Extracted new API styles dependent on API 16 and 17 into values-17.
This involved the typical Android design pattern of a "Base" style in
`values/styles.xml`, then the an empty normal style which uses that Base style
as a `parent` also in `values/styles.xml`, and finally any API specific
styles in another version of the normal style in a `values/styles-v17` folder.
Same was done for android:actionBarStyle moving it into into values-v11.
This time, didn't worry about the base style, because there was not much to be
gained. by doing so.
Fixes#582.
See merge request !335
We missed an off-by-one in my previous DB change:
90467bf8bf2f8e4a46cb1db563154df4035bf746
This causes the installed app parsing to happen on each start when on any
build that is on db-version/56. Its not a big deal since the broken code
was not shipped at all, even in an alpha.
In order to avoid having null guards making the code ugly, use a "blank"
instance of Apk which will work for the various comparisons. This fixes
this crash:
fixes#688
java.lang.NullPointerException
at org.fdroid.fdroid.installer.InstallManagerService$4.onReceive(InstallManagerService.java:243)
at android.support.v4.content.LocalBroadcastManager.executePendingBroadcasts(LocalBroadcastManager.java:297)
at android.support.v4.content.LocalBroadcastManager.access$000(LocalBroadcastManager.java:46)
at android.support.v4.content.LocalBroadcastManager$1.handleMessage(LocalBroadcastManager.java:116)
at android.os.Handler.dispatchMessage(Handler.java:102)
at android.os.Looper.loop(Looper.java:136)
at android.app.ActivityThread.main(ActivityThread.java:5001)
at java.lang.reflect.Method.invokeNative(Native Method)
at java.lang.reflect.Method.invoke(Method.java:515)
at com.android.internal.os.ZygoteInit$MethodAndArgsCaller.run(ZygoteInit.java:785)
at com.android.internal.os.ZygoteInit.main(ZygoteInit.java:601)
at dalvik.system.NativeStart.main(Native Method)
Improve order by/selection logic for database layer.
This was extracted from the postponed !311.
The order by stuff previously only allowed specifying a particular field. We should also be able to sort based on arbitrary expressions, and such expressions will require the ability to bind arguments using the "?" syntax. This change provides a Java abstraction for the order by, and improves the handling of selection arguments that need to bind to "?" so that both the selection (i.e. `WHERE` clause) and the `ORDER BY` clause can provide arguments as required.
See merge request !329
Make sure to query package manager for `PackageInfo` when required.
A previous commit accidentally pushed the code which queries the
`PackageManager` to a different method, but then still used the
`packageInfo` which was supposed to be populated by that code.
This change rectifies this, and in the process also clarifies/documents under
what circumstances the `PackageManager` needs to be queried, rather than
relying on the incoming intent.
Fixes#686.
See merge request !336
A previous commit accidentally pushed the code which queries the
`PackageManager` to a different method, but then still used the
`packageInfo` which was supposed to be populated by that code.
This change rectifies this, and in the process also clarifies/documents under
what circumstances the `PackageManager` needs to be queried, rather than
relying on the incoming intent.
Fixes#686.
This involved the typical Android design pattern of a "Base" style in
`values/styles.xml`, then the an empty normal style which uses that Base style
as a `parent` also in `values/styles.xml`, and finally any API specific
styles in another version of the normal style in a `values/styles-v17` folder.
Same was done for android:actionBarStyle moving it into into values-v11.
This time, didn't worry about the base style, because there was not much to be
gained. by doing so.
The order by stuff previously only allowed specifying a particular field.
We should also be able to sort based on arbitrary expressions, and such
expressions will require the ability to bind arguments using the "?" syntax.
This changes provides a Java abstraction for the order by, and improves
the handling of selection arguments that need to bind to "?" so that both
the selection (i.e. WHERE clause) and the ORDER BY clause can provide
arguments as required.
Ask for all fields from the content provider.
**To be cherry-picked into `master` as well as this merge into `stable-v0.100`**
Fixes#684.

Ask for all fields from the `ContentProvider`.
It is not a particularly expensive operation in the scheme of things. When we are going to the database, the bottlneck is in disk access for the actual query of the database tables (looking up indexes, performing joins, etc). The difference between retrieving two columns or all the columns when the query is for a handful of apps is inconsequential.
Thus, it is better to be safe than sorry and just ask for all the things so that our value objects are correctly populated. There are indeed suitable times to only request specific fields, but I'd suggest that they are probably only when we need to ask a question about thousands of apps at a time, and then the heap space becomes a concern.
See merge request !328
It is not a particularly expensive operation in the scheme of things. When we
are going to the database, the bottlneck is in disk access for the actual query
of the database tables. The difference between retrieving two columns or
all the columns when the query is for a handful of apps is inconsequential.
Thus, it is better to be safe than sorry and just ask for all the things so
that our value objects are correctly populated.
Translators:
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Permissions UI in AppDetails
* Removes the "m" prefix and some unnecessary TODOs
* Re-uses the permission list from the privileged installer for the list in AppDetails:

See merge request !332
include targetSdkVersion in Apk
In order to work well with the Android 6.0+ permissions, the client needs to know whether an APK has been built against android-23 or higher.
@pserwylo @dschuermann how does this look?
See merge request !323
Check permissions for unattended installer
This PR introduces the class ``ApkVerifier`` which checks the permissions of the downloaded apk file against the expected permissions from the F-Droid listing (``Apk`` class).
* I removed ``AndroidXMLDecompress`` because everything which it has been used for can also be done with ``PackageManager.getPackageArchiveInfo()``, to the best of my knowledge. I even asked in at a similar project why ``PackageManager.getPackageArchiveInfo()``may not be enough: https://github.com/jaredrummler/APKParser/issues/3 It turns out in our case it should do everything we need.
