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Dirk Dougherty5748bc42016-02-06 18:24:32 -08001page.title=API Overview
2page.keywords=preview,sdk,compatibility
3page.tags=previewresources, androidm
4sdk.platform.apiLevel=22-mnc
5page.image=images/cards/card-api-overview_16-9_2x.png
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9<div id="qv-wrapper">
10<div id="qv">
11
12<h2>In this document
13 <a href="#" onclick="hideNestedItems('#toc44',this);return false;" class="header-toggle">
14 <span class="more">show more</span>
15 <span class="less" style="display:none">show less</span></a></h2>
16
17<ol id="toc44" class="hide-nested">
18 <li><a href="#app-linking">App Linking</a></li>
19 <li><a href="#backup">Auto Backup for Apps</a></li>
20 <li><a href="#authentication">Authentication</a>
21 <ol>
22 <li><a href="#fingerprint-authentication">Fingerprint Authentication</a></li>
23 <li><a href="#confirm-credential">Confirm Credential</a></li>
24 </ol>
25 </li>
26 <li><a href="#direct-share">Direct Share</a></li>
27 <li><a href="#voice-interactions">Voice Interactions</a></li>
28 <li><a href="#assist">Assist API</a></li>
29 <li><a href="#notifications">Notifications</a></li>
30 <li><a href="#bluetooth-stylus">Bluetooth Stylus Support</a></li>
31 <li><a href="#ble-scanning">Improved Bluetooth Low Energy Scanning</a></li>
32 <li><a href="#hotspot">Hotspot 2.0 Release 1 Support</a></li>
33 <li><a href="#4K-display">4K Display Mode</a></li>
34 <li><a href="#behavior-themeable-colorstatelists">Themeable ColorStateLists</a></li>
35 <li><a href="#audio">Audio Features</a></li>
36 <li><a href="#video">Video Features</a></li>
37 <li><a href="#camera">Camera Features</a>
38 <ol>
39 <li><a href="#flashlight">Flashlight API</a></li>
40 <li><a href="#reprocessing">Camera Reprocessing</a></li>
41 </ol>
42 </li>
43 <li><a href="#afw">Android for Work Features</a></li>
44</ol>
45
46<h2>API Differences</h2>
47<ol>
48<li><a href="{@docRoot}sdk/api_diff/23/changes.html">API level 22 to 23 (Preview 3) &raquo;</a> </li>
49</ol>
50
51</div>
52</div>
53
54<p>The M Developer Preview gives you an advance look at the upcoming release
55for the Android platform, which offers new features for users and app
56developers. This document provides an introduction to the most notable APIs.</p>
57
58<p>
59 The M Developer Preview 3 release includes the <strong>final APIs for Android 6.0 (API level
60 23)</strong>. If you are preparing an app for use on Android 6.0,
61 <a href="{@docRoot}preview/setup-sdk.html">download the latest SDK</a> and to complete your
62 final updates and release testing. You can review the final APIs in the
63 <a href="{@docRoot}reference/packages.html">API Reference</a> and see the API differences in
64 the <a href="{@docRoot}sdk/api_diff/23/changes.html">Android API Differences Report</a>.
65</p>
66
67</p>
68
69<p class="caution"><strong>Important:</strong>
70 You may now publish apps that target Android 6.0 (API level 23) to the Google Play store.
71</p>
72
73<p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong>
74 If you have been working with previous preview releases and want to see the differences
75 between the final API and previous preview versions, download the additional difference
76 reports included in the <a href="{@docRoot}preview/download.html#docs">preview docs
77 reference</a>.
78</p>
79
80<h3>Important behavior changes</h3>
81
82<p>If you have previously published an app for Android, be aware that your app might be affected
83by changes in the platform.</p>
84
85<p>Please see <a href="behavior-changes.html">Behavior Changes</a> for complete information.</p>
86
87<h2 id="app-linking">App Linking</h2>
88<p>This preview enhances Android’s intent system by providing more powerful app linking.
89This feature allows you to associate an app with a web domain you own. Based on this
90association, the platform can determine the default app to use to handle a particular
91web link and skip prompting users to select an app. To learn how to implement this feature, see
92<a href="{@docRoot}preview/features/app-linking.html">App Linking</a>.
