1page.title=Security Tips
2page.article=true
3@jd:body
4
5<div id="tb-wrapper">
6<div id="tb">
7<h2>In this document</h2>
8<ol class="nolist">
9  <li><a href="#StoringData">Storing Data</a></li>
10  <li><a href="#Permissions">Using Permissions</a></li>
11  <li><a href="#Networking">Using Networking</a></li>
12  <li><a href="#InputValidation">Performing Input Validation</a></li>
13  <li><a href="#UserData">Handling User Data</a></li>
14  <li><a href="#WebView">Using WebView</a></li>
15  <li><a href="#Crypto">Using Cryptography</a></li>
16  <li><a href="#IPC">Using Interprocess Communication</a></li>
17  <li><a href="#DynamicCode">Dynamically Loading Code</a></li>
18  <li><a href="#Dalvik">Security in a Virtual Machine</a></li>
19  <li><a href="#Native">Security in Native Code</a></li>
20</ol>
21<h2>See also</h2>
22<ul>
23<li><a href="http://source.android.com/tech/security/index.html">Android
24Security Overview</a></li>
25<li><a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/security/permissions.html">Permissions</a></li>
26</ul>
27</div></div>
28
29
30<p>Android has security features built
31into the operating system that significantly reduce the frequency and impact of
32application security issues. The system is designed so you can typically build your apps with
33default system and file permissions and avoid difficult decisions about security.</p>
34
35<p>Some of the core security features that help you build secure apps
36include:
37<ul>
38<li>The Android Application Sandbox, which isolates your app data and code execution
39from other apps.</li>
40<li>An application framework with robust implementations of common
41security functionality such as cryptography, permissions, and secure
42<acronym title="Interprocess Communication">IPC</acronym>.</li>
43<li>Technologies like ASLR, NX, ProPolice, safe_iop, OpenBSD dlmalloc, OpenBSD
44calloc, and Linux mmap_min_addr to mitigate risks associated with common memory
45management errors.</li>
46<li>An encrypted filesystem that can be enabled to protect data on lost or
47stolen devices.</li>
48<li>User-granted permissions to restrict access to system features and user data.</li>
49<li>Application-defined permissions to control application data on a per-app basis.</li>
50</ul>
51
52<p>Nevertheless, it is important that you be familiar with the Android
53security best practices in this document. Following these practices as general coding habits
54will reduce the likelihood of inadvertently introducing security issues that
55adversely affect your users.</p>
56
57
58
59<h2 id="StoringData">Storing Data</h2>
60
61<p>The most common security concern for an application on Android is whether the data
62that you save on the device is accessible to other apps. There are three fundamental
63ways to save data on the device:</p>
64
65<h3 id="InternalStorage">Using internal storage</h3>
66
67<p>By default, files that you create on <a
68href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/data/data-storage.html#filesInternal">internal
69storage</a> are accessible only to your app. This
70protection is implemented by Android and is sufficient for most
71applications.</p>
72
73<p>You should generally avoid using the {@link android.content.Context#MODE_WORLD_WRITEABLE} or
74{@link android.content.Context#MODE_WORLD_READABLE} modes for
75<acronym title="Interprocess Communication">IPC</acronym> files because they do not provide
76the ability to limit data access to particular applications, nor do they
77provide any control on data format. If you want to share your data with other
78app processes, you might instead consider using a
79<a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/providers/content-providers.html">content provider</a>, which
80offers read and write permissions to other apps and can make
81dynamic permission grants on a case-by-case basis.</p>
82
83<p>To provide additional protection for sensitive data, you might
84choose to encrypt local files using a key that is not directly accessible to the
85application. For example, a key can be placed in a {@link java.security.KeyStore}
86and protected with a user password that is not stored on the device.  While this
87does not protect data from a root compromise that can monitor the user
88inputting the password,  it can provide protection for a lost device without <a
89href="http://source.android.com/tech/encryption/index.html">file system
90encryption</a>.</p>
91
92
93<h3 id="ExternalStorage">Using external storage</h3>
94
95<p>Files created on <a
96href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/data/data-storage.html#filesExternal">external
97storage</a>, such as SD Cards, are globally readable and writable.  Because
98external storage can be removed by the user and also modified by any
99application,  you should not store sensitive information using
100external storage.</p>
101
102<p>As with data from any untrusted source, you should <a href="#InputValidation">perform input
103validation</a> when handling data from external storage.
