the table above does not list specific bitrate requirements for |
| 836 | most video codecs. The reason for this is that in practice, current device |
| 837 | hardware does not necessarily support bitrates that map exactly to the |
| 838 | required bitrates specified by the relevant standards. Instead, device |
| 839 | implementations SHOULD support the highest bitrate practical on the hardware, |
| 840 | up to the limits defined by the specifications.</p> |
| 841 | |
| 842 | <a name="section-6.2"></a><h3>6.2. Audio Recording</h3> |
| 843 | <p>When an application has used the <code>android.media.AudioRecord</code> API to |
| 844 | start recording an audio stream, device implementations SHOULD sample and |
| 845 | record audio with each of these behaviors:</p> |
| 846 | <ul> |
| 847 | <li>Noise reduction processing, if present, SHOULD be disabled.</li> |
| 848 | <li>Automatic gain control, if present, SHOULD be disabled.</li> |
| 849 | <li>The device SHOULD exhibit approximately flat amplitude versus frequency |
| 850 | characteristics; specifically, ±3 dB, from 100 Hz to 4000 Hz</li> |
| 851 | <li>Audio input sensitivity SHOULD be set such that a 90 dB sound power level |
| 852 | (SPL) source at 1000 Hz yields RMS of 5000 for 16-bit samples.</li> |
| 853 | <li>PCM amplitude levels SHOULD linearly track input SPL changes over at least |
| 854 | a 30 dB range from -18 dB to +12 dB re 90 dB SPL at the microphone.</li> |
| 855 | <li>Total harmonic distortion SHOULD be less than 1% from 100 Hz to 4000 Hz at |
| 856 | 90 dB SPL input level.</li> |
| 857 | </ul> |
| 858 | <p><b>Note:</b> while the requirements outlined above are stated as "SHOULD" |
| 859 | for Android 2.2, the Compatibility Definition for a future version is planned |
| 860 | to change these to "MUST". That is, these requirements are optional in Android |
| 861 | 2.2 but <b>will be required</b> by a future version. Existing and new devices |
| 862 | that run Android 2.2 Android are <b>very strongly encouraged to meet |
| 863 | these requirements in Android 2.2</b>, or they will not be able to attain |
| 864 | Android compatibility when upgraded to the future version.</p> |
| 865 | |
| 866 | <a name="section-6.3"></a><h3>6.3. Audio Latency</h3> |
| 867 | <p>Audio latency is broadly defined as the interval between when an |
| 868 | application requests an audio playback or record operation, and when the |
| 869 | device implementation actually begins the operation. Many classes of |
| 870 | applications rely on short latencies, to achieve real-time effects such sound |
| 871 | effects or VOIP communication. Device implementations SHOULD meet all audio |
| 872 | latency requirements outlined in this section.</p> |
| 873 | <p>For the purposes of this section:</p> |
| 874 | <ul> |
| 875 | <li>"cold output latency" is defined to be the interval between when an |
| 876 | application requests audio playback and when sound begins playing, when |
| 877 | the audio system has been idle and powered down prior to the request</li> |
| 878 | <li>"warm output latency" is defined to be the interval between when an |
| 879 | application requests audio playback and when sound begins playing, when |
| 880 | the audio system has been recently used but is currently idle (that is, |
| 881 | silent)</li> |
| 882 | <li>"continuous output latency" is defined to be the interval between when an |
| 883 | application issues a sample to be played and when the speaker physically |
| 884 | plays the corresponding sound, while the device is currently playing back |
| 885 | audio</li> |
| 886 | <li>"cold input latency" is defined to be the interval between when an |
| 887 | application requests audio recording and when the first sample is |
| 888 | delivered to the application via its callback, when the audio system and |
| 889 | microphone has been idle and powered down prior to the request</li> |
| 890 | <li>"continuous input latency" is defined to be when an ambient sound occurs |
| 891 | and when the sample corresponding to that sound is delivered to a |
| 892 | recording application via its callback, while the device is in recording |
| 893 | mode</li> |
| 894 | </ul> |
| 895 | <p>Using the above definitions, device implementations SHOULD exhibit each of |
| 896 | these properties:</p> |
| 897 | <ul> |
| 898 | <li>cold output latency of 100 milliseconds or less</li> |
| 899 | <li>warm output latency of 10 milliseconds or less</li> |
| 900 | <li>continuous output latency of 45 milliseconds or less</li> |
| 901 | <li>cold input latency of 100 milliseconds or less</li> |
| 902 | <li>continuous input latency of 50 milliseconds or less</li> |
| 903 | </ul> |
| 904 | <p><b>Note:</b> while the requirements outlined above are stated as "SHOULD" |
| 905 | for Android 2.2, the Compatibility Definition for a future version is planned |
| 906 | to change these to "MUST". That is, these requirements are optional in Android |
| 907 | 2.2 but <b>will be required</b> by a future version. Existing and new devices |
| 908 | that run Android 2.2 Android are <b>very strongly encouraged to meet |
| 909 | these requirements in Android 2.2</b>, or they will not be able to attain |
| 910 | Android compatibility when upgraded to the future version.</p> |
| 911 | |
| 912 | <a name="section-7"></a><h2>7. Developer Tool Compatibility</h2> |
| 913 | <p>Device implementations MUST support the Android Developer Tools provided in |