93
94<h2 id="backup">Auto Backup for Apps</h2>
95<p>The system now performs automatic full data backup and restore for apps. For the
96duration of the <a href="{@docRoot}preview/overview.html">M Developer Preview program</a>, all
97apps are backed up, independent of which SDK version they target. After the final M SDK release,
98your app must target M to enable this behavior; you do not need to add any additional code. If users
99delete their Google accounts, their backup data is deleted as well. To learn how this feature
100works and how to configure what to back up on the file system, see
101<a href="{@docRoot}preview/backup/index.html">Auto Backup for Apps</a>.</p>
102
103<h2 id="authentication">Authentication</h2>
104<p>This preview offers new APIs to let you authenticate users by using their fingerprint scans on
105supported devices, and check how recently the user was last authenticated using a device unlocking
106mechanism (such as a lockscreen password). Use these APIs in conjunction with
107the <a href="{@docRoot}training/articles/keystore.html">Android Keystore system</a>.</p>
108
109<h3 id="fingerprint-authentication">Fingerprint Authentication</h3>
110
111<p>To authenticate users via fingerprint scan, get an instance of the new
112{@link android.hardware.fingerprint.FingerprintManager} class and call the
113{@link android.hardware.fingerprint.FingerprintManager#authenticate(android.hardware.fingerprint.FingerprintManager.CryptoObject, android.os.CancellationSignal, int, android.hardware.fingerprint.FingerprintManager.AuthenticationCallback, android.os.Handler) authenticate()}
114method. Your app must be running on a compatible
115device with a fingerprint sensor. You must implement the user interface for the fingerprint
116authentication flow on your app, and use the standard Android fingerprint icon in your UI.
117The Android fingerprint icon ({@code c_fp_40px.png}) is included in the
118<a href="https://github.com/googlesamples/android-FingerprintDialog"
119class="external-link">sample app</a>. If you are developing multiple apps that use fingerprint
120authentication, note that each app must authenticate the user’s fingerprint independently.
121</p>
122
123<p>To use this feature in your app, first add the
124 {@link android.Manifest.permission#USE_FINGERPRINT} permission in your manifest.</p>
125
126<pre>
127&lt;uses-permission
128 android:name="android.permission.USE_FINGERPRINT" /&gt;
129</pre>
130<img src="{@docRoot}preview/images/fingerprint-screen.png"
131srcset="{@docRoot}preview/images/fingerprint-screen.png 1x, {@docRoot}preview/images/fingerprint-screen_2x.png 2x"
132style="float:right; margin:0 0 10px 20px" width="282" height="476" />
133
134<p>To see an app implementation of fingerprint authentication, refer to the
135<a href="https://github.com/googlesamples/android-FingerprintDialog" class="external-link">
136 Fingerprint Dialog sample</a>. For a demonstration of how you can use these authentication
137 APIs in conjunction with other Android APIs, see the video
138 <a class="video-shadowbox-button" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VOn7VrTRlA4">
139 Fingerprint and Payment APIs</a>.</p>
140
141<p>If you are testing this feature, follow these steps:</p>
142<ol>
143<li>Install Android SDK Tools Revision 24.3, if you have not done so.</li>
144<li>Enroll a new fingerprint in the emulator by going to
145<strong>Settings > Security > Fingerprint</strong>, then follow the enrollment instructions.</li>
146<li>Use an emulator to emulate fingerprint touch events with the
147following command. Use the same command to emulate fingerprint touch events on the lockscreen or
148in your app.
149<pre class="no-prettyprint">
150adb -e emu finger touch &lt;finger_id&gt;
151</pre>
152<p>On Windows, you may have to run {@code telnet 127.0.0.1 <emulator-id>} followed by
153 {@code finger touch <finger_id>}.
