1fullpage=true 2page.viewport_width=970 3no_footer_links=true 4excludeFromSuggestions=true 5page.metaDescription=Android Auto 6 7@jd:body 8 9<style> 10.jd-descr { 11 height:auto; 12} 13#copyright { 14 margin-top:-35px; 15} 16.auto-img-container { 17 position:relative; 18} 19.auto-img-frame { 20 z-index:2; 21 position:relative; 22} 23.auto-img-shot { 24 position:absolute; 25 top:9px; 26 left:8px; 27 z-index:1; 28} 29.auto-img-container-cols { 30 position:relative; 31 margin-top:10px; 32} 33.auto-img-frame-cols { 34 width:380px; 35 z-index:2; 36 position:relative; 37} 38.auto-img-shot-cols { 39 width:369px; 40 position:absolute; 41 top:7px; 42 left:6px; 43 z-index:1; 44} 45.auto-col-2 { 46 width:380px; 47 display: inline; 48 float: left; 49 margin-left: 10px; 50 margin-right: 10px; 51} 52.auto-img-container-single { 53 width:380px; 54 margin:0 auto; 55 margin-top:20px; 56} 57</style> 58 59<div style="width:780px; margin:0 auto;"> 60 61<div id="qv-wrapper"> 62<div id="qv"> 63<h2>In this document</h2> 64<ol> 65 <li><a href="#design">Design</a> 66 <ol> 67 <li><a href="#designprinciples">Design Principles</a></li> 68 <li><a href="#uioverview">UI Overview</a></li> 69 </ol> 70 </li> 71 <li><a href="#architecture">Architecture</a></li> 72 <li><a href="#ui">User Interface</a> 73 <ol> 74 <li><a href="#launchapp">Launch App</a></li> 75 <li><a href="#useractions">User Actions</a></li> 76 <li><a href="#drawertransitions">Drawer Transitions</a></li> 77 <li><a href="#daynighttransitions">Day and Night Transitions</a></li> 78 <li><a href="#customizeui">Customizing the UI</a></li> 79 </ol> 80 </li> 81 <li><a href="#devprocess">Development Process</a></li> 82 <li><a href="#emulator">Testing Your App</a></li> 83 <li><a href="#running">Running Your App</a></li> 84</ol> 85</div> 86</div> 87 88<h1>Android Auto Developer Overview</h1> 89 90<p>Android Auto extends the Android platform into the car. When users connect 91their Android handheld device to a compatible vehicle, Android Auto provides a car-optimized 92Android experience on the vehicle's screen. Users interact with compatible apps and services 93through voice actions and the vehicle's input controls.</p> 94 95<p>The Android Auto SDK lets you easily extend your existing apps to work in the car, without 96having to worry about vehicle-specific hardware differences. You can use many Android APIs and 97services you are already familiar with. Android Auto provides an easy to use UI model and 98supports notifications and voice actions:</p> 99 100<dl> 101<dt style="margin-bottom:10px"><strong>Media UI</strong></dt> 102<dd style="margin-bottom:20px"> 103Android Auto defines interaction models and car-specific UI patterns for apps. The 104first version of Android Auto supports media apps, such as music, podcast, live radio, and 105audio news apps. 106</dd> 107<dt style="margin-bottom:10px"><strong>Notifications</strong></dt> 108<dd style="margin-bottom:20px"> 109The platform will integrate with existing Android APIs for notifications. Users will get 110car appropiate notifications from Android apps on the vehicle's screen.</dd> 111 112<dt style="margin-bottom:10px"><strong>Voice Actions</strong></dt> 113<dd style="margin-bottom:20px"> 114Android Auto supports a set of voice actions to interact with compatible apps and services. 115Apps can respond to the voice actions they're interested in, such as playing a particular song 116or taking a note.</dd> 117 118<dt style="margin-bottom:10px"><strong>Easy Development Workflow</strong></dt> 119<dd style="margin-bottom:20px"> 120To extend an existing Android app for Android Auto, you implement a set of interfaces and 121services defined in the platform. You can reuse existing functionality and many Android APIs 122you already know.</dd> 123</dl> 124 125<p>We’ll release the Android Auto SDK in the coming months, which will let you test your 126Android Auto experience on a regular Android device.</p> 127 128 129<h2 id="design">Design</h2> 130 131<p>Android Auto extends users' digital ecosystem into their cars, allowing drivers to stay 132connected to their virtual worlds while staying focused on the road ahead.</p> 133 134<p>Because driving is the primary activity in the car, any digital experiences should be designed 135to complement and augment that activity. They should never demand the user's attention.