Home | History | Annotate | Download | only in 4.0
      1 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
      2 <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
      3 <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
      4 <head>
      5 <title>Android 4.0 Compatibility Definition</title>
      6 <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="cdd.css"/>
      7 </head>
      8 <body>
      9 <div><img src="header.jpg" alt="Android logo"/></div>
     10 <h1>Android 4.0 Compatibility Definition</h1>
     11 <!--
     12 <span style="color: red; font-weight: bold;"><h2>DRAFT 3</h2></span><br/>
     13 <span style="color: red;">Last updated: November 17, 2012</span>
     14 -->
     15 <p>Revision 4<br/>
     16 Last updated: April 21, 2013
     17 </p>
     18 <p>Copyright &copy; 2012, Google Inc. All rights reserved.<br/>
     19 <a href="mailto:compatibility (a] android.com">compatibility (a] android.com</a>
     20 </p>
     21 
     22 <h2> Table of Contents</h2>
     23 <div style="margin-left: 2em;">
     24   <a href="#section-1">1. Introduction</a><br/>
     25   <a href="#section-2">2. Resources</a><br/>
     26   <a href="#section-3">3. Software</a><br/>
     27   <div style="margin-left: 2em;">
     28     <a href="#section-3.1">3.1. Managed API Compatibility</a><br/>
     29     <a href="#section-3.2">3.2. Soft API Compatibility</a><br/>
     30     <div style="margin-left: 2em;">
     31       <a href="#section-3.2.1">3.2.1. Permissions</a><br/>
     32       <a href="#section-3.2.2">3.2.2. Build Parameters</a><br/>
     33       <a href="#section-3.2.3">3.2.3. Intent Compatibility</a><br/>
     34       <div style="margin-left: 2em;">
     35         <a href="#section-3.2.3.1">3.2.3.1. Core Application Intents</a><br/>
     36         <a href="#section-3.2.3.2">3.2.3.2. Intent Overrides</a><br/>
     37         <a href="#section-3.2.3.3">3.2.3.3. Intent Namespaces</a><br/>
     38         <a href="#section-3.2.3.4">3.2.3.4. Broadcast Intents</a><br/>
     39       </div>
     40     </div>
     41     <a href="#section-3.3">3.3. Native API Compatibility</a><br/>
     42     <div style="margin-left: 2em;">
     43       <a href="#section-3.3.1">3.3.1 Application Binary Interfaces</a><br/>
     44     </div>
     45     <a href="#section-3.4">3.4. Web Compatibility</a><br/>
     46     <div style="margin-left: 2em;">
     47       <a href="#section-3.4.1">3.4.1. WebView Compatibility</a><br/>
     48       <a href="#section-3.4.2">3.4.2. Browser Compatibility</a><br/>
     49     </div>
     50     <a href="#section-3.5">3.5. API Behavioral Compatibility</a><br/>
     51     <a href="#section-3.6">3.6. API Namespaces</a><br/>
     52     <a href="#section-3.7">3.7. Virtual Machine Compatibility</a><br/>
     53     <a href="#section-3.8">3.8. User Interface Compatibility</a><br/>
     54     <div style="margin-left: 2em;">
     55       <a href="#section-3.8.1">3.8.1. Widgets</a><br/>
     56       <a href="#section-3.8.2">3.8.2. Notifications</a><br/>
     57       <a href="#section-3.8.3">3.8.3. Search</a><br/>
     58       <a href="#section-3.8.4">3.8.4. Toasts</a><br/>
     59       <a href="#section-3.8.5">3.8.5. Themes</a><br/>
     60       <a href="#section-3.8.6">3.8.6. Live Wallpapers</a><br/>
     61       <a href="#section-3.8.7">3.8.7. Recent Application Display</a><br/>
     62       <a href="#section-3.8.8">3.8.8. Input Management Settings</a><br/>
     63     </div>
     64     <a href="#section-3.9">3.9 Device Administration</a><br/>
     65     <a href="#section-3.10">3.10 Accessibility</a><br/>
     66     <a href="#section-3.11">3.11 Text-to-Speech</a><br/>
     67   </div>
     68   <a href="#section-4">4. Application Packaging Compatibility</a><br/>
     69   <a href="#section-5">5. Multimedia Compatibility</a><br/>
     70     <div style="margin-left: 2em;">
     71       <a href="#section-5.1">5.1. Media Codecs</a><br/>
     72       <a href="#section-5.2">5.2. Video Encoding</a><br/>
     73       <a href="#section-5.3">5.3. Audio Recording</a><br/>
     74       <a href="#section-5.4">5.4. Audio Latency</a><br/>
     75       <a href="#section-5.5">5.5. Network Protocols</a><br/>
     76     </div>
     77   <a href="#section-6">6. Developer Tool Compatibility</a><br/>
     78   <a href="#section-7">7. Hardware Compatibility</a><br/>
     79   <div style="margin-left: 2em;">
     80     <a href="#section-7.1">7.1. Display and Graphics</a><br/>
     81     <div style="margin-left: 2em;">
     82       <a href="#section-7.1.1">7.1.1. Screen Configuration</a><br/>
     83       <a href="#section-7.1.2">7.1.2. Display Metrics</a><br/>
     84       <a href="#section-7.1.3">7.1.3. Screen Orientation</a><br/>
     85       <a href="#section-7.1.4">7.1.4. 2D and 3D Graphics Accleration</a><br/>
     86       <a href="#section-7.1.5">7.1.5. Legacy Application Compatibility Mode</a><br/>
     87       <a href="#section-7.1.6">7.1.6. Screen Types</a><br/>
     88       <a href="#section-7.1.7">7.1.7. Screen Technology</a><br/>
     89     </div>
     90     <a href="#section-7.2">7.2. Input Devices</a><br/>
     91     <div style="margin-left: 2em;">
     92       <a href="#section-7.2.1">7.2.1. Keyboard</a><br/>
     93       <a href="#section-7.2.2">7.2.2. Non-touch Navigation</a><br/>
     94       <a href="#section-7.2.3">7.2.3. Navigation keys</a><br/>
     95       <a href="#section-7.2.4">7.2.4. Touchscreen input</a><br/>
     96       <a href="#section-7.2.5">7.2.5. Fake touch input</a><br/>
     97       <a href="#section-7.2.6">7.2.6. Microphone</a><br/>
     98     </div>
     99     <a href="#section-7.3">7.3. Sensors</a><br/>
    100     <div style="margin-left: 2em;">
    101       <a href="#section-7.3.1">7.3.1. Accelerometer</a><br/>
    102       <a href="#section-7.3.2">7.3.2. Magnetometer</a><br/>
    103       <a href="#section-7.3.3">7.3.3. GPS</a><br/>
    104       <a href="#section-7.3.4">7.3.4. Gyroscope</a><br/>
    105       <a href="#section-7.3.5">7.3.5. Barometer</a><br/>
    106       <a href="#section-7.3.6">7.3.6. Thermometer</a><br/>
    107       <a href="#section-7.3.7">7.3.7. Photometer</a><br/>
    108       <a href="#section-7.3.8">7.3.8. Proximity Sensor</a><br/>
    109     </div>
    110     <a href="#section-7.4">7.4. Data Connectivity</a><br/>
    111     <div style="margin-left: 2em;">
    112       <a href="#section-7.4.1">7.4.1. Telephony</a><br/>
    113       <a href="#section-7.4.2">7.4.2. IEEE 802.11 (WiFi)</a><br/>
    114       <a href="#section-7.4.3">7.4.3. Bluetooth</a><br/>
    115       <a href="#section-7.4.4">7.4.4. Near-Field Communications</a><br/>
    116       <a href="#section-7.4.5">7.4.5. Minimum Network Capability</a><br/>
    117     </div>
    118     <a href="#section-7.5">7.5. Cameras</a><br/>
    119     <div style="margin-left: 2em;">
    120       <a href="#section-7.5.1">7.5.1. Rear-Facing Camera</a><br/>
    121       <a href="#section-7.5.2">7.5.2. Front-Facing Camera</a><br/>
    122       <a href="#section-7.5.3">7.5.3. Camera API Behavior</a><br/>
    123       <a href="#section-7.5.4">7.5.4. Camera Orientation</a><br/>
    124     </div>
    125     <a href="#section-7.6">7.6. Memory and Storage</a><br/>
    126     <div style="margin-left: 2em;">
    127       <a href="#section-7.6.1">7.6.1. Minimum Memory and Storage</a><br/>
    128       <a href="#section-7.6.2">7.6.2. Application Shared Storage</a><br/>
    129     </div>
    130     <a href="#section-7.7">7.7. USB</a><br/>
    131   </div>
    132   <a href="#section-8">8. Performance Compatibility</a><br/>
    133   <a href="#section-9">9. Security Model Compatibility</a><br/>
    134   <div style="margin-left: 2em;">
    135     <a href="#section-9.1">9.1. Permissions</a><br/>
    136     <a href="#section-9.2">9.2. UID and Process Isolation</a><br/>
    137     <a href="#section-9.3">9.3. Filesystem Permissions</a><br/>
    138     <a href="#section-9.4">9.4. Alternate Execution Environments</a><br/>
    139   </div>
    140   <a href="#section-10">10. Software Compatibility Testing</a><br/>
    141   <div style="margin-left: 2em;">
    142     <a href="#section-10.1">10.1. Compatibility Test Suite</a><br/>
    143     <a href="#section-10.2">10.2. CTS Verifier</a><br/>
    144     <a href="#section-10.3">10.3. Reference Applications</a><br/>
    145   </div>
    146   <a href="#section-11">11. Updatable Software</a><br/>
    147   <a href="#section-12">12. Contact Us</a><br/>
    148   <a href="#appendix-A">Appendix A - Bluetooth Test Procedure</a><br/>
    149 </div>
    150 
    151 <div style="page-break-before: always;"></div>
    152 
    153 <a name="section-1"></a><h2>1. Introduction</h2>
    154 <p>This document enumerates the requirements that must be met in order for
    155 devices to be compatible with Android 4.0.</p>
    156 <p>The use of "must", "must not", "required", "shall", "shall not", "should",
    157 "should not", "recommended", "may" and "optional" is per the IETF standard
    158 defined in RFC2119 [<a href="#resources01">Resources, 1</a>].</p>
    159 <p>As used in this document, a "device implementer" or "implementer" is a
    160 person or organization developing a hardware/software solution running Android
    161 4.0. A "device implementation" or "implementation" is the hardware/software
    162 solution so developed.</p>
    163 <p>To be considered compatible with Android 4.0, device implementations
    164 MUST meet the requirements presented in this Compatibility Definition,
    165 including any documents incorporated via reference.</p>
    166 <p>Where this definition or the software tests described in <a
    167 href="#section-10">Section 10</a> is silent, ambiguous, or incomplete, it is
    168 the responsibility of the device implementer to ensure compatibility with
    169 existing implementations.</p>
    170 <p>For this reason, the Android Open Source Project [<a
    171 href="#resources03">Resources, 3</a>] is both the reference and preferred
    172 implementation of Android. Device implementers are strongly encouraged to base
    173 their implementations to the greatest extent possible on the "upstream" source
    174 code available from the Android Open Source Project. While some components can
    175 hypothetically be replaced with alternate implementations this practice is
    176 strongly discouraged, as passing the software tests will become substantially
    177 more difficult. It is the implementer's responsibility to ensure full
    178 behavioral compatibility with the standard Android implementation, including
    179 and beyond the Compatibility Test Suite. Finally, note that certain component
    180 substitutions and modifications are explicitly forbidden by this document.</p>
    181 <a name="section-2"></a><h2>2. Resources</h2>
    182 <ol>
    183 <a name="resources01"></a><li>IETF RFC2119 Requirement Levels: <a href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2119.txt">http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2119.txt</a></li>
    184 <a name="resources02"></a><li>Android Compatibility Program Overview: <a href="http://source.android.com/compatibility/index.html">http://source.android.com/compatibility/index.html</a></li>
    185 <a name="resources03"></a><li>Android Open Source Project: <a href="http://source.android.com/">http://source.android.com/</a></li>
    186 <a name="resources04"></a><li>API definitions and documentation: <a href="http://developer.android.com/reference/packages.html">http://developer.android.com/reference/packages.html</a></li>
    187 <a name="resources05"></a><li>Android Permissions reference: <a href="http://developer.android.com/reference/android/Manifest.permission.html">http://developer.android.com/reference/android/Manifest.permission.html</a></li>
    188 <a name="resources06"></a><li>android.os.Build reference: <a href="http://developer.android.com/reference/android/os/Build.html">http://developer.android.com/reference/android/os/Build.html</a></li>
    189 <a name="resources07"></a><li>Android 4.0 allowed version strings: <a href="http://source.android.com/compatibility/4.0/versions.html">http://source.android.com/compatibility/4.0/versions.html</a></li>
    190 <a name="resources08"></a><li>Renderscript: <a href="http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/graphics/renderscript.html">http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/graphics/renderscript.html</a></li>
    191 <a name="resources09"></a><li>Hardware Acceleration: <a href="http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/graphics/hardware-accel.html">http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/graphics/hardware-accel.html</a></li>
    192 <a name="resources10"></a><li>android.webkit.WebView class: <a href="http://developer.android.com/reference/android/webkit/WebView.html">http://developer.android.com/reference/android/webkit/WebView.html</a></li>
    193 <a name="resources11"></a><li>HTML5: <a href="http://www.whatwg.org/specs/web-apps/current-work/multipage/">http://www.whatwg.org/specs/web-apps/current-work/multipage/</a></li>
    194 <a name="resources12"></a><li>HTML5 offline capabilities: <a href="http://dev.w3.org/html5/spec/Overview.html#offline">http://dev.w3.org/html5/spec/Overview.html#offline</a></li>
    195 <a name="resources13"></a><li>HTML5 video tag: <a href="http://dev.w3.org/html5/spec/Overview.html#video">http://dev.w3.org/html5/spec/Overview.html#video</a></li>
    196 <a name="resources14"></a><li>HTML5/W3C geolocation API: <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/geolocation-API/">http://www.w3.org/TR/geolocation-API/</a></li>
    197 <a name="resources15"></a><li>HTML5/W3C webdatabase API: <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/webdatabase/">http://www.w3.org/TR/webdatabase/</a></li>
    198 <a name="resources16"></a><li>HTML5/W3C IndexedDB API: <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/IndexedDB/">http://www.w3.org/TR/IndexedDB/</a></li>
    199 <a name="resources17"></a><li>Dalvik Virtual Machine specification: available in the Android source code, at dalvik/docs</li>
    200 <a name="resources18"></a><li>AppWidgets: <a href="http://developer.android.com/guide/practices/ui_guidelines/widget_design.html">http://developer.android.com/guide/practices/ui_guidelines/widget_design.html</a></li>
    201 <a name="resources19"></a><li>Notifications: <a href="http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/ui/notifiers/notifications.html">http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/ui/notifiers/notifications.html</a></li>
    202 <a name="resources20"></a><li>Application Resources: <a href="http://code.google.com/android/reference/available-resources.html">http://code.google.com/android/reference/available-resources.html</a></li>
    203 <a name="resources21"></a><li>Status Bar icon style guide: <a href="http://developer.android.com/guide/practices/ui_guidelines/icon_design.html#statusbarstructure">http://developer.android.com/guide/practices/ui_guideline /icon_design.html#statusbarstructure</a></li>
    204 <a name="resources22"></a><li>Search Manager: <a href="http://developer.android.com/reference/android/app/SearchManager.html">http://developer.android.com/reference/android/app/SearchManager.html</a></li>
    205 <a name="resources23"></a><li>Toasts: <a href="http://developer.android.com/reference/android/widget/Toast.html">http://developer.android.com/reference/android/widget/Toast.html</a></li>
    206 <a name="resources24"></a><li>Themes: <a href="http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/ui/themes.html">http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/ui/themes.html</a></li>
    207 <a name="resources25"></a><li>R.style class: <a href="http://developer.android.com/reference/android/R.style.html">http://developer.android.com/reference/android/R.style.html</a></li>
    208 <a name="resources26"></a><li>Live Wallpapers: <a href="http://developer.android.com/resources/articles/live-wallpapers.html">http://developer.android.com/resources/articles/live-wallpapers.html</a></li>
    209 <a name="resources27"></a><li>Android Device Administration: <a href="http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/admin/device-admin.html">http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/admin/device-admin.html</a></li>