154</p>
155</li>
156</ol>
157
158<h3 id="confirm-credential">Confirm Credential</h3>
159<p>Your app can authenticate users based on how recently they last unlocked their device. This
160feature frees users from having to remember additional app-specific passwords, and avoids the need
161for you to implement your own authentication user interface. Your app should use this feature in
162conjunction with a public or secret key implementation for user authentication.</p>
163
164<p>To set the timeout duration for which the same key can be re-used after a user is successfully
165authenticated, call the new
166{@link android.security.keystore.KeyGenParameterSpec.Builder#setUserAuthenticationValidityDurationSeconds(int) setUserAuthenticationValidityDurationSeconds()}
167method when you set up a {@link javax.crypto.KeyGenerator} or
168{@link java.security.KeyPairGenerator}.</p>
169
170<p>Avoid showing the re-authentication dialog excessively -- your apps should try using the
171cryptographic object first and if the the timeout expires, use the
172{@link android.app.KeyguardManager#createConfirmDeviceCredentialIntent(java.lang.CharSequence, java.lang.CharSequence) createConfirmDeviceCredentialIntent()}
173method to re-authenticate the user within your app.
174</p>
175
176<p>To see an app implementation of this feature, refer to the
177<a href="https://github.com/googlesamples/android-ConfirmCredential" class="external-link">
178 Confirm Credential sample</a>.</p>
179
180<h2 id="direct-share">Direct Share</h2>
181
182<img src="{@docRoot}preview/images/direct-share-screen.png"
183srcset="{@docRoot}preview/images/direct-share-screen.png 1x, {@docRoot}preview/images/direct-share-screen_2x.png 2x"
184style="float:right; margin:0 0 20px 30px" width="312" height="329" />
185
186<p>This preview provides you with APIs to make sharing intuitive and quick for users. You can now
187define <em>direct share targets</em> that launch a specific activity in your app. These direct share
188targets are exposed to users via the <em>Share</em> menu. This feature allows users to share
189content to targets, such as contacts, within other apps. For example, the direct share target might
190launch an activity in another social network app, which lets the user share content directly to a
191specific friend or community in that app.</p>
192
193<p>To enable direct share targets you must define a class that extends the
194{@link android.service.chooser.ChooserTargetService} class. Declare your
195service in the manifest. Within that declaration, specify the
196{@link android.Manifest.permission#BIND_CHOOSER_TARGET_SERVICE} permission and an
197intent filter using the
198{@link android.service.chooser.ChooserTargetService#SERVICE_INTERFACE SERVICE_INTERFACE} action.</p>
199<p>The following example shows how you might declare the
200{@link android.service.chooser.ChooserTargetService} in your manifest.</p>
201<pre>
202&lt;service android:name=".ChooserTargetService"
203 android:label="&#64;string/service_name"
204 android:permission="android.permission.BIND_CHOOSER_TARGET_SERVICE"&gt;
205 &lt;intent-filter&gt;
206 &lt;action android:name="android.service.chooser.ChooserTargetService" /&gt;
207 &lt;/intent-filter&gt;
208&lt;/service&gt;
209</pre>
210
211<p>For each activity that you want to expose to
212{@link android.service.chooser.ChooserTargetService}, add a
213{@code <meta-data>} element with the name
214{@code "android.service.chooser.chooser_target_service"} in your app manifest.
215</p>
216
217<pre>
218&lt;activity android:name=".MyShareActivity”
219 android:label="&#64;string/share_activity_label"&gt;
220 &lt;intent-filter>
221 &lt;action android:name="android.intent.action.SEND" /&gt;
222 &lt;/intent-filter>
223&lt;meta-data
224 android:name="android.service.chooser.chooser_target_service"
225 android:value=".ChooserTargetService" /&gt;
226&lt;/activity>
227</pre>
228
229<h2 id="voice-interactions">Voice Interactions</h2>
230<p>
231This preview provides a new voice interaction API which, together with
232<a href="https://developers.google.com/voice-actions/" class="external-link">Voice Actions</a>,
233allows you to build conversational voice experiences into your apps. Call the
234{@link android.app.Activity#isVoiceInteraction()} method to determine if a voice action triggered
235your activity. If so, your app can use the
236{@link android.app.VoiceInteractor} class to request a voice confirmation from the user, select
237from a list of options, and more.</p>
238
239<p>Most voice interactions originate from a user voice action. A voice interaction activity can
240also, however, start without user input. For example, another app launched through a voice
241interaction can also send an intent to launch a voice interaction. To determine if your activity
242launched from a user voice query or from another voice interaction app, call the
243{@link android.app.Activity#isVoiceInteractionRoot()} method. If another app launched your
244activity, the method returns {@code false}. Your app may then prompt the user to confirm that
245they intended this action.</p>
246
247<p>To learn more about implementing voice actions, see the
248<a href="https://developers.google.com/voice-actions/interaction/"
249class="external-link">Voice Actions developer site</a>.
