1<!-- 2 Copyright (C) 2020 The Android Open Source Project 3 4 Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); 5 you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. 6 You may obtain a copy of the License at 7 8 http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 9 10 Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software 11 distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, 12 WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. 13 See the License for the specific language governing permissions and 14 limitations under the License 15 --> 16 17# Android Role for system developers 18 19This document targets system developers. App developers should refer to the [RoleManager 20documentation](https://developer.android.com/reference/android/app/role/RoleManager) and AndroidX 21[core-role](https://developer.android.com/reference/androidx/core/role/package-summary) library. 22 23## Definition 24 25A role is a unique name within the system for a purpose, associated with certain requirements and 26privileges if granted. For example, the SMS role requires the app to have certain declarations in 27its manifest that are central to SMS functionality, and grants the app privileges like reading and 28writing user's SMS. 29 30The list of available roles and their behavior can be updated via PermissionController upgrade, out 31of the platform release cycle. Since Android Q, all the default apps (e.g. default SMS app) are 32backed by a corresponding role implementation. 33 34The definition for all the roles can be found in [roles.xml](../../../../../res/xml/roles.xml) and 35associated [`RoleBehavior`](model/RoleBehavior.java) classes. 36 37## Defining a role 38 39A role is defined by a `<role>` tag in `roles.xml`. 40 41The following attributes are available for role: 42 43- `name`: The unique name to identify the role, e.g. `android.app.role.SMS`. 44- `behavior`: Optional name of a [`RoleBehavior`](model/RoleBehavior.java) class to control certain 45role behavior in Java code, e.g. `SmsRoleBehavior`. This can be useful when the XML syntax cannot 46express certain behavior specific to the role. 47- `defaultHolders`: Optional name of a system config resource that designates the default holders of 48the role, e.g. `config_defaultSms`. If the role is not exclusive, multiple package names can be 49specified by separating them with a semicolon (`;`). 50- `description`: The string resource for the description of the role, e.g. 51`@string/role_sms_description`, which says "Apps that allow you to use your phone number to send and 52receive short text messages, photos, videos, and more". For default apps, this string will appear in 53the default app detail page as a footer. This attribute is required if the role is `visible`. 54- `exclusive`: Whether the role is exclusive. If a role is exclusive, at most one application is 55allowed to be its holder. 56- `fallBackToDefaultHolder`: Whether the role should fall back to the default holder. This attribute 57is optional and defaults to `false`. 58- `label`: The string resource for the label of the role, e.g. `@string/role_sms_label`, which says 59"Default SMS app". For default apps, this string will appear in the default app detail page as the 60title. This attribute is required if the role is `visible`. 61- `minSdkVersion`: The minimum SDK version for the role to be available, e.g. `31` for Android S. 62This attribute is optional and defaults to `Build.VERSION_CODES.BASE`. 63- `requestDescription`: The string resource for the description in the request role dialog, e.g. 64`@string/role_sms_request_description`, which says "Gets access to contacts, SMS, phone". This 65description should describe to the user the privileges that are going to be granted, and should not 66be too long. This attribute is required if the role is both `visible` and `requestable`. 67- `requestTitle`: The string resource for the title of the request role dialog, e.g. 68`@string/role_sms_request_title`, which says "Set %1$s as your default SMS app?". This attribute is 69required if the role is both `visible` and `requestable`. 70- `requestable`: Whether the role will be requestable by apps. If a role isn't requestable but is 71still visible, apps cannot show the request role dialog to user, but user can still manage the role 72in Settings page. This attribute is optional and defaults to the value of `visible`. 73- `searchKeywords`: Optional string resource for additional search keywords for the role, e.g. 74`@string/role_sms_search_keywords` which says "text message, texting, messages, messaging". The role 75label is always implicitly included in search keywords. 76- `shortLabel`: The string resource for the short label of the role, e.g. 77`@string/role_sms_short_label`, which says "SMS app". For default apps, this string will appear in 78the default app list page as the title for the default app item. This attribute is required if the 79role is `visible`. 80- `showNone`: Whether this role will show a "None" option. This allows user to explicitly select 81none of the apps for a role. This attribute is optional, only applies to `exclusive` roles and 82defaults to `false`. 