</p> 136 137<p>Designing for cars is fundamentally different than designing for phones or tablets, and 138requires rethinking how experiences unfold. Because attention is limited and not all tasks are 139possible in the car, effective apps leverage the entire set of devices that drivers have, 140leveraging the app experience on those devices, outside of the car, to set the stage for simple 141experiences while driving.</p> 142 143<p>Android Auto experiences are:</p> 144 145<p><strong>Glanceable and simple</strong>. Driving requires users' full attention. In-car software 146should not. Android Auto was designed to simplify not only the UI, but to optimize interactions 147and require less thinking, induce lower cognitive load, and ultimately, be safer. Effective apps 148provide just enough information in the minimum amount of time the user needs to glance at it and 149return their attention back to the road. Apps should also reduce the number of features to only 150those that are safe and drive-appropriate.</p> 151 152<p><strong>Predictive, yet predictable</strong>. Android Auto leverages rich, contextual awareness 153to keep the driver informed about important situations during the drive. Rich, timely help is 154combined with predictable functions. Effective apps make use of the patterns for common tasks and 155show timely information only when relevant.</p> 156 157<p><strong>Connected</strong>. By leveraging the user's personal ecosystem of apps and services, 158Android Auto promotes a continuous experience from phone to car to other devices. The user's 159music, destinations, and virtual ecosystem are always available to augment the drive. Experiences 160that leverage personal context and other devices are naturally part of Android Auto.</p> 161 162<p><strong>Naturally integrated</strong>. Android Auto blends the user's apps with the car, 163creating a truly integrated experience that leverages what is unique about each car. By using 164the screens, controls, and capabilities of the vehicle, Android Auto feels like an extension of 165the car.</p> 166 167 168 169 170<h2 id="architecture">Architecture</h2> 171 172<p>The Android Auto app shows your app's customized UI on the vehicle's screen. To communicate 173with the Android Auto app, your media app implements a set of media interfaces.</p> 174 175<div style="width:750px;margin:0 auto"> 176<img src="{@docRoot}auto/images/figure01.png" alt="" /> 177<p class="img-caption"> 178 <strong>Figure 1</strong> - Architecture of Android Auto. 179</p> 180</div> 181 182<p>The architecture consists of the following components:</p> 183 184<p><strong>Media App</strong> - Runs a media service that exposes content through browsing and 185playback APIs. The service provides content to the Android Auto app. This is your Android app.</p> 186 187<p><strong>Android Auto App</strong> - Creates the UI and handles user interactions. 188This app uses a media client to request content from the media service running in the media 189app. The client requests data from the media service and monitors service states.</p> 190 191<p><strong>Vehicle Display</strong> - Shows app content and supports user interaction via 192on-screen soft buttons and other components, such as physical buttons or steering 193wheel controls.</p> 194 195<p>Android media apps must implement binders to these APIs:</p> 196 197<ul> 198<li><strong>Browsing</strong> - Enables a media client to browse a hierarchy of a user’s 199media collection, presented as a virtual file system with containers (similar to directories) 200and items (similar to files).</li> 201<li><strong>Playback</strong> - Enables a media client to control media playback and monitor 202playback state through callbacks.</li> 203</ul> 204 205 206<h2 id="ui">User Interface</h2> 207 208<p>The Android Auto app uses a car-specific UI model to display content and user interaction 209opportunities. Android Auto provides you with a standard UI designed to minimize driver 210distraction. You do not have to test a custom UI for for driver distraction, which is a 211lengthy and expensive process involving multiple legislations across the globe and different 212standards for each vehicle OEM.