| 914 | the Android SDK. Specifically, Android-compatible devices MUST be compatible |
| 915 | with:</p> |
| 916 | <ul> |
| 917 | <li><b>Android Debug Bridge (known as adb)</b> [<a href="#resources19">Resources, 19</a>]<br/> |
| 918 | Device implementations MUST support all <code>adb</code> functions as |
| 919 | documented in the Android SDK. The device-side <code>adb</code> daemon SHOULD |
| 920 | be inactive by default, but there MUST be a user-accessible mechanism to turn |
| 921 | on the Android Debug Bridge.</li> |
| 922 | <li><b>Dalvik Debug Monitor Service (known as ddms)</b> [<a href="#resources19">Resources, 19</a>]<br/> |
| 923 | Device implementations MUST support all <code>ddms</code> features as documented in the |
| 924 | Android SDK. As <code>ddms</code> uses <code>adb</code>, support for |
| 925 | <code>ddms</code> SHOULD be inactive by default, |
| 926 | but MUST be supported whenever the user has activated the Android Debug |
| 927 | Bridge, as above.</li> |
| 928 | <li><b>Monkey</b> [<a href="#resources22">Resources, 22</a>]<br/> |
| 929 | Device implementations MUST include the Monkey framework, and make it |
| 930 | available for applications to use.</li> |
| 931 | </ul> |
| 932 | |
| 933 | <a name="section-8"></a><h2>8. Hardware Compatibility</h2> |
| 934 | <p>Android is intended to support device implementers creating innovative form |
| 935 | factors and configurations. At the same time Android developers expect |
| 936 | certain hardware, sensors and APIs across all Android device. This section |
| 937 | lists the hardware features that all Android 2.2 compatible devices must |
| 938 | support.</p> |
| 939 | <p>If a device includes a particular hardware component that has a |
| 940 | corresponding API for third-party developers, the device implementation MUST |
| 941 | implement that API as defined in the Android SDK documentation. If an API in |
| 942 | the SDK interacts with a hardware component that is stated to be optional and the device |
| 943 | implementation does not possess that component:</p> |
| 944 | <ul> |
| 945 | <li>class definitions for the component's APIs MUST be present</li> |
| 946 | <li>the API's behaviors MUST be implemented as no-ops in some reasonable fashion</li> |
| 947 | <li>API methods MUST return null values where permitted by the SDK documentation</li> |
| 948 | <li>API methods MUST return no-op implementations of classes where null values are not permitted by the SDK documentation</li> |
| 949 | </ul> |
| 950 | <p>A typical example of a scenario where these requirements apply is the |
| 951 | telephony API: even on non-phone devices, these APIs must be implemented as |
| 952 | reasonable no-ops.</p> |
| 953 | <p>Device implementations MUST accurately report accurate hardware configuration |
| 954 | information via the <code>getSystemAvailableFeatures()</code> and |
| 955 | <code>hasSystemFeature(String)</code> methods on the |
| 956 | <code>android.content.pm.PackageManager</code> class. [<a |
| 957 | href="#resources23">Resources, 23</a>]</p> |
| 958 | |
| 959 | <a name="section-8.1"></a><h3>8.1. Display</h3> |
| 960 | <p>Android 2.2 includes facilities that perform certain automatic scaling and |
| 961 | transformation operations under some circumstances, to ensure that third-party |
| 962 | applications run reasonably well on a variety of hardware configurations [<a |
| 963 | href="#resources24">Resources, 24</a>]. Devices MUST properly implement these |
| 964 | behaviors, as detailed in this section.</p> |
| 965 | <p>For Android 2.2, these are the most common display configurations:</p> |
| 966 | <table><tbody> |
| 967 | <tr> |
| 968 | <td>Screen Type</td> |
| 969 | <td>Width (Pixels)</td> |
| 970 | <td>Height (Pixels)</td> |
| 971 | <td>Diagonal Length Range (inches)</td> |
| 972 | <td>Screen Size Group</td> |
| 973 | <td>Screen Density Group</td> |
| 974 | </tr> |
| 975 | <tr> |
| 976 | <td>QVGA</td> |
| 977 | <td>240</td> |
| 978 | <td>320</td> |
| 979 | <td>2.6 - 3.0</td> |
| 980 | <td>Small</td> |
| 981 | <td>Low</td> |
| 982 | </tr> |
| 983 | <tr> |
| 984 | <td>WQVGA</td> |
| 985 | <td>240</td> |
| 986 | <td>400</td> |
| 987 | <td>3.2 - 3.5</td> |
| 988 | <td>Normal</td> |
| 989 | <td>Low</td> |
| 990 | </tr> |
| 991 | <tr> |
| 992 | <td>FWQVGA</td> |
| 993 | <td>240</td> |
| 994 | <td>432</td> |
| 995 | <td>3.5 - 3.8</td> |
| 996 | <td>Normal</td> |
| 997 | <td>Low</td> |
| 998 | </tr> |
| 999 | <tr> |
| 1000 | <td>HVGA</td> |
| 1001 | <td>320</td> |
| 1002 | <td>480</td> |
| 1003 | <td>3.0 - 3.5</td> |
| 1004 | <td>Normal</td> |
| 1005 | <td>Medium</td> |
| 1006 | </tr> |
| 1007 | <tr> |
| 1008 | <td>WVGA</td> |
| 1009 | <td>480</td> |
| 1010 | <td>800</td> |
| 1011 | <td>3.3 - 4.0</td> |
| 1012 | <td>Normal</td> |
| 1013 | <td>High</td> |
| 1014 | </tr> |
| 1015 | <tr> |
| 1016 | <td>FWVGA</td> |
| 1017 | <td>480</td> |
| 1018 | <td>854</td> |
| 1019 | <td>3.5 - 4.0</td> |
| 1020 | <td>Normal</td> |
| 1021 | <td>High</td> |
| 1022 | </tr> |
| 1023 | <tr> |
| 1024 | <td>WVGA </td> |
| 1025 | <td>480 </td> |
| 1026 | <td>800 </td> |
| 1027 | <td>4.8 - 5.5 </td> |
| 1028 | <td>Large </td> |
| 1029 | <td>Medium</td> |
| 1030 | </tr> |
| 1031 | <tr> |
| 1032 | <td>FWVGA</td> |
| 1033 | <td>480</td> |
| 1034 | <td>854</td> |
| 1035 | <td>5.0 - 5.8</td> |
| 1036 | <td>Large</td> |
| 1037 | <td>Medium</td> |
| 1038 | </tr> |
| 1039 | |
| 1040 | </tbody></table> |
| 1041 | |