104We strongly recommend that you not store executables or
105class files on external storage prior to dynamic loading.  If your app
106does retrieve executable files from external storage, the files should be signed and
107cryptographically verified prior to dynamic loading.</p>
108
109
110<h3 id="ContentProviders">Using content providers</h3>
111
112<p><a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/providers/content-providers.html">Content providers</a>
113offer a structured storage mechanism that can be limited
114to your own application or exported to allow access by other applications.
115If you do not intend to provide other
116applications with access to your {@link android.content.ContentProvider}, mark them as <code><a
117href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/provider-element.html#exported">
118android:exported=false</a></code> in the application manifest. Otherwise, set the <code><a
119href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/provider-element.html#exported">android:exported</a></code>
120attribute {@code "true"} to allow other apps to access the stored data.
121</p>
122
123<p>When creating a {@link android.content.ContentProvider}
124that will be exported for use by other applications, you can specify a single
125<a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/provider-element.html#prmsn">permission
126</a> for reading and writing, or distinct permissions for reading and writing
127within the manifest. We recommend that you limit your permissions to those
128required to accomplish the task at hand. Keep in mind that it’s usually
129easier to add permissions later to expose new functionality than it is to take
130them away and break existing users.</p>
131
132<p>If you are using a content provider
133for sharing data between only your own apps, it is preferable to use the
134<a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/permission-element.html#plevel">{@code
135android:protectionLevel}</a> attribute set to {@code "signature"} protection.
136Signature permissions do not require user confirmation,
137so they provide a better user experience and more controlled access to the
138content provider data when the apps accessing the data are
139<a href="{@docRoot}tools/publishing/app-signing.html">signed</a> with
140the same key.</p>
141
142<p>Content providers can also provide more granular access by declaring the <a
143href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/provider-element.html#gprmsn">{@code
144android:grantUriPermissions}</a> attribute and using the {@link
145android.content.Intent#FLAG_GRANT_READ_URI_PERMISSION} and {@link
146android.content.Intent#FLAG_GRANT_WRITE_URI_PERMISSION} flags in the
147{@link android.content.Intent} object
148that activates the component.  The scope of these permissions can be further
149limited by the <code><a
150href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/grant-uri-permission-element.html">
151&lt;grant-uri-permission element&gt;</a></code>.</p>
152
153<p>When accessing a content provider, use parameterized query methods such as
154{@link android.content.ContentProvider#query(Uri,String[],String,String[],String) query()},
155{@link android.content.ContentProvider#update(Uri,ContentValues,String,String[]) update()}, and
156{@link android.content.ContentProvider#delete(Uri,String,String[]) delete()} to avoid
157potential SQL injection from untrusted sources. Note that using parameterized methods is not
158sufficient if the <code>selection</code> argument is built by concatenating user data
159prior to submitting it to the method.</p>
160
161<p>Do not have a false sense of security about the write permission.  Consider
162that the write permission allows SQL statements which make it possible for some
163data to be confirmed using creative <code>WHERE</code> clauses and parsing the
164results. For example, an attacker might probe for presence of a specific phone
165number in a call-log by modifying a row only if that phone number already
166exists. If the content provider data has predictable structure, the write
167permission may be equivalent to providing both reading and writing.</p>
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175<h2 id="Permissions">Using Permissions</h2>
176
177<p>Because Android sandboxes applications from each other, applications must explicitly
178share resources and data. They do this by declaring the permissions they need for additional
179capabilities not provided by the basic sandbox, including access to device features such as
180the camera.</p>
181
182
183<h3 id="RequestingPermissions">Requesting Permissions</h3>
184
185<p>We recommend minimizing the number of permissions that your app requests.
186Not having access to sensitive permissions reduces the risk of
187inadvertently misusing those permissions, can improve user adoption, and makes
188your app less vulnerable for attackers. Generally,
189if a permission is not required for your app to function, do not request it.</p>
190
191<p>If it's possible to design your application in a way that does not require
192any permissions, that is preferable.  For example, rather than requesting access
193to device information to create a unique identifier, create a <a
194href="{@docRoot}reference/java/util/UUID.html">GUID</a> for your application
195(see the section about <a href="#UserData">Handling User Data</a>). Or, rather than
196using external storage (which requires permission), store data
197on the internal storage.</p>
198
199<p>In addition to requesting permissions, your application can use the <a
200href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/permission-element.html">{@code &lt;permissions>}</a>
201to protect IPC that is security sensitive and will be exposed to other
202applications, such as a {@link android.content.ContentProvider}.