250</p>
251
252<h2 id="assist">Assist API</h2>
253<p>
254This preview offers a new way for users to engage with your apps through an assistant. To use this
255feature, the user must enable the assistant to use the current context. Once enabled, the user
256can summon the assistant within any app, by long-pressing on the <strong>Home</strong> button.</p>
257<p>Your app can elect to not share the current context with the assistant by setting the
258{@link android.view.WindowManager.LayoutParams#FLAG_SECURE} flag. In addition to the
259standard set of information that the platform passes to the assistant, your app can share
260additional information by using the new {@link android.app.assist.AssistContent} class.</p>
261
262<p>To provide the assistant with additional context from your app, follow these steps:</p>
263
264<ol>
265<li>Implement the {@link android.app.Application.OnProvideAssistDataListener} interface.</li>
266<li>Register this listener by using
267{@link android.app.Application#registerOnProvideAssistDataListener(android.app.Application.OnProvideAssistDataListener) registerOnProvideAssistDataListener()}.</li>
268<li>In order to provide activity-specific contextual information, override the
269{@link android.app.Activity#onProvideAssistData(android.os.Bundle) onProvideAssistData()}
270callback and, optionally, the new
271{@link android.app.Activity#onProvideAssistContent(android.app.assist.AssistContent) onProvideAssistContent()}
272callback.
273</ol>
274
275<h2 id="notifications">Notifications</h2>
276<p>This preview adds the following API changes for notifications:</p>
277<ul>
278 <li>New {@link android.app.NotificationManager#INTERRUPTION_FILTER_ALARMS} filter level that
279 corresponds to the new <em>Alarms only</em> do not disturb mode.</li>
280 <li>New {@link android.app.Notification#CATEGORY_REMINDER} category value that is used to
281 distinguish user-scheduled reminders from other events
282 ({@link android.app.Notification#CATEGORY_EVENT}) and alarms
283 ({@link android.app.Notification#CATEGORY_ALARM}).</li>
284 <li>New {@link android.graphics.drawable.Icon} class that you can attach to your notifications
285 via the
286 {@link android.app.Notification.Builder#setSmallIcon(android.graphics.drawable.Icon) setSmallIcon()}
287 and {@link android.app.Notification.Builder#setLargeIcon(android.graphics.drawable.Icon) setLargeIcon()}
288 methods. Similarly, the
289 {@link android.app.Notification.Builder#addAction(int, java.lang.CharSequence, android.app.PendingIntent)
290 addAction()} method now accepts an {@link android.graphics.drawable.Icon} object instead of a
291 drawable resource ID.</li>
292 <li>New {@link android.app.NotificationManager#getActiveNotifications()} method that allows your
293 apps to find out which of their notifications are currently alive. To see an app implementation
294 that uses this feature, see the <a href="https://github.com/googlesamples/android-ActiveNotifications"
295 class="external-link">Active Notifications sample</a>.</li>
296</ul>
297
298<h2 id="bluetooth-stylus">Bluetooth Stylus Support</h2>
299<p>This preview provides improved support for user input using a Bluetooth stylus. Users can pair
300and connect a compatible Bluetooth stylus with their phone or tablet. While connected, position
301information from the touch screen is fused with pressure and button information from the stylus to
302provide a greater range of expression than with the touch screen alone. Your app can listen for
303stylus button presses and perform secondary actions, by registering
304{@link android.view.View.OnContextClickListener} and
305{@link android.view.GestureDetector.OnContextClickListener} objects in your activity.</p>
306
307<p>Use the {@link android.view.MotionEvent} methods and constants to detect stylus button
308interactions:</p>
309<ul>
310<li>If the user touches a stylus with a button on the screen of your app, the
311{@link android.view.MotionEvent#getToolType(int) getTooltype()} method returns
312{@link android.view.MotionEvent#TOOL_TYPE_STYLUS}.</li>
313<li>For apps targeting M Preview, the
314{@link android.view.MotionEvent#getButtonState() getButtonState()}
315method returns {@link android.view.MotionEvent#BUTTON_STYLUS_PRIMARY} when the user
316presses the primary stylus button. If the stylus has a second button, the same method returns
317{@link android.view.MotionEvent#BUTTON_STYLUS_SECONDARY} when the user presses it. If the user presses
318both buttons simultaneously, the method returns both values OR'ed together
319({@link android.view.MotionEvent#BUTTON_STYLUS_PRIMARY}|{@link android.view.MotionEvent#BUTTON_STYLUS_SECONDARY}).</li>
320<li>
321For apps targeting a lower platform version, the
322{@link android.view.MotionEvent#getButtonState() getButtonState()} method returns
323{@link android.view.MotionEvent#BUTTON_SECONDARY} (for primary stylus button press),
324{@link android.view.MotionEvent#BUTTON_TERTIARY} (for secondary stylus button press), or both.