| 1042 | <p>Device implementations corresponding to one of the standard configurations |
| 1043 | above MUST be configured to report the indicated screen size to applications |
| 1044 | via the <code>android.content.res.Configuration</code> [<a href="#resources25">Resources, |
| 1045 | 24</a>] class.</p> |
| 1046 | <p>Some .apk packages have manifests that do not identify them as supporting a |
| 1047 | specific density range. When running such applications, the following |
| 1048 | constraints apply:</p> |
| 1049 | <ul> |
| 1050 | <li>Device implementations MUST interpret resources in a .apk that lack a |
| 1051 | density qualifier as defaulting to "medium" (known as "mdpi" in the SDK |
| 1052 | documentation.)</li> |
| 1053 | <li>When operating on a "low" density screen, device implementations MUST |
| 1054 | scale down medium/mdpi assets by a factor of 0.75.</li> |
| 1055 | <li>When operating on a "high" density screen, device implementations MUST |
| 1056 | scale up medium/mdpi assets by a factor of 1.5.</li> |
| 1057 | <li>Device implementations MUST NOT scale assets within a density range, and |
| 1058 | MUST scale assets by exactly these factors between density ranges.</li> |
| 1059 | </ul> |
| 1060 | |
| 1061 | <a name="section-8.1.2"></a><h4>8.1.2. Non-Standard Display Configurations</h4> |
| 1062 | <p>Display configurations that do not match one of the standard configurations |
| 1063 | listed in Section 8.1.1 require additional consideration and work to be |
| 1064 | compatible. Device implementers MUST contact Android Compatibility Team as |
| 1065 | described in Section 13 to obtain classifications for screen-size bucket, |
| 1066 | density, and scaling factor. When provided with this information, device |
| 1067 | implementations MUST implement them as specified.</p> |
| 1068 | <p>Note that some display configurations (such as very large or very small |
| 1069 | screens, and some aspect ratios) are fundamentally incompatible with Android |
| 1070 | 2.2; therefore device implementers are encouraged to contact Android |
| 1071 | Compatibility Team as early as possible in the development process.</p> |
| 1072 | |
| 1073 | <a name="section-8.1.3"></a><h4>8.1.3. Display Metrics</h4> |
| 1074 | <p>Device implementations MUST report correct valuesfor all display metrics |
| 1075 | defined in <code>android.util.DisplayMetrics</code> [<a |
| 1076 | href="#resources26">Resources, 26</a>].</p> |
| 1077 | |
| 1078 | <a name="section-8.1.4"></a><h4>8.1.4. Declared Screen Support</h4> |
| 1079 | <p>Applications may indicate which screen sizes they support via the |
| 1080 | <code><supports-screens></code> attribute in the AndroidManifest.xml |
| 1081 | file. Device implementations MUST correctly honor applications' stated support |
| 1082 | for small, medium, and large screens, as described in the Android |
| 1083 | SDK documentation.</p> |
| 1084 | |
| 1085 | <a name="section-8.2"></a><h3>8.2. Keyboard</h3> |
| 1086 | <p>Device implementations:</p> |
| 1087 | <ul> |
| 1088 | <li>MUST include support for the Input Management Framework (which allows third party developers to create Input Management Engines -- i.e. soft keyboard) as detailed at developer.android.com</li> |
| 1089 | <li>MUST provide at least one soft keyboard implementation (regardless of whether a hard keyboard is present)</li> |
| 1090 | <li>MAY include additional soft keyboard implementations</li> |
| 1091 | <li>MAY include a hardware keyboard</li> |
| 1092 | <li>MUST NOT include a hardware keyboard that does not match one of the |
| 1093 | formats specified in <code>android.content.res.Configuration.keyboard</code> |
| 1094 | [<a href="#resources25">Resources, 25</a>] (that is, QWERTY, or 12-key)</li> |
| 1095 | </ul> |
| 1096 | <a name="section-8.3"></a><h3>8.3. Non-touch Navigation</h3> |
| 1097 | <p>Device implementations:</p> |
| 1098 | <ul> |
| 1099 | <li>MAY omit a non-touch navigation options (that is, may omit a trackball, d-pad, or wheel)</li> |
| 1100 | <li>MUST report the correct value for |
| 1101 | <code>android.content.res.Configuration.navigation</code> [<a href="#resources25">Resources, 25</a>]</li> |
| 1102 | </ul> |
| 1103 | <a name="section-8.4"></a><h3>8.4. Screen Orientation</h3> |
| 1104 | <p>Compatible devices MUST support dynamic orientation by applications to |
| 1105 | either portrait or landscape screen orientation. That is, the device must |
| 1106 | respect the application's request for a specific screen orientation. Device |
| 1107 | implementations MAY select either portrait or landscape orientation as the |
| 1108 | default.</p> |
| 1109 | <p>Devices MUST report the correct value for the device's current orientation, |
| 1110 | whenever queried via the android.content.res.Configuration.orientation, |
| 1111 | android.view.Display.getOrientation(), or other APIs.</p> |
| 1112 | |
| 1113 | <a name="section-8.5"></a><h3>8.5. Touchscreen input</h3> |
| 1114 | <p>Device implementations:</p> |
| 1115 | <ul> |
| 1116 | <li>MUST have a touchscreen</li> |
| 1117 | <li>MAY have either capacative or resistive touchscreen</li> |
| 1118 | <li>MUST report the value of <code>android.content.res.Configuration</code> |
| 1119 | [<a href="#resources25">Resources, 25</a>] |
| 1120 | reflecting corresponding to the type of the specific touchscreen on the |
| 1121 | device</li> |
| 1122 | <li>SHOULD support fully independently tracked pointers, if the touchscreen supports multiple pointers</li> |
