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I have App A that has defined a permission with protection level as signature. This app starts a service that belongs to App B. It calls startService(intent) repeatedly (only the intent class name is defined to call the service).

I need to ensure that only App B receives the onStartCommand() and not other rogue apps (if someone tries to reverse engineer and create a service with same name etc). Do i define the same permission even in App B's manifest?

<permission
    android:name="my.android.permissions.MY_PERM"
    android:protectionLevel="signature" />

<uses-permission android:name="my.android.permissions.MY_PERM" />

This permission is already defined in App A's manifest.

1 Answer 1

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Put these lines into app B's manifest

<permission
    android:protectionLevel="signature"
    android:name="my.android.permissions.MY_PERM"/>

<uses-permission android:name="my.android.permissions.MY_PERM" />

<!-- define an activity which can only be started through internal code -->
<service android:name="..."
          android:permission="my.android.permissions.MY_PERM" >
    ...
</service>

and

<uses-permission android:name="my.android.permissions.MY_PERM" />

into app A's manifest

1
  • There is no need to define permission in service too in this case. Look at Android docs: developer.android.com/guide/topics/manifest/… "If this attribute is not set, the permission set by the <application> element's permission attribute applies to the service. If neither attribute is set, the service is not protected by a permission. For more information on permissions, see the Permissions section in the introduction and a separate document, Security and Permissions." Jun 4, 2015 at 14:15

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