325</li>
326</ul>
327
328<h2 id="ble-scanning">Improved Bluetooth Low Energy Scanning</h2>
329<p>
330If your app performs performs Bluetooth Low Energy scans, use the new
331{@link android.bluetooth.le.ScanSettings.Builder#setCallbackType(int) setCallbackType()}
332method to specify that you want the system to notify callbacks when it first finds, or sees after a
333long time, an advertisement packet matching the set {@link android.bluetooth.le.ScanFilter}. This
334approach to scanning is more power-efficient than what’s provided in the previous platform version.
335</p>
336
337<h2 id="hotspot">Hotspot 2.0 Release 1 Support</h2>
338<p>
339This preview adds support for the Hotspot 2.0 Release 1 spec on Nexus 6 and Nexus 9 devices. To
340provision Hotspot 2.0 credentials in your app, use the new methods of the
341{@link android.net.wifi.WifiEnterpriseConfig} class, such as
342{@link android.net.wifi.WifiEnterpriseConfig#setPlmn(java.lang.String) setPlmn()} and
343{@link android.net.wifi.WifiEnterpriseConfig#setRealm(java.lang.String) setRealm()}. In the
344{@link android.net.wifi.WifiConfiguration} object, you can set the
345{@link android.net.wifi.WifiConfiguration#FQDN} and the
346{@link android.net.wifi.WifiConfiguration#providerFriendlyName} fields.
347The new {@link android.net.wifi.ScanResult#isPasspointNetwork()} method indicates if a detected
348network represents a Hotspot 2.0 access point.
349</p>
350
351<h2 id="4K-display">4K Display Mode</h2>
352<p>The platform now allows apps to request that the display resolution be upgraded to 4K rendering
353on compatible hardware. To query the current physical resolution, use the new
354{@link android.view.Display.Mode} APIs. If the UI is drawn at a lower logical resolution and is
355upscaled to a larger physical resolution, be aware that the physical resolution the
356{@link android.view.Display.Mode#getPhysicalWidth()} method returns may differ from the logical
357resolution reported by {@link android.view.Display#getSize(android.graphics.Point) getSize()}.</p>
358
359<p>You can request the system to change the physical resolution in your app as it runs, by setting
360the {@link android.view.WindowManager.LayoutParams#preferredDisplayModeId} property of your app’s
361window. This feature is useful if you want to switch to 4K display resolution. While in 4K display
362mode, the UI continues to be rendered at the original resolution (such as 1080p) and is upscaled to
3634K, but {@link android.view.SurfaceView} objects may show content at the native resolution.</p>
364
365<h2 id="behavior-themeable-colorstatelists">Themeable ColorStateLists</h2>
366<p>Theme attributes are now supported in
367{@link android.content.res.ColorStateList} for devices running the M Preview. The
368{@link android.content.res.Resources#getColorStateList(int) getColorStateList()} and
369{@link android.content.res.Resources#getColor(int) getColor()} methods have been deprecated. If
370you are calling these APIs, call the new
371{@link android.content.Context#getColorStateList(int) getColorStateList()} or
372{@link android.content.Context#getColor(int) getColor()} methods instead. These methods are also
373available in the v4 appcompat library via {@link android.support.v4.content.ContextCompat}.</p>
374
375<h2 id="audio">Audio Features</h2>
376
377<p>This preview adds enhancements to audio processing on Android, including: </p>
378<ul>
379 <li>Support for the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MIDI" class="external-link">MIDI</a>
380protocol, with the new {@link android.media.midi} APIs. Use these APIs to send and receive MIDI
381events.</li>
382 <li>New {@link android.media.AudioRecord.Builder} and {@link android.media.AudioTrack.Builder}
383classes to create digital audio capture and playback objects respectively, and configure audio
384source and sink properties to override the system defaults.</li>
385 <li>API hooks for associating audio and input devices. This is particularly useful if your app
386allows users to start a voice search from a game controller or remote control connected to Android
387TV. The system invokes the new
388{@link android.app.Activity#onSearchRequested(android.view.SearchEvent) onSearchRequested()}
389callback when the user starts a search. To determine if the user's input device has a built-in
390microphone, retrieve the {@link android.view.InputDevice} object from that callback, then call the
391new {@link android.view.InputDevice#hasMicrophone()} method.</li>
