FileProvider
public
class
FileProvider
extends ContentProvider
| java.lang.Object | ||
| ↳ | android.content.ContentProvider | |
| ↳ | androidx.core.content.FileProvider | |
FileProvider is a special subclass of ContentProvider that facilitates secure sharing
of files associated with an app by creating a content:// Uri for a file
instead of a file:/// Uri.
A content URI allows you to grant read and write access using
temporary access permissions. When you create an Intent containing
a content URI, in order to send the content URI
to a client app, you can also call Intent.setFlags() to add
permissions. These permissions are available to the client app for as long as the stack for
a receiving Activity is active. For an Intent going to a
Service, the permissions are available as long as the
Service is running.
In comparison, to control access to a file:/// Uri you have to modify the
file system permissions of the underlying file. The permissions you provide become available to
any app, and remain in effect until you change them. This level of access is
fundamentally insecure.
The increased level of file access security offered by a content URI makes FileProvider a key part of Android's security infrastructure.
This overview of FileProvider includes the following topics:
- Defining a FileProvider
- Specifying Available Files
- Retrieving the Content URI for a File
- Granting Temporary Permissions to a URI
- Serving a Content URI to Another App
Defining a FileProvider
Since the default functionality of FileProvider includes content URI generation for files, you
don't need to define a subclass in code. Instead, you can include a FileProvider in your app
by specifying it entirely in XML. To specify the FileProvider component itself, add a
<provider>
element to your app manifest. Set the android:name attribute to
androidx.core.content.FileProvider. Set the android:authorities
attribute to a URI authority based on a domain you control; for example, if you control the
domain mydomain.com you should use the authority
com.mydomain.fileprovider. Set the android:exported attribute to
false; the FileProvider does not need to be public. Set the
android:grantUriPermissions attribute to true, to allow you
to grant temporary access to files. For example:
<manifest>
...
<application>
...
<provider
android:name="androidx.core.content.FileProvider"
android:authorities="com.mydomain.fileprovider"
android:exported="false"
android:grantUriPermissions="true">
...
</provider>
...
</application>
</manifest>
If you want to override any of the default behavior of FileProvider methods, extend
the FileProvider class and use the fully-qualified class name in the android:name
attribute of the <provider> element.
Specifying Available Files
A FileProvider can only generate a content URI for files in directories that you specify beforehand. To specify a directory, specify its storage area and path in XML, using child elements of the<paths> element.
For example, the following paths element tells FileProvider that you intend to
request content URIs for the images/ subdirectory of your private file area.
<paths xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android">
<files-path name="my_images" path="images/"/>
...
</paths>
The <paths> element must contain one or more of the following child elements:
-
<files-path name="name" path="path" />
-
Represents files in the
files/subdirectory of your app's internal storage area. This subdirectory is the same as the value returned byContext.getFilesDir(). -
<cache-path name="name" path="path" />
-
Represents files in the cache subdirectory of your app's internal storage area. The root path
of this subdirectory is the same as the value returned by
getCacheDir(). -
<external-path name="name" path="path" />
-
Represents files in the root of the external storage area. The root path of this subdirectory
is the same as the value returned by
Environment.getExternalStorageDirectory(). -
<external-files-path name="name" path="path" />
-
Represents files in the root of your app's external storage area. The root path of this
subdirectory is the same as the value returned by
Context#getExternalFilesDir(String) Context.getExternalFilesDir(null). -
<external-cache-path name="name" path="path" />
-
Represents files in the root of your app's external cache area. The root path of this
subdirectory is the same as the value returned by
Context.getExternalCacheDir(). -
<external-media-path name="name" path="path" />
-
Represents files in the root of your app's external media area. The root path of this
subdirectory is the same as the value returned by the first result of
Context.getExternalMediaDirs().Note: this directory is only available on API 21+ devices.
These child elements all use the same attributes:
-
name="name" -
A URI path segment. To enforce security, this value hides the name of the subdirectory
you're sharing. The subdirectory name for this value is contained in the
pathattribute. -
path="path" -
The subdirectory you're sharing. While the
nameattribute is a URI path segment, thepathvalue is an actual subdirectory name. Notice that the value refers to a subdirectory, not an individual file or files. You can't share a single file by its file name, nor can you specify a subset of files using wildcards.
