1 page.title=In-app Billing Reference <span style="font-size:16px;">(IAB Version 2)</span> 2 excludeFromSuggestions=true 3 @jd:body 4 5 <div style="background-color:#fffdeb;width:100%;margin-bottom:1em;padding:.5em;">In-app Billing Version 2 is superseded. Please <a href="{@docRoot}google/play/billing/billing_overview.html#migration">migrate to Version 3</a> at your earliest convenience.</div> 6 <div id="qv-wrapper" style="margin-top:0;"> 7 <div id="qv"> 8 <h2>In this document</h2> 9 <ol> 10 <li><a href="#billing-codes">Server Response Codes</a></li> 11 <li><a href="#billing-interface">API Reference</a></li> 12 <li><a href="#billing-intents">Broadcast Intents</a></li> 13 <li><a href="#http-api">REST API for Subscriptions</a></li> 14 </ol> 15 16 <h2>Related Samples</h2> 17 <ol> 18 <li><a href="{@docRoot}google/play/billing/v2/billing_integrate.html#billing-download">Sample 19 Application (V2)</a></li> 20 </ol> 21 22 </div> 23 </div> 24 <p>This documentation provides technical reference information for using the In-app Billing Version 2 API. </p> 25 26 <h2 id="billing-codes">Server Response Codes</h2> 27 <p>The following table lists all of the server response codes that are sent from Google Play to 28 your application. Google Play sends these response codes asynchronously as 29 <code>response_code</code> extras in the <code>com.android.vending.billing.RESPONSE_CODE</code> 30 broadcast intent. Your application must handle all of these response codes.</p> 31 32 <p class="table-caption" id="response-codes-table"><strong>Table 6.</strong> Summary of response 33 codes returned by Google Play.</p> 34 35 <table> 36 <tr> 37 <th>Response Code</th> 38 <th>Value</th> 39 <th>Description</th> 40 </tr> 41 <tr> 42 <td><code>RESULT_OK</code></td> 43 <td>0</td> 44 <td>Indicates that the request was sent to the server successfully. When this code is returned in 45 response to a <code>CHECK_BILLING_SUPPORTED</code> request, indicates that billing is 46 supported.</td> 47 </tr> 48 <tr> 49 <td><code>RESULT_USER_CANCELED</code></td> 50 <td>1</td> 51 <td>Indicates that the user pressed the back button on the checkout page instead of buying the 52 item.</td> 53 </tr> 54 <tr> 55 <td><code>RESULT_SERVICE_UNAVAILABLE</code></td> 56 <td>2</td> 57 <td>Indicates that the network connection is down.</td> 58 </tr> 59 <tr> 60 <td><code>RESULT_BILLING_UNAVAILABLE</code></td> 61 <td>3</td> 62 <td>Indicates that In-app Billing is not available because the <code>API_VERSION</code> that you 63 specified is not recognized by the Google Play application or the user is ineligible for in-app 64 billing (for example, the user resides in a country that prohibits in-app purchases).</td> 65 </tr> 66 <tr> 67 <td><code>RESULT_ITEM_UNAVAILABLE</code></td> 68 <td>4</td> 69 <td>Indicates that Google Play cannot find the requested item in the application's product 70 list. This can happen if the product ID is misspelled in your <code>REQUEST_PURCHASE</code> 71 request or if an item is unpublished in the application's product list.</td> 72 </tr> 73 <tr> 74 <td><code>RESULT_DEVELOPER_ERROR</code></td> 75 <td>5</td> 76 <td>Indicates that an application is trying to make an In-app Billing request but the application 77 has not declared the com.android.vending.BILLING permission in its manifest. Can also indicate 78 that an application is not properly signed, or that you sent a malformed request, such as a 79 request with missing Bundle keys or a request that uses an unrecognized request type.</td> 80 </tr> 81 <tr> 82 <td><code>RESULT_ERROR</code></td> 83 <td>6</td> 84 <td>Indicates an unexpected server error. For example, this error is triggered if you try to 85 purchase an item from yourself, which is not allowed by Google Wallet.