    210 <a name="resources28"></a><li>android.app.admin.DevicePolicyManager class: <a href="http://developer.android.com/reference/android/app/admin/DevicePolicyManager.html">http://developer.android.com/reference/android/app/admin/DevicePolicyManager.html</a></li>
    211 <a name="resources29"></a><li>Android Accessibility Service APIs: <a href="http://developer.android.com/reference/android/accessibilityservice/package-summary.html">http://developer.android.com/reference/android/accessibilityservice/package-summary.html</a></li>
    212 <a name="resources30"></a><li>Android Accessibility APIs: <a href="http://developer.android.com/reference/android/view/accessibility/package-summary.html">http://developer.android.com/reference/android/view/accessibility/package-summary.html</a></li>
    213 <a name="resources31"></a><li>Eyes Free project: <a href="http://http://code.google.com/p/eyes-free">http://code.google.com/p/eyes-free</a></li>
    214 <a name="resources32"></a><li>Text-To-Speech APIs: <a href="http://developer.android.com/reference/android/speech/tts/package-summary.html">http://developer.android.com/reference/android/speech/tts/package-summary.html</a></li>
    215 <a name="resources33"></a><li>Reference tool documentation (for adb, aapt, ddms): <a href="http://developer.android.com/guide/developing/tools/index.html">http://developer.android.com/guide/developing/tools/index.html</a></li>
    216 <a name="resources34"></a><li>Android apk file description: <a href="http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/fundamentals.html">http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/fundamentals.html</a></li>
    217 <a name="resources35"></a><li>Manifest files: <a href="http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/manifest/manifest-intro.html">http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/manifest/manifest-intro.html</a></li>
    218 <a name="resources36"></a><li>Monkey testing tool: <a href="http://developer.android.com/guide/developing/tools/monkey.html">http://developer.android.com/guide/developing/tools/monkey.html</a></li>
    219 <a name="resources37"></a><li>Android android.content.pm.PackageManager class and Hardware Features List: <a href="http://developer.android.com/reference/android/content/pm/PackageManager.html">http://developer.android.com/reference/android/content/pm/PackageManager.html</a></li>
    220 <a name="resources38"></a><li>Supporting Multiple Screens: <a href="http://developer.android.com/guide/practices/screens_support.html">http://developer.android.com/guide/practices/screens_support.html</a></li>
    221 <a name="resources39"></a><li>android.util.DisplayMetrics: <a href="http://developer.android.com/reference/android/util/DisplayMetrics.html">http://developer.android.com/reference/android/util/DisplayMetrics.html</a></li>
    222 <a name="resources40"></a><li>android.content.res.Configuration: <a href="http://developer.android.com/reference/android/content/res/Configuration.html">http://developer.android.com/reference/android/content/res/Configuration.html</a></li>
    223 <a name="resources41"></a><li>android.hardware.SensorEvent: <a href="http://developer.android.com/reference/android/hardware/SensorEvent.html">http://developer.android.com/reference/android/hardware/SensorEvent.html</a></li>
    224 <a name="resources42"></a><li>Bluetooth API: <a href="http://developer.android.com/reference/android/bluetooth/package-summary.html">http://developer.android.com/reference/android/bluetooth/package-summary.html</a></li>
    225 <a name="resources43"></a><li>NDEF Push Protocol: <a href="http://source.android.com/compatibility/ndef-push-protocol.pdf">http://source.android.com/compatibility/ndef-push-protocol.pdf</a></li>
    226 <a name="resources44"></a><li>MIFARE MF1S503X: <a href="http://www.nxp.com/documents/data_sheet/MF1S503x.pdf">http://www.nxp.com/documents/data_sheet/MF1S503x.pdf</a></li>
    227 <a name="resources45"></a><li>MIFARE MF1S703X: <a href="http://www.nxp.com/documents/data_sheet/MF1S703x.pdf">http://www.nxp.com/documents/data_sheet/MF1S703x.pdf</a></li>
    228 <a name="resources46"></a><li>MIFARE MF0ICU1: <a href="http://www.nxp.com/documents/data_sheet/MF0ICU1.pdf">http://www.nxp.com/documents/data_sheet/MF0ICU1.pdf</a></li>
    229 <a name="resources47"></a><li>MIFARE MF0ICU2: <a href="http://www.nxp.com/documents/short_data_sheet/MF0ICU2_SDS.pdf">http://www.nxp.com/documents/short_data_sheet/MF0ICU2_SDS.pdf</a></li>
    230 <a name="resources48"></a><li>MIFARE AN130511: <a href="http://www.nxp.com/documents/application_note/AN130511.pdf">http://www.nxp.com/documents/application_note/AN130511.pdf</a></li>
    231 <a name="resources49"></a><li>MIFARE AN130411: <a href="http://www.nxp.com/documents/application_note/AN130411.pdf">http://www.nxp.com/documents/application_note/AN130411.pdf</a></li>
    232 <a name="resources50"></a><li>Camera orientation API: <a href="http://developer.android.com/reference/android/hardware/Camera.html#setDisplayOrientation(int)">http://developer.android.com/reference/android/hardware/Camera.html#setDisplayOrientation(int)</a></li>
    233 <a name="resources51"></a><li>android.hardware.Camera: <a href="http://developer.android.com/reference/android/hardware/Camera.html">http://developer.android.com/reference/android/hardware/Camera.html</a></li>
    234 <a name="resources52"></a><li>Android Open Accessories: <a href="http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/usb/accessory.html">http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/usb/accessory.html</a></li>
    235 <a name="resources53"></a><li>USB Host API: <a href="http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/usb/host.html">http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/usb/host.html</a></li>
    236 <a name="resources54"></a><li>Android Security and Permissions reference: <a href="http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/security/security.html">http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/security/security.html</a></li>
    237 <a name="resources55"></a><li>Apps for Android: <a href="http://code.google.com/p/apps-for-android">http://code.google.com/p/apps-for-android</a></li>
    238 <a name="resources56"></a><li>android.app.DownloadManager class: <a href="http://developer.android.com/reference/android/app/DownloadManager.html">http://developer.android.com/reference/android/app/DownloadManager.html</a></li>
    239 <a name="resources57"></a><li>Android File Transfer: <a href="http://www.android.com/filetransfer">http://www.android.com/filetransfer</a></li>
    240 <a name="resources58"></a><li>Android Media Formats: <a href="http://developer.android.com/guide/appendix/media-formats.html">http://developer.android.com/guide/appendix/media-formats.html</a></li>
    241 <a name="resources59"></a><li>HTTP Live Streaming Draft Protocol: <a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-pantos-http-live-streaming-03">http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-pantos-http-live-streaming-03</a></li>
    242 <a name="resources60"></a><li>Motion Event API: <a href="http://developer.android.com/reference/android/view/MotionEvent.html">http://developer.android.com/reference/android/view/MotionEvent.html</a></li>
    243 <a name="resources61"></a><li>Touch Input Configuration: <a href="http://source.android.com/tech/input/touch-devices.html">http://source.android.com/tech/input/touch-devices.html</a></li>
    244 </ol>
    245 
    246 <p>Many of these resources are derived directly or indirectly from the Android
    247 4.0 SDK, and will be functionally identical to the information in that SDK's
    248 documentation. In any cases where this Compatibility Definition or the
    249 Compatibility Test Suite disagrees with the SDK documentation, the SDK
    250 documentation is considered authoritative. Any technical details provided in
    251 the references included above are considered by inclusion to be part of this
    252 Compatibility Definition.</p>
    253 
    254 <a name="section-3"></a><h2>3. Software</h2>
    255 <a name="section-3.1"></a><h3>3.1. Managed API Compatibility</h3>
    256 <p>The managed (Dalvik-based) execution environment is the primary vehicle for
    257 Android applications. The Android application programming interface (API) is
    258 the set of Android platform interfaces exposed to applications running in the
    259 managed VM environment. Device implementations MUST provide complete
    260 implementations, including all documented behaviors, of any documented API
    261 exposed by the Android 4.0 SDK [<a href="#resources04">Resources, 4</a>].</p>
    262 <p>Device implementations MUST NOT omit any managed APIs, alter API interfaces
    263 or signatures, deviate from the documented behavior, or include no-ops, except
    264 where specifically allowed by this Compatibility Definition.</p>
    265 <p>This Compatibility Definition permits some types of hardware for which
    266 Android includes APIs to be omitted by device implementations. In such cases,
    267 the APIs MUST still be present and behave in a reasonable way. See
    268 <a href="#section-7">Section 7</a> for specific requirements for this scenario.
    269 </p>
    270 
    271 <a name="section-3.2"></a><h3>3.2. Soft API Compatibility</h3>
    272 <p>In addition to the managed APIs from Section 3.1, Android also includes a
    273 significant runtime-only "soft" API, in the form of such things such as
    274 Intents, permissions, and similar aspects of Android applications that cannot
    275 be enforced at application compile time.</p>
    276 <a name="section-3.2.1"></a><h4>3.2.1. Permissions</h4>
    277 <p>Device implementers MUST support and enforce all permission constants as
    278 documented by the Permission reference page [<a
    279 href="#resources05">Resources, 5</a>]. Note that Section 10 lists additional
    280 requirements related to the Android security model.</p>
    281 <a name="section-3.2.3"></a><h4>3.2.3. Build Parameters</h4>
    282 <p>The Android APIs include a number of constants on the <code>android.os.Build</code>
    283 class [<a href="#resources06">Resources, 6</a>] that are intended to describe
    284 the current device. To provide consistent, meaningful values across device
    285 implementations, the table below includes additional restrictions on the
    286 formats of these values to which device implementations MUST conform.</p>
    287 <table>
    288 <tbody>
    289 <tr>
    290 <td><b>Parameter</b></td>
    291 <td><b>Comments</b></td>
    292 </tr>
    293 <tr>
    294 <td>android.os.Build.VERSION.RELEASE</td>
    295 <td>The version of the currently-executing Android system, in human-readable
    296 format. This field MUST have one of the string values defined in [<a
    297 href="#resources07">Resources, 7</a>].</td>
    298 </tr>
    299 <tr>
    300 <td>android.os.Build.VERSION.SDK</td>
    301 <td>The version of the currently-executing Android system, in a format
    302 accessible to third-party application code. For Android 4.0.1 - 4.0.2, this
    303 field MUST have the integer value 14. For Android 4.0.3 or greater, this field
    304 MUST have the integer value 15.</td>
    305 </tr>
    306 <tr>
    307 <td>android.os.Build.VERSION.SDK_INT</td>
    308 <td>The version of the currently-executing Android system, in a format
    309 accessible to third-party application code. For Android 4.0.1 - 4.0.2, this
    310 field MUST have the integer value 14. For Android 4.0.3 or greater, this field
    311 MUST have the integer value 15.</td>
    312 </tr>
    313 <tr>
    314 <td>android.os.Build.VERSION.INCREMENTAL</td>
    315 <td>A value chosen by the device implementer designating the specific build of
    316 the currently-executing Android system, in human-readable format. This value
    317 MUST NOT be re-used for different builds made available to end users. A typical use
    318 of this field is to indicate which build number or source-control change
    319 identifier was used to generate the build. There are no requirements on the
    320 specific format of this field, except that it MUST NOT be null or the empty
    321 string ("").</td>
    322 </tr>
    323 <tr>
    324 <td>android.os.Build.BOARD</td>
    325 <td>A value chosen by the device implementer identifying the specific internal
    326 hardware used by the device, in human-readable format. A possible use of this
    327 field is to indicate the specific revision of the board powering the device.
    328 The value of this field MUST be encodable as 7-bit ASCII and match the regular expression
    329 <code>"^[a-zA-Z0-9.,_-]+$"</code>.</td>
    330 </tr>
    331 <tr>
    332 <td>android.os.Build.BRAND</td>
    333 <td>A value chosen by the device implementer identifying the name of the
    334 company, organization, individual, etc. who produced the device, in
    335 human-readable format. A possible use of this field is to indicate the OEM
    336 and/or carrier who sold the device. The value of this field MUST be
    337 encodable as 7-bit ASCII and match the regular expression
    338 <code>"^[a-zA-Z0-9.,_-]+$"</code>.
    339 </td>
    340 </tr>
    341 <tr>
    342 <td>android.os.Build.CPU_ABI</td>
    343 <td>The name of the instruction set (CPU type + ABI convention) of native code.
    344 See <a href="#section-3.3">Section 3.3: Native API Compatibility</a>.
    345 </td>
    346 </tr>
    347 <tr>
    348 <td>android.os.Build.CPU_ABI2</td>
    349 <td>The name of the second instruction set (CPU type + ABI convention) of native code.
    350 See <a href="#section-3.3">Section 3.3: Native API Compatibility</a>.
    351 </td>
    352 </tr>
    353 <tr>
    354 <td>android.os.Build.DEVICE</td>
    355 <td>A value chosen by the device implementer identifying the specific
    356 configuration or revision of the body (sometimes called "industrial design")
    357 of the device. The value of this field MUST be encodable as 7-bit ASCII and
    358 match the regular expression <code>"^[a-zA-Z0-9.,_-]+$"</code>.</td>
    359 </tr>
    360 <tr>
    361 <td>android.os.Build.FINGERPRINT</td>
    362 <td>A string that uniquely identifies this build. It SHOULD be reasonably
    363 human-readable. It MUST follow this template:
    364 <br/><code>$(BRAND)/$(PRODUCT)/$(DEVICE):$(VERSION.RELEASE)/$(ID)/$(VERSION.INCREMENTAL):$(TYPE)/$(TAGS)</code><br/>
    365 For example:
    366 <br/><code>acme/mydevice/generic:4.0/IRK77/3359:userdebug/test-keys</code><br/>
    367 The fingerprint MUST NOT include whitespace characters. If other fields included in the
    368 template above have whitespace characters, they MUST be replaced in the build
    369 fingerprint with another character, such as the underscore ("_") character.
    370 The value of this field MUST be encodable as 7-bit ASCII.</td>
    371 </tr>
    372 <tr>
    373 <td>android.os.Build.HARDWARE</td>
    374 <td>The name of the hardware (from the kernel command line or /proc).  It SHOULD be
    375 reasonably human-readable. The value of this field MUST be encodable as 7-bit ASCII and
    376 match the regular expression <code>"^[a-zA-Z0-9.,_-]+$"</code>.</td>
    377 </tr>
    378 <tr>
    379 <td>android.os.Build.HOST</td>
    380 <td>A string that uniquely identifies the host the build was built on, in
    381 human readable format. There are no requirements on the specific format of
    382 this field, except that it MUST NOT be null or the empty string ("").</td>
    383 </tr>
    384 <tr>
    385 <td>android.os.Build.ID</td>
    386 <td>An identifier chosen by the device implementer to refer to a specific
    387 release, in human readable format. This field can be the same as
    388 android.os.Build.VERSION.INCREMENTAL, but SHOULD be a value sufficiently
    389 meaningful for end users to distinguish between software builds. The value of
    390 this field MUST be encodable as 7-bit ASCII and match the regular expression
    391 <code>"^[a-zA-Z0-9.,_-]+$"</code>.
    392 </td>
    393 </tr>
    394 <tr>
    395 <td>android.os.Build.MANUFACTURER</td>
    396 <td>The trade name of the Original Equipment Manufacturer (OEM) of the product.