203In general, we recommend using access controls
204other than user confirmed permissions where possible because permissions can
205be confusing for users. For example, consider using the <a
206href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/permission-element.html#plevel">signature
207protection level</a> on permissions for IPC communication between applications
208provided by a single developer.</p>
209
210<p>Do not leak permission-protected data.  This occurs when your app exposes data
211over IPC that is only available because it has a specific permission, but does
212not require that permission of any clients of it’s IPC interface. More
213details on the potential impacts, and frequency of this type of problem is
214provided in this research paper published at USENIX: <a
215href="http://www.cs.berkeley.edu/~afelt/felt_usenixsec2011.pdf">http://www.cs.be
216rkeley.edu/~afelt/felt_usenixsec2011.pdf</a></p>
217
218
219
220<h3 id="CreatingPermissions">Creating Permissions</h3>
221
222<p>Generally, you should strive to define as few permissions as possible while
223satisfying your security requirements.  Creating a new permission is relatively
224uncommon for most applications, because the <a
225href="{@docRoot}reference/android/Manifest.permission.html">system-defined
226permissions</a> cover many situations.  Where appropriate,
227perform access checks using existing permissions.</p>
228
229<p>If you must create a new permission, consider whether you can accomplish
230your task with a <a
231href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/permission-element.html#plevel">"signature"
232protection level</a>.  Signature permissions are transparent
233to the user and only allow access by applications signed by the same developer
234as application performing the permission check.</p>
235
236<p>If you create a permission with the <a
237href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/permission-element.html#plevel">"dangerous"
238protection level</a>, there are a number of complexities
239that you need to consider:
240<ul>
241<li>The permission must have a string that concisely expresses to a user the
242security decision they will be required to make.</li>
243<li>The permission string must be localized to many different languages.</li>
244<li>Users may choose not to install an application because a permission is
245confusing or perceived as risky.</li>
246<li>Applications may request the permission when the creator of the permission
247has not been installed.</li>
248</ul>
249
250<p>Each of these poses a significant non-technical challenge for you as the developer
251while also confusing your users,
252which is why we discourage the use of the "dangerous" permission level.</p>
253
254
255
256
257
258<h2 id="Networking">Using Networking</h2>
259
260<p>Network transactions are inherently risky for security, because it involves transmitting
261data that is potentially private to the user. People are increasingly aware of the privacy
262concerns of a mobile device, especially when the device performs network transactions,
263so it's very important that your app implement all best practices toward keeping the user's
264data secure at all times.</p>
265
266<h3 id="IPNetworking">Using IP Networking</h3>
267
268<p>Networking on Android is not significantly different from other Linux
269environments.  The key consideration is making sure that appropriate protocols
270are used for sensitive data, such as {@link javax.net.ssl.HttpsURLConnection} for
271secure web traffic.   We prefer use of HTTPS over HTTP anywhere that HTTPS is
272supported on the server, because mobile devices frequently connect on networks
273that are not secured, such as public Wi-Fi hotspots.</p>
274
275<p>Authenticated, encrypted socket-level communication can be easily
276implemented using the {@link javax.net.ssl.SSLSocket}
277class.  Given the frequency with which Android devices connect to unsecured
278wireless networks using Wi-Fi, the use of secure networking is strongly
279encouraged for all applications that communicate over the network.</p>
280
281<p>We have seen some applications use <a
282href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Localhost">localhost</a> network ports for
283handling sensitive IPC.  We discourage this approach since these interfaces are
284accessible by other applications on the device.  Instead, you should use an Android IPC
285mechanism where authentication is possible such as with a {@link android.app.Service}.  (Even
286worse than using loopback is to bind to INADDR_ANY since then your application
287may receive requests from anywhere.)</p>
288
289<p>Also, one common issue that warrants repeating is to make sure that you do
290not trust data downloaded from HTTP or other insecure protocols.  This includes
291validation of input in {@link android.webkit.WebView} and
292any responses to intents issued against HTTP.</p>
293
294
295<h3>Using Telephony Networking</h3>
296
297<p>The <acronym title="Short Message Service">SMS</acronym> protocol was primarily designed for
298user-to-user communication and is not well-suited for apps that want to transfer data.