| 1123 | </ul> |
| 1124 | |
| 1125 | <a name="section-8.6"></a><h3>8.6. USB</h3> |
| 1126 | <p>Device implementations:</p> |
| 1127 | <ul> |
| 1128 | <li>MUST implement a USB client, connectable to a USB host with a standard |
| 1129 | USB-A port</li> |
| 1130 | <li>MUST implement the Android Debug Bridge over USB (as described in Section |
| 1131 | 7)</li> |
| 1132 | <li>MUST implement the USB mass storage specification, to allow a host |
| 1133 | connected to the device to access the contents of the /sdcard volume </li> |
| 1134 | <li>SHOULD use the micro USB form factor on the device side</li> |
| 1135 | <li>MAY include a non-standard port on the device side, but if so MUST ship |
| 1136 | with a cable capable of connecting the custom pinout to standard USB-A |
| 1137 | port</li> |
| 1138 | <li>SHOULD implement support for the USB Mass Storage specification (so that |
| 1139 | either removable or fixed storage on the device can be accessed from a host |
| 1140 | PC)</li> |
| 1141 | </ul> |
| 1142 | |
| 1143 | <a name="section-8.7"></a><h3>8.7. Navigation keys</h3> |
| 1144 | <p>The Home, Menu and Back functions are essential to the Android navigation |
| 1145 | paradigm. Device implementations MUST make these functions available to the |
| 1146 | user at all times, regardless of application state. These functions SHOULD be |
| 1147 | implemented via dedicated buttons. They MAY be implemented using software, |
| 1148 | gestures, touch panel, etc., but if so they MUST be always accessible and not |
| 1149 | obscure or interfere with the available application display area.</p> |
| 1150 | <p>Device implementers SHOULD also provide a dedicated search key. Device |
| 1151 | implementers MAY also provide send and end keys for phone calls.</p> |
| 1152 | |
| 1153 | <a name="section-8.8"></a><h3>8.8. Wireless Data Networking</h3> |
| 1154 | <p>Device implementations MUST include support for wireless high-speed data |
| 1155 | networking. Specifically, device implementations MUST include support for at |
| 1156 | least one wireless data standard capable of 200Kbit/sec or greater. Examples of |
| 1157 | technologies that satisfy this requirement include EDGE, HSPA, EV-DO, 802.11g, etc.</p> |
| 1158 | <p>If a device implementation includes a particular modality for which the |
| 1159 | Android SDK includes an API (that is, WiFi, GSM, or CDMA), the implementation |
| 1160 | MUST support the API.</p> |
| 1161 | <p>Devices MAY implement more than one form of wireless data connectivity. |
| 1162 | Devices MAY implement wired data connectivity (such as Ethernet), but MUST |
| 1163 | nonetheless include at least one form of wireless connectivity, as above.</p> |
| 1164 | |
| 1165 | <a name="section-8.9"></a><h3>8.9. Camera</h3> |
| 1166 | <p>Device implementations MUST include a rear-facing camera. The included |
| 1167 | rear-facing camera:</p> |
| 1168 | <ul> |
| 1169 | <li>MUST have a resolution of at least 2 megapixels</li> |
| 1170 | <li>SHOULD have either hardware auto-focus, or software auto-focus implemented |
| 1171 | in the camera driver (transparent to application software)</li> |
| 1172 | <li>MAY have fixed-focus or EDOF (extended depth of field) hardware</li> |
| 1173 | <li>MAY include a flash. If the Camera includes a flash, the flash lamp MUST |
| 1174 | NOT be lit while an android.hardware.Camera.PreviewCallback instance has been |
| 1175 | registered on a Camera preview surface, unless the application has explicitly |
| 1176 | enabled the flash by enabling the <code>FLASH_MODE_AUTO</code> or |
| 1177 | <code>FLASH_MODE_ON</code> attributes of a <code>Camera.Parameters</code> |
| 1178 | object. Note that this constraint does not apply to the device's built-in |
| 1179 | system camera application, but only to third-party applications using |
| 1180 | <code>Camera.PreviewCallback</code>.</li> |
| 1181 | </ul> |
| 1182 | <p>Device implementations MUST implement the following behaviors for the |
| 1183 | camera-related APIs:</p> |
| 1184 | <ol> |
| 1185 | <li>If an application has never called |
| 1186 | android.hardware.Camera.Parameters.setPreviewFormat(int), then the device MUST |
| 1187 | use android.hardware.PixelFormat.YCbCr_420_SP for preview data provided to |
| 1188 | application callbacks.</li> |
| 1189 | <li>If an application registers an android.hardware.Camera.PreviewCallback |
| 1190 | instance and the system calls the onPreviewFrame() method when the preview |
| 1191 | format is YCbCr_420_SP, the data in the byte[] passed into onPreviewFrame() |
| 1192 | must further be in the NV21 encoding format. (This is the format used natively |
| 1193 | by the 7k hardware family.) That is, NV21 MUST be the default.</li> |
| 1194 | </ol> |
| 1195 | <p>Device implementations MUST implement the full Camera API included in the |
| 1196 | Android 2.2 SDK documentation [<a href="#resources27">Resources, 27</a>]), |
| 1197 | regardless of whether the device includes hardware autofocus or other |
| 1198 | capabilities. For instance, cameras that lack autofocus MUST still call any |
| 1199 | registered <code>android.hardware.Camera.AutoFocusCallback</code> instances (even though |
| 1200 | this has no relevance to a non-autofocus camera.)</p> |
| 1201 | <p>Device implementations MUST recognize and honor each parameter name defined |
| 1202 | as a constant on the <code>android.hardware.Camera.Parameters</code> class, if the |