    397 There are no requirements on the specific format of this field, except that it
    398 MUST NOT be null or the empty string ("").</td>
    399 </tr>
    400 <tr>
    401 <td>android.os.Build.MODEL</td>
    402 <td>A value chosen by the device implementer containing the name of the device
    403 as known to the end user. This SHOULD be the same name under which the device
    404 is marketed and sold to end users. There are no requirements on the specific
    405 format of this field, except that it MUST NOT be null or the empty string
    406 ("").</td>
    407 </tr>
    408 <tr>
    409 <td>android.os.Build.PRODUCT</td>
    410 <td>A value chosen by the device implementer containing the development name
    411 or code name of the product (SKU). MUST be human-readable, but is not necessarily
    412 intended for view by end users. The value of this field MUST be encodable as 7-bit
    413 ASCII and match the regular expression
    414 <code>"^[a-zA-Z0-9.,_-]+$"</code>.</td>
    415 </tr>
    416 <tr>
    417 <td>android.os.Build.SERIAL</td>
    418 <td>A hardware serial number, if available. The value of this field MUST be encodable
    419 as 7-bit ASCII and match the regular expression
    420 <code>"^([a-zA-Z0-9]{0,20})$"</code>.</td>
    421 </tr>
    422 <tr>
    423 <td>android.os.Build.TAGS</td>
    424 <td>A comma-separated list of tags chosen by the device implementer that
    425 further distinguish the build. For example, "unsigned,debug". The value of
    426 this field MUST be encodable as 7-bit ASCII and match the regular expression
    427 <code>"^[a-zA-Z0-9.,_-]+$"</code>.</td>
    428 </tr>
    429 <tr>
    430 <td>android.os.Build.TIME</td>
    431 <td>A value representing the timestamp of when the build occurred.</td>
    432 </tr>
    433 <tr>
    434 <td>android.os.Build.TYPE</td>
    435 <td>A value chosen by the device implementer specifying the runtime
    436 configuration of the build. This field SHOULD have one of the values
    437 corresponding to the three typical Android runtime configurations: "user",
    438 "userdebug", or "eng". The value of this field MUST be
    439 encodable as 7-bit ASCII and match the regular expression
    440 <code>"^[a-zA-Z0-9.,_-]+$"</code>.</td>
    441 </tr>
    442 <tr>
    443 <td>android.os.Build.USER</td>
    444 <td>A name or user ID of the user (or automated user) that generated the
    445 build. There are no requirements on the specific format of this field, except
    446 that it MUST NOT be null or the empty string ("").</td>
    447 </tr>
    448 </tbody>
    449 </table>
    450 <a name="section-3.2.3"></a><h4>3.2.3. Intent Compatibility</h4>
    451 <p>
    452 Device implementations MUST honor Android's loose-coupling Intent system, as
    453 described in the sections below. By "honored", it is meant that the device
    454 implementer MUST provide an Android Activity or Service that specifies a
    455 matching Intent filter and binds to and implements correct behavior for each
    456 specified Intent pattern.</p>
    457 <a name="section-3.2.3.1"></a><h4>3.2.3.1. Core Application Intents</h4>
    458 <p>The Android upstream project defines a number of core applications, such as
    459 contacts, calendar, photo gallery, music player, and so on. Device implementers
    460 MAY replace these applications with alternative versions.</p>
    461 <p>However, any such alternative versions MUST honor the same Intent patterns
    462 provided by the upstream project. For example, if a device contains an
    463 alternative music player, it must still honor the Intent pattern issued by
    464 third-party applications to pick a song.</p>
    465 <p>The following applications are considered core Android system
    466 applications:</p>
    467 <ul>
    468 <li>Desk Clock</li>
    469 <li>Browser</li>
    470 <li>Calendar</li>
    471 <li>Contacts</li>
    472 <!--<li>Email</li>-->
    473 <li>Gallery</li>
    474 <li>GlobalSearch</li>
    475 <li>Launcher</li>
    476 <!-- <li>LivePicker (that is, the Live Wallpaper picker application; MAY be omitted
    477 if the device does not support Live Wallpapers, per Section 3.8.5.)</li> -->
    478 <!-- <li>Messaging (AKA "Mms")</li> -->
    479 <li>Music</li>
    480 <!-- <li>Phone</li> -->
    481 <li>Settings</li>
    482 <!-- <li>SoundRecorder</li> -->
    483 </ul>
    484 <p>The core Android system applications include various Activity, or Service
    485 components that are considered "public".  That is, the attribute
    486 "android:exported" may be absent, or may have the value "true".</p>
    487 <p>For every Activity or Service defined
    488 in one of the core Android system apps that is not marked as non-public via an
    489 android:exported attribute with the value "false", device implementations MUST
    490 include a compontent of the same type implementing the same Intent filter
    491 patterns as the core Android system app.</p>
    492 <p>In other words, a device implementation MAY replace core Android system
    493 apps; however, if it does, the device implementation MUST support all Intent
    494 patterns defined by each core Android system app being replaced.</p>
    495 <a name="section-3.2.3.2"></a><h4>3.2.3.2. Intent Overrides</h4>
    496 <p>As Android is an extensible platform, device implementations MUST allow each
    497 Intent pattern referenced in Section 3.2.3.2 to be overridden by third-party
    498 applications. The upstream Android open source implementation allows this by
    499 default; device implementers MUST NOT attach special privileges to system
    500 applications' use of these Intent patterns, or prevent third-party
    501 applications from binding to and assuming control of these patterns. This
    502 prohibition specifically includes but is not limited to disabling the
    503 "Chooser" user interface which allows the user to select between multiple
    504 applications which all handle the same Intent pattern.</p>
    505 <a name="section-3.2.3.3"></a><h4>3.2.3.3. Intent Namespaces</h4>
    506 <p>Device implementations MUST NOT include any Android component that honors any
    507 new Intent or Broadcast Intent patterns using an ACTION, CATEGORY, or other
    508 key string in the android.* or com.android.* namespace.  Device implementers
    509 MUST NOT include any Android components that honor any new Intent or Broadcast
    510 Intent patterns using an ACTION, CATEGORY, or other key string in a package
    511 space belonging to another organization. Device implementers MUST NOT alter or
    512 extend any of the Intent patterns used by the core apps listed in Section
    513 3.2.3.1. Device implementations MAY include Intent patterns using
    514 namespaces clearly and obviously associated with their own organization.</p>
    515 <p>This prohibition is analogous to that specified for Java language classes
    516 in Section 3.6.</p>
    517 <a name="section-3.2.3.4"></a><h4>3.2.3.4. Broadcast Intents</h4>
    518 <p>Third-party applications rely on the platform to broadcast certain Intents
    519 to notify them of changes in the hardware or software environment.
    520 Android-compatible devices MUST broadcast the public broadcast Intents in
    521 response to appropriate system events. Broadcast Intents are described in the
    522 SDK documentation.</p>
    523 
    524 <a name="section-3.3"></a><h3>3.3. Native API Compatibility</h3>
    525 <a name="section-3.3.1"></a><h4>3.3.1 Application Binary Interfaces</h4>
    526 <p>Managed code running in Dalvik can call into native code provided in the
    527 application .apk file as an ELF .so file compiled for the appropriate device
    528 hardware architecture. As native code is highly dependent on the underlying
    529 processor technology, Android defines a number of Application Binary
    530 Interfaces (ABIs) in the Android NDK, in the file
    531 <code>docs/CPU-ARCH-ABIS.txt</code>. If a device implementation is compatible
    532 with one or more defined ABIs, it SHOULD implement compatibility with the
    533 Android NDK, as below.</p>
    534 <p>If a device implementation includes support for an Android ABI, it:</p>
    535 <ul>
    536 <li>MUST include support for code running in the managed environment to call
    537 into native code, using the standard Java Native Interface (JNI)
    538 semantics.</li>
    539 <li>MUST be source-compatible (i.e. header compatible) and binary-compatible
    540 (for the ABI) with each required library in the list below</li>
    541 <li>MUST accurately report the native Application Binary Interface (ABI)
    542 supported by the device, via the <code>android.os.Build.CPU_ABI</code>
    543 API</li>
    544 <li>MUST report only those ABIs documented in the latest version of the
    545 Android NDK, in the file <code>docs/CPU-ARCH-ABIS.txt</code></li>
    546 <li>SHOULD be built using the source code and header files available in the
    547 upstream Android open source project</li>
    548 </ul>
    549 <p>The following native code APIs MUST be available to apps that include
    550 native code:</p>
    551 <ul>
    552 <li>libc (C library)</li>
    553 <li>libm (math library)</li>
    554 <li>Minimal support for C++</li>
    555 <li>JNI interface</li>
    556 <li>liblog (Android logging)</li>
    557 <li>libz (Zlib compression)</li>
    558 <li>libdl (dynamic linker)</li>
    559 <li>libGLESv1_CM.so (OpenGL ES 1.0)</li>
    560 <li>libGLESv2.so (OpenGL ES 2.0)</li>
    561 <li>libEGL.so (native OpenGL surface management)</li>
    562 <li>libjnigraphics.so</li>
    563 <li>libOpenSLES.so (OpenSL ES 1.0.1 audio support)</li>
    564 <li>libOpenMAXAL.so (OpenMAX AL 1.0.1 support)</li>
    565 <li>libandroid.so (native Android activity support)</li>
    566 <li>Support for OpenGL, as described below</li>
    567 </ul>
    568 <p>Note that future releases of the Android NDK may introduce support for
    569 additional ABIs. If a device implementation is not compatible with an existing
    570 predefined ABI, it MUST NOT report support for any ABI at all.</p>
    571 <p>Native code compatibility is challenging. For this reason, it should be
    572 repeated that device implementers are VERY strongly encouraged to use the
    573 upstream implementations of the libraries listed above to help ensure
    574 compatibility.</p>
    575 
    576 <a name="section-3.4"></a><h3>3.4. Web Compatibility</h3>
    577 <a name="section-3.4.1"></a><h4>3.4.1. WebView Compatibility</h4>
    578 <p>The Android Open Source implementation uses the WebKit rendering engine to
    579 implement the <code>android.webkit.WebView</code>. Because it is not feasible
    580 to develop a comprehensive test suite for a web rendering system, device
    581 implementers MUST use the specific upstream build of WebKit in the WebView
    582 implementation.  Specifically:</p>
    583 <ul>
    584 <li>Device implementations' <code>android.webkit.WebView</code>
    585 implementations MUST be based on the 534.30 WebKit build from the upstream
    586 Android Open Source tree for Android 4.0. This build includes a specific set
    587 of functionality and security fixes for the WebView. Device implementers MAY
    588 include customizations to the WebKit implementation; however, any such
    589 customizations MUST NOT alter the behavior of the WebView, including rendering
    590 behavior.</li>
    591 <li>The user agent string reported by the WebView MUST be in this format:<br/>
    592     <code>Mozilla/5.0 (Linux; U; Android $(VERSION); $(LOCALE); $(MODEL) Build/$(BUILD)) AppleWebKit/534.30 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/4.0 Mobile Safari/534.30</code>
    593   <ul>
    594   <li>The value of the $(VERSION) string MUST be the same as the value for <code>android.os.Build.VERSION.RELEASE</code></li>
    595   <li>The value of the $(LOCALE) string SHOULD follow the ISO conventions for country code and language, and SHOULD refer to the current configured locale of the device</li>
    596   <li>The value of the $(MODEL) string MUST be the same as the value for <code>android.os.Build.MODEL</code></li>
    597   <li>The value of the $(BUILD) string MUST be the same as the value for <code>android.os.Build.ID</code></li>
    598   </ul>
    599 </li>
    600 </ul>
    601 <p>The WebView component SHOULD include support for as much of HTML5 [<a
    602 href="#resources11">Resources, 11</a>] as possible.
    603 Minimally, device implementations MUST support each of these APIs associated
    604 with HTML5 in the WebView:</p>
    605 <ul>
    606 <li>application cache/offline operation [<a href="#resources12">Resources, 12</a>]</li>
    607 <li>the &lt;video&gt; tag [<a href="#resources13">Resources, 13</a>]</li>
    608 <li>geolocation [<a href="#resources14">Resources, 14</a>]</li>
    609 </ul>
    610 <p>Additionally, device implementations MUST support the HTML5/W3C webstorage
    611 API [<a href="#resources15">Resources, 15</a>], and SHOULD support the
    612 HTML5/W3C IndexedDB API [<a href="#resources16">Resources, 16</a>]. <i>Note
    613 that as the web development standards bodies are transitioning to favor
    614 IndexedDB over webstorage, IndexedDB is expected to become a required
    615 component in a future version of Android.</i></p>
    616 <p>HTML5 APIs, like all JavaScript APIs, MUST be disabled by default in a
    617 WebView, unless the developer explicitly enables them via the usual Android
    618 APIs.</p>
    619 
    620 <a name="section-3.4.2"></a><h4>3.4.2. Browser Compatibility</h4>
    621 <p>Device implementations MUST include a standalone Browser application for
    622 general user web browsing. The standalone Browser MAY be based on a
    623 browser technology other than WebKit. However, even if an alternate Browser
    624 application is used, the <code>android.webkit.WebView</code> component
    625 provided to third-party applications MUST be based on WebKit, as described in
    626 Section 3.4.1.</p>
    627 <p>Implementations MAY ship a custom user agent string in the standalone
    628 Browser application.</p>
    629 <p>The standalone Browser application (whether based on the upstream
    630 WebKit Browser application or a third-party replacement) SHOULD include support
    631 for as much of HTML5 [<a href="#resources11">Resources, 11</a>] as possible.
    632 Minimally, device implementations MUST support each of these APIs associated
    633 with HTML5:</p>
    634 <ul>
    635 <li>application cache/offline operation [<a href="#resources12">Resources, 12</a>]</li>
    636 <li>the &lt;video&gt; tag [<a href="#resources13">Resources, 13</a>]</li>
    637 <li>geolocation [<a href="#resources14">Resources, 14</a>]</li>
    638 </ul>
    639 <p>Additionally, device implementations MUST support the HTML5/W3C webstorage
    640 API [<a href="#resources15">Resources, 15</a>], and SHOULD support the
    641 HTML5/W3C IndexedDB API [<a href="#resources16">Resources, 16</a>]. <i>Note
    642 that as the web development standards bodies are transitioning to favor
    643 IndexedDB over webstorage, IndexedDB is expected to become a required
    644 component in a future version of Android.</i></p>
    645 
    646 <a name="section-3.5"></a><h3>3.5. API Behavioral Compatibility</h3>
    647 <p>The behaviors of each of the API types (managed, soft, native, and web)
    648 must be consistent with the preferred implementation of the upstream Android
    649 open source project [<a href="#resources03">Resources, 3</a>]. Some specific areas
    650 of compatibility are:</p>
    651 <ul>
    652 <li>Devices MUST NOT change the behavior or semantics of a standard Intent</li>
    653 <li>Devices MUST NOT alter the lifecycle or lifecycle semantics of a
    654     particular type of system component (such as Service, Activity,
    655     ContentProvider, etc.)</li>
    656 <li>Devices MUST NOT change the semantics of a standard permission</li>
    657 </ul>
    658 <p>The above list is not comprehensive. The Compatibility Test Suite (CTS)
    659 tests significant portions of the platform for behavioral compatibility, but
    660 not all. It is the responsibility of the implementer to ensure behavioral
    661 compatibility with the Android Open Source Project.  For this reason, device
    662 implementers SHOULD use the source code available via the Android Open Source
    663 Project where possible, rather than re-implement significant parts of the
    664 system.</p>
    665 
    666 
    667 <a name="section-3.6"></a><h3>3.6. API Namespaces</h3>
    668 <p>Android follows the package and class namespace conventions defined by the
    669 Java programming language. To ensure compatibility with third-party
    670 applications, device implementers MUST NOT make any prohibited modifications
    671 (see below) to these package namespaces:</p>
    672 <ul>
    673 <li>java.*</li>
    674 <li>javax.*</li>
    675 <li>sun.*</li>
    676 <li>android.*</li>
    677 <li>com.android.*</li>
    678 </ul>
    679 <p>Prohibited modifications include:</p>
    680 <ul>
    681 <li>Device implementations MUST NOT modify the publicly exposed APIs on the
    682 Android platform by changing any method or class signatures, or by removing
    683 classes or class fields.</li>
    684 <li>Device implementers MAY modify the underlying implementation of the APIs,
    685 but such modifications MUST NOT impact the stated behavior and Java-language
    686 signature of any publicly exposed APIs.</li>
    687 <li>Device implementers MUST NOT add any publicly exposed elements (such as
    688 classes or interfaces, or fields or methods to existing classes or interfaces)
    689 to the APIs above.</li>
    690 </ul>
    691 <p>A "publicly exposed element" is any construct which is not decorated with
    692 the "@hide" marker as used in the upstream Android source code. In other
    693 words, device implementers MUST NOT expose new APIs or alter existing APIs in
    694 the namespaces noted above. Device implementers MAY make internal-only
    695 modifications, but those modifications MUST NOT be advertised or otherwise
    696 exposed to developers.</p>
    697 <p>Device implementers MAY add custom APIs, but any such APIs MUST NOT be in a
    698 namespace owned by or referring to another organization. For instance, device
    699 implementers MUST NOT add APIs to the com.google.* or similar namespace; only
    700 Google may do so. Similarly, Google MUST NOT add APIs to other companies'
    701 namespaces. Additionally, if a device implementation includes custom APIs
    702 outside the standard Android namespace, those APIs MUST be packaged in an
    703 Android shared library so that only apps that explicitly use them (via the
    704 <code>&lt;uses-library&gt;</code> mechanism) are affected by the increased
    705 memory usage of such APIs.</p>
    706 <p>If a device implementer proposes to improve one of the package namespaces
    707 above (such as by adding useful new functionality to an existing API, or
    708 adding a new API), the implementer SHOULD visit source.android.com and begin
    709 the process for contributing changes and code, according to the information on
    710 that site.</p>
    711 <p>Note that the restrictions above correspond to standard conventions for
    712 naming APIs in the Java programming language; this section simply aims to
    713 reinforce those conventions and make them binding through inclusion in this
    714 compatibility definition.</p>
    715 
    716 <a name="section-3.7"></a><h3>3.7. Virtual Machine Compatibility</h3>
    717 <p>Device implementations MUST support the full Dalvik Executable (DEX)
    718 bytecode specification and Dalvik Virtual Machine semantics [<a
    719 href="#resources17">Resources, 17</a>].</p>
    720 <p>Device implementations MUST configure Dalvik to allocate memory in
    721 accordance with the upstream Android platform, and as specified by the following
    722 table.  (See <a href="#section-7.1.1">Section 7.1.1</a> for screen size and screen
    723 density definitions.)</p>
    724 
    725 <p>Note that memory values specified below are considered minimum values,
    726 and device implementations MAY allocate more memory per application.</p>
    727 <table>
    728 <tbody>
    729 <tr>
    730 <td><b>Screen Size</b></td>
    731 <td><b>Screen Density</b></td>
    732 <td><b>Application Memory</b></td>
    733 </tr>
    734 <tr>
    735 <td>small / normal / large</td>
    736 <td>ldpi / mdpi</td>
    737 <td>16MB</td>
    738 </tr>
    739 <tr>
    740 <td>small / normal / large</td>
    741 <td>tvdpi / hdpi</td>
    742 <td>32MB</td>
    743 </tr>
    744 <tr>
    745 <td>small / normal / large</td>
    746 <td>xhdpi</td>
    747 <td>64MB</td>
    748 </tr>
    749 <tr>
    750 <td>xlarge</td>
    751 <td>mdpi</td>
    752 <td>32MB</td>
    753 </tr>
    754 <tr>
    755 <td>xlarge</td>
    756 <td>tvdpi / hdpi</td>
    757 <td>64MB</td>
    758 </tr>
    759 <tr>
    760 <td>xlarge</td>
    761 <td>xhdpi</td>
    762 <td>128MB</td>
    763 </tr>
    764 </tbody>
    765 </table>
    766 
    767 <a name="section-3.8"></a><h3>3.8. User Interface Compatibility</h3>
    768 <a name="section-3.8.1"></a><h4>3.8.1. Widgets</h4>
    769 <p>Android defines a component type and corresponding API and lifecycle that
    770 allows applications to expose an "AppWidget" to the end user [<a
    771 href="#resources18">Resources, 18</a>].