299Due to the limitations of SMS, we strongly recommend the use of <a
300href="{@docRoot}google/gcm/index.html">Google Cloud Messaging</a> (GCM)
301and IP networking for sending data messages from a web server to your app on a user device.</p>
302
303<p>Beware that SMS is neither encrypted nor strongly
304authenticated on either the network or the device.  In particular, any SMS receiver
305should expect that a malicious user may have sent the SMS to your application&mdash;Do
306not rely on unauthenticated SMS data to perform sensitive commands.
307Also, you should be aware that SMS may be subject to spoofing and/or
308interception on the network.  On the Android-powered device itself, SMS
309messages are transmitted as broadcast intents, so they may be read or captured
310by other applications that have the {@link android.Manifest.permission#READ_SMS}
311permission.</p>
312
313
314
315
316
317<h2 id="InputValidation">Performing Input Validation</h2>
318
319<p>Insufficient input validation is one of the most common security problems
320affecting applications, regardless of what platform they run on. Android does
321have platform-level countermeasures that reduce the exposure of applications to
322input validation issues and you should use those features where possible. Also
323note that selection of type-safe languages tends to reduce the likelihood of
324input validation issues.</p>
325
326<p>If you are using native code, then any data read from files, received over
327the network, or received from an IPC has the potential to introduce a security
328issue.  The most common problems are <a
329href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buffer_overflow">buffer overflows</a>, <a
330href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double_free#Use_after_free">use after
331free</a>, and <a
332href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Off-by-one_error">off-by-one errors</a>.
333Android provides a number of technologies like <acronym
334title="Address Space Layout Randomization">ASLR</acronym> and <acronym
335title="Data Execution Prevention">DEP</acronym> that reduce the
336exploitability of these errors, but they do not solve the underlying problem.
337You can prevent these vulneratbilities by careful handling pointers and managing
338buffers.</p>
339
340<p>Dynamic, string based languages such as JavaScript and SQL are also subject
341to input validation problems due to escape characters and <a
342href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Code_injection">script injection</a>.</p>
343
344<p>If you are using data within queries that are submitted to an SQL database or a
345content provider, SQL injection may be an issue.  The best defense is to use
346parameterized queries, as is discussed in the above section about <a
347href="#ContentProviders">content providers</a>.
348Limiting permissions to read-only or write-only can also reduce the potential
349for harm related to SQL injection.</p>
350
351<p>If you cannot use the security features above, we strongly recommend the use
352of well-structured data formats and verifying that the data conforms to the
353expected format. While blacklisting of characters or character-replacement can
354be an effective strategy, these techniques are error-prone in practice and
355should be avoided when possible.</p>
356
357
358
359
360
361<h2 id="UserData">Handling User Data</h2>
362
363<p>In general, the best approach for user data security is to minimize the use of APIs that access
364sensitive or personal user data. If you have access to user data and can avoid
365storing or transmitting the information, do not store or transmit the data.
366Finally, consider if there is a way that your application logic can be
367implemented using a hash or non-reversible form of the data.  For example, your
368application might use the hash of an an email address as a primary key, to
369avoid transmitting or storing the email address.  This reduces the chances of
370inadvertently exposing data, and it also reduces the chance of attackers
371attempting to exploit your application.</p>
372
373<p>If your application accesses personal information such as passwords or
374usernames, keep in mind that some jurisdictions may require you to provide a
375privacy policy explaining your use and storage of that data.  So following the
376security best practice of minimizing access to user data may also simplify
377compliance.</p>
378
379<p>You should also consider whether your application might be inadvertently
380exposing personal information to other parties such as third-party components
381for advertising or third-party services used by your application. If you don't
382know why a component or service requires a personal information, don’t
383provide it.  In general, reducing the access to personal information by your
384application will reduce the potential for problems in this area.</p>
385
386<p>If access to sensitive data is required, evaluate whether that information
387must be transmitted to a server, or whether the operation can be performed on
388the client.  Consider running any code using sensitive data on the client to
389avoid transmitting user data.</p>
390
391<p>Also, make sure that you do not inadvertently expose user data to other
392application on the device through overly permissive IPC, world writable files,
393or network sockets. This is a special case of leaking permission-protected data,
394discussed in the <a href="#RequestingPermissions">Requesting Permissions</a> section.</p>
395
396<p>If a <acronym title="Globally Unique Identifier">GUID</acronym>
397is required, create a large, unique number and store it.  Do not
398use phone identifiers such as the phone number or IMEI which may be associated
399with personal information.  This topic is discussed in more detail in the <a
400href="http://android-developers.blogspot.com/2011/03/identifying-app-installations.html">Android
401Developer Blog</a>.</p>
402
403<p>Be careful when writing to on-device logs.