83- `static`: Whether this role is static, i.e. the role will always be assigned to its default 84holders. This attribute is optional and defaults to `false`. 85- `systemOnly`: Whether this role only allows system apps to hold it. This attribute is optional and 86defaults to `false. 87- `visible`: Whether this role is visible to users. If a role is invisible (a.k.a. hidden) to users, 88users won't be able to find it in Settings, and apps won't be able to request it. The role can still 89be managed by system APIs and shell command. 90 91The following tags can be specified inside a `<role>` tag: 92 93- `<required-components>`: Child tags like `<activity>`, `<service>`, `<provider>` and `<receiver>` 94can be used to specified the app manifest requirements of the role, and an app is only qualified 95when it declares all these components. They follow a similar syntax as in typical 96`AndroidManifest.xml`. 97- `<permissions>`: Child tags like `<permission-set>` and `<permission>` can be used to specify the 98permissions that should be granted to the app when it has the role. Several `<permission-set>` are 99defined at the beginning of `roles.xml`. 100- `<app-op-permissions>`: The child tag `<app-op-permission>` can be used to specify the app op 101permissions whose app op should be granted to the app when it has the role. 102- `<app-ops>`: The child tag `<app-op>` can be used to specify the app ops that should be granted to 103the app when it has the role. 104- `<preferred-activities>`: The child tag `<preferred-activity>` can be used to specify the 105preferred activities that should be configured for the app when it gets the role. The first 106`<activity>` tag inside `<preferred-activity>` will identify the activity component inside the app, 107and the other `<intent-filter>` tags inside `<preferred-activity>` can be used to specify for which 108intent filters the identified activity component should be configured as preferred, i.e. the default 109handler for those intents. 110 111## Requesting a role 112 113Before requesting a role, an app should check whether it already has the role with 114`RoleManager.isRoleHeld()`. If it doesn't have the role, it should then check for the availability 115of the role with `RoleManager.isRoleAvailable()`. 116 117An app can request for a role by launching the intent returned by 118`RoleManager.createRequestRoleIntent()`. If the role is unavailable or the app isn't qualified for 119the role, the request role dialog won't show up and will return `RESULT_CANCELED` immediately. If 120the role is granted to the app, it will return `RESULT_OK`. 121 122The following is an example about how to request the SMS role: 123 124```kotlin 125val roleManager = getSystemService(RoleManager::class.java) 126if (roleManager.isRoleHeld(RoleManager.ROLE_SMS)) { 127 // We already have the role. 128} else if (roleManager.isRoleAvailable(RoleManager.ROLE_SMS)) { 129 startActivityForResult(roleManager.createRequestRoleIntent(RoleManager.ROLE_SMS), REQUEST_CODE) 130 // Check the result later in onActivityResult(). 131} else { 132 // Role is unavailable. 133} 134``` 135 136## Checking a role 137 138Role is not a replacement for permission, and if one needs to check a certain privilege for an 139action, they should typically check a permission instead, and introduce a new permission if there 140isn't an existing one. 141 142`RoleManager.isRoleHeld()` can be used to check whether an app itself has a role. For checking 143whether an arbitrary app has a certain role, `RoleManager.getRoleHoldersAsUser()` can be used to 144retrieve the list of role holders and check if the app is within the list. This is a system API and 145requires the `MANAGE_ROLE_HOLDERS` permission. 146 147## Managing a role 148 149Generally roles are managed by the role implementation and the user, so it's less likely one should 150manage them manually. 151 152In case the system does need to manage the holders of a role, `RoleManager.addRoleHolderAsUser()`, 153`RoleManager.removeRoleHolderAsUser()` and `RoleManager.clearRoleHoldersAsUser()` may be used. These 154are system APIs and require the `MANAGE_ROLE_HOLDERS` permission. These requests are asynchronous 155and the role might not be modified until the `callback` is notified. The role requirements and 156behavior will still apply even if managed via these APIs, so the request might fail and one need to 157check the result in `callback`. In the event that the role controller hanged or crashed, the 158`callback` will return with failure after a certain timeout. 159 160## Shell command 161 162The current list of roles and their holders can be checked with the following shell command on 163device: 164 165```bash 166dumpsys role 167``` 168 169You can also manage the role holders with `cmd role`: 170 171```bash 172cmd role add-role-holder [--user USER_ID] ROLE PACKAGE [FLAGS] 173cmd role remove-role-holder [--user USER_ID] ROLE PACKAGE [FLAGS] 174cmd role clear-role-holders [--user USER_ID] ROLE [FLAGS] 175``` 176 177The command outputs nothing and exits with `0` on success. If there was an error, the error will be 178printed and the command will terminate with a non-zero exit code. 179