</td> 86 </tr> 87 </table> 88 </p> 89 90 <h3 id="billing-interface">In-app billing Version 2 API reference</h3> 91 92 <p>The following section describes the interface for Google Play's In-app Billing service. The 93 interface is defined in the <code>IMarketBillingService.aidl</code> file, which is included with the 94 In-app Billing <a 95 href="{@docRoot}google/play/billing/v2/billing_integrate.html#billing-download">sample 96 application</a>.</p> 97 <p>The interface consists of a single request method <code>sendBillingRequest()</code>. This method 98 takes a single {@link android.os.Bundle} parameter. The Bundle parameter includes several key-value 99 pairs, which are summarized in table 7.</p> 100 101 <p class="table-caption"><strong>Table 7.</strong> Description of Bundle keys passed in a 102 <code>sendBillingRequest()</code> request.</p> 103 104 <table> 105 106 <tr> 107 <th>Key</th> 108 <th>Type</th> 109 <th>Possible Values</th> 110 <th>Required?</th> 111 <th>Description</th> 112 </tr> 113 <tr> 114 <td><code>BILLING_REQUEST</code></td> 115 <td><code>String</code></td> 116 <td><code>CHECK_BILLING_SUPPORTED</code>, <code>REQUEST_PURCHASE</code>, 117 <code>GET_PURCHASE_INFORMATION</code>, <code>CONFIRM_NOTIFICATIONS</code>, or 118 <code>RESTORE_TRANSACTIONS</code></td> 119 <td>Yes</td> 120 <td>The type of billing request you are making with the <code>sendBillingRequest()</code> request. 121 The possible values are discussed more below this table.</td> 122 </tr> 123 <tr> 124 <td><code>API_VERSION</code></td> 125 <td><code>int</code></td> 126 <td> <ul> 127 <li><code>"2"</code> [<a href="#version_2">details</a>]</li> 128 <li><code>"1"</code> [<a href="#version_1">details</a>]</li> 129 </ul></td> 130 <td>Yes</td> 131 <td>The version of Google Play's In-app Billing service you want to use.</td> 132 </tr> 133 <tr> 134 <td><code>PACKAGE_NAME</code></td> 135 <td><code>String</code></td> 136 <td>A valid package name.</td> 137 <td>Yes</td> 138 <td>The name of the application that is making the request.</td> 139 </tr> 140 <tr> 141 <td><code>ITEM_ID</code></td> 142 <td><code>String</code></td> 143 <td>Any valid product identifier.</td> 144 <td>Required for <code>REQUEST_PURCHASE</code> requests.</td> 145 <td>The product ID of the item you are making a billing request for. Every in-app item that you 146 sell using Google Play's In-app Billing service must have a unique product ID, which you 147 specify on the Google Play Developer Console.</td> 148 </tr> 149 <tr> 150 <td><code>NONCE</code></td> 151 <td><code>long</code></td> 152 <td>Any valid <code>long</code> value.</td> 153 <td>Required for <code>GET_PURCHASE_INFORMATION</code> and <code>RESTORE_TRANSACTIONS</code> 154 requests.</td> 155 <td>A number used once. Your application must generate and send a nonce with each 156 <code>GET_PURCHASE_INFORMATION</code> and <code>RESTORE_TRANSACTIONS</code> request. The nonce is 157 returned with the <code>PURCHASE_STATE_CHANGED</code> broadcast intent, so you can use this value 158 to verify the integrity of transaction responses form Google Play.</td> 159 </tr> 160 <tr> 161 <td><code>NOTIFY_IDS</code></td> 162 <td>Array of <code>long</code> values</td> 163 <td>Any valid array of <code>long</code> values</td> 164 <td>Required for <code>GET_PURCHASE_INFORMATION</code> and <code>CONFIRM_NOTIFICATIONS</code> 165 requests.</td> 166 <td>An array of notification identifiers. A notification ID is sent to your application in an 167 <code>IN_APP_NOTIFY</code> broadcast intent every time a purchase changes state. You use the 168 notification to retrieve the details of the purchase state change.</td> 169 </tr> 170 <tr> 171 <td><code>DEVELOPER_PAYLOAD</code></td> 172 <td><code>String</code></td> 173 <td>Any valid <code>String</code> less than 256 characters long.</td> 174 <td>No</td> 175 <td>A developer-specified string that can be specified when you make a 176 <code>REQUEST_PURCHASE</code> request. This field is returned in the JSON string that contains 177 transaction information for an order. You can use this key to send supplemental information with 178 an order. For example, you can use this key to send index keys with an order, which is useful if 179 you are using a database to store purchase information. We recommend that you do not use this key 180 to send data or content.