404In Android, logs are a shared resource, and are available
405to an application with the {@link android.Manifest.permission#READ_LOGS} permission.
406Even though the phone log data
407is temporary and erased on reboot, inappropriate logging of user information
408could inadvertently leak user data to other applications.</p>
409
410
411
412
413
414
415<h2 id="WebView">Using WebView</h2>
416
417<p>Because {@link android.webkit.WebView} consumes web content that can include HTML and JavaScript,
418improper use can introduce common web security issues such as <a
419href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross_site_scripting">cross-site-scripting</a>
420(JavaScript injection).  Android includes a number of mechanisms to reduce
421the scope of these potential issues by limiting the capability of {@link android.webkit.WebView} to
422the minimum functionality required by your application.</p>
423
424<p>If your application does not directly use JavaScript within a {@link android.webkit.WebView}, do
425<em>not</em> call {@link android.webkit.WebSettings#setJavaScriptEnabled setJavaScriptEnabled()}.
426Some sample code uses this method, which you might repurpose in production
427application, so remove that method call if it's not required. By default,
428{@link android.webkit.WebView} does
429not execute JavaScript so cross-site-scripting is not possible.</p>
430
431<p>Use {@link android.webkit.WebView#addJavascriptInterface
432addJavaScriptInterface()} with
433particular care because it allows JavaScript to invoke operations that are
434normally reserved for Android applications.  If you use it, expose
435{@link android.webkit.WebView#addJavascriptInterface addJavaScriptInterface()} only to
436web pages from which all input is trustworthy.  If untrusted input is allowed,
437untrusted JavaScript may be able to invoke Android methods within your app.  In general, we
438recommend exposing {@link android.webkit.WebView#addJavascriptInterface
439addJavaScriptInterface()} only to JavaScript that is contained within your application APK.</p>
440
441<p>If your application accesses sensitive data with a
442{@link android.webkit.WebView}, you may want to use the
443{@link android.webkit.WebView#clearCache clearCache()} method to delete any files stored
444locally. Server-side
445headers like <code>no-cache</code> can also be used to indicate that an application should
446not cache particular content.</p>
447
448<p>Devices running platforms older than Android 4.4 (API level 19)
449use a version of {@link android.webkit webkit} that has a number of security issues.
450As a workaround, if your app is running on these devices, it
451should confirm that {@link android.webkit.WebView} objects display only trusted
452content. You should also use the updatable security {@link
453java.security.Provider Provider} object to make sure your app isn’t exposed to
454potential vulnerabilities in SSL, as described in <a
455href="{@docRoot}training/articles/security-gms-provider.html">Updating Your
456Security Provider to Protect Against SSL Exploits</a>. If your application must
457render content from the open web, consider providing your own renderer so
458you can keep it up to date with the latest security patches.</p>
459
460
461<h3 id="Credentials">Handling Credentials</h3>
462
463<p>In general, we recommend minimizing the frequency of asking for user
464credentials&mdash;to make phishing attacks more conspicuous, and less likely to be
465successful.  Instead use an authorization token and refresh it.</p>
466
467<p>Where possible, username and password should not be stored on the device.
