Google has asked me to address https://support.google.com/faqs/answer/9095419 in my Android app, which basically means not to use the JavaScript injection mechanism for a web page loaded via HTTP.
Not using this mechanism (option 1) doesn't work for me. Setting android:usesCleartextTraffic to false also doesn't work, as the app uses non-HTTPS traffic elsewhere. So that leaves me with "you can ensure that any affected WebViews do not load any URLs with HTTP schemes via loadUrl" - which I'm happy to do, as my app only uses file:/// URLs to load content into the WebView, which should be fine security-wise. But how do I need to code the shouldOverrideUrlLoading method so that Google's checker recognizes that I'm using only file:/// URLs?
Note that the question is different from both Remediation for JavaScript Interface Injection Vulnerability (because I'm clear what is being asked) and In Android, JavaScript Interface Injection Vulnerability (because I'm not using HTTP, but file:/// URLs).
Edit: Adding my shouldOverrideUrlLoading method. (This isn't the entire method, but the salient part of it.)
@Override
public boolean shouldOverrideUrlLoading (WebView browser, String url) {
if (url.startsWith("file:///")) {
// This is my web site, so do not override; let my WebView load the page
browser.loadUrl(url);
return true;
}
// Otherwise, the link is not for a page on my site, or is an entirely different kind of URI
// (like tel:, geo: or mailto:), so launch another Activity that handles URLs
act.startActivity(new Intent(Intent.ACTION_VIEW, Uri.parse(url)));
return true;
}
file:///
is handled the same as HTTP. Have you already tried to overwriteshouldOverrideUrlLoading
with your own code? If you did, it may be worth adding to your question even if it doesn't work.minSdkVersion
? There are other options (e.g., channels) for app<->JavaScript communication, but they are relatively new.