| 1203 | underlying hardware supports the feature. If the device hardware does not |
| 1204 | support a feature, the API must behave as documented. Conversely, Device |
| 1205 | implementations MUST NOT honor or recognize string constants passed |
| 1206 | to the <code>android.hardware.Camera.setParameters()</code> method other than |
| 1207 | those documented as constants on the |
| 1208 | <code>android.hardware.Camera.Parameters</code>. That is, |
| 1209 | device implementations MUST support all standard Camera parameters if the |
| 1210 | hardware allows, and MUST NOT support custom Camera parameter types.</p> |
| 1211 | <p>Device implementations MAY include a front-facing camera. However, if |
| 1212 | a device implementation includes a front-facing camera, the camera API as |
| 1213 | implemented on the device MUST NOT use the front-facing camera by default. |
| 1214 | That is, the camera API in Android 2.2 is for rear-facing cameras only, and |
| 1215 | device implementations MUST NOT reuse or overload the API to act on a |
| 1216 | front-facing camera, if one is present. Note that any custom APIs added by |
| 1217 | device implementers to support front-facing cameras MUST abide by sections 3.5 |
| 1218 | and 3.6; for instance, if a custom <code>android.hardware.Camera</code> or |
| 1219 | <code>Camera.Parameters</code> subclass is provided to support front-facing |
| 1220 | cameras, it MUST NOT be located in an existing namespace, as described by |
| 1221 | sections 3.5 and 3.6. Note that the inclusion of a front-facing camera does |
| 1222 | not meet the requirement that devices include a rear-facing camera.</p> |
| 1223 | |
| 1224 | <a name="section-8.10"></a><h3>8.10. Accelerometer</h3> |
| 1225 | <p>Device implementations MUST include a 3-axis accelerometer and MUST be able |
| 1226 | to deliver events at 50 Hz or greater. The coordinate system used by the |
| 1227 | accelerometer MUST comply with the Android sensor coordinate system as detailed |
| 1228 | in the Android APIs (see [<a href="#resources28">Resources, 28</a>]).</p> |
| 1229 | |
| 1230 | <a name="section-8.11"></a><h3>8.11. Compass</h3> |
| 1231 | <p>Device implementations MUST include a 3-axis compass and MUST be able to |
| 1232 | deliver events 10 Hz or greater. The coordinate system used by the compass |
| 1233 | MUST comply with the Android sensor coordinate system as defined in the Android |
| 1234 | API (see [<a href="#resources28">Resources, 28</a>]).</p> |
| 1235 | |
| 1236 | <a name="section-8.12"></a><h3>8.12. GPS</h3> |
| 1237 | <p>Device implementations MUST include a GPS receiver, and SHOULD include |
| 1238 | some form of "assisted GPS" technique to minimize GPS lock-on time.</p> |
| 1239 | |
| 1240 | <a name="section-8.13"></a><h3>8.13. Telephony</h3> |
| 1241 | <p>Android 2.2 MAY be used on devices that do not include telephony hardware. |
| 1242 | That is, Android 2.2 is compatible with devices that are not phones. |
| 1243 | However, if a device implementation does include GSM or CDMA telephony, it |
| 1244 | MUST implement the full support for the API for that technology. Device |
| 1245 | implementations that do not include telephony hardware MUST implement the full |
| 1246 | APIs as no-ops.</p> |
| 1247 | <p>See also Section 8.8, Wireless Data Networking.</p> |
| 1248 | |
| 1249 | <a name="section-8.14"></a><h3>8.14. Memory and Storage</h3> |
| 1250 | <p>Device implementations MUST have at least 92MB of memory available to the |
| 1251 | kernel and userspace. The 92MB MUST be in addition to any memory dedicated to |
| 1252 | hardware components such as radio, memory, and so on that is not under the |
| 1253 | kernel's control.</p> |
| 1254 | <p>Device implementations MUST have at least 150MB of non-volatile storage |
| 1255 | available for user data. That is, the <code>/data</code> partition MUST be at |
| 1256 | least 150MB.</p> |
| 1257 | <p>Beyond the requirements above, device implementations SHOULD have at least |
| 1258 | 128MB of memory available to kernel and userspace, in addition to any memory |
| 1259 | dedicated to hardware components that is not under the kernel's control. |
| 1260 | Device implementations SHOULD have at least 1GB of non-volatile storage |
| 1261 | available for user data. Note that these higher requirements are planned to |
| 1262 | become hard minimums in a future version of Android. Device implementations are |
| 1263 | strongly encouraged to meet these requirements now, or else they may not be |
| 1264 | eligible for compatibility for a future version of Android.</p> |
| 1265 | |
| 1266 | <a name="section-8.15"></a><h3>8.15. Application Shared Storage</h3> |
| 1267 | <p>Device implementations MUST offer shared storage for applications. The |
| 1268 | shared storage provided MUST be at least 2GB in size.</p> |
| 1269 | <p>Device implementations MUST be configured with shared storage mounted by |
| 1270 | default, "out of the box". If the shared storage is not mounted on the Linux |
| 1271 | path <code>/sdcard</code>, then the device MUST include a Linux symbolic link |
| 1272 | from <code>/sdcard</code> to the actual mount point.</p> |
| 1273 | <p>Device implementations MUST enforce as documented the |
| 1274 | <code>android.permission.WRITE_EXTERNAL_STORAGE</code> permission on this |
| 1275 | shared storage. Shared storage MUST otherwise be writable by any application |
| 1276 | that obtains that permission.</p> |
