On restore now, the backup manager gets the signature blocks corresponding to
the restore set from the transport. It then validates those signatures against
the on-device app signatures, and refuses to restore data to an app whose
on-device sig block does not match the backup image's.
Also actually implement 'bmgr transport N' so that we can select the local
transport easily during runtime.
The 'list sets' and 'restore token#' commands from bmgr now do what they are
supposed to. At this point we see the restore target's data being cleared
properly and its agent being launched and invoked for restore.
The keystore service is protected by the user 'keystore'. Only keystore
user/group can access the key content. All users are able to do the
following commands from shell as well:
listcerts
listuserkeys
installcert
removecert
installuserkey
removeuserkey
Now we have a 5-second time after home is pressed, during which
only the home app (and the status bar) can switch to another app.
After that time, any start activity requests that occurred will
be executed, to allow things like alarms to be displayed. Also
if during that time the user launches another app, the pending
starts will be executed without resuming their activities and
the one they started placed at the top and executed.
You can now use android:testOnly="true" to not allow your .apk to be installed
as a normal app. The only way to do so is with the pm command and giving the
-t option, which sets a new INSTALL_ALLOW_TEST flag when installing.
I also used this to clean up the install API... actually, mostly to hide
it, since it is not accessible to apps so shouldn't be in the SDK. We
will be doing some more work on it, so this will prevent adding yet
another backwards-compatibility-for-no-reason version.
This adds new attributes for specifying a targetSdkVersion and maxSdkVersion.
There is a new ApplicationInfo flag that is set if the application has set
its targetSdkVersion to the current platform or later. Also you can now
use a string for minSdkVersion and targetSdkVerion, to indicate you are
building against a development tree instead of an official platform.