392 <li>New {@link android.media.AudioManager#getDevices(int) getDevices()} method which lets you
393retrieve a list of all audio devices currently connected to the system. You can also register an
394{@link android.media.AudioDeviceCallback} object if you want the system to notify your app
395when an audio device connects or disconnects.</li>
396</ul>
397
398<h2 id="video">Video Features</h2>
399<p>This preview adds new capabilities to the video processing APIs, including:</p>
400<ul>
401<li>New {@link android.media.MediaSync} class which helps applications to synchronously render
402audio and video streams. The audio buffers are submitted in non-blocking fashion and are
403returned via a callback. It also supports dynamic playback rate.
404</li>
405<li>New {@link android.media.MediaDrm#EVENT_SESSION_RECLAIMED} event, which indicates that a
406session opened by the app has been reclaimed by the resource manager. If your app uses DRM sessions,
407you should handle this event and make sure not to use a reclaimed session.
408</li>
409<li>New {@link android.media.MediaCodec.CodecException#ERROR_RECLAIMED} error code, which indicates
410that the resource manager reclaimed the media resource used by the codec. With this exception, the
411codec must be released, as it has moved to terminal state.
412</li>
413<li>New {@link android.media.MediaCodecInfo.CodecCapabilities#getMaxSupportedInstances()
414getMaxSupportedInstances()} interface to get a hint for the max number of the supported
415concurrent codec instances.
416</li>
417<li>New {@link android.media.MediaPlayer#setPlaybackParams(android.media.PlaybackParams)
418setPlaybackParams()} method to set the media playback rate for fast or
419slow motion playback. It also stretches or speeds up the audio playback automatically in
420conjunction with the video.</li>
421</ul>
422
423<h2 id="camera">Camera Features</h2>
424<p>This preview includes the following new APIs for accessing the camera’s flashlight and for
425camera reprocessing of images:</p>
426
427<h3 id="flashlight">Flashlight API</h3>
428<p>If a camera device has a flash unit, you can call the
429{@link android.hardware.camera2.CameraManager#setTorchMode(java.lang.String, boolean) setTorchMode()}
430method to switch the flash unit’s torch mode on or off without opening the camera device. The app
431does not have exclusive ownership of the flash unit or the camera device. The torch mode is turned
432off and becomes unavailable whenever the camera device becomes unavailable, or when other camera
433resources keeping the torch on become unavailable. Other apps can also call
434{@link android.hardware.camera2.CameraManager#setTorchMode(java.lang.String, boolean) setTorchMode()}
435to turn off the torch mode. When the last app that turned on the torch mode is closed, the torch
436mode is turned off.</p>
437
438<p>You can register a callback to be notified about torch mode status by calling the
439{@link android.hardware.camera2.CameraManager#registerTorchCallback(android.hardware.camera2.CameraManager.TorchCallback, android.os.Handler) registerTorchCallback()}
440method. The first time the callback is registered, it is immediately called with the torch mode
441status of all currently known camera devices with a flash unit. If the torch mode is turned on or
442off successfully, the
443{@link android.hardware.camera2.CameraManager.TorchCallback#onTorchModeChanged(java.lang.String, boolean) onTorchModeChanged()}
444method is invoked.</p>
445
446<h3 id="reprocessing">Reprocessing API</h3>
447<p>The {@link android.hardware.camera2 Camera2} API is extended to support YUV and private
448opaque format image reprocessing. To determine if these reprocessing capabilities are available,
449call {@link android.hardware.camera2.CameraManager#getCameraCharacteristics(java.lang.String)
450getCameraCharacteristics()} and check for the
451{@link android.hardware.camera2.CameraCharacteristics#REPROCESS_MAX_CAPTURE_STALL} key. If a
452device supports reprocessing, you can create a reprocessable camera capture session by calling
453<a href="/reference/android/hardware/camera2/CameraDevice.html#createReprocessableCaptureSession(android.hardware.camera2.params.InputConfiguration, java.util.List<android.view.Surface>, android.hardware.camera2.CameraCaptureSession.StateCallback, android.os.Handler)"><code>createReprocessableCaptureSession()</code></a>,
454and create requests for input buffer reprocessing.</p>
455