| 1277 | <p>Device implementations MAY have hardware for user-accessible removable |
| 1278 | storage, such as a Secure Digital card. Alternatively, device implementations |
| 1279 | MAY allocate internal (non-removable) storage as shared storage for apps.</p> |
| 1280 | <p>Regardless of the form of shared storage used, the shared storage MUST |
| 1281 | implement USB mass storage, as described in Section 8.6. As shipped out of the |
| 1282 | box, the shared storage MUST be mounted with the FAT filesystem.</p> |
| 1283 | <p>It is illustrative to consider two common examples. If a device |
| 1284 | implementation includes an SD card slot to satisfy the shared storage |
| 1285 | requirement, a FAT-formatted SD card 2GB in size or larger MUST be included |
| 1286 | with the device as sold to users, and MUST be mounted by default. |
| 1287 | Alternatively, if a device implementation uses internal fixed storage to |
| 1288 | satisfy this requirement, that storage MUST be 2GB in size or larger, |
| 1289 | formatted as FAT, and mounted on <code>/sdcard</code> (or <code>/sdcard</code> |
| 1290 | MUST be a symbolic link to the physical location if it is mounted elsewhere.)</p> |
| 1291 | <p>Device implementations that include multiple shared storage paths (such as |
| 1292 | both an SD card slot and shared internal storage) SHOULD modify the core |
| 1293 | applications such as the media scanner and ContentProvider to transparently |
| 1294 | support files placed in both locations.</p> |
| 1295 | |
| 1296 | <a name="section-8.16"></a><h3>8.16. Bluetooth</h3> |
| 1297 | <p>Device implementations MUST include a Bluetooth transceiver. Device |
| 1298 | implementations MUST enable the RFCOMM-based Bluetooth API as described in the |
| 1299 | SDK documentation [<a href="#resources30">Resources, 30</a>]. Device |
| 1300 | implementations SHOULD implement relevant Bluetooth profiles, such as A2DP, |
| 1301 | AVRCP, OBEX, etc. as appropriate for the device.</p> |
| 1302 | <p>The Compatibility Test Suite includes cases that cover basic operation of |
| 1303 | the Android RFCOMM Bluetooth API. However, since Bluetooth is a communications |
| 1304 | protocol between devices, it cannot be fully tested by unit tests running on a |
| 1305 | single device. Consequently, device implementations MUST also pass the |
| 1306 | human-driven Bluetooth test procedure described in Appendix A.</p> |
| 1307 | |
| 1308 | <a name="section-9"></a><h2>9. Performance Compatibility</h2> |
| 1309 | <p>One of the goals of the Android Compatibility Program is to enable |
| 1310 | consistent application experience to consumers. Compatible implementations |
| 1311 | must ensure not only that applications simply run correctly on the device, but |
| 1312 | that they do so with reasonable performance and overall good user experience. |
| 1313 | Device implementations MUST meet the key performance metrics of an Android 2.2 |
| 1314 | compatible device defined in the table below:</p> |
| 1315 | <table><tbody><tr> |
| 1316 | <td><b>Metric</b></td> |
| 1317 | <td><b>Performance Threshold</b></td> |
| 1318 | <td><b>Comments</b></td> |
| 1319 | </tr> |
| 1320 | <tr> |
| 1321 | <td>Application Launch Time</td> |
| 1322 | <td>The following applications should launch within the specified time.<ul> |
| 1323 | <li>Browser: less than 1300ms</li> |
| 1324 | <li>MMS/SMS: less than 700ms</li> |
| 1325 | <li>AlarmClock: less than 650ms</li> |
| 1326 | </ul></td> |
| 1327 | <td>The launch time is measured as the total time to |
| 1328 | complete loading the default activity for the application, including the time |
| 1329 | it takes to start the Linux process, load the Android package into the Dalvik |
| 1330 | VM, and call onCreate.</td> |
| 1331 | </tr> |
| 1332 | <tr> |
| 1333 | <td>Simultaneous Applications</td> |
| 1334 | <td>When multiple applications have been launched, re-launching an |
| 1335 | already-running application after it has been launched must take less than the |
| 1336 | original launch time.</td> |
| 1337 | <td> </td> |
| 1338 | </tr> |
| 1339 | </tbody> |
| 1340 | </table> |
| 1341 | |
| 1342 | <a name="section-10"></a><h2>10. Security Model Compatibility</h2> |
| 1343 | <p>Device implementations MUST implement a security model consistent with the |
| 1344 | Android platform security model as defined in Security and Permissions |
| 1345 | reference document in the APIs [<a href="#resources29">Resources, 29</a>] in the |
| 1346 | Android developer documentation. Device implementations MUST support |
| 1347 | installation of self-signed applications without requiring any additional |
| 1348 | permissions/certificates from any third parties/authorities. Specifically, |
| 1349 | compatible devices MUST support the security mechanisms described in the |
| 1350 | follow sub-sections.</p> |
| 1351 | <a name="section-10.1"></a><h3>10.1. Permissions</h3> |
| 1352 | <p>Device implementations MUST support the Android permissions model as |
| 1353 | defined in the Android developer documentation [<a |
| 1354 | href="#resources29">Resources, 29</a>]. Specifically, |
| 1355 | implementations MUST enforce each permission defined as described in the SDK |
| 1356 | documentation; no permissions may be omitted, altered, or ignored. |
| 1357 | Implementations MAY add additional permissions, provided the new permission ID |
| 1358 | strings are not in the android.* namespace.</p> |
| 1359 | <a name="section-10.2"></a><h3>10.2. UID and Process Isolation</h3> |