468Instead, perform initial authentication using the username and password
469supplied by the user, and then use a short-lived, service-specific
470authorization token.</p>
471
472<p>Services that will be accessible to multiple applications should be accessed
473using {@link android.accounts.AccountManager}. If possible, use the
474{@link android.accounts.AccountManager} class to invoke a cloud-based service and do not store
475passwords on the device.</p>
476
477<p>After using {@link android.accounts.AccountManager} to retrieve an
478{@link android.accounts.Account}, {@link android.accounts.Account#CREATOR}
479before passing in any credentials, so that you do not inadvertently pass
480credentials to the wrong application.</p>
481
482<p>If credentials are to be used only by applications that you create, then you
483can verify the application which accesses the {@link android.accounts.AccountManager} using
484{@link android.content.pm.PackageManager#checkSignatures checkSignature()}.
485Alternatively, if only one application will use the credential, you might use a
486{@link java.security.KeyStore} for storage.</p>
487
488
489
490
491
492<h2 id="Crypto">Using Cryptography</h2>
493
494<p>In addition to providing data isolation, supporting full-filesystem
495encryption, and providing secure communications channels, Android provides a
496wide array of algorithms for protecting data using cryptography.</p>
497
498<p>In general, try to use the highest level of pre-existing framework
499implementation that can  support your use case.  If you need to securely
500retrieve a file from a known location, a simple HTTPS URI may be adequate and
501requires no knowledge of cryptography.  If you need a secure
502tunnel, consider using {@link javax.net.ssl.HttpsURLConnection} or
503{@link javax.net.ssl.SSLSocket}, rather than writing your own protocol.</p>
504
505<p>If you do find yourself needing to implement your own protocol, we strongly
506recommend that you <em>not</em> implement your own cryptographic algorithms. Use
507existing cryptographic algorithms such as those in the implementation of AES or
508RSA provided in the {@link javax.crypto.Cipher} class.</p>
509
510<p>Use a secure random number generator, {@link java.security.SecureRandom},
511to initialize any cryptographic keys, {@link javax.crypto.KeyGenerator}.
512Use of a key that is not generated with a secure random
513number generator significantly weakens the strength of the algorithm, and may
514allow offline attacks.</p>
515
516<p>If you need to store a key for repeated use, use a mechanism like
517  {@link java.security.KeyStore} that
518provides a mechanism for long term storage and retrieval of cryptographic
519keys.</p>
520
521
522
523
524
525<h2 id="IPC">Using Interprocess Communication</h2>
526
527<p>Some apps attempt to implement IPC using traditional Linux
528techniques such as network sockets and shared files.  We strongly encourage you to instead
529use Android system functionality for IPC such as {@link android.content.Intent},
530{@link android.os.Binder} or {@link android.os.Messenger} with a {@link
531android.app.Service}, and {@link android.content.BroadcastReceiver}.
532The Android IPC mechanisms allow you to verify the identity of
533the application connecting to your IPC and set security policy for each IPC
534mechanism.</p>
535
536<p>Many of the security elements are shared across IPC mechanisms.
537If your IPC mechanism is not intended for use by other applications, set the
538{@code android:exported} attribute to {@code "false"} in the component's manifest element,
539such as for the <a
540href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/service-element.html#exported">{@code &lt;service&gt;}</a>
541element.  This is useful for applications that consist of multiple processes
542within the same UID, or if you decide late in development that you do not
543actually want to expose functionality as IPC but you don’t want to rewrite
544the code.</p>
545
546<p>If your IPC is intended to be accessible to other applications, you can
547apply a security policy by using the <a
548href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/permission-element.html">{@code &lt;permission>}</a>
549element. If IPC is between your own separate apps that are signed with the same key,
550it is preferable to use {@code "signature"} level permission in the <a
551href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/permission-element.html#plevel">{@code
552android:protectionLevel}</a>.</p>
553
554
555
556
557<h3>Using intents</h3>
558
559<p>Intents are the preferred mechanism for asynchronous IPC in Android.