* The code responsible for sanitizing the local apk file and making it world readable has also been moved into ``ApkVerifier`` for now. This can change in a later PR when I introduce the FileProvider for downloaded apks.
We still need to check the target sdk version (see TODO in ``ApkVerifier``). This depends on https://gitlab.com/fdroid/fdroidclient/merge_requests/323
See merge request !322
Remove first-time dialogs for extension installer
The root mechanism will not be useful in 5.1 and later and has been shown to be error prone.
See merge request !330
Port most tests to JVM via Robolectric library
Fixes#607.
This ports all but one of the tests from `app/src/androidTest` to `app/src/test` to be run on the JVM.
I would've liked to port the final one, but it must be run on Android because we are testing the ability of an Android OS to perform symlinks. Also, it is not a bad thing in itself to have tests run on an emulator, just that those which _can_ be run on the host JVM should be. In the future, there will no doubt be other tests which are required to run on the JVM. At the very least, we should be able to run tests on faster emulators now because we are not constrained by the failing provider tests.
This branch required only very minimal changes to the client code, but resulted in the removal of a whole bunch of crappy mocking code that I had to add in order to support testing of the content providers (i.e. navigating around all of the final/hidden/etc apis in Android).
See merge request !327
Like PMD, we also had to add a concession to allow static imports.
This time, it was achieved by moving the assertions to a more generally
named `Assert` class, and then allowing static imports from that.
To appease PMD, we now have a three rulesets in `config/pmd/*.xml`:
* `rules.xml`: The bulk of the rules, used by both main and test code.
* `rules-main.xml`: Rules specific to the andoid client code.
* `rules-test.xml`: Rules specific to test code.
The rationale is because checkstyle by default checks for "too many static
imports", which is a fair call. However in JUnit4 code, it is common to
import many `assert*` static methods.
The tests pass, but there is a lingering message that gets logged:
```
Jun 08, 2016 7:31:13 AM com.almworks.sqlite4java.Internal log
WARNING: [sqlite] [DETACH DATABASE temp_update_db]DB[1][C]: exception when clearing
com.almworks.sqlite4java.SQLiteException: [1] DB[1] reset [no such database: temp_update_db]
at com.almworks.sqlite4java.SQLiteConnection.throwResult(SQLiteConnection.java:1309)
at com.almworks.sqlite4java.SQLiteConnection.throwResult(SQLiteConnection.java:1282)
at com.almworks.sqlite4java.SQLiteConnection.cacheStatementHandle(SQLiteConnection.java:1211)
at com.almworks.sqlite4java.SQLiteConnection.access$900(SQLiteConnection.java:54)
at com.almworks.sqlite4java.SQLiteConnection$CachedController.dispose(SQLiteConnection.java:1606)
at com.almworks.sqlite4java.SQLiteStatement.dispose(SQLiteStatement.java:187)
at org.robolectric.shadows.ShadowSQLiteConnection$Connections$4.call(ShadowSQLiteConnection.java:421)
at org.robolectric.shadows.ShadowSQLiteConnection$Connections$6.call(ShadowSQLiteConnection.java:449)
at org.robolectric.shadows.ShadowSQLiteConnection$Connections$6.call(ShadowSQLiteConnection.java:443)
at java.util.concurrent.FutureTask.run(FutureTask.java:266)
at java.util.concurrent.ThreadPoolExecutor.runWorker(ThreadPoolExecutor.java:1142)
at java.util.concurrent.ThreadPoolExecutor$Worker.run(ThreadPoolExecutor.java:617)
at java.lang.Thread.run(Thread.java:745)
```
The `temp_update_db` is the one used for repo updates, but I thought that it
correctly gets dropped/detached by the `TempAppProvider` when required. In fact,
given the nature of the error message (no such database: temp_update_db), that
hints at the fact that it is indeed dropped. I'm struggling to figure out what
causes this, but it should not be harmful to the running of the tests. If a test
actually fails, then it is picked up correctly by JUnit.
Many of the `Mock*` classes are there to deal with idiosyncrosies of
the Android SDK, including `final`/package local/`@Hide` annotations/etc.
They are no longer required with robolectric tests.
Get around silly `final` methods in `ContentResolver` with Mockito and `delegatesTo`.
The Robolectric library presumes that people always want to test content providers by
manually invoking the `query`/`update`/`delete` methods on the `ShadowContentResolver`.
While that is a great feature for testing, we have helper methods that require testing,
and these methods accept either a _real_ `ContentResolver` or `Context`. Robolectric
did some cool magic in terms of intercepting runtime calls to content resolvers and
forwarding them to the "shadow" verison, to deal with final/package private/etc methods.
However, as a side effect, the `ShadowContentProvider` _is not a `ContentProvider` as
far as the Java compiler is concerned.
By utilising Mockito + `delegatesTo` method, we are able to achieve what is required:
* An actual `ContentProvider` instance.
* It forwards calls to the `ShadowContentProvider` provided by Robolectric.
Robolectric provides testing support for Android via the JVM, including testing
of content providers. In order to get these tests to work, we need to avoid
the default behaviour of starting up FDroidApp.onCreate(). This method has a lot
of static state which fails if set multiple times. Instead of trying to ensure
we correctly zero out that state each test, it is preferable to instead never
bother with that in the first place. Expecially when that is not what is under
test (as is the case with content provider tests).
This makes testing of the function easier, as the method previously expected
a real file to exist on disk for which it could then hash. This instead allows
mock hash values to be inserted when under test.
Other than this, the semantics remain exactly the same as before, and the
expensive hashing is still done on a worker thread as part of the `IntentService`.