</p> 213 214<p>The UI defines interfaces for browsing, searching, and listening to content from 215media apps. You can customize the UI colors, action icons, background images, and more.</p> 216 217<h3 id="launchapp">Launcher</h3> 218 219<p>The launcher shows all the compatible media apps installed on the user’s 220Android device and lets users select one of them from an scrollable list:</p> 221 222<div class="auto-img-container-single"> 223 <div class="auto-img-container"> 224 <img class="auto-img-frame-cols" src="/auto/images/assets/00_frame.png" /> 225 <img class="auto-img-shot-cols" src="/auto/images/assets/do_01_switcher.png" /> 226 </div> 227 <p class="img-caption" style="margin-top:0px"> 228 <strong>Figure 2.</strong> The launcher. 229 </p> 230</div> 231 232<h3>Primary App UI</h3> 233 234<p>After the user selects a media app, the display shows the primary app UI. 235You can customize this UI to show your own icons, app name, and 236background images. Figure 3 shows an example of a customized UI:</p> 237 238<div class="cols"> 239<div class="auto-col-2"> 240 <div class="auto-img-container-cols"> 241 <img class="auto-img-frame-cols" src="{@docRoot}auto/images/assets/00_frame.png" /> 242 <img class="auto-img-shot-cols" src="{@docRoot}auto/images/assets/do_05_template.png" /> 243 </div> 244</div> 245<div class="auto-col-2"> 246 <div class="auto-img-container-cols"> 247 <img class="auto-img-frame-cols" src="{@docRoot}auto/images/assets/00_frame.png" /> 248 <img class="auto-img-shot-cols" src="{@docRoot}auto/images/assets/do_02_music.png" /> 249 </div> 250</div> 251</div> 252<p class="img-caption"> 253 <strong>Figure 3.</strong> A customized UI. 254</p> 255 256 257 258<h3 id="useractions">User Actions</h3> 259 260<p>The primary app UI supports four main actions on the action bar, four auxiliary actions 261on the overflow bar, and the <em>Return</em> action. You can use standard controls and customize 262the actions and icons, as shown in Figure 4.</p> 263 264<div class="auto-img-container-single"> 265 <div class="auto-img-container"> 266 <img class="auto-img-frame-cols" src="/auto/images/assets/00_frame.png" /> 267 <img class="auto-img-shot-cols" src="/auto/images/assets/do_03_more.png" /> 268 </div> 269 <p class="img-caption" style="margin-top:0px"> 270 <strong>Figure 4.</strong> Custom extra actions. 271 </p> 272</div> 273 274<h3 id="drawertransitions">Drawer Transitions</h3> 275 276<p>For browse actions, the display shows the drawer transition as shown in Figure 5.</p> 277 278<div class="cols"> 279<div class="auto-col-2"> 280 <div class="auto-img-container-cols"> 281 <img class="auto-img-frame-cols" src="{@docRoot}auto/images/assets/00_frame.png" /> 282 <img class="auto-img-shot-cols" src="{@docRoot}auto/images/assets/do_06_gdrawer.png" /> 283 </div> 284</div> 285<div class="auto-col-2"> 286 <div class="auto-img-container-cols"> 287 <img class="auto-img-frame-cols" src="{@docRoot}auto/images/assets/00_frame.png" /> 288 <img class="auto-img-shot-cols" src="{@docRoot}auto/images/assets/do_04_mdrawer.png" /> 289 </div> 290</div> 291</div> 292<p class="img-caption"> 293 <strong>Figure 5.</strong> Generic and customized drawers. 294</p> 295 296<p>After the transition from the primary app UI to the drawer UI, the drawer 297appears on the center. The customized drawer UI shows the media containers and 298media files provided by the media service in your app. You can also customize drawers 299with icons for list items.</p> 300 301 302<h3 id="daynighttransitions">Day and Night Transitions</h3> 303 304<p>All the UIs support different color schemes for day and night. 305The platform provides the state (day or night) and makes adjustments automatically.</p> 306 307<div class="cols"> 308<div class="auto-col-2"> 309 <div class="auto-img-container-cols"> 310 <img class="auto-img-frame-cols" src="{@docRoot}auto/images/assets/00_frame.png" /> 311 <img class="auto-img-shot-cols" src="{@docRoot}auto/images/assets/do_02_music.png" /> 312 </div> 313</div> 314<div class="auto-col-2"> 315 <div class="auto-img-container-cols"> 316 <img class="auto-img-frame-cols" src="{@docRoot}auto/images/assets/00_frame.png" /> 317 <img class="auto-img-shot-cols" src="{@docRoot}auto/images/assets/do_02_music_night.png" /> 318 </div> 319</div> 320</div> 321<p class="img-caption"> 322 <strong>Figure 6.