560Depending on your application requirements, you might use {@link
561android.content.Context#sendBroadcast sendBroadcast()}, {@link
562android.content.Context#sendOrderedBroadcast sendOrderedBroadcast()},
563or an explicit intent to a specific application component.</p>
564
565<p>Note that ordered broadcasts can be “consumed” by a recipient, so they
566may not be delivered to all applications.  If you are sending an intent that must be delivered
567to a specific receiver, then you must use an explicit intent that declares the receiver
568by nameintent.</p>
569
570<p>Senders of an intent can verify that the recipient has a permission
571specifying a non-Null permission with the method call.  Only applications with that
572permission will receive the intent.  If data within a broadcast intent may be
573sensitive, you should consider applying a permission to make sure that
574malicious applications cannot register to receive those messages without
575appropriate permissions.  In those circumstances, you may also consider
576invoking the receiver directly, rather than raising a broadcast.</p>
577
578<p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> Intent filters should not be considered
579a security feature&mdash;components
580can be invoked with explicit intents and may not have data that would conform to the intent
581filter. You should perform input validation within your intent receiver to
582confirm that it is properly formatted for the invoked receiver, service, or
583activity.</p>
584
585
586
587
588<h3 id="Services">Using services</h3>
589
590<p>A {@link android.app.Service} is often used to supply functionality for other applications to
591use. Each service class must have a corresponding <a
592href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/service-element.html">{@code <service>}</a> declaration in its
593manifest file.</p>
594
595<p>By default, services are not exported and cannot be invoked by any other
596application. However, if you add any intent filters to the service declaration, then it is exported
597by default. It's best if you explicitly declare the <a
598href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/service-element.html#exported">{@code
599android:exported}</a> attribute to be sure it behaves as you'd like.
600Services can also be protected using the <a
601href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/service-element.html#prmsn">{@code android:permission}</a>
602attribute. By doing so, other applications will need to declare
603a corresponding <code><a
604href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/uses-permission-element.html">&lt;uses-permission&gt;</a>
605</code> element in their own manifest to be
606able to start, stop, or bind to the service.</p>
607
608<p>A service can protect individual IPC calls into it with permissions, by
609calling {@link android.content.Context#checkCallingPermission
610checkCallingPermission()} before executing
611the implementation of that call.  We generally recommend using the
612declarative permissions in the manifest, since those are less prone to
613oversight.</p>
614
615
616
617<h3>Using binder and messenger interfaces</h3>
618
619<p>Using {@link android.os.Binder} or {@link android.os.Messenger} is the
620preferred mechanism for RPC-style IPC in Android. They provide a well-defined
621interface that enables mutual authentication of the endpoints, if required.</p>
622
623<p>We strongly encourage designing interfaces in a manner that does not require
624interface specific permission checks. {@link android.os.Binder} and
625{@link android.os.Messenger} objects are not declared within the
626application manifest, and therefore you cannot apply declarative permissions
627directly to them.  They generally inherit permissions declared in the
628application manifest for the {@link android.app.Service} or {@link
629android.app.Activity} within which they are
630implemented.  If you are creating an interface that requires authentication
631and/or access controls, those controls must be
632explicitly added as code in the {@link android.os.Binder} or {@link android.os.Messenger}
633interface.</p>
634
635<p>If providing an interface that does require access controls, use {@link
636android.content.Context#checkCallingPermission checkCallingPermission()}
637to verify whether the
638caller has a required permission. This is especially important
639before accessing a service on behalf of the caller, as the identify of your
640application is passed to other interfaces.  If invoking an interface provided
641by a {@link android.app.Service}, the {@link
642android.content.Context#bindService bindService()}
643 invocation may fail if you do not have permission to access the given service.
644 If calling an interface provided locally by your own application, it may be
645useful to use the {@link android.os.Binder#clearCallingIdentity clearCallingIdentity()}
646to satisfy internal security checks.</p>
647
648<p>For more information about performing IPC with a service, see
649<a href="{@docRoot}guide/components/bound-services.html">Bound Services</a>.</p>
650
651
652
653<h3 id="BroadcastReceivers">Using broadcast receivers</h3>
654
655<p>A {@link android.content.BroadcastReceiver} handles asynchronous requests initiated by
656an {@link android.content.Intent}.</p>
657
658<p>By default, receivers are exported and can be invoked by any other
659application. If your {@link android.content.BroadcastReceiver}
660is intended for use by other applications, you
661may want to apply security permissions to receivers using the <code><a
662href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/receiver-element.html">
663&lt;receiver&gt;</a></code> element within the application manifest.  This will
664prevent applications without appropriate permissions from sending an intent to
665the {@link android.content.BroadcastReceiver}.</p>
666
667
668
669
670
671
672
673
674<h2 id="DynamicCode">Dynamically Loading Code</h2>
675
676<p>We strongly discourage loading code from outside of your application APK.