    772 The Android Open Source reference release includes a Launcher application that
    773 includes user interface affordances allowing the user to add, view, and remove
    774 AppWidgets from the home screen.</p>
    775 <p>Device implementations MAY substitute an alternative to the reference Launcher
    776 (i.e. home screen).  Alternative Launchers SHOULD include built-in support for
    777 AppWidgets, and expose user interface affordances to add, configure, view, and
    778 remove AppWidgets directly within the Launcher. Alternative Launchers MAY omit
    779 these user interface elements; however, if they are omitted, the device
    780 implementation MUST provide a separate application accessible from the Launcher
    781 that allows users to add, configure, view, and remove AppWidgets.</p>
    782 <p>Device implementations MUST be capable of rendering widgets that are 4 x 4
    783 in the standard grid size. (See the App Widget Design Guidelines in the Android
    784 SDK documentation [<a
    785 href="#resources18">Resources, 18</a>] for details.</p>
    786 <a name="section-3.8.2"></a><h4>3.8.2. Notifications</h4>
    787 <p>Android includes APIs that allow developers to notify users of notable
    788 events [<a href="#resources19">Resources, 19</a>], using hardware and software
    789 features of the device.</p>
    790 <p>Some APIs allow applications to perform notifications or attract attention
    791 using hardware, specifically sound, vibration, and light. Device implementations
    792 MUST support notifications that use hardware features, as described in the SDK
    793 documentation, and to the extent possible with the device implementation
    794 hardware. For instance, if a device implementation includes a vibrator, it
    795 MUST correctly implement the vibration APIs. If a device implementation lacks
    796 hardware, the corresponding APIs MUST be implemented as no-ops. Note that this
    797 behavior is further detailed in <a href="#section-7">Section 7.</a></p>
    798 <p>Additionally, the implementation MUST correctly render all resources
    799 (icons, sound files, etc.) provided for in the APIs [<a
    800 href="#resources20">Resources, 20</a>], or in the
    801 Status/System Bar icon style guide [<a href="#resources21">Resources, 21</a>].
    802 Device implementers MAY provide an alternative user experience for
    803 notifications than that provided by the reference Android Open Source
    804 implementation; however, such alternative notification systems MUST support
    805 existing notification resources, as above.</p>
    806 <p>Android 4.0 includes support for rich notifications, such as interactive
    807 Views for ongoing notifications. Device implementations MUST properly display
    808 and execute rich notifications, as documented in the Android APIs.</p>
    809 <a name="section-3.8.3"></a><h4>3.8.3. Search</h4>
    810 <p>Android includes APIs [<a href="#resources22">Resources, 22</a>] that allow
    811 developers to incorporate search into their applications, and expose their
    812 application's data into the global system search. Generally speaking, this
    813 functionality consists of a single, system-wide user interface that allows users
    814 to enter queries, displays suggestions as users type, and displays results. The
    815 Android APIs allow developers to reuse this interface to provide search within
    816 their own apps, and allow developers to supply results to the common global
    817 search user interface.</p>
    818 <p>Device implementations MUST include a single, shared, system-wide search
    819 user interface capable of real-time suggestions in response to user input.
    820 Device implementations MUST implement the APIs that allow developers to reuse
    821 this user interface to provide search within their own applications.  Device
    822 implementations MUST implement the APIs that allow third-party applications to
    823 add suggestions to the search box when it is run in global search mode. If no
    824 third-party applications are installed that make use of this functionality,
    825 the default behavior SHOULD be to display web search engine results and
    826 suggestions.</p>
    827 <a name="section-3.8.4"></a><h4>3.8.4. Toasts</h4>
    828 <p>Applications can use the "Toast" API (defined in [<a
    829 href="#resources23">Resources, 23</a>]) to
    830 display short non-modal strings to the end user, that disappear after a brief
    831 period of time. Device implementations MUST display Toasts from applications
    832 to end users in some high-visibility manner.</p>
    833 
    834 <a name="section-3.8.5"></a><h4>3.8.5. Themes</h4>
    835 <p>Android provides "themes" as a mechanism for applications to apply styles
    836 across an entire Activity or application. Android 3.0 introduced a new "Holo"
    837 or "holographic" theme as a set of defined styles for application developers to
    838 use if they want to match the Holo theme look and feel as defined by the Android
    839 SDK [<a href="#resources24">Resources, 24</a>]. Device implementations MUST NOT
    840 alter any of the Holo theme attributes exposed to applications
    841 [<a href="#resources25">Resources, 25</a>].</p>
    842 <p>Android 4.0 introduces a new "Device Default" theme as a set of defined
    843 styles for application developers to use if they want to match the look and feel
    844 of the device theme as defined by the device implementer. Device implementations
    845 MAY modify the DeviceDefault theme attributes exposed to applications
    846 [<a href="#resources25">Resources, 25</a>].</p>
    847 
    848 <a name="section-3.8.6"></a><h4>3.8.6. Live Wallpapers</h4>
    849 <p>Android defines a component type and corresponding API and lifecycle that
    850 allows applications to expose one or more "Live Wallpapers" to the end user
    851 [<a href="#resources26">Resources, 26</a>]. Live Wallpapers are animations,
    852 patterns, or similar images with limited input capabilities that display as a
    853 wallpaper, behind other applications.</p>
    854 <p>Hardware is considered capable of reliably running live wallpapers if it
    855 can run all live wallpapers, with no limitations on functionality, at a
    856 reasonable framerate with no adverse affects on other applications. If
    857 limitations in the hardware cause wallpapers and/or applications to crash,
    858 malfunction, consume excessive CPU or battery power, or run at unacceptably
    859 low frame rates, the hardware is considered incapable of running live
    860 wallpaper. As an example, some live wallpapers may use an Open GL 1.0 or 2.0
    861 context to render their content. Live wallpaper will not run reliably on
    862 hardware that does not support multiple OpenGL contexts because the live
    863 wallpaper use of an OpenGL context may conflict with other applications that
    864 also use an OpenGL context.</p>
    865 <p>Device implementations capable of running live wallpapers reliably as
    866 described above SHOULD implement live wallpapers. Device implementations
    867 determined to not run live wallpapers reliably as described above MUST NOT
    868 implement live wallpapers.</p>
    869 <a name="section-3.8.7"></a><h4>3.8.7. Recent Application Display</h4>
    870 <p>The upstream Android 4.0 source code includes a user interface for
    871 displaying recent applications using a thumbnail image of the application's
    872 graphical state at the moment the user last left the application. Device
    873 implementations MAY alter or eliminate this user interface; however, a future
    874 version of Android is planned to make more extensive use of this
    875 functionality. Device implementations are strongly encouraged to use the
    876 upstream Android 4.0 user interface (or a similar thumbnail-based interface)
    877 for recent applications, or else they may not be compatible with a future
    878 version of Android.</p>
    879 <a name="section-3.8.8"></a><h4>3.8.8. Input Management Settings</h4>
    880 <p>Android 4.0 includes support for Input Management Engines. The Android 4.0
    881 APIs allow custom app IMEs to specify user-tunable settings. Device
    882 implementations MUST include a way for the user to access IME settings at all
    883 times when an IME that provides such user settings is displayed.</p>
    884 
    885 <a name="section-3.9"></a><h3>3.9 Device Administration</h3>
    886 <p>Android 4.0 includes features that allow security-aware applications
    887 to perform device administration functions at the system level, such as enforcing
    888 password policies or performing remote wipe, through the Android Device
    889 Administration API [<a href="#resources27">Resources, 27</a>]. Device
    890 implementations MUST provide an implementation of the <code>DevicePolicyManager
    891 </code> class [<a href="#resources28">Resources, 28</a>], and SHOULD support
    892 the full range of device administration policies defined in the Android SDK
    893 documentation [<a href="#resources27">Resources, 27</a>].</p>
    894 
    895 <p>If device implementations do not support the full range of device administration
    896 policies, they MUST NOT allow device administration applications to be enabled.
    897 Specifically, if a device does not support all device administration policies,
    898 the device implementation MUST respond to the
    899 <code>android.app.admin.DevicePolicyManager.ACTION_ADD_DEVICE_ADMIN</code> intent,
    900 but MUST dislpay a message notifying the user that the device does not support
    901 device administration.</p>
    902 
    903 <a name="section-3.10"></a><h3>3.10 Accessibility</h3>
    904 <p>Android 4.0 provides an accessibility layer that helps users with disabilities
    905 to navigate their devices more easily. In addition, Android 4.0 provides
    906 platform APIs that enable accessibility service implementations to receive
    907 callbacks for user and system events and generate alternate feedback mechanisms,
    908 such as text-to-speech, haptic feedback, and trackball/d-pad navigation
    909 [<a href="#resources29">Resources, 29</a>]. Device implementations MUST provide an
    910 implementation of the Android accessibility framework consistent with the
    911 default Android implementation.  Specifically, device implementations MUST meet
    912 the following requirements.</p>
    913 <ul>
    914  <li>Device implementations MUST support third party accessibility service
    915      implementations through the <code>android.accessibilityservice</code>
    916      APIs [<a href="#resources30">Resources, 30</a>].</li>
    917  <li>Device implementations MUST generate <code>AccessibilityEvent</code>s 
    918      and deliver these events to all registered <code>AccessibilityService
    919      </code> implementations in a manner consistent with the default Android
    920      implementation.</li>
    921  <li>Device implementations MUST provide a user-accessible mechanism to enable
    922      and disable accessibility services, and MUST display this interface in
    923      response to the
    924      <code>android.provider.Settings.ACTION_ACCESSIBILITY_SETTINGS</code>
    925      intent.</li>
    926 </ul>
    927 <p>Additionally, device implementations SHOULD provide an implementation
    928 of an accessibility service on the device, and SHOULD provide a mechanism
    929 for users to enable the accessibility service during device setup.  An open
    930 source implementation of an accessibility service is available from the Eyes
    931 Free project [<a href="#resources31">Resources, 31</a>].</p>
    932 
    933 <a name="section-3.11"></a><h3>3.11 Text-to-Speech</h3>
    934 <p>Android 4.0 includes APIs that allow applications to make use of
    935 text-to-speech (TTS) services, and allows service providers to provide
    936 implementations of TTS services [<a href="#resources32">Resources, 32</a>].
    937 Device implementations MUST meet these requirements related to the Android TTS
    938 framework:</p>
    939 <ul>
    940   <li>Device implementations MUST support the Android TTS framework APIs and
    941       SHOULD include a TTS engine supporting the languages available on the
    942       device. Note that the upstream Android open source software includes a
    943       full-featured TTS engine implementation.</li>
    944   <li>Device implementations MUST support installation of third-party TTS
    945       engines.</li>
    946   <li>Device implementations MUST provide a user-accessible interface that allows
    947       users to select a TTS engine for use at the system level.</li>
    948 </ul>
    949 
    950 <a name="section-4"></a><h2>4. Application Packaging Compatibility</h2>
    951 <p>Device implementations MUST install and run Android ".apk" files as
    952 generated by the "aapt" tool included in the official Android SDK [<a
    953 href="#resources33">Resources, 33</a>].</p>
    954 <p>Devices implementations MUST NOT extend either the .apk [<a
    955 href="#resources34">Resources, 34</a>], Android Manifest [<a
    956 href="#resources35">Resources, 35</a>],
    957 Dalvik bytecode [<a href="#resources17">Resources, 17</a>], or renderscript
    958 bytecode formats in such a way that would prevent those files from installing
    959 and running correctly on other compatible devices. Device implementers SHOULD
    960 use the reference upstream implementation of Dalvik, and the reference
    961 implementation's package management system.</p>
    962 
    963 <a name="section-5"></a><h2>5. Multimedia Compatibility</h2>
    964 <p>Device implementations MUST include at least one form of audio output, such as
    965 speakers, headphone jack, external speaker connection, etc.</p>
    966 <a name="section-5.1"></a><h3>5.1. Media Codecs</h3>
    967 <p>Device implementations MUST support the core media formats specified
    968 in the Android SDK documentation [<a href="#resources58">Resources, 58</a>] except
    969 where explicitly permitted in this document. Specifically, device implementations
    970 MUST support the media formats, encoders, decoders, file types and container
    971 formats defined in the tables below. All of these codecs are provided as
    972 software implementations in the preferred Android implementation from the Android
    973 Open Source Project.</p>
    974 
    975 <p><strong>Please note that neither Google nor the Open Handset Alliance make any
    976 representation that these codecs are unencumbered by third-party patents.
