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Can anyone suggest how can we share a file between n number of android applications? Suggest me any links, code etc? Thanks in advance !!

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  • 1
    Use content providers for sharing data like SQLite database between your n number of android applications.
    – Rahul
    Aug 23, 2013 at 18:06
  • Use the Environment.getExternalStoragePublicDirectory("") call to get the public directory path. Aug 23, 2013 at 19:04

2 Answers 2

6

Look at android.support.v4.content.FileProvider. This component can share a file from one app to any other apps in the system by means of a content URI, which allows the hosting app to use URI (not just file) permissions to control the file. This means that the hosting app can set temporary access permissions instead of permanently changing the file's permissions. There's no performance penalty, so every time an app needs a file it can get the content URI and temporary permissions. Very secure.

FileProvider is a subclass of ContentProvider, and works in roughly the same way.

The current reference doc is a bit vague. I'll try to summarize:

Hosting app needs to declare the provider in the manifest:

<provider
    android:name="android.support.v4.content.FileProvider"
    android:authorities=authority
    android:exported="false"
    android:grantUriPermissions="true">
    <meta-data>
        android:name="android.support.FILE_PROVIDER_PATHS"
        android:resource="@xml/some_name" />
</provider>
  • "authority" is a URI authority you make up.
  • some_name is the name of an XML file you put in your project (usually in the xml/ subdirectory.

The contents of some_name.xml is

<paths>
    <files-path name="path-segment" path="filepath"/>
    ...
</paths

files-path

shares files in your private file area (value returned by Context.getFilesDir()), but you can also share files in your external area and cache area.

filepath

is a subdirectory in your private file area, for example images/. path-segment is the corresponding path that goes into the content URI. For example, if you use an authority of

com.example.myapp.fileprovider

and put in

<files-path name="images" path="images/">

then the resulting content URI starts with

content://com.example.myapp.fileprovider/images

If you want to share out the file images/myimage.jpg, the resulting content URI is

content://com.example.myapp.fileprovider/images/myimage.jpg

The hosting app generates a content URI by calling `FileProvider.getUriForFile()

What's nice is that you don't have to implement a subclass of FileProvider in code; it's default behavior is sufficient for most people's needs.

See the javadoc for more info.

0

All the applications would have to know the filename. Save the file to the SD card or internal memory and make sure it's public. Have a look at the Android developer site on this topic: http://developer.android.com/training/basics/data-storage/files.html

I hope this helps.

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