I have Lollipop, and see that we have a separate app for "android system webview". Is there any way to get its version number from my own app that uses a WebView instance?
I'd like to report some stats on which version my users are using.
Thanks
How about checking the user-agent string?
Log.i("WebViewActivity", "UA: " + mWebView.getSettings().getUserAgentString());
For me, this outputs:
User-agent string: Mozilla/5.0 (Linux; Android 5.0; Nexus 4 Build/LRX21T) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/4.0 Chrome/37.0.0.0 Mobile Safari/537.36
More info: WebView on Android
In case you override UA string with your own:
String getWebviewVersionInfo() {
// Overridden UA string
String alreadySetUA = mWebView.getSettings().getUserAgentString();
// Next call to getUserAgentString() will get us the default
mWebView.getSettings().setUserAgentString(null);
// Devise a method for parsing the UA string
String webViewVersion =
parseUAForVersion(mWebView.getSettings().getUserAgentString());
// Revert to overriden UA string
mWebView.getSettings().setUserAgentString(alreadySetUA);
return webViewVersion;
}
WebView
version, as you're only reporting 37, but they just announced 40. But, I see that my Nexus 4 has version 37 of the Android System WebView app, suggesting that my user agent would also report 37. I'd prefer something more... definitive, but if the user agent tracks with the system app update, this is a bit easier than the PackageManager
approach of examining the system app's version itself.
Commented
Mar 23, 2015 at 19:48
setUserAgentString(null)
), retrieves the default UA string using getUserAgentString()
, and finally - reverts back to the custom UA string using setUserAgentString(customUAString)
. I have added this as an edit to my answer.
Matcher m = Pattern.compile("Chrome/([\\d.]+)").matcher(ua); if (m.find()) version = matcher.group(1);
Commented
Feb 3 at 3:02
UPDATE:
Apparently this will not always accurately give the actual WebView
client being used on the target device. As of Android 7.0 users can select preferred client (h/t @Greg Dan).
First, we get the package name from Google Play Store:
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.google.android.webview
Then this
PackageManager pm = getPackageManager();
try {
PackageInfo pi = pm.getPackageInfo("com.google.android.webview", 0);
Log.d(TAG, "version name: " + pi.versionName);
Log.d(TAG, "version code: " + pi.versionCode);
} catch (PackageManager.NameNotFoundException e) {
Log.e(TAG, "Android System WebView is not found");
}
gives
D/WebViewDetails﹕ version name: 39 (1743759-arm)
D/WebViewDetails﹕ version code: 320201
Hope this helps.
In Android O and newer you can use WebView.getCurrentWebViewPackage();
import android.webkit.WebView;
...
...
if (Build.VERSION.SDK_INT >= Build.VERSION_CODES.O) {
PackageInfo info = WebView.getCurrentWebViewPackage();
return info.versionName;
}
val webViewPackage: PackageInfo? = WebViewCompat.getCurrentWebViewPackage(this@MainActivity)
This approach is compatible with most devices:
val packageInfo = WebViewCompat.getCurrentWebViewPackage(this@MainActivity)
return packageInfo.versionName
WebView
itself, though there ideally would be an option for that. Worst-case, if you can figure out the application ID of that "android system webview" app, you can get aversionCode
andversionName
for it fromPackageManager
.WebView
component is play.google.com/store/apps/… and itsversionName
seems to roughly follow the Chrome version naming scheme.