    977 Those intending to use this source code in hardware or software products are
    978 advised that implementations of this code, including in open source software
    979 or shareware, may require patent licenses from the relevant patent
    980 holders.</strong></p>
    981 
    982 <p>Note that these tables do not list specific bitrate requirements for
    983 most video codecs because current device hardware does not necessarily support
    984 bitrates that map exactly to the required bitrates specified by the relevant
    985 standards. Instead, device implementations SHOULD support the highest bitrate
    986 practical on the hardware, up to the limits defined by the specifications.</p>
    987 <div style="page-break-before: always;"></div>
    988 <table>
    989 <tbody>
    990 
    991 <tr>
    992 <th>Type</th>
    993 <th>Format / Codec</th>
    994 <th>Encoder</th>
    995 <th>Decoder</th>
    996 <th>Details</th>
    997 <th>File Type(s) / Container Formats</th>
    998 </tr>
    999 
   1000 <tr>
   1001 <td rowspan="10">Audio</td>
   1002 <td>AAC LC/LTP</td>
   1003 <td style="text-align: center;">REQUIRED<br/>
   1004 <small>Required for device implementations that include microphone hardware
   1005 and define <code>android.hardware.microphone</code>.</small></td>
   1006 <td style="text-align: center;">REQUIRED</td>
   1007 <td rowspan="3">Mono/Stereo content in any combination of standard bit
   1008 rates up to 160 kbps and sampling rates from 8 to 48kHz</td>
   1009 <td rowspan="3">
   1010   <ul>
   1011     <li>3GPP (.3gp)</li>
   1012     <li>MPEG-4 (.mp4, .m4a)</li>
   1013     <li>ADTS raw AAC (.aac, decode in Android 3.1+, encode in Android 4.0+, ADIF not supported)</li>
   1014     <li>MPEG-TS (.ts, not seekable, Android 3.0+)</li>
   1015   </ul>
   1016 </td>
   1017 </tr>
   1018 <tr>
   1019 <td>HE-AACv1 (AAC+)</td>
   1020 <td>&nbsp;</td>
   1021 <td style="text-align: center;">REQUIRED</td>
   1022 </tr>
   1023 
   1024 <tr>
   1025 <td>HE-AACv2 (enhanced AAC+)</td>
   1026 <td>&nbsp;</td>
   1027 <td style="text-align: center;">REQUIRED</td>
   1028 </tr>
   1029 
   1030 <tr>
   1031 <td>AMR-NB</td>
   1032 <td style="text-align: center;">REQUIRED<br/>
   1033 <small>Required for device implementations that include microphone hardware
   1034 and define <code>android.hardware.microphone</code>.</small></td>
   1035 <td style="text-align: center;">REQUIRED</td>
   1036 <td>4.75 to 12.2 kbps sampled @ 8kHz</td>
   1037 <td>3GPP (.3gp)
   1038 </td>
   1039 </tr>
   1040 
   1041 <tr>
   1042 <td>AMR-WB</td>
   1043 <td style="text-align: center;">REQUIRED<br/>
   1044 <small>Required for device implementations that include microphone hardware
   1045 and define <code>android.hardware.microphone</code>.</small></td>
   1046 <td style="text-align: center;">REQUIRED</td>
   1047 <td>9 rates from 6.60 kbit/s to 23.85 kbit/s sampled @ 16kHz</td>
   1048 <td>3GPP (.3gp)</td>
   1049 </tr>
   1050 
   1051 <tr>
   1052 <td>FLAC</td>
   1053 <td>&nbsp;</td>
   1054 <td style="text-align: center;">REQUIRED<br/><small>(Android 3.1+)</small></td>
   1055 <td>Mono/Stereo (no multichannel). Sample rates up to 48 kHz (but up to 44.1
   1056 kHz is recommended on devices with 44.1 kHz output, as the 48 to 44.1 kHz
   1057 downsampler does not include a low-pass filter). 16-bit recommended;
   1058 no dither applied for 24-bit.
   1059 </td>
   1060 <td>FLAC (.flac) only</td>
   1061 </tr>
   1062 
   1063 <tr>
   1064 <td>MP3</td>
   1065 <td>&nbsp;</td>
   1066 <td style="text-align: center;">REQUIRED</td>
   1067 <td>Mono/Stereo 8-320Kbps constant (CBR) or variable bit-rate (VBR)
   1068 </td>
   1069 <td>MP3 (.mp3)</td>
   1070 </tr>
   1071 
   1072 <tr>
   1073 <td>MIDI</td>
   1074 <td>&nbsp;</td>
   1075 <td style="text-align: center;">REQUIRED</td>
   1076 <td>MIDI Type 0 and 1. DLS Version 1 and 2. XMF and Mobile XMF. Support for ringtone formats RTTTL/RTX, OTA, and iMelody </td>
   1077 <td>
   1078   <ul>
   1079     <li>Type 0 and 1 (.mid, .xmf, .mxmf)</li>
   1080     <li>RTTTL/RTX (.rtttl, .rtx)</li>
   1081     <li>OTA (.ota)</li>
   1082     <li>iMelody (.imy)</li>
   1083   </ul>
   1084 </td>
   1085 </tr>
   1086 
   1087 <tr>
   1088 <td>Vorbis</td>
   1089 <td>&nbsp;</td>
   1090 <td style="text-align: center;">REQUIRED</td>
   1091 <td>&nbsp;</td>
   1092 <td>
   1093   <ul>
   1094     <li>Ogg (.ogg)</li>
   1095     <li>Matroska (.mkv)</li>
   1096   </ul>
   1097 </td>
   1098 </tr>
   1099 
   1100 <tr>
   1101 <td>PCM/WAVE</td>
   1102 <td>&nbsp;</td>
   1103 <td style="text-align: center;">REQUIRED</td>
   1104 <td>8- and 16-bit linear PCM (rates up to limit of hardware)</td>
   1105 <td>WAVE (.wav)</td>
   1106 </tr>
   1107 
   1108 <tr>
   1109 <td rowspan="5">Image</td>
   1110 <td>JPEG</td>
   1111 <td style="text-align: center;">REQUIRED</td>
   1112 <td style="text-align: center;">REQUIRED</td>
   1113 <td>Base+progressive</td>
   1114 <td>JPEG (.jpg)</td>
   1115 </tr>
   1116 
   1117 <tr>
   1118 <td>GIF</td>
   1119 <td>&nbsp;</td>
   1120 <td style="text-align: center;">REQUIRED</td>
   1121 <td>&nbsp;</td>
   1122 <td>GIF (.gif)</td>
   1123 </tr>
   1124 
   1125 <tr>
   1126 <td>PNG</td>
   1127 <td style="text-align: center;">REQUIRED</td>
   1128 <td style="text-align: center;">REQUIRED</td>
   1129 <td>&nbsp;</td>
   1130 <td>PNG (.png)</td>
   1131 </tr>
   1132 
   1133 <tr>
   1134 <td>BMP</td>
   1135 <td>&nbsp;</td>
   1136 <td style="text-align: center;">REQUIRED</td>
   1137 <td>&nbsp;</td>
   1138 <td>BMP (.bmp)</td>
   1139 </tr>
   1140 
   1141 
   1142 <tr>
   1143 <td>WEBP</td>
   1144 <td style="text-align: center;">REQUIRED</td>
   1145 <td style="text-align: center;">REQUIRED</td>
   1146 <td>&nbsp;</td>
   1147 <td>WebP (.webp)</td>
   1148 </tr>
   1149 
   1150 <tr>
   1151 <td rowspan="4">Video</td>
   1152 <td>H.263</td>
   1153 <td style="text-align: center;">REQUIRED<br/>
   1154 <small>Required for device implementations that include camera hardware
   1155 and define <code>android.hardware.camera</code> or
   1156 <code>android.hardware.camera.front</code>.</small></td>
   1157 <td style="text-align: center;">REQUIRED</td>
   1158 <td>&nbsp;</td>
   1159 <td>
   1160   <ul>
   1161     <li>3GPP (.3gp)</li>
   1162     <li>MPEG-4 (.mp4)</li>
   1163   </ul>
   1164 </td>
   1165 </tr>
   1166 
   1167 <tr>
   1168 <td>H.264 AVC</td>
   1169 <td style="text-align: center;">REQUIRED<br/>
   1170 <small>Required for device implementations that include camera hardware
   1171 and define <code>android.hardware.camera</code> or
   1172 <code>android.hardware.camera.front</code>.</small></td>
   1173 <td style="text-align: center;">REQUIRED</td>
   1174 <td>Baseline Profile (BP)</td>
   1175 <td>
   1176   <ul>
   1177     <li>3GPP (.3gp)</li>
   1178     <li>MPEG-4 (.mp4)</li>
   1179     <li>MPEG-TS (.ts, AAC audio only, not seekable, Android 3.0+)</li>
   1180   </ul>
   1181 </td>
   1182 </tr>
   1183 
   1184 <tr>
   1185 <td>MPEG-4 SP</td>
   1186 <td>&nbsp;</td>
   1187 <td style="text-align: center;">REQUIRED</td>
   1188 <td>&nbsp;</td>
   1189 <td>3GPP (.3gp)</td>
   1190 </tr>
   1191 
   1192 <tr>
   1193 <td>VP8</td>
   1194 <td>&nbsp;</td>
   1195 <td style="text-align: center;">REQUIRED<br/><small>(Android 2.3.3+)</small></td>
   1196 <td>&nbsp;</td>
   1197 <td><a href="http://www.webmproject.org/">WebM</a> (.webm) and Matroska (.mkv, Android 4.0+)</td>
   1198 </tr>
   1199 
   1200 </tbody></table>
   1201 
   1202 <a name="section-5.2"></a><h3>5.2 Video Encoding</h3>
   1203 <p>Android device implementations that include a rear-facing camera and declare
   1204 <code>android.hardware.camera</code> SHOULD support the following video encoding
   1205 profiles.</p>
   1206 <table>
   1207   <thead>
   1208   <tr>
   1209     <th>&nbsp;</th>
   1210     <th>SD (Low quality)</th>
   1211     <th>SD (High quality)</th>
   1212     <th>HD (When supported by hardware)</th>
   1213   </tr>
   1214   </thead>
   1215   <tbody>
   1216   <tr>
   1217     <th>Video codec</th>
   1218     <td>H.264 Baseline Profile</td>
   1219     <td>H.264 Baseline Profile</td>
   1220     <td>H.264 Baseline Profile</td>
   1221   </tr>
   1222   <tr>
   1223     <th>Video resolution</th>
   1224     <td>176 x 144 px</td>
   1225     <td>480 x 360 px</td>
   1226     <td>1280 x 720 px</td>
   1227   </tr>
   1228   <tr>
   1229     <th>Video frame rate</th>
   1230     <td>12 fps</td>
   1231     <td>30 fps</td>
   1232     <td>30 fps</td>
   1233   </tr>
   1234   <tr>
   1235     <th>Video bitrate</th>
   1236     <td>56 Kbps</td>
   1237     <td>500 Kbps or higher</td>
   1238     <td>2 Mbps or higher</td>
   1239   </tr>
   1240   <tr>
   1241     <th>Audio codec</th>
   1242     <td>AAC-LC</td>
   1243     <td>AAC-LC</td>
   1244     <td>AAC-LC</td>
   1245   </tr>
   1246   <tr>
   1247     <th>Audio channels</th>
   1248     <td>1 (mono)</td>
   1249     <td>2 (stereo)</td>
   1250     <td>2 (stereo)</td>
   1251   </tr>
   1252   <tr>
   1253     <th>Audio bitrate</th>
   1254     <td>24 Kbps</td>
   1255     <td>128 Kbps</td>
   1256     <td>192 Kbps</td>
   1257   </tr>
   1258   </tbody>
   1259 </table>
   1260 
   1261 <a name="section-5.3"></a><h3>5.3. Audio Recording</h3>
   1262 <p>When an application has used the <code>android.media.AudioRecord</code> API to
   1263 start recording an audio stream, device implementations that include microphone
   1264 hardware and declare <code>android.hardware.microphone</code> MUST sample and
   1265 record audio with each of these behaviors:</p>
   1266 <ul>
   1267 <li>The device SHOULD exhibit approximately flat amplitude versus frequency
   1268     characteristics; specifically, &plusmn;3 dB, from 100 Hz to 4000 Hz</li>
   1269 <li>Audio input sensitivity SHOULD be set such that a 90 dB sound power level
   1270     (SPL) source at 1000 Hz yields RMS of 2500 for 16-bit samples.</li>
   1271 <li>PCM amplitude levels SHOULD linearly track input SPL changes over at least
   1272     a 30 dB range from -18 dB to +12 dB re 90 dB SPL at the microphone.</li>
   1273 <li>Total harmonic distortion SHOULD be less than 1% from 100 Hz to 4000 Hz at
   1274     90 dB SPL input level.</li>
   1275 </ul>
   1276 <p>In addition to the above recording specifications, when an application has
   1277 started recording an audio stream using the
   1278 <code>android.media.MediaRecorder.AudioSource.VOICE_RECOGNITION</code> audio
   1279 source:</p>
   1280 <ul>
   1281 <li>Noise reduction processing, if present, MUST be disabled.</li>
   1282 <li>Automatic gain control, if present, MUST be disabled.</li>
   1283 </ul>
   1284 <p><b>Note:</b> while some of the requirements outlined above are stated as "SHOULD"
   1285 for Android 4.0, the Compatibility Definition for a future version is planned
   1286 to change these to "MUST". That is, these requirements are optional in Android
   1287 4.0 but <b>will be required</b> by a future version. Existing and new devices
   1288 that run Android 4.0 are <b>very strongly encouraged to meet
   1289 these requirements in Android 4.0</b>, or they will not be able to attain
   1290 Android compatibility when upgraded to the future version.</p>
   1291 
   1292 <a name="section-5.4"></a><h3>5.4. Audio Latency</h3>
   1293 <p>Audio latency is broadly defined as the interval between when an
   1294 application requests an audio playback or record operation, and when the
   1295 device implementation actually begins the operation. Many classes of
   1296 applications rely on short latencies, to achieve real-time effects such sound
   1297 effects or VOIP communication. Device implementations that include microphone
   1298 hardware and declare <code>android.hardware.microphone</code> SHOULD meet all
   1299 audio latency requirements outlined in this section. See <a href="#section-7">
   1300 Section 7</a> for details on the conditions under which microphone hardware may
   1301 be omitted by device implementations.</p>
   1302 <p>For the purposes of this section:</p>
   1303 <ul>
   1304 <li>"cold output latency" is defined to be the interval between when an
   1305     application requests audio playback and when sound begins playing, when
   1306     the audio system has been idle and powered down prior to the request</li>
   1307 <li>"warm output latency" is defined to be the interval between when an
   1308     application requests audio playback and when sound begins playing, when
   1309     the audio system has been recently used but is currently idle (that is,
   1310     silent)</li>
   1311 <li>"continuous output latency" is defined to be the interval between when an
   1312     application issues a sample to be played and when the speaker physically
   1313     plays the corresponding sound, while the device is currently playing back
   1314     audio</li>
   1315 <li>"cold input latency" is defined to be the interval between when an
   1316     application requests audio recording and when the first sample is
   1317     delivered to the application via its callback, when the audio system and
   1318     microphone has been idle and powered down prior to the request</li>
   1319 <li>"continuous input latency" is defined to be when an ambient sound occurs
   1320     and when the sample corresponding to that sound is delivered to a
   1321     recording application via its callback, while the device is in recording
   1322     mode</li>
   1323 </ul>
   1324 <p>Using the above definitions, device implementations SHOULD exhibit each of
   1325 these properties:</p>
   1326 <ul>
   1327 <li>cold output latency of 100 milliseconds or less</li>
   1328 <li>warm output latency of 10 milliseconds or less</li>
   1329 <li>continuous output latency of 45 milliseconds or less</li>
   1330 <li>cold input latency of 100 milliseconds or less</li>
   1331 <li>continuous input latency of 50 milliseconds or less</li>
   1332 </ul>
   1333 <p><b>Note:</b> while the requirements outlined above are stated as "SHOULD"
   1334 for Android 4.0, the Compatibility Definition for a future version is planned
   1335 to change these to "MUST". That is, these requirements are optional in Android
   1336 4.0 but <b>will be required</b> by a future version. Existing and new devices
   1337 that run Android 4.0 are <b>very strongly encouraged to meet
   1338 these requirements in Android 4.0</b>, or they will not be able to attain
   1339 Android compatibility when upgraded to the future version.</p>
   1340 <p>If a device implementation meets the requirements of this section, it MAY
   1341 report support for low-latency audio, by reporting the feature
   1342 "android.hardware.audio.low-latency" via the
   1343 <code>android.content.pm.PackageManager</code> class. [<a
   1344 href="#resources37">Resources, 37</a>] Conversely, if the device
   1345 implementation does not meet these requirements it MUST NOT report support for
   1346 low-latency audio.</p>
   1347 
   1348 <a name="section-5.5"></a><h3>5.5. Network Protocols</h3>
   1349 <p>Devices MUST support the media network protocols for audio and video playback
   1350 as specified in the Android SDK documentation
   1351 [<a href="#resources58">Resources, 58</a>].  Specifically, devices MUST support
   1352 the following media network protocols:</p>
   1353 <ul>
   1354 <li>RTSP (RTP, SDP)</li>
   1355 <li>HTTP(S) progressive streaming</li>
   1356 <li>HTTP(S) Live Streaming draft protocol, Version 3 [<a href="#resources59">Resources, 59</a>]</li>
   1357 </ul>
   1358 <a name="section-6"></a><h2>6. Developer Tool Compatibility</h2>
   1359 <p>Device implementations MUST support the Android Developer Tools provided in
   1360 the Android SDK. Specifically, Android-compatible devices MUST be compatible
   1361 with:</p>
   1362 <ul>
   1363 <li><b>Android Debug Bridge (known as adb)</b> [<a href="#resources33">Resources, 33</a>]<br/>
   1364 Device implementations MUST support all <code>adb</code> functions as
   1365 documented in the Android SDK. The device-side <code>adb</code> daemon MUST
   1366 be inactive by default, and there MUST be a user-accessible mechanism to turn
   1367 on the Android Debug Bridge.</li>
   1368 <li><b>Dalvik Debug Monitor Service (known as ddms)</b> [<a href="#resources33">Resources, 33</a>]<br/>
   1369 Device implementations MUST support all <code>ddms</code> features as documented in the
   1370 Android SDK. As <code>ddms</code> uses <code>adb</code>, support for
   1371 <code>ddms</code> SHOULD be inactive by default,
   1372 but MUST be supported whenever the user has activated the Android Debug
   1373 Bridge, as above.</li>
   1374 <li><b>Monkey</b> [<a href="#resources36">Resources, 36</a>]<br/>
   1375 Device implementations MUST include the Monkey framework, and make it
   1376 available for applications to use.</li>
   1377 </ul>
   1378 <p>Most Linux-based systems and Apple Macintosh systems recognize Android
   1379 devices using the standard Android SDK tools, without additional support;
   1380 however Microsoft Windows systems typically require a driver for new Android
   1381 devices. (For instance, new vendor IDs and sometimes new device IDs require
   1382 custom USB drivers for Windows systems.) If a device implementation is
   1383 unrecognized by the <code>adb</code> tool as provided in the standard Android
   1384 SDK, device implementers MUST provide Windows drivers allowing developers to
   1385 connect to the device using the <code>adb</code> protocol. These drivers MUST
   1386 be provided for Windows XP, Windows Vista, and Windows 7, in both 32-bit and
   1387 64-bit versions.</p>
   1388 
   1389 <a name="section-7"></a><h2>7. Hardware Compatibility</h2>