</td> 181 </tr> 182 </table> 183 184 <p>The <code>BILLING_REQUEST</code> key can have the following values:</p> 185 186 <ul> 187 <li><code>CHECK_BILLING_SUPPORTED</code> 188 <p>This request verifies that the Google Play application supports In-app Billing. You 189 usually send this request when your application first starts up. This request is useful if you 190 want to enable or disable certain UI features that are relevant only to In-app Billing.</p> 191 </li> 192 <li><code>REQUEST_PURCHASE</code> 193 <p>This request sends a purchase message to the Google Play application and is the foundation 194 of In-app Billing. You send this request when a user indicates that he or she wants to purchase 195 an item in your application. Google Play then handles the financial transaction by displaying 196 the checkout user interface.</p> 197 </li> 198 <li><code>GET_PURCHASE_INFORMATION</code> 199 <p>This request retrieves the details of a purchase state change. A purchase state change can 200 occur when a purchase request is billed successfully or when a user cancels a transaction during 201 checkout. It can also occur when a previous purchase is refunded. Google Play notifies your 202 application when a purchase changes state, so you only need to send this request when there is 203 transaction information to retrieve.</p> 204 </li> 205 <li><code>CONFIRM_NOTIFICATIONS</code> 206 <p>This request acknowledges that your application received the details of a purchase state 207 change. That is, this message confirms that you sent a <code>GET_PURCHASE_INFORMATION</code> 208 request for a given notification and that you received the purchase information for the 209 notification.</p> 210 </li> 211 <li><code>RESTORE_TRANSACTIONS</code> 212 <p>This request retrieves a user's transaction status for managed purchases (see <a 213 href="{@docRoot}google/play/billing/billing_admin.html#billing-purchase-type">Choosing a 214 Purchase Type</a> for more information). You should send this message only when you need to 215 retrieve a user's transaction status, which is usually only when your application is reinstalled 216 or installed for the first time on a device.</p> 217 </li> 218 </ul> 219 220 <p>Every In-app Billing request generates a synchronous response. The response is a {@link 221 android.os.Bundle} and can include one or more of the following keys:</p> 222 223 <ul> 224 <li><code>RESPONSE_CODE</code> 225 <p>This key provides status information and error information about a request.</p> 226 </li> 227 <li><code>PURCHASE_INTENT</code> 228 <p>This key provides a {@link android.app.PendingIntent}, which you use to launch the checkout 229 activity.</p> 230 </li> 231 <li><code>REQUEST_ID</code> 232 <p>This key provides you with a request identifier, which you can use to match asynchronous 233 responses with requests.</p> 234 </li> 235 </ul> 236 237 <p>Some of these keys are not relevant to certain types of requests. Table 8 shows which keys are 238 returned for each request type.</p> 239 240 <p class="table-caption"><strong>Table 8.</strong> Description of Bundle keys that are returned with 241 each In-app Billing request type.</p> 242 243 <table> 244 245 <tr> 246 <th>Request Type</th> 247 <th>Keys Returned</th> 248 <th>Possible Response Codes</th> 249 </tr> 250 <tr> 251 <td><code>CHECK_BILLING_SUPPORTED</code></td> 252 <td><code>RESPONSE_CODE</code></td> 253 <td><code>RESULT_OK</code>, <code>RESULT_BILLING_UNAVAILABLE</code>, <code>RESULT_ERROR</code>, 254 <code>RESULT_DEVELOPER_ERROR</code></td> 255 </tr> 256 <tr> 257 <td><code>REQUEST_PURCHASE</code></td> 258 <td><code>RESPONSE_CODE</code>, <code>PURCHASE_INTENT</code>, <code>REQUEST_ID</code></td> 259 <td><code>RESULT_OK</code>, <code>RESULT_ERROR</code>, <code>RESULT_DEVELOPER_ERROR</code></td> 260 </tr> 261 <tr> 262 <td><code>GET_PURCHASE_INFORMATION</code></td> 263 <td><code>RESPONSE_CODE</code>, <code>REQUEST_ID</code></td> 264 <td><code>RESULT_OK</code>, <code>RESULT_ERROR</code>, <code>RESULT_DEVELOPER_ERROR</code></td> 265 </tr> 266 <tr> 267 <td><code>CONFIRM_NOTIFICATIONS</code></td> 268 <td><code>RESPONSE_CODE</code>, <code>REQUEST_ID</code></td> 269 <td><code>RESULT_OK</code>, <code>RESULT_ERROR</code>, <code>RESULT_DEVELOPER_ERROR</code></td> 270 </tr> 271 <tr> 272 <td><code>RESTORE_TRANSACTIONS</code></td> 273 <td><code>RESPONSE_CODE</code>, <code>REQUEST_ID</code></td> 274 <td><code>RESULT_OK</code>, <code>RESULT_ERROR</code>, <code>RESULT_DEVELOPER_ERROR</code></td> 275 </tr> 276 </table> 277 278 <h3 id="billing-intents">In-app billing broadcast intents</h3> 279 280 <p>The following section describes the In-app Billing broadcast intents that are sent by the Google 281 Play application. These broadcast intents inform your application about In-app Billing actions 282 that have occurred. Your application must implement a {@link android.content.BroadcastReceiver} to 283 receive these broadcast intents, such as the <code>BillingReceiver</code> that's shown in the in-app 284 billing <a href="{@docRoot}google/play/billing/v2/billing_integrate.html#billing-download">sample 285 application</a>.</p> 286 287 <h4>com.android.vending.billing.RESPONSE_CODE</h4> 288 289 <p>This broadcast intent contains a Google Play response code, and is sent after you make an 290 In-app Billing request. A server response code can indicate that a billing request was successfully 291 sent to Google Play or it can indicate that some error occurred during a billing request. This 292 intent is not used to report any purchase state changes (such as refund or purchase information). 293 For more information about the response codes that are sent with this response, see <a 294 href="#billing-codes">Google Play Response Codes for In-app Billing</a>. The sample application 295 assigns this broadcast intent to a constant named <code>ACTION_RESPONSE_CODE</code>.</p> 296 297 <h5>Extras</h5> 298 299 <ul type="none"> 300 <li><code>request_id</code>—a <code>long</code> representing a request ID. A request ID 301 identifies a specific billing request and is returned by Google Play at the time a request is 302 made.</li> 303 <li><code>response_code</code>—an <code>int</code> representing the Google Play server 304 response code.</li> 305 </ul> 306 307 <h4>com.android.vending.billing.IN_APP_NOTIFY</h4> 308 309 <p>This response indicates that a purchase has changed state, which means a purchase succeeded, was 310 canceled, or was refunded. This response contains one or more notification IDs. Each notification ID 311 corresponds to a specific server-side message, and each messages contains information about one or 312 more transactions. After your application receives an <code>IN_APP_NOTIFY</code> broadcast intent, 313 you send a <code>GET_PURCHASE_INFORMATION</code> request with the notification IDs to retrieve the 314 message details. The sample application assigns this broadcast intent to a constant named 315 <code>ACTION_NOTIFY</code>.</p> 316 317 <h5>Extras</h5> 318 319 <ul type="none"> 320 <li><code>notification_id</code>—a <code>String</code> representing the notification ID for 321 a given purchase state change. Google Play notifies you when there is a purchase state change 322 and the notification includes a unique notification ID. To get the details of the purchase state 323 change, you send the notification ID with the <code>GET_PURCHASE_INFORMATION</code> request.</li> 324 </ul> 325 326 <h4>com.android.vending.billing.PURCHASE_STATE_CHANGED</h4> 327 328 <p>This broadcast intent contains detailed information about one or more transactions. The 329 transaction information is contained in a JSON string. The JSON string is signed and the signature 330 is sent to your application along with the JSON string (unencrypted). To help ensure the security of 331 your In-app Billing messages, your application can verify the signature of this JSON string. The 332 sample application assigns this broadcast intent to a constant named 333 <code>ACTION_PURCHASE_STATE_CHANGED</code>.