| 1360 | <p>Device implementations MUST support the Android application sandbox model, |
| 1361 | in which each application runs as a unique Unix-style UID and in a separate |
| 1362 | process. Device implementations MUST support running multiple applications as |
| 1363 | the same Linux user ID, provided that the applications are properly signed and |
| 1364 | constructed, as defined in the Security and Permissions reference [<a |
| 1365 | href="#resources29">Resources, 29</a>].</p> |
| 1366 | <a name="section-10.3"></a><h3>10.3. Filesystem Permissions</h3> |
| 1367 | <p>Device implementations MUST support the Android file access permissions |
| 1368 | model as defined in as defined in the Security and Permissions reference [<a |
| 1369 | href="#resources29">Resources, 29</a>].</p> |
| 1370 | <a name="section-10.4"></a><h3>10.4. Alternate Execution Environments</h3> |
| 1371 | <p>Device implementations MAY include runtime environments that execute |
| 1372 | applications using some other software or technology than the Dalvik virtual |
| 1373 | machine or native code. However, such alternate execution environments MUST |
| 1374 | NOT compromise the Android security model or the security of installed Android |
| 1375 | applications, as described in this section.</p> |
| 1376 | <p>Alternate runtimes MUST themselves be Android applications, and abide by |
| 1377 | the standard Android security model, as described elsewhere in Section 10.</p> |
| 1378 | <p>Alternate runtimes MUST NOT be granted access to resources protected by |
| 1379 | permissions not requested in the runtime's AndroidManifest.xml file via the |
| 1380 | <code><uses-permission></code> mechanism.</p> |
| 1381 | <p>Alternate runtimes MUST NOT permit applications to make use of features |
| 1382 | protected by Android permissions restricted to system applications.</p> |
| 1383 | <p>Alternate runtimes MUST abide by the Android sandbox model. Specifically:</p> |
| 1384 | <ul> |
| 1385 | <li>Alternate runtimes SHOULD install apps via the PackageManager into |
| 1386 | separate Android sandboxes (that is, Linux user IDs, etc.)</li> |
| 1387 | <li>Alternate runtimes MAY provide a single Android sandbox shared by all |
| 1388 | applications using the alternate runtime.</li> |
| 1389 | <li>Alternate runtimes and installed applications using an alternate runtime |
| 1390 | MUST NOT reuse the sandbox of any other app installed on the device, except |
| 1391 | through the standard Android mechanisms of shared user ID and signing |
| 1392 | certificate</li> |
| 1393 | <li>Alternate runtimes MUST NOT launch with, grant, or be granted access to |
| 1394 | the sandboxes corresponding to other Android applications.</li> |
| 1395 | </ul> |
| 1396 | <p>Alternate runtimes MUST NOT be launched with, be granted, or grant to other |
| 1397 | applications any privileges of the superuser (root), or of any other user ID.</p> |
| 1398 | <p>The .apk files of alternate runtimes MAY be included in the system image of |
| 1399 | a device implementation, but MUST be signed with a key distinct |
| 1400 | from the key used to sign other applications included with the device |
| 1401 | implementation.</p> |
| 1402 | <p>When installing applications, alternate runtimes MUST obtain user consent |
| 1403 | for the Android permissions used by the application. That is, if an |
| 1404 | application needs to make use of a device resource for which there is a |
| 1405 | corresponding Android permission (such as Camera, GPS, etc.), the alternate |
| 1406 | runtime MUST inform the user that the application will be able to access |
| 1407 | that resource. If the runtime environment does not record application |
| 1408 | capabilities in this manner, the runtime environment MUST list all |
| 1409 | permissions held by the runtime itself when installing any application |
| 1410 | using that runtime.</p> |
| 1411 | |
| 1412 | <a name="section-11"></a><h2>11. Compatibility Test Suite</h2> |
| 1413 | <p>Device implementations MUST pass the Android Compatibility Test Suite (CTS) |
| 1414 | [<a href="#resources02">Resources, 2</a>] available from the Android Open Source |
| 1415 | Project, using the final shipping software on the device. Additionally, device |
| 1416 | implementers SHOULD use the reference implementation in the Android Open |
| 1417 | Source tree as much as possible, and MUST ensure compatibility in cases of |
| 1418 | ambiguity in CTS and for any reimplementations of parts of the reference |
| 1419 | source code.</p> |
| 1420 | <p>The CTS is designed to be run on an actual device. Like any software, the |
| 1421 | CTS may itself contain bugs. The CTS will be versioned independently of this |
| 1422 | Compatibility Definition, and multiple revisions of the CTS may be released |
| 1423 | for Android 2.2. Device implementations MUST pass the latest CTS version |
| 1424 | available at the time the device software is completed.</p> |
| 1425 | |
| 1426 | <a name="section-12"></a><h2>12. Updatable Software</h2> |
| 1427 | <p>Device implementations MUST include a mechanism to replace the entirety of |
| 1428 | the system software. The mechanism need not perform "live" upgrades -- that |
| 1429 | is, a device restart MAY be required.</p> |
| 1430 | <p>Any method can be used, provided that it can replace the entirety of the |
| 1431 | software preinstalled on the device. For instance, any of the following |