   1390 <p>If a device includes a particular hardware component that has a
   1391 corresponding API for third-party developers, the device implementation MUST
   1392 implement that API as described in the Android SDK documentation. If an API in
   1393 the SDK interacts with a hardware component that is stated to be optional and
   1394 the device implementation does not possess that component:</p>
   1395 <ul>
   1396 <li>complete class definitions (as documented by the SDK) for the component's
   1397 APIs MUST still be present</li>
   1398 <li>the API's behaviors MUST be implemented as no-ops in some reasonable
   1399 fashion</li>
   1400 <li>API methods MUST return null values where permitted by the SDK
   1401 documentation</li>
   1402 <li>API methods MUST return no-op implementations of classes where null
   1403 values are not permitted by the SDK documentation</li>
   1404 <li>API methods MUST NOT throw exceptions not documented by the SDK
   1405 documentation</li>
   1406 </ul>
   1407 <p>A typical example of a scenario where these requirements apply is the
   1408 telephony API: even on non-phone devices, these APIs must be implemented as
   1409 reasonable no-ops.</p>
   1410 <p>Device implementations MUST accurately report accurate hardware configuration
   1411 information via the <code>getSystemAvailableFeatures()</code> and
   1412 <code>hasSystemFeature(String)</code> methods on the
   1413 <code>android.content.pm.PackageManager</code> class. [<a
   1414 href="#resources37">Resources, 37</a>]</p>
   1415 
   1416 <a name="section-7.1"></a><h3>7.1. Display and Graphics</h3>
   1417 <p>Android 4.0 includes facilities that automatically adjust application
   1418 assets and UI layouts appropriately for the device, to ensure that third-party
   1419 applications run well on a variety of hardware configurations [<a
   1420 href="#resources38">Resources, 38</a>]. Devices MUST properly implement these
   1421 APIs and behaviors, as detailed in this section.</p>
   1422 
   1423 <p>The units referenced by the requirements in this section are defined as follows:</p>
   1424 <ul>
   1425 <li>"Physical diagonal size" is the distance in inches between two opposing
   1426 corners of the illuminated portion of the display.</li>
   1427 <li>"dpi" (meaning "dots per inch") is the number of pixels encompassed by a
   1428 linear horizontal or vertical span of 1". Where dpi values are listed, both
   1429 horizontal and vertical dpi must fall within the range.</li>
   1430 <li>"Aspect ratio" is the ratio of the longer dimension of the screen to the
   1431 shorter dimension. For example, a display of 480x854 pixels would be 854 / 480
   1432 = 1.779, or roughly "16:9".</li>
   1433 <li>A "density-independent pixel" or ("dp") is the virtual pixel unit normalized to a
   1434 160 dpi screen, calculated as:
   1435 <code>pixels = dps * (density / 160)</code>.</li>
   1436 </ul>
   1437 
   1438 
   1439 <a name="section-7.1.1"></a><h4>7.1.1. Screen Configuration</h4>
   1440 
   1441 <p style="font-weight:bold;">Screen Size</p>
   1442 <p>The Android UI framework supports a variety of different screen sizes, and
   1443 allows applications to query the device screen size (aka "screen layout") via
   1444 <code>android.content.res.Configuration.screenLayout</code> with the
   1445 <code>SCREENLAYOUT_SIZE_MASK</code>. Device implementations MUST report the
   1446 correct screen size as defined in the Android SDK documentation
   1447 [<a href="#resources38">Resources, 38</a>] and determined by the upstream
   1448 Android platform. Specifically, device implementations must report the correct
   1449 screen size according to the following logical density-independent pixel (dp)
   1450 screen dimensions.</p>
   1451 <ul>
   1452 <li>Devices MUST have screen sizes of at least 426 dp x 320 dp ('small')</li>
   1453 <li>Devices that report screen size 'normal' MUST have screen sizes of at least
   1454 470 dp x 320 dp</li>
   1455 <li>Devices that report screen size 'large' MUST have screen sizes of at least
   1456 640 dp x 480 dp</li>
   1457 <li>Devices that report screen size 'xlarge' MUST have screen sizes of at least
   1458 960 dp x 720 dp</li>
   1459 </ul>
   1460 <p>In addition, devices MUST have screen sizes of at least 2.5 inches in
   1461 physical diagonal size.</p>
   1462 
   1463 <p>Devices MUST NOT change their reported screen size at any time.</p>
   1464 <p>Applications optionally indicate which screen sizes they support via the
   1465 <code>&lt;supports-screens&gt;</code> attribute in the AndroidManifest.xml
   1466 file. Device implementations MUST correctly honor applications' stated support
   1467 for small, normal, large, and xlarge screens, as described in the Android
   1468 SDK documentation.</p>
   1469 
   1470 <p style="font-weight:bold;">Screen Aspect Ratio</p>
   1471 <p>The aspect ratio MUST be between 1.3333 (4:3) and 1.85 (16:9).</p>
   1472 
   1473 <p style="font-weight:bold;">Screen Density</p>
   1474 <p>The Android UI framework defines a set of standard logical densities to
   1475 help application developers target application resources. Device
   1476 implementations MUST report one of the following logical Android framework
   1477 densities through the <code>android.util.DisplayMetrics</code> APIs, and MUST
   1478 execute applications at this standard density.
   1479 <ul>
   1480 <li>120 dpi, known as 'ldpi'</li>
   1481 <li>160 dpi, known as 'mdpi'</li>
   1482 <li>213 dpi, known as 'tvdpi'</li>
   1483 <li>240 dpi, known as 'hdpi'</li>
   1484 <li>320 dpi, known as 'xhdpi'</li>
   1485 </ul>
   1486 Device implementations SHOULD define the standard Android framework density
   1487 that is numerically closest to the physical density of the screen, unless that
   1488 logical density pushes the reported screen size below the minimum supported.
   1489 If the standard Android framework density that is numerically closest to the
   1490 physical density results in a screen size that is smaller than the smallest
   1491 supported compatible screen size (320 dp width), device implementations SHOULD
   1492 report the next lowest standard Android framework density.</p>
   1493 
   1494 <a name="section-7.1.2"></a><h4>7.1.2. Display Metrics</h4>
   1495 <p>Device implementations MUST report correct values for all display metrics
   1496 defined in <code>android.util.DisplayMetrics</code> [<a
   1497 href="#resources39">Resources, 39</a>].</p>
   1498 
   1499 <a name="section-7.1.3"></a><h4>7.1.3. Screen Orientation</h4>
   1500 <p>Devices MUST support dynamic orientation by applications to
   1501 either portrait or landscape screen orientation. That is, the device must
   1502 respect the application's request for a specific screen orientation. Device
   1503 implementations MAY select either portrait or landscape orientation as the
   1504 default.</p>
   1505 <p>Devices MUST report the correct value for the device's current orientation,
   1506 whenever queried via the android.content.res.Configuration.orientation,
   1507 android.view.Display.getOrientation(), or other APIs.</p>
   1508 <p>Devices MUST NOT change the reported screen size or density when changing
   1509 orientation.</p>
   1510 <p>Devices MUST report which screen orientations they support (
   1511 <code>android.hardware.screen.portrait</code> and/or
   1512 <code>android.hardware.screen.landscape</code>) and MUST report at least one
   1513 supported orientation.  For example, a device with a fixed-orientation
   1514 landscape screen, such as a television or laptop, MUST only report
   1515 <code>android.hardware.screen.landscape</code>.</p>
   1516 
   1517 <a name="section-7.1.4"></a><h4>7.1.4. 2D and 3D Graphics Acceleration</h4>
   1518 <p>Device implementations MUST support both OpenGL ES 1.0 and 2.0, as embodied
   1519 and detailed in the Android SDK documentations. Device implementations MUST
   1520 also support Android Renderscript, as detailed in the Android SDK
   1521 documentation [<a href="#resources08">Resources, 8</a>].</p>
   1522 <p>Device implementations MUST also correctly identify themselves as
   1523 supporting OpenGL ES 1.0 and 2.0. That is:</p>
   1524 <ul>
   1525 <li>The managed APIs (such as via the <code>GLES10.getString()</code> method)
   1526 MUST report support for OpenGL ES 1.0 and 2.0</li>
   1527 <li>The native C/C++ OpenGL APIs (that is, those available to apps via
   1528 libGLES_v1CM.so, libGLES_v2.so, or libEGL.so) MUST report support for
   1529 OpenGL ES 1.0 and 2.0.</li>
   1530 </ul>
   1531 <p>Device implementations MAY implement any desired OpenGL ES extensions.
   1532 However, device implementations MUST report via the OpenGL ES managed and
   1533 native APIs all extension strings that they do support, and conversely MUST
   1534 NOT report extension strings that they do not support.</p>
   1535 <p>Note that Android 4.0 includes support for applications to optionally
   1536 specify that they require specific OpenGL texture compression formats. These
   1537 formats are typically vendor-specific. Device implementations are not required
   1538 by Android 4.0 to implement any specific texture compression format. However,
   1539 they SHOULD accurately report any texture compression formats that they do
   1540 support, via the <code>getString()</code> method in the OpenGL API.</p>
   1541 
   1542 <p>Android 3.0 introduced a mechanism for applications to declare that they
   1543 wanted to enable hardware acceleration for 2D graphics at the Application,
   1544 Activity, Window or View level through the use of a manifest tag
   1545 <code>android:hardwareAccelerated</code> or direct API calls
   1546 [<a href="#resources09">Resources, 9</a>].</p>
   1547 <p>In Android 4.0, device implementations MUST enable hardware acceleration by
   1548 default, and MUST disable hardware acceleration if the developer so requests
   1549 by setting <code>android:hardwareAccelerated="false"</code> or disabling
   1550 hardware acceleration directly through the Android View APIs.</p>
   1551 <p>In addition, device implementations MUST exhibit behavior consistent with the
   1552 Android SDK documentation on hardware acceleration
   1553 [<a href="#resources09">Resources, 9</a>].</p>
   1554 <p>Android 4.0 includes a <code>TextureView</code> object that lets developers
   1555 directly integrate hardware-accelerated OpenGL ES textures as rendering targets
   1556 in a UI hierarchy. Device implementations MUST support the <code>TextureView
   1557 </code> API, and MUST exhibit consistent behavior with the upstream Android
   1558 implementation.</p>
   1559 
   1560 <a name="section-7.1.5"></a><h4>7.1.5. Legacy Application Compatibility Mode</h4>
   1561 <p>Android 4.0 specifies a "compatibility mode" in which the framework
   1562 operates in an 'normal' screen size equivalent (320dp width) mode for the benefit
   1563 of legacy applications not developed for old versions of Android that pre-date
   1564 screen-size independence. Device implementations MUST include support for legacy
   1565 application compatibility mode as implemented by the upstream Android open source
   1566 code. That is, device implementations MUST NOT alter the triggers or thresholds at
   1567 which compatibility mode is activated, and MUST NOT alter the behavior of the
   1568 compatibility mode itself.</p>
   1569 
   1570 <a name="section-7.1.6"></a><h4>7.1.6. Screen Types</h4>
   1571 <p>Device implementation screens are classified as one of two types:</p>
   1572 <ul>
   1573 <li>Fixed-pixel display implementations: the screen is a single panel that supports only a
   1574 single pixel width and height. Typically the screen is physically integrated with
   1575 the device. Examples include mobile phones, tablets, and so on.</li>
   1576 <li>Variable-pixel display implementations: the device implementation either has no
   1577 embedded screen and includes a video output port such as VGA or HDMI for
   1578 display, or has an embedded screen that can change pixel dimensions. Examples
   1579 include televisions, set-top boxes, and so on.</li>
   1580 </ul>
   1581 <p style="font-weight: bold;">Fixed-Pixel Device Implementations</p>
   1582 <p>Fixed-pixel device implementations MAY use screens of any pixel dimensions, provided
   1583 that they meet the requirements defined this Compatibility Definition.</p>
   1584 <p>Fixed-pixel implementations MAY include a video output port for use with an
   1585 external display. However, if that display is ever used for running apps, the
   1586 device MUST meet the following requirements:</p>
   1587 <ul>
   1588 <li>The device MUST report the same screen configuration and display metrics, as detailed
   1589 in Sections 7.1.1 and 7.1.2, as the fixed-pixel display.</li>
   1590 <li>The device MUST report the same logical density as the fixed-pixel display.</li>
   1591 <li>The device MUST report screen dimensions that are the same as, or very close to,
   1592 the fixed-pixel display.</li>
   1593 </ul>
   1594 <p>For example, a tablet that is 7" diagonal size with a 1024x600 pixel resolution is
   1595 considered a fixed-pixel large mdpi display implementation.  If it contains a video
   1596 output port that displays at 720p or 1080p, the device implementation MUST scale the output so that
   1597 applications are only executed in a large mdpi window, regardless of whether the fixed-pixel display
   1598 or video output port is in use.</p>
   1599 
   1600 <p style="font-weight: bold;">Variable-Pixel Device Implementations</p>
   1601 <p>Variable-pixel device implementations MUST support one or both of 1280x720,
   1602 or 1920x1080 (that is, 720p or 1080p). Device implementations with
   1603 variable-pixel displays MUST NOT support any other screen configuration or
   1604 mode. Device implementations with variable-pixel screens MAY change screen
   1605 configuration or mode at runtime or boot-time. For example, a user of a
   1606 set-top box may replace a 720p display with a 1080p display, and the device
   1607 implementation may adjust accordingly.</p>
   1608 
   1609 <p>Additionally, variable-pixel device implementations MUST report the following
   1610 configuration buckets for these pixel dimensions:</p>
   1611 <ul>
   1612 <li>1280x720 (also known as 720p): 'large' screen size, 'tvdpi' (213 dpi)
   1613 density</li>
   1614 <li>1920x1080 (also known as 1080p): 'large' screen size, 'xhdpi' (320 dpi)
   1615 density</li>
   1616 </ul>
   1617 <p>For clarity, device implementations with variable pixel dimensions are
   1618 restricted to 720p or 1080p in Android 4.0, and MUST be configured to report
   1619 screen size and density buckets as noted above.</p>
   1620 
   1621 <a name="section-7.1.7"></a><h4>7.1.7. Screen Technology</h4>
   1622 <p>The Android platform includes APIs that allow applications to render rich
   1623 graphics to the display. Devices MUST support all of these APIs as defined by
   1624 the Android SDK unless specifically allowed in this document.  Specifically:</p>
   1625 <ul>
   1626 <li>Devices MUST support displays capable of rendering 16-bit color graphics and
   1627 SHOULD support displays capable of 24-bit color graphics.</li>
   1628 <li>Devices MUST support displays capable of rendering animations.</li>
   1629 <li>The display technology used MUST have a pixel aspect ratio (PAR) between
   1630     0.9 and 1.1. That is, the pixel aspect ratio MUST be near square (1.0) with
   1631     a 10% tolerance.</li>
   1632 </ul>
   1633 
   1634 <a name="section-7.2"></a><h3>7.2. Input Devices</h3>
   1635 <a name="section-7.2.1"></a><h4>7.2.1. Keyboard</h4>
   1636 <p>Device implementations:</p>
   1637 <ul>
   1638 <li>MUST include support for the Input Management Framework (which allows third
   1639 party developers to create Input Management Engines - i.e. soft keyboard) as
   1640 detailed at <a href="http://developer.android.com">http://developer.android.com</a>
   1641 </li>
   1642 <li>MUST provide at least one soft keyboard implementation (regardless of whether
   1643 a hard keyboard is present)</li>
   1644 <li>MAY include additional soft keyboard implementations</li>
   1645 <li>MAY include a hardware keyboard</li>
   1646 <li>MUST NOT include a hardware keyboard that does not match one of the
   1647 formats specified in <code>android.content.res.Configuration.keyboard</code>
   1648 [<a href="#resources40">Resources, 40</a>] (that is, QWERTY, or 12-key)</li>
   1649 </ul>
   1650 <a name="section-7.2.2"></a><h4>7.2.2. Non-touch Navigation</h4>
   1651 <p>Device implementations:</p>
   1652 <ul>
   1653 <li>MAY omit a non-touch navigation option (that is, may omit a trackball, d-pad,
   1654 or wheel)</li>
   1655 <li>MUST report the correct value for
   1656 <code>android.content.res.Configuration.navigation</code>
   1657 [<a href="#resources40">Resources, 40</a>]</li>
   1658 <li>MUST provide a reasonable alternative user interface mechanism for the
   1659 selection and editing of text, compatible with Input Management Engines. The
   1660 upstream Android open source software includes a selection mechanism suitable
   1661 for use with devices that lack non-touch navigation inputs.</li>
   1662 </ul>
   1663 <a name="section-7.2.3"></a><h4>7.2.3. Navigation keys</h4>
   1664 <p>The Home, Menu and Back functions are essential to the Android navigation
   1665 paradigm. Device implementations MUST make these functions available to the
   1666 user at all times when running applications. These functions MAY be implemented
   1667 via dedicated physical buttons (such as mechanical or capacitive touch buttons),
   1668 or MAY be implemented using dedicated software keys, gestures, touch panel, etc.