456<p>Use the {@link android.media.ImageWriter} class to connect the input buffer flow to the camera
457reprocessing input. To get an empty buffer, follow this programming model:</p>
458
459<ol>
460<li>Call the {@link android.media.ImageWriter#dequeueInputImage()} method.</li>
461<li>Fill the data into the input buffer.</li>
462<li>Send the buffer to the camera by calling the
463{@link android.media.ImageWriter#queueInputImage(android.media.Image) queueInputImage()} method.</li>
464</ol>
465
466<p>If you are using a {@link android.media.ImageWriter} object together with an
467{@link android.graphics.ImageFormat#PRIVATE} image, your app cannot access the image
468data directly. Instead, pass the {@link android.graphics.ImageFormat#PRIVATE} image directly to the
469{@link android.media.ImageWriter} by calling the
470{@link android.media.ImageWriter#queueInputImage(android.media.Image) queueInputImage()} method
471without any buffer copy.</p>
472
473<p>The {@link android.media.ImageReader} class now supports
474{@link android.graphics.ImageFormat#PRIVATE} format image streams. This support allows your app to
475maintain a circular image queue of {@link android.media.ImageReader} output images, select one or
476more images, and send them to the {@link android.media.ImageWriter} for camera reprocessing.</p>
477
478<h2 id="afw">Android for Work Features</h2>
479<p>This preview includes the following new APIs for Android for Work:</p>
480<ul>
481 <li><strong>Enhanced controls for Corporate-Owned, Single-Use devices:</strong> The Device Owner
482can now control the following settings to improve management of
483Corporate-Owned, Single-Use (COSU) devices:
484 <ul>
485 <li>Disable or re-enable the keyguard with the
486{@link android.app.admin.DevicePolicyManager#setKeyguardDisabled(android.content.ComponentName, boolean)
487setKeyguardDisabled()} method.</li>
488 <li>Disable or re-enable the status bar (including quick settings, notifications, and the
489navigation swipe-up gesture that launches Google Now) with the
490{@link android.app.admin.DevicePolicyManager#setStatusBarDisabled(android.content.ComponentName, boolean) setStatusBarDisabled()}
491method.</li>
492 <li>Disable or re-enable safe boot with the {@link android.os.UserManager} constant
493{@link android.os.UserManager#DISALLOW_SAFE_BOOT}.</li>
494 <li>Prevent the screen from turning off while plugged in with the
495 {@link android.provider.Settings.Global#STAY_ON_WHILE_PLUGGED_IN} constant.</li>
496 </ul>
497 </li>
498 <li><strong>Silent install and uninstall of apps by Device Owner:</strong> A Device Owner can now
499silently install and uninstall applications using the {@link android.content.pm.PackageInstaller}
500APIs, independent of Google Play for Work. You can now provision devices through a Device Owner that
501fetches and installs apps without user interaction. This feature is useful for enabling one-touch
502provisioning of kiosks or other such devices without activating a Google account.</li>
503<li><strong>Silent enterprise certificate access: </strong> When an app calls
504{@link android.security.KeyChain#choosePrivateKeyAlias(android.app.Activity,android.security.KeyChainAliasCallback,java.lang.String[],java.security.Principal[],java.lang.String,int,java.lang.String) choosePrivateKeyAlias()},
505prior to the user being prompted to select a certificate, the Profile or Device Owner can now call
506the {@link android.app.admin.DeviceAdminReceiver#onChoosePrivateKeyAlias(android.content.Context, android.content.Intent, int, android.net.Uri, java.lang.String) onChoosePrivateKeyAlias()}
507method to provide the alias silently to the requesting application. This feature lets you grant
508managed apps access to certificates without user interaction.</li>
509<li><strong>Auto-acceptance of system updates.</strong> By setting a system update policy with
510{@link android.app.admin.DevicePolicyManager#setSystemUpdatePolicy(android.content.ComponentName, android.app.admin.SystemUpdatePolicy) setSystemUpdatePolicy()},
511a Device Owner can now auto-accept a system
512update, for instance in the case of a kiosk device, or postpone the update and prevent it being
513taken by the user for up to 30 days. Furthermore, an administrator can set a daily time window in
514which an update must be taken, for example during the hours when a kiosk device is not in use. When
515a system update is available, the system checks if the Work Policy Controller app has set a system
516update policy, and behaves accordingly.