| 1432 | approaches will satisfy this requirement:</p> |
| 1433 | <ul> |
| 1434 | <li>Over-the-air (OTA) downloads with offline update via reboot</li> |
| 1435 | <li>"Tethered" updates over USB from a host PC</li> |
| 1436 | <li>"Offline" updates via a reboot and update from a file on removable |
| 1437 | storage</li> |
| 1438 | </ul> |
| 1439 | <p>The update mechanism used MUST support updates without wiping user data. |
| 1440 | Note that the upstream Android software includes an update mechanism that |
| 1441 | satisfies this requirement.</p> |
| 1442 | <p>If an error is found in a device implementation after it has been released |
| 1443 | but within its reasonable product lifetime that is determined in consultation |
| 1444 | with the Android Compatibility Team to affect the compatibility of thid-party |
| 1445 | applications, the device implementer MUST correct the error via a software |
| 1446 | update available that can be applied per the mechanism just described.</p> |
| 1447 | |
| 1448 | <a name="section-13"></a><h2>13. Contact Us</h2> |
| 1449 | <p>You can contact the document authors at <a |
| 1450 | href="mailto:compatibility@android.com">compatibility@android.com</a> for |
| 1451 | clarifications and to bring up any issues that you think the document does not |
| 1452 | cover.</p> |
| 1453 | |
| 1454 | <div style="page-break-before: always;"></div> |
| 1455 | |
| 1456 | <a name="appendix-A"></a><h2>Appendix A - Bluetooth Test Procedure</h2> |
| 1457 | <p>The Compatibility Test Suite includes cases that cover basic operation of |
| 1458 | the Android RFCOMM Bluetooth API. However, since Bluetooth is a communications |
| 1459 | protocol between devices, it cannot be fully tested by unit tests running on a |
| 1460 | single device. Consequently, device implementations MUST also pass the |
| 1461 | human-driven Bluetooth test procedure described below.</p> |
| 1462 | <p>The test procedure is based on the BluetoothChat sample app included in the |
| 1463 | Android open-source project tree. The procedure requires two devices:</p> |
| 1464 | <ul> |
| 1465 | <li>a candidate device implementation running the software build to be tested</li> |
| 1466 | <li>a separate device implementation already known to be compatible, and of a |
| 1467 | model from the device implementation being tested -- that is, a "known |
| 1468 | good" device implementation</li> |
| 1469 | </ul> |
| 1470 | <p>The test procedure below refers to these devices as the "candidate" and "known |
| 1471 | good" devices, respectively.</p> |
| 1472 | <h3>Setup and Installation</h3> |
| 1473 | <ol> |
| 1474 | <li>Build BluetoothChat.apk via 'make samples' from an Android source code tree.</li> |
| 1475 | <li>Install BluetoothChat.apk on the known-good device.</li> |
| 1476 | <li>Install BluetoothChat.apk on the candidate device.</li> |
| 1477 | </ol> |
| 1478 | <h3>Test Bluetooth Control by Apps</h3> |
| 1479 | <ol> |
| 1480 | <li>Launch BluetoothChat on the candidate device, while Bluetooth is disabled.</li> |
| 1481 | <li>Verify that the candidate device either turns on Bluetooth, or prompts the user with a dialog to turn on Bluetooth.</li> |
| 1482 | </ol> |
| 1483 | <h3>Test Pairing and Communication</h3> |
| 1484 | <ol> |
| 1485 | <li>Launch the Bluetooth Chat app on both devices.</li> |
| 1486 | <li>Make the known-good device discoverable from within BluetoothChat (using the Menu).</li> |
| 1487 | <li>On the candidate device, scan for Bluetooth devices from within BluetoothChat (using the Menu) and pair with the known-good device.</li> |
| 1488 | <li>Send 10 or more messages from each device, and verify that the other device receives them correctly.</li> |
| 1489 | <li>Close the BluetoothChat app on both devices by pressing <b>Home</b>.</li> |
| 1490 | <li>Unpair each device from the other, using the device Settings app.</li> |
| 1491 | </ol> |
| 1492 | <h3>Test Pairing and Communication in the Reverse Direction</h3> |
| 1493 | <ol> |
| 1494 | <li>Launch the Bluetooth Chat app on both devices.</li> |
| 1495 | <li>Make the candidate device discoverable from within BluetoothChat (using the Menu).</li> |
| 1496 | <li>On the known-good device, scan for Bluetooth devices from within BluetoothChat (using the Menu) and pair with the candidate device.</li> |
| 1497 | <li>Send 10 or messages from each device, and verify that the other device receives them correctly.</li> |
| 1498 | <li>Close the Bluetooth Chat app on both devices by pressing Back repeatedly to get to the Launcher.</li> |
| 1499 | </ol> |
| 1500 | <h3>Test Re-Launches</h3> |
| 1501 | <ol> |
| 1502 | <li>Re-launch the Bluetooth Chat app on both devices.</li> |
| 1503 | <li>Send 10 or messages from each device, and verify that the other device receives them correctly.</li> |
| 1504 | </ol> |
| 1505 | <p>Note: the above tests have some cases which end a test section by using |
| 1506 | Home, and some using Back. These tests are not redundant and are not optional: |
| 1507 | the objective is to verify that the Bluetooth API and stack works correctly |
| 1508 | both when Activities are explicitly terminated (via the user pressing Back, |
| 1509 | which calls finish()), and implicitly sent to background (via the user |
| 1510 | pressing Home.) Each test sequence MUST be performed as described.</p> |
| 1511 | <div id="footerContent"> |
| 1512 | <pdf:pagenumber/> |
| 1513 | </div> |
| 1514 | </body> |
| 1515 | </html> |