You must specify a child element of <paths> for each directory that contains
files for which you want content URIs. For example, these XML elements specify two directories:
<paths xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android">
<files-path name="my_images" path="images/"/>
<files-path name="my_docs" path="docs/"/>
</paths>
Put the <paths> element and its children in an XML file in your project.
For example, you can add them to a new file called res/xml/file_paths.xml.
To link this file to the FileProvider, add a
<meta-data> element
as a child of the <provider> element that defines the FileProvider. Set the
<meta-data> element's "android:name" attribute to
android.support.FILE_PROVIDER_PATHS. Set the element's "android:resource" attribute
to @xml/file_paths (notice that you don't specify the .xml
extension). For example:
<provider
android:name="androidx.core.content.FileProvider"
android:authorities="com.mydomain.fileprovider"
android:exported="false"
android:grantUriPermissions="true">
<meta-data
android:name="android.support.FILE_PROVIDER_PATHS"
android:resource="@xml/file_paths" />
</provider>
Generating the Content URI for a File
To share a file with another app using a content URI, your app has to generate the content URI.
To generate the content URI, create a new File for the file, then pass the File
to getUriForFile(). You can send the content URI
returned by getUriForFile() to another app in an
Intent. The client app that receives the content URI can open the file
and access its contents by calling
ContentResolver.openFileDescriptor to get a ParcelFileDescriptor.
For example, suppose your app is offering files to other apps with a FileProvider that has the
authority com.mydomain.fileprovider. To get a content URI for the file
default_image.jpg in the images/ subdirectory of your internal storage
add the following code:
File imagePath = new File(Context.getFilesDir(), "my_images"); File newFile = new File(imagePath, "default_image.jpg"); Uri contentUri = getUriForFile(getContext(), "com.mydomain.fileprovider", newFile);As a result of the previous snippet,
getUriForFile() returns the content URI
content://com.mydomain.fileprovider/my_images/default_image.jpg.
Granting Temporary Permissions to a URI
To grant an access permission to a content URI returned fromgetUriForFile(), you can either grant the
permission to a specific package or include the permission in an intent, as shown in the
following sections.
Grant Permission to a Specific Package
Call the method
Context.grantUriPermission(package, Uri, mode_flags) for the content://
Uri, using the desired mode flags. This grants temporary access permission for the
content URI to the specified package, according to the value of the
the mode_flags parameter, which you can set to
Intent.FLAG_GRANT_READ_URI_PERMISSION, Intent.FLAG_GRANT_WRITE_URI_PERMISSION
or both. The permission remains in effect until you revoke it by calling
revokeUriPermission() or until the device
reboots.
Include the Permission in an Intent
To allow the user to choose which app receives the intent, and the permission to access the content, do the following:
-
Put the content URI in an
Intentby callingsetData(). -
Call the method
Intent.setFlags()with eitherIntent.FLAG_GRANT_READ_URI_PERMISSIONorIntent.FLAG_GRANT_WRITE_URI_PERMISSIONor both.To support devices that run a version between Android 4.1 (API level 16) and Android 5.1 (API level 22) inclusive, create a
ClipDataobject from the content URI, and set the access permissions on theClipDataobject:shareContentIntent.setClipData(ClipData.newRawUri("", contentUri)); shareContentIntent.addFlags( Intent.FLAG_GRANT_READ_URI_PERMISSION | Intent.FLAG_GRANT_WRITE_URI_PERMISSION); -
Send the
Intentto another app. Most often, you do this by callingsetResult().
Permissions granted in an Intent remain in effect while the stack of the receiving
Activity is active. When the stack finishes, the permissions are
automatically removed. Permissions granted to one Activity in a client
app are automatically extended to other components of that app.
Serving a Content URI to Another App
There are a variety of ways to serve the content URI for a file to a client app. One common way
is for the client app to start your app by calling
startActivityResult(),
which sends an Intent to your app to start an Activity in your app.
In response, your app can immediately return a content URI to the client app or present a user
interface that allows the user to pick a file. In the latter case, once the user picks the file
your app can return its content URI. In both cases, your app returns the content URI in an
Intent sent via setResult().
You can also put the content URI in a <a href="https://developer.android.com/reference/android/content/C