</strong> Day and night modes. 323</p> 324 325<h3 id="customizeui">Customizing UIs</h3> 326 327<p>To customize the UI, you provide the following app-specific resources and actions 328to the Android Auto media client:</p> 329 330<ul> 331<li><strong>Resources</strong> - App logo, app name, theme colors, and background images.</li> 332<li><strong>Actions</strong> - Multiple custom actions; for example: <em>Thumbs Up/Down</em>, 333<em>Favorite</em>, and <em>Bookmark</em>. These actions are app-specific.</li> 334</ul> 335 336<p>If provided, the media client automatically uses them in the UI.</p> 337 338 339<h2 id="devprocess">Development Process</h2> 340 341<p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> When released, the Android Auto SDK will provide 342media service interfaces, an APK for handheld devices that simulates the Android Auto 343app, and other tools for Android Auto development.</p> 344 345<p>To create a media app for Android Auto, you include an Android service in your app 346that implements the media service interfaces provided by the Android Auto SDK. These 347interfaces define functionality for browsing and finding content, playing media, 348customizing the UI, and performing app-specific actions.</p> 349 350<p>The media service interfaces present the content library as a navigable tree and enable 351clients to play media, get album art, obtain theme resources for the UI, and 352invoke app-specific actions.</p> 353 354<p>You don’t have to create a new app for Android Auto: you can extend your existing 355Android app with implementations of the media service interfaces. Your service exposes 356your app’s media content, theme resources, and app-specific actions using the methods and 357data types specified by the media service interfaces. This simplifies the development 358cycle because:</p> 359 360<ul> 361<li>You do not have to maintain a separate project for Android Auto</li> 362<li>You can reuse existing functionality from your Android app</li> 363</ul> 364 365<p>The Android Auto client presents the customized UI to users and invokes the 366functionality from your service as needed. This has two additional advantages:</p> 367 368<ul> 369<li>Your app does not implement a UI for Android Auto</li> 370<li>Your app does not manage user interactions directly</li> 371</ul> 372 373<p>This also means that you do not have to worry about vehicle-specific hardware 374differences such as screen resolutions, software interfaces, knobs and touch 375controls.</p> 376 377 378<h2 id="emulator">Testing Your App on an Android Device</h2> 379 380<p>The Android Auto SDK includes an APK with a media client implementation, which is 381similar to those available in compatible vehicles. To test your app with this 382client:</p> 383 384<ol> 385<li>Get an Android device with a similar form factor to a dashboard screen (like a 386Nexus 7).</li> 387<li>Configure the device for Android development.</li> 388<li>Install the APK for the media client from the Android Auto SDK on the device.</li> 389<li>Install the APK for your app on the device.</li> 390<li>Open the media client app from the Android Auto SDK on the device.</li> 391<li>Select your app from the list of available services.</li> 392</ol> 393 394<p>The customized UI for your app appears on the client. You can navigate the content 395library and play media. If your app provides app-specific actions, these actions appear 396in the UI controls.</p> 397 398 399<h2 id="running">Running Your App on Android Auto</h2> 400 401<p>Media apps are available on the Google Play Store for compatible Android devices. 402When users connect their Android device to a compatible vehicle, the 403Android Auto media client shows a list of all the Android apps installed on the phone 404that implement the media service interfaces.</p> 405 406<p>When users select one of these apps, the Android Auto media client uses the app’s 407service to respond to user input and invoke the methods in the media service interfaces 408to build the UI, navigate the content library, and play media.</p> 409 410<div style="margin-bottom:40px"> </div> 411</div> 412