   1669 Android 4.0 supports both implementations.</p>
   1670 
   1671 <p>Device implementations MAY use a distinct portion of the screen to display
   1672 the navigation keys, but if so, MUST meet these requirements:</p>
   1673 
   1674 <ul>
   1675   <li>Device implementation navigation keys MUST use a distinct portion of the
   1676       screen, not available to applications, and MUST NOT obscure or otherwise
   1677       interfere with the portion of the screen available to applications.</li>
   1678   <li>Device implementations MUST make available a portion of the display to
   1679       applications that meets the requirements defined in
   1680       <a href="section-7.1.1">Section 7.1.1</a>.</li>
   1681   <li>Device implementations MUST display the navigation keys when applications
   1682       do not specify a system UI mode, or specify
   1683       <code>SYSTEM_UI_FLAG_VISIBLE</code>.</li>
   1684   <li>Device implementations MUST present the navigation keys in an unobtrusive
   1685       "low profile" (eg. dimmed) mode when applications specify
   1686       <code>SYSTEM_UI_FLAG_LOW_PROFILE</code>.</li>
   1687   <li>Device implementations MUST hide the navigation keys when applications
   1688       specify <code>SYSTEM_UI_FLAG_HIDE_NAVIGATION</code>.</li>
   1689   <li>Device implementation MUST present a Menu key to applications when
   1690       targetSdkVersion &lt;= 10 and SHOULD NOT present a Menu key when the
   1691       targetSdkVersion &gt; 10.</li>
   1692 </ul>
   1693 
   1694 <a name="section-7.2.4"></a><h4>7.2.4. Touchscreen input</h4>
   1695 <p>Device implementations:</p>
   1696 <ul>
   1697 <li>MUST have a pointer input system of some kind (either mouse-like, or touch)</li>
   1698 <li>MAY have a touchscreen of any modality (such as capacitive or resistive)</li>
   1699 <li>SHOULD support fully independently tracked pointers, if a touchscreen supports multiple pointers</li>
   1700 <li>MUST report the value of <code>android.content.res.Configuration.touchscreen</code> [<a href="#resources40">Resources, 40</a>]
   1701 corresponding to the type of the specific touchscreen on the device</li>
   1702 </ul>
   1703 
   1704 <p>Android 4.0 includes support for a variety of touch screens, touch pads, and fake touch input devices.
   1705 Touch screen based device implementations are associated with a display [<a href="#resources61">Resources, 61</a>]
   1706 such that the user has the impression of directly manipulating items on screen. Since the user is directly touching the screen,
   1707 the system does not require any additional affordances to indicate the objects being manipulated.
   1708 In contrast, a fake touch interface provides a user input system that approximates a subset of touchscreen capabilities.
   1709 For example, a mouse or remote control that drives an on-screen cursor approximates touch, but requires the user to first
   1710 point or focus then click. Numerous input devices like the mouse, trackpad, gyro-based air mouse, gyro-pointer, joystick,
   1711 and multi-touch trackpad can support fake touch interactions. Android 4.0 includes the feature constant <code>android.hardware.faketouch</code>,
   1712 which corresponds to a high-fidelity non-touch (that is, pointer-based) input device such as a mouse or trackpad that can adequately emulate touch-based
   1713 input (including basic gesture support), and indicates that the device supports an emulated subset of touchscreen
   1714 functionality. Device implementations that declare the fake touch feature MUST meet the fake touch requirements in <a href="section 7.2.5">Section 7.2.5</a>.</p>
   1715 
   1716 <p>Device implementations MUST report the correct feature corresponding to the type of input used. Device implementations that
   1717 include a touchscreen (single-touch or better) MUST also report the platform feature constant <code>android.hardware.faketouch</code>.
   1718 Device implementations that do not include a touchscreen (and rely on a pointer device only) MUST NOT report any touchscreen feature, and MUST report only
   1719 <code>android.hardware.faketouch</code> if they meet the fake touch requirements in <a href="section 7.2.5">Section 7.2.5</a>.</p>
   1720 
   1721 <a name="section-7.2.5"></a><h4>7.2.5. Fake touch input</h4>
   1722 <p>Device implementations that declare support for <code>android.hardware.faketouch</code></p>
   1723 <ul>
   1724 <li> MUST report the absolute X and Y screen positions of the pointer location and display a visual pointer on the screen[<a href="#resources60">Resources, 60</a>] </li>
   1725 <li> MUST report touch event with the action code [<a href="#resources60">Resources, 60</a>] that specifies the state change
   1726 that occurs on the pointer going <code>down</code> or <code>up</code> on the screen [<a href="#resources60">Resources, 60</a>] </li>
   1727 <li> MUST support pointer <code>down</code> and <code>up</code> on an object on the screen, which allows users to emulate tap on an object on the screen</li>
   1728 <li> MUST support pointer <code>down</code>, pointer <code>up</code>, pointer <code>down</code> then pointer <code>up</code> in the same place on an object on the screen
   1729 within a time threshold, which allows users to emulate double tap on an object on the screen [<a href="#resources60">Resources, 60</a>]</li>
   1730 <li>MUST support pointer <code>down</code> on an arbitrary point on the screen, pointer move to any other arbitrary point on the screen,
   1731 followed by a pointer <code>up</code>, which allows users to emulate a touch drag</li>
   1732 <li> MUST support pointer <code>down</code> then allow users to quickly move the object to a different position on the screen
   1733 and then pointer <code>up</code> on the screen, which allows users to fling an object on the screen</li>
   1734 </ul>
   1735 
   1736 <p>Devices that declare support for <code>android.hardware.faketouch.multitouch.distinct</code> MUST meet the requirements for
   1737 faketouch above, and MUST also support distinct tracking of two or more independent pointer inputs.</p>
   1738 
   1739 <a name="section-7.2.6"></a><h4>7.2.6. Microphone</h4>
   1740 <p>Device implementations MAY omit a microphone. However, if a device
   1741 implementation omits a microphone, it MUST NOT report the
   1742 <code>android.hardware.microphone</code> feature constant, and must implement
   1743 the audio recording API as no-ops, per <a href="section-7">Section 7</a>.
   1744 Conversely, device implementations that do possess a microphone:</p>
   1745 <ul>
   1746 <li>MUST report the <code>android.hardware.microphone</code> feature
   1747 constant</li>
   1748 <li>SHOULD meet the audio quality requirements in <a
   1749 href="section-5.3">Section 5.3</a></li>
   1750 <li>SHOULD meet the audio latency requirements in <a
   1751 href="section-5.4">Section 5.4</a></li>
   1752 </ul>
   1753 
   1754 <a name="section-7.3"></a><h3>7.3. Sensors</h3>
   1755 <p>Android 4.0 includes APIs for accessing a variety of sensor types. Devices
   1756 implementations generally MAY omit these sensors, as provided for in the
   1757 following subsections. If a device includes a particular sensor type that has a
   1758 corresponding API for third-party developers, the device implementation MUST
   1759 implement that API as described in the Android SDK documentation. For example,
   1760 device implementations:</p>
   1761 <ul>
   1762 <li>MUST accurately report the presence or absence of sensors per the
   1763 <code>android.content.pm.PackageManager</code> class. [<a
   1764 href="#resources37">Resources, 37</a>]</li>
   1765 <li>MUST return an accurate list of supported sensors via the
   1766 <code>SensorManager.getSensorList()</code> and similar methods</li>
   1767 <li>MUST behave reasonably for all other sensor APIs (for example, by
   1768 returning true or false as appropriate when applications attempt to register
   1769 listeners, not calling sensor listeners when the corresponding sensors are not
   1770 present; etc.)</li>
   1771 <li>MUST report all sensor measurements using the relevant International System
   1772 of Units (i.e. metric) values for each sensor type as defined in the Android SDK
   1773 documentation [<a href="#resources41">Resources, 41</a>]</li>
   1774 </ul>
   1775 <p>The list above is not comprehensive; the documented behavior of the Android
   1776 SDK is to be considered authoritative.</p>
   1777 <p>Some sensor types are synthetic, meaning they can be derived from data
   1778 provided by one or more other sensors. (Examples include the orientation
   1779 sensor, and the linear acceleration sensor.) Device implementations SHOULD
   1780 implement these sensor types, when they include the prerequisite physical
   1781 sensors.</p>
   1782 <p>The Android 4.0 APIs introduce a notion of a "streaming" sensor, which is
   1783 one that returns data continuously, rather than only when the data changes.
   1784 Device implementations MUST continuously provide periodic data samples for any
   1785 API indicated by the Android 4.0 SDK documentation to be a streaming
   1786 sensor.</p>
   1787 <a name="section-7.3.1"></a><h4>7.3.1. Accelerometer</h4>
   1788 <p>Device implementations SHOULD include a 3-axis accelerometer. If a device
   1789 implementation does include a 3-axis accelerometer, it:</p>
   1790 <ul>
   1791 <li>MUST be able to deliver events at 50 Hz or greater</li>
   1792 <li>MUST comply with the Android sensor coordinate system as detailed
   1793 in the Android APIs (see [<a href="#resources41">Resources, 41</a>])</li>
   1794 <li>MUST be capable of measuring from freefall up to twice gravity (2g) or
   1795 more on any three-dimensional vector</li>
   1796 <li>MUST have 8-bits of accuracy or more</li>
   1797 <li>MUST have a standard deviation no greater than 0.05 m/s^2</li>
   1798 </ul>
   1799 <a name="section-7.3.2"></a><h4>7.3.2. Magnetometer</h4>
   1800 <p>Device implementations SHOULD include a 3-axis magnetometer (i.e. compass.)
   1801 If a device does include a 3-axis magnetometer, it:</p>
   1802 <ul>
   1803 <li>MUST be able to deliver events at 10 Hz or greater</li>
   1804 <li>MUST comply with the Android sensor coordinate system as detailed
   1805 in the Android APIs (see [<a href="#resources41">Resources, 41</a>]).</li>
   1806 <li>MUST be capable of sampling a range of field strengths adequate to cover the
   1807 geomagnetic field</li>
   1808 <li>MUST have 8-bits of accuracy or more</li>
   1809 <li>MUST have a standard deviation no greater than 0.5 &micro;T</li>
   1810 </ul>
   1811 <a name="section-7.3.3"></a><h4>7.3.3. GPS</h4>
   1812 <p>Device implementations SHOULD include a GPS receiver. If a device
   1813 implementation does include a GPS receiver, it SHOULD include
   1814 some form of "assisted GPS" technique to minimize GPS lock-on time.</p>
   1815 <a name="section-7.3.4"></a><h4>7.3.4. Gyroscope</h4>
   1816 <p>Device implementations SHOULD include a gyroscope (i.e. angular change
   1817 sensor.) Devices SHOULD NOT include a gyroscope sensor unless a 3-axis
   1818 accelerometer is also included. If a device implementation includes a
   1819 gyroscope, it:</p>
   1820 <ul>
   1821 <li>MUST be temperature compensated</li>
   1822 <li>MUST be capable of measuring orientation changes up to 5.5*Pi
   1823 radians/second (that is, approximately 1,000 degrees per second)</li>
   1824 <li>MUST be able to deliver events at 100 Hz or greater</li>
   1825 <li>MUST have 12-bits of accuracy or more</li>
   1826 <li>MUST have a variance no greater than 1e-7 rad^2 / s^2 per Hz (variance per Hz, or rad^2 / s).
   1827 The variance is allowed to vary with the sampling rate, but must be constrained by this value.
   1828 In other words, if you measure the variance of the gyro at 1 Hz sampling rate it should be no
   1829 greater than 1e-7 rad^2/s^2. </li>
   1830 <li>MUST have timestamps as close to when the hardware event happened as possible. The constant latency must be removed.</li>
   1831 </ul>
   1832 <a name="section-7.3.5"></a><h4>7.3.5. Barometer</h4>
   1833 <p>Device implementations MAY include a barometer (i.e. ambient air pressure
   1834 sensor.) If a device implementation includes a barometer, it:</p>
   1835 <ul>
   1836 <li>MUST be able to deliver events at 5 Hz or greater</li>
   1837 <li>MUST have adequate precision to enable estimating altitude</li>
   1838 </ul>
   1839 <a name="section-7.3.6"></a><h4>7.3.7. Thermometer</h4>
   1840 <p>Device implementations MAY but SHOULD NOT include a thermometer (i.e.
   1841 temperature sensor.) If a device implementation does include a thermometer, it
   1842 MUST measure the temperature of the device CPU. It MUST NOT measure any other
   1843 temperature. (Note that this sensor type is deprecated in the Android 4.0
   1844 APIs.)</p>
   1845 <a name="section-7.3.7"></a><h4>7.3.7. Photometer</h4>
   1846 <p>Device implementations MAY include a photometer (i.e. ambient light
   1847 sensor.)</p>
   1848 <a name="section-7.3.8"></a><h4>7.3.8. Proximity Sensor</h4>
   1849 <p>Device implementations MAY include a proximity sensor.  If a device
   1850 implementation does include a proximity sensor, it MUST measure the proximity
   1851 of an object in the same direction as the screen. That is, the proximity
   1852 sensor MUST be oriented to detect objects close to the screen, as the
   1853 primary intent of this sensor type is to detect a phone in use by the
   1854 user. If a device implementation includes a proximity sensor with any other
   1855 orientation, it MUST NOT be accessible through this API. If a device
   1856 implementation has a proximity sensor, it MUST be have 1-bit of accuracy or
   1857 more.</p>
   1858 
   1859 <a name="section-7.4"></a><h3>7.4. Data Connectivity</h3>
   1860 <a name="section-7.4.1"></a><h4>7.4.1. Telephony</h4>
   1861 <p>"Telephony" as used by the Android 4.0 APIs and this document refers
   1862 specifically to hardware related to placing voice calls and sending SMS
   1863 messages via a GSM or CDMA network. While these voice calls may or may not be
   1864 packet-switched, they are for the purposes of Android 4.0 considered
   1865 independent of any data connectivity that may be implemented using the same
   1866 network. In other words, the Android "telephony" functionality and APIs refer
   1867 specifically to voice calls and SMS; for instance, device implementations that
   1868 cannot place calls or send/receive SMS messages MUST NOT report the
   1869 "android.hardware.telephony" feature or any sub-features, regardless of
   1870 whether they use a cellular network for data connectivity.</p>
   1871 <p>Android 4.0 MAY be used on devices that do not include telephony hardware.
