For the next version of our application, I want to change the sharedUserId since we now use an internal control dashboard app which must write to the other app's settings files.

But since the app is already installed on many phones, will this be a problem? I ran a little test on the emulator, and I'm seeing exceptions in the device logs that *.bak versions of the preference files cannot be written. Not sure how critical that is. Curiously, safing settings still seems to work, even though the shared_prefs folder had been created using another Linux user ID.

Did anyone try this before?

link|improve this question

72% accept rate
okay, looks like this will be impossible, dang. It crashes when trying to access a database file that had been created using a version of the app that didn't have a custom user ID set. What's the default user ID anyway? Could the second app maybe set its user ID to the default user ID of the first app? – Matthias Jul 15 '10 at 15:54
feedback

1 Answer

up vote 5 down vote accepted

And to answer my own question again:

No, it's not safe. Since updating an app via Android Market will not remove the database and preference files, the new version will not be able to read or write these files (since they were created under a different Linux user ID), and the app will crash after the update. You would have to ask your users to completely uninstall and reinstall the app, which is certainly not recommended.

As a general rule I conclude from this: Whenever you start out developing a new app, make sure to set a manual android:process and android:sharedUserId attribute! It doesn't hurt in case you don't need it, but it gives you full control over which apps have access to this app's private resources.

link|improve this answer
Thanks for posting that, I was almost publishing an update of sharedUserId.. Sadly we never learn that when we are creating the app :/ – Paulo Cesar Dec 12 '11 at 15:45
For those of us who didn't plan ahead, is there a solution to this problem? – Barry Fruitman Feb 10 at 22:48
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.