</p> 334 335 <h5>Extras</h5> 336 337 <ul type="none"> 338 <li><code>inapp_signed_data</code>—a <code>String</code> representing the signed JSON 339 string.</li> 340 <li><code>inapp_signature</code>—a <code>String</code> representing the signature.</li> 341 </ul> 342 343 <p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> Your application should map the broadcast intents and extras 344 to constants that are unique to your application. See the <code>Consts.java</code> file in the 345 sample application to see how this is done.</p> 346 347 <p>The fields in the JSON string are described in the following table (see table 9):</p> 348 349 <p class="table-caption"><strong>Table 9.</strong> Description of JSON fields that are returned with 350 a <code>PURCHASE_STATE_CHANGED</code> intent.</p> 351 352 <table> 353 354 <tr> 355 <th>Field</th> 356 <th>Description</th> 357 </tr> 358 <tr> 359 <td>nonce</td> 360 <td>A number used once. Your application generates the nonce and sends it with the 361 <code>GET_PURCHASE_INFORMATION</code> request. Google Play sends the nonce back as part of the 362 JSON string so you can verify the integrity of the message.</td> 363 </tr> 364 <tr> 365 <td>notificationId</td> 366 <td>A unique identifier that is sent with an <code>IN_APP_NOTIFY</code> broadcast intent. Each 367 <code>notificationId</code> corresponds to a specify message that is waiting to be retrieved on 368 the Google Play server. Your application sends back the <code>notificationId</code> with the 369 <code>GET_PURCHASE_INFORMATION</code> message so Google Play can determine which messages you 370 are retrieving.</td> 371 </tr> 372 <tr> 373 <td>orderId</td> 374 <td>A unique order identifier for the transaction. This corresponds to the Google Wallet Order 375 ID.</td> 376 </tr> 377 <tr> 378 <td>packageName</td> 379 <td>The application package from which the purchase originated.</td> 380 </tr> 381 <tr> 382 <td>productId</td> 383 <td>The item's product identifier. Every item has a product ID, which you must specify in the 384 application's product list on the Google Play Developer Console.</td> 385 </tr> 386 <tr> 387 <td>purchaseTime</td> 388 <td>The time the product was purchased, in milliseconds since the epoch (Jan 1, 1970).</td> 389 </tr> 390 391 <tr> 392 <td>purchaseState</td> 393 <td>The purchase state of the order. Possible values are 0 (purchased), 1 (canceled), 2 394 (refunded), or 3 (expired, for subscription purchases only).</td> 395 </tr> 396 <tr> 397 <td>purchaseToken</td> 398 <td>A token that uniquely identifies a subscription purchase for a given item and user pair. 399 You can use the token to specify the subscription when querying for subscription validity. 400 401 <p><br><em>Supported only in In-app Billing API Version 2 and higher.</em></p></td> 402 </tr> 403 <tr> 404 <td>developerPayload</td> 405 <td>A developer-specified string that contains supplemental information about an order. You can 406 specify a value for this field when you make a <code>REQUEST_PURCHASE</code> request.</td> 407 </tr> 408 </table> 409 410 <!--<h2 id="other-intents">Other Intents</h2> 411 412 <p>The following Intents related to In-app Billing may be useful in your 413 implemention. </p> --> 414 415 <h3 id="http-api">REST API for subscriptions</h3> 416 <p>Google Play offers an HTTP-based API that you can use to remotely query the validity of a specific subscription at any time or cancel a subscription. The API is designed to be used from your backend servers as a way of securely managing subscriptions, as well as extending and integrating subscriptions with other services. See <a href="{@docRoot}google/play/billing/gp-purchase-status-api.html">Purchase Status API</a> for more information.</p> 417