677Doing so significantly increases the likelihood of application compromise due
678to code injection or code tampering.  It also adds complexity around version
679management and application testing.  Finally, it can make it impossible to
680verify the behavior of an application, so it may be prohibited in some
681environments.</p>
682
683<p>If your application does dynamically load code, the most important thing to
684keep in mind about dynamically loaded code is that it runs with the same
685security permissions as the application APK.  The user made a decision to
686install your application based on your identity, and they are expecting that
687you provide any code run within the application, including code that is
688dynamically loaded.</p>
689
690<p>The major security risk associated with dynamically loading code is that the
691code needs to come from a verifiable source. If the modules are included
692directly within your APK, then they cannot be modified by other applications.
693This is true whether the code is a native library or a class being loaded using
694{@link dalvik.system.DexClassLoader}.  We have seen many instances of applications
695attempting to load code from insecure locations, such as downloaded from the
696network over unencrypted protocols or from world writable locations such as
697external storage. These locations could allow someone on the network to modify
698the content in transit, or another application on a users device to modify the
699content on the device, respectively.</p>
700
701
702
703
704
705<h2 id="Dalvik">Security in a Virtual Machine</h2>
706
707<p>Dalvik is Android's runtime virtual machine (VM). Dalvik was built specifically for Android,
708but many of the concerns regarding secure code in other virtual machines also apply to Android.
709In general, you shouldn't concern yourself with security issues relating to the virtual machine.
710Your application runs in a secure sandbox environment, so other processes on the system cannnot
711access your code or private data.</p>
712
713<p>If you're interested in diving deeper on the subject of virtual machine security,
714we recommend that you familiarize yourself with some
715existing literature on the subject. Two of the more popular resources are:
716<ul>
717<li><a href="http://www.securingjava.com/toc.html">
718http://www.securingjava.com/toc.html</a></li>
719<li><a
720href="https://www.owasp.org/index.php/Java_Security_Resources">
721https://www.owasp.org/index.php/Java_Security_Resources</a></li>
722</ul></p>
723
724<p>This document is focused on the areas which are Android specific or
725different from other VM environments.  For developers experienced with VM
726programming in other environments, there are two broad issues that may be
727different about writing apps for Android:
728<ul>
729<li>Some virtual machines, such as the JVM or .net runtime, act as a security
730boundary, isolating code from the underlying operating system capabilities.  On
731Android, the Dalvik VM is not a security boundary&mdash;the application sandbox is
732implemented at the OS level, so Dalvik can interoperate with native code in the
733same application without any security constraints.</li>
734
735<li>Given the limited storage on mobile devices, it’s common for developers
736to want to build modular applications and use dynamic class loading.  When
737doing this, consider both the source where you retrieve your application logic
738and where you store it locally. Do not use dynamic class loading from sources
739that are not verified, such as unsecured network sources or external storage,
740because that code might be modified to include malicious behavior.</li>
741</ul>
742
743
744
745<h2 id="Native">Security in Native Code</h2>
746
747<p>In general, we encourage developers to use the Android SDK for
748application development, rather than using native code with the
749<a href="{@docRoot}tools/sdk/ndk/index.html">Android NDK</a>.  Applications built
750with native code are more complex, less portable, and more like to include
751common memory corruption errors such as buffer overflows.</p>
752
753<p>Android is built using the Linux kernel and being familiar with Linux
754development security best practices is especially useful if you are going to
755use native code. Linux security practices are beyond the scope of this document,
756but one of the most popular resources is “Secure Programming for
757Linux and Unix HOWTO”, available at <a
758href="http://www.dwheeler.com/secure-programs">
759http://www.dwheeler.com/secure-programs</a>.</p>
760
761<p>An important difference between Android and most Linux environments is the
762Application Sandbox.  On Android, all applications run in the Application
763Sandbox, including those written with native code.  At the most basic level, a
764good way to think about it for developers familiar with Linux is to know that
765every application is given a unique <acronym title="User Identifier">UID</acronym>
766with very limited permissions. This is discussed in more detail in the <a
767href="http://source.android.com/tech/security/index.html">Android Security
768Overview</a> and you should be familiar with application permissions even if
769you are using native code.</p>
770
771