   1872 That is, Android 4.0 is compatible with devices that are not phones.
   1873 However, if a device implementation does include GSM or CDMA telephony, it
   1874 MUST implement full support for the API for that technology. Device
   1875 implementations that do not include telephony hardware MUST implement the full
   1876 APIs as no-ops.</p>
   1877 <a name="section-7.4.2"></a><h4>7.4.2. IEEE 802.11 (WiFi)</h4>
   1878 <p>Android 4.0 device implementations SHOULD include support for one or more
   1879 forms of 802.11 (b/g/a/n, etc.) If a device implementation does include
   1880 support for 802.11, it MUST implement the corresponding Android API.</p>
   1881 <a name="section-7.4.3"></a><h4>7.4.3. Bluetooth</h4>
   1882 <p>Device implementations SHOULD include a Bluetooth transceiver. Device
   1883 implementations that do include a Bluetooth transceiver MUST enable the
   1884 RFCOMM-based Bluetooth API as described in the SDK documentation [<a
   1885 href="#resources42">Resources, 42</a>]. Device implementations SHOULD
   1886 implement relevant Bluetooth profiles, such as A2DP, AVRCP, OBEX, etc. as
   1887 appropriate for the device.</p>
   1888 <p>The Compatibility Test Suite includes cases that cover basic operation of
   1889 the Android RFCOMM Bluetooth API. However, since Bluetooth is a communications
   1890 protocol between devices, it cannot be fully tested by unit tests running on a
   1891 single device. Consequently, device implementations MUST also pass the
   1892 human-driven Bluetooth test procedure described in Appendix A.</p>
   1893 <a name="section-7.4.4"></a><h4>7.4.4. Near-Field Communications</h4>
   1894 <p>Device implementations SHOULD include a transceiver and related hardware
   1895 for Near-Field Communications (NFC). If a device implementation does include
   1896 NFC hardware, then it:</p>
   1897 <ul>
   1898   <li>MUST report the android.hardware.nfc feature from the
   1899       <code>android.content.pm.PackageManager.hasSystemFeature()</code> method.
   1900       [<a href="#resources37">Resources, 37</a>]</li>
   1901   <li>MUST be capable of reading and writing NDEF messages via the following NFC
   1902       standards:
   1903    <ul>
   1904     <li>MUST be capable of acting as an NFC Forum reader/writer
   1905         (as defined by the NFC Forum technical specification
   1906         NFCForum-TS-DigitalProtocol-1.0) via the following NFC standards:
   1907      <ul>
   1908       <li>NfcA (ISO14443-3A)</li>
   1909       <li>NfcB (ISO14443-3B) </li>
   1910       <li>NfcF (JIS 6319-4)</li>
   1911       <li>IsoDep (ISO 14443-4)</li>
   1912       <li>NFC Forum Tag Types 1, 2, 3, 4 (defined by the NFC Forum)</li>
   1913      </ul>
   1914     </li>
   1915    </ul>
   1916   </li>
   1917   <li>SHOULD be capable of reading and writing NDEF messages via the following
   1918       NFC standards. Note that while the NFC standards below are stated as
   1919       "SHOULD" for Android 4.0, the Compatibility Definition for a future
   1920       version is planned to change these to "MUST". That is, these stanards are
   1921       optional in Android 4.0 but <b>will be required</b> in future versions.
   1922       Existing and new devices that run Android 4.0 are <b>very strongly
   1923       encouraged to meet these requirements in Android 4.0</b> so they will be
   1924       able to upgrade to the future platform releases.
   1925     <ul>
   1926       <li>NfcV (ISO 15693)</li>
   1927     </ul>
   1928   </li>
   1929   <li>MUST be capable of transmitting and receiving data via the following
   1930       peer-to-peer standards and protocols:
   1931     <ul>
   1932       <li>ISO 18092</li>
   1933       <li>LLCP 1.0 (defined by the NFC Forum)</li>
   1934       <li>SDP 1.0 (defined by the NFC Forum)</li>
   1935       <li>NDEF Push Protocol [<a href="#resources43">Resources, 43</a>]</li>
   1936       <li>SNEP 1.0 (defined by the NFC Forum)</li>
   1937     </ul>
   1938   </li>
   1939   <li>MUST include support for Android Beam:
   1940    <ul>
   1941     <li>MUST implement the SNEP default server. Valid NDEF messages received
   1942         by the default SNEP server MUST be dispatched to applications using
   1943         the android.nfc.ACTION_NDEF_DISCOVERED intent. Disabling Android Beam
   1944         in settings MUST NOT disable dispatch of incoming NDEF message.</li>
   1945     <li>MUST implement the NPP server. Messages received by the NPP server MUST
   1946         be processed the same way as the SNEP default server.</li>
   1947     <li>MUST implement a SNEP client and attempt to send outbound P2P NDEF to
   1948         the default SNEP server when Android Beam is enabled. If no default
   1949         SNEP server is found then the client MUST attempt to send to an NPP
   1950         server.</li>
   1951     <li>MUST allow foreground activities to set the outbound P2P NDEF message
   1952         using android.nfc.NfcAdapter.setNdefPushMessage, and
   1953         android.nfc.NfcAdapter.setNdefPushMessageCallback, and
   1954         android.nfc.NfcAdapter.enableForegroundNdefPush.</li>
   1955     <li>SHOULD use a gesture or on-screen confirmation, such as 'Touch to Beam',
   1956         before sending outbound P2P NDEF messages.</li>
   1957     <li>SHOULD enable Android Beam by default</li>
   1958    </ul>
   1959   </li>
   1960   <li>MUST poll for all supported technologies while in NFC discovery mode.</li>
   1961   <li>SHOULD be in NFC discovery mode while the device is awake with the screen active
   1962       and the lock-screen unlocked.</li>
   1963 </ul>
   1964 
   1965 <p>(Note that publicly available links are not available for the JIS, ISO, and
   1966 NFC Forum specifications cited above.)</p>
   1967 <p>Additionally, device implementations MAY include reader/writer support for
   1968 the following MIFARE technologies.</p>
   1969 <ul>
   1970   <li>MIFARE Classic (NXP MF1S503x [<a href="#resources44">Resources, 44</a>],
   1971       MF1S703x [<a href="#resources44">Resources, 44</a>])</li>
   1972   <li>MIFARE Ultralight (NXP MF0ICU1 [<a href="#resources46">Resources, 46</a>],
   1973       MF0ICU2 [<a href="#resources46">Resources, 46</a>])</li>
   1974   <li>NDEF on MIFARE Classic (NXP AN130511 [<a href="#resources48">Resources, 48</a>],
   1975       AN130411 [<a href="#resources49">Resources, 49</a>])</li>
   1976 </ul>
   1977 <p>Note that Android 4.0 includes APIs for these MIFARE types. If a
   1978 device implementation supports MIFARE in the reader/writer role, it:</p>
   1979 <ul>
   1980   <li>MUST implement the corresponding Android APIs as documented by the
   1981   Android SDK</li>
   1982   <li>MUST report the feature com.nxp.mifare from the
   1983   <code>android.content.pm.PackageManager.hasSystemFeature()</code> method.
   1984   [<a href="#resources37">Resources, 37</a>] Note that this is not a standard
   1985   Android feature, and as such does not appear as a constant on the
   1986   <code>PackageManager</code> class.</li>
   1987   <li>MUST NOT implement the corresponding Android APIs nor report the
   1988   com.nxp.mifare feature unless it also implements general NFC support as
   1989   described in this section</li>
   1990 </ul>
   1991 <p>If a device implementation does not include NFC hardware, it MUST NOT
   1992 declare the android.hardware.nfc feature from the
   1993 <code>android.content.pm.PackageManager.hasSystemFeature()</code> method [<a
   1994 href="#resources37">Resources, 37</a>], and MUST implement the Android 4.0 NFC
   1995 API as a no-op.</p>
   1996 <p>As the classes <code>android.nfc.NdefMessage</code> and
   1997 <code>android.nfc.NdefRecord</code> represent a protocol-independent data
   1998 representation format, device implementations MUST implement these APIs even
   1999 if they do not include support for NFC or declare the android.hardware.nfc
   2000 feature.</p>
   2001 <a name="section-7.4.5"></a><h4>7.4.5. Minimum Network Capability</h4>
   2002 <p>Device implementations MUST include support for one or more forms of data
   2003 networking. Specifically, device implementations MUST include support for at
   2004 least one data standard capable of 200Kbit/sec or greater. Examples of
   2005 technologies that satisfy this requirement include EDGE, HSPA, EV-DO, 802.11g,
   2006 Ethernet, etc.</p>
   2007 <p>Device implementations where a physical networking standard (such as
   2008 Ethernet) is the primary data connection SHOULD also include support for at
   2009 least one common wireless data standard, such as 802.11 (WiFi).</p>
   2010 <p>Devices MAY implement more than one form of data connectivity.</p>
   2011 
   2012 
   2013 <a name="section-7.5"></a><h3>7.5. Cameras</h3>
   2014 <p>Device implementations SHOULD include a rear-facing camera, and MAY include
   2015 a front-facing camera. A rear-facing camera is a camera located on the side of
   2016 the device opposite the display; that is, it images scenes on the far side of
   2017 the device, like a traditional camera. A front-facing camera is a camera
   2018 located on the same side of the device as the display; that is, a camera
   2019 typically used to image the user, such as for video conferencing and similar
   2020 applications.</p>
   2021 <a name="section-7.5.1"></a><h4>7.5.1. Rear-Facing Camera</h4>
   2022 <p>Device implementations SHOULD include a rear-facing camera. If a device
   2023 implementation includes a rear-facing camera, it:</p>
   2024 <ul>
   2025 <li>MUST have a resolution of at least 2 megapixels</li>
   2026 <li>SHOULD have either hardware auto-focus, or software auto-focus implemented
   2027 in the camera driver (transparent to application software)</li>
   2028 <li>MAY have fixed-focus or EDOF (extended depth of field) hardware</li>
   2029 <li>MAY include a flash. If the Camera includes a flash, the flash lamp MUST
   2030 NOT be lit while an android.hardware.Camera.PreviewCallback instance has been
   2031 registered on a Camera preview surface, unless the application has explicitly
   2032 enabled the flash by enabling the <code>FLASH_MODE_AUTO</code> or
   2033 <code>FLASH_MODE_ON</code> attributes of a <code>Camera.Parameters</code>
   2034 object. Note that this constraint does not apply to the device's built-in
   2035 system camera application, but only to third-party applications using
   2036 <code>Camera.PreviewCallback</code>.</li>
   2037 </ul>
   2038 <a name="section-7.5.2"></a><h4>7.5.2. Front-Facing Camera</h4>
   2039 <p>Device implementations MAY include a front-facing camera. If a device
   2040 implementation includes a front-facing camera, it:</p>
   2041 <ul>
   2042 <li>MUST have a resolution of at least VGA (that is, 640x480 pixels)</li>
   2043 <li>MUST NOT use a front-facing camera as the default for the Camera API.
   2044 That is, the camera API in Android 4.0 has specific support for front-facing
   2045 cameras, and device implementations MUST NOT configure the API to to treat a
   2046 front-facing camera as the default rear-facing camera, even if it is the only
   2047 camera on the device.</li>
   2048 <li>MAY include features (such as auto-focus, flash, etc.)
   2049 available to rear-facing cameras as described in Section 7.5.1.</li>
   2050 <li>MUST horizontally reflect (i.e. mirror) the stream displayed by an app in a
   2051 CameraPreview, as follows:</li>
   2052 <ul>
   2053 <li>If the device implementation is capable of being rotated by user (such as
   2054 automatically via an accelerometer or manually via user input), the camera
   2055 preview MUST be mirrored horizontally relative to the device's current
   2056 orientation.</li>
   2057 <li>If the current application has explicitly requested that the Camera
   2058 display be rotated via a call to the
   2059 <code>android.hardware.Camera.setDisplayOrientation()</code> [<a
   2060 href="#resources50">Resources, 50</a>] method, the camera preview MUST be
   2061 mirrored horizontally relative to the orientation specified by the
   2062 application.</li>
   2063 <li>Otherwise, the preview MUST be mirrored along the device's default horizontal axis.</li>
   2064 </ul>
   2065 <li>MUST mirror the image displayed by the postview in the same manner as
   2066 the camera preview image stream. (If the device implementation does not
   2067 support postview, this requirement obviously does not apply.)</li>
   2068 <li>MUST NOT mirror the final captured still image or video streams returned
   2069 to application callbacks or committed to media storage</li>
   2070 </ul>
   2071 <a name="section-7.5.3"></a><h4>7.5.3. Camera API Behavior</h4>
   2072 <p>Device implementations MUST implement the following behaviors for the
   2073 camera-related APIs, for both front- and rear-facing cameras:</p>
   2074 <ol>
   2075 <li>If an application has never called
   2076 <code>android.hardware.Camera.Parameters.setPreviewFormat(int)</code>, then the
   2077 device MUST use <code>android.hardware.PixelFormat.YCbCr_420_SP</code> for
   2078 preview data provided to application callbacks.</li>
   2079 <li>If an application registers an <code>android.hardware.Camera.PreviewCallback
   2080 </code> instance and the system calls the <code>onPreviewFrame()</code> method
   2081 when the preview format is YCbCr_420_SP, the data in the <code>byte[]</code>
   2082 passed into <code>onPreviewFrame()</code> must further be in the NV21 encoding
   2083 format. That is, NV21 MUST be the default.</li>
   2084 <li>Device implementations MUST support the YV12 format (as denoted by the
   2085 <code>android.graphics.ImageFormat.YV12</code> constant) for camera previews
   2086 for both front- and rear-facing cameras.  (The hardware video decoder and camera
   2087 may use any native pixel format, but the device implementation MUST support conversion
   2088 to YV12.)</li>
   2089 </ol>
   2090 <p>Device implementations MUST implement the full Camera API included in the
   2091 Android 4.0 SDK documentation [<a href="#resources51">Resources, 51</a>]),
   2092 regardless of whether the device includes hardware autofocus or other
   2093 capabilities. For instance, cameras that lack autofocus MUST still call any
   2094 registered <code>android.hardware.Camera.AutoFocusCallback</code> instances (even though
   2095 this has no relevance to a non-autofocus camera.) Note that this does apply
   2096 to front-facing cameras; for instance, even though most front-facing cameras
   2097 do not support autofocus, the API callbacks must still be "faked" as
   2098 described.</p>
   2099 <p>Device implementations MUST recognize and honor each parameter name defined
   2100 as a constant on the <code>android.hardware.Camera.Parameters</code> class, if the
   2101 underlying hardware supports the feature. If the device hardware does not
   2102 support a feature, the API must behave as documented. Conversely, Device
   2103 implementations MUST NOT honor or recognize string constants passed
   2104 to the <code>android.hardware.Camera.setParameters()</code> method other than
   2105 those documented as constants on the
   2106 <code>android.hardware.Camera.Parameters</code>.  That is,
   2107 device implementations MUST support all standard Camera parameters if the
   2108 hardware allows, and MUST NOT support custom Camera parameter types.</p>
   2109 <p>Device implementations MUST broadcast the <code>Camera.ACTION_NEW_PICTURE</code>
   2110 intent whenever a new picture is taken by the camera and the entry of the picture
   2111 has been added to the media store.</p>
   2112 <p>Device implementations MUST broadcast the <code>Camera.ACTION_NEW_VIDEO</code>
   2113 intent whenever a new video is recorded by the camera and the entry of the picture
   2114 has been added to the media store.</p>
   2115 <a name="section-7.5.4"></a><h4>7.5.4. Camera Orientation</h4>
   2116 <p>Both front- and rear-facing cameras, if present, MUST be oriented so that
   2117 the long dimension of the camera aligns with the screen's long dimention. That
   2118 is, when the device is held in the landscape orientation, cameras MUST
   2119 capture images in the landscape orientation. This applies regardless of the
   2120 device's natural orientation; that is, it applies to landscape-primary devices
   2121 as well as portrait-primary devices.</p>
   2122 
   2123 
   2124 <a name="section-7.6"></a><h3>7.6. Memory and Storage</h3>
   2125 <a name="section-7.6.1"></a><h4>7.6.1. Minimum Memory and Storage</h4>
   2126 <p>Device implementations MUST have at least 340MB of memory available to the
   2127 kernel and userspace. The 340MB MUST be in addition to any memory dedicated to
   2128 hardware components such as radio, video, and so on that is not under the
   2129 kernel's control.</p>
   2130 <p>Device implementations MUST have at least 350MB of non-volatile storage
   2131 available for application private data. That is, the <code>/data</code> partition MUST be at
   2132 least 350MB.</p>
   2133 <p>The Android APIs include a Download Manager that applications may use to
   2134 download data files [<a href="#resources56">Resources, 56</a>]. The device
   2135 implementation of the Download Manager MUST be capable of downloading individual
   2136 files of at least 100MB in size to the default "cache" location.</p>
   2137 <a name="section-7.6.2"></a><h4>7.6.2. Application Shared Storage</h4>
   2138 <p>Device implementations MUST offer shared storage for applications. The