517</li>
518<li>
519<strong>Delegated certificate installation:</strong> A Profile or Device Owner can now grant a
520third-party app the ability to call these {@link android.app.admin.DevicePolicyManager} certificate
521management APIs:
522<ul>
523 <li>{@link android.app.admin.DevicePolicyManager#getInstalledCaCerts(android.content.ComponentName)
524getInstalledCaCerts()}</li>
525 <li>{@link android.app.admin.DevicePolicyManager#hasCaCertInstalled(android.content.ComponentName,byte[])
526hasCaCertInstalled()}</li>
527 <li>{@link android.app.admin.DevicePolicyManager#installCaCert(android.content.ComponentName,byte[])
528installCaCert()}</li>
529 <li>{@link android.app.admin.DevicePolicyManager#uninstallCaCert(android.content.ComponentName,byte[])
530uninstallCaCert()}</li>
531 <li>{@link android.app.admin.DevicePolicyManager#uninstallAllUserCaCerts(android.content.ComponentName)
532uninstallAllUserCaCerts()}</li>
533 <li>{@link android.app.admin.DevicePolicyManager#installKeyPair(android.content.ComponentName,java.security.PrivateKey,java.security.cert.Certificate,java.lang.String)
534installKeyPair()}</li>
535</ul>
536</li>
537<img src="{@docRoot}preview/images/work-profile-screen.png"
538srcset="{@docRoot}preview/images/work-profile-screen.png 1x, {@docRoot}preview/images/work-profile-screen_2x.png 2x"
539style="float:right; margin:0 0 10px 20px" width="282" height="476" />
540<li><strong>Data usage tracking.</strong> A Profile or Device Owner can now query for the
541data usage statistics visible in <strong>Settings > Data</strong> usage by using the new
542{@link android.app.usage.NetworkStatsManager} methods. Profile Owners are automatically granted
543permission to query data on the profile they manage, while Device Owners get access to usage data
544of the managed primary user.</li>
545<li><strong>Runtime permission management:</strong>
546<p>A Profile or Device Owner can set a permission policy
547for all runtime requests of all applications using
548{@link android.app.admin.DevicePolicyManager#setPermissionPolicy(android.content.ComponentName, int)
549setPermissionPolicy()}, to either prompt the user to grant the permission or automatically grant or
550deny the permission silently. If the latter policy is set, the user cannot
551modify the selection made by the Profile or Device Owner within the app’s permissions screen in
552<strong>Settings</strong>.</p></li>
553<li><strong>VPN in Settings:</strong> VPN apps are now visible in
554 <strong>Settings > More > VPN</strong>.
555Additionally, the notifications that accompany VPN usage are now specific to how that VPN is
556configured. For Profile Owner, the notifications are specific to whether the VPN is configured
557for a managed profile, a personal profile, or both. For a Device Owner, the notifications are
558specific to whether the VPN is configured for the entire device.</li>
559<li><strong>Work status notification:</strong> A status bar briefcase icon now appears whenever
560an app from the managed profile has an activity in the foreground. Furthermore, if the device is
561unlocked directly to the activity of an app in the managed profile, a toast is displayed notifying
562the user that they are within the work profile.
563</li>
564</ul>
565
566<p class="note">
567 For a detailed view of all API changes in the M Developer Preview, see the <a href=
568 "{@docRoot}preview/download.html">API Differences Report</a>.
569</p>