My android application opens the "document tree" selector to prompt read permission on an external storage full directory (as per android 10+ scoped storage rules).
Relative Code
Intent intent = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_OPEN_DOCUMENT_TREE);
intent.addFlags(Intent.FLAG_GRANT_PERSISTABLE_URI_PERMISSION);
startActivityForResult(intent, REQUEST_ID_PERMISSION);
Works fine for all tested versions and device variants. But, my crashlytics shows the below error ocuring a considerable number of times for some Samsung devices. (A20 - Android 9 | S10/10+ - Android 10 & 11 | Note20 - Android 11)
Fatal Exception: android.content.ActivityNotFoundException: No Activity found to handle Intent { act=android.intent.action.OPEN_DOCUMENT_TREE flg=0x40 }
at android.app.Instrumentation.checkStartActivityResult(Instrumentation.java:2071)
at android.app.Instrumentation.execStartActivity(Instrumentation.java:1717)
at android.app.Activity.startActivityForResult(Activity.java:5252)
at androidx.fragment.app.FragmentActivity.startActivityForResult(FragmentActivity.java:676)
Any potential reason and solution for this problem, knowing that:
- I can check the availability of the activity prior to launching the OPEN_DOCUMENT_TREE, but this will result in the document selector not opening.
- Some old answers suggest adding intent.setType("*/*"), but this is no longer valid, and causes crashes with reasons explained in another questions (That i can no longer find, but is irrelevant here).
- I also think it might be very likely related to the fact that some users have disabled the FILES app on their devices, since MOST PROBABLY the error is not occurring on all the devices models listed above, but for a subset.
thank you.
intent.addFlags(Intent.FLAG_GRANT_PERSISTABLE_URI_PERMISSION)
Dont put that flag. You cannot grant anything. Instead you should be glad if in onActivityResult permissions are granted to you.but this will result in the document selector not opening.
Of course. You will not launch the intent then. And instead you display a nice Toast() to inform the user. And tell them all about the Files app.think it might be very likely related to the fact that some users have disabled the FILES app on their devices
But then.. you can easily test that with your own device.Intent
. Ordinary apps do not use this flag; it is used by document providers to offer persistable permissions to apps. "I also think it might be very likely related to the fact that some users have disabled the FILES app on their devices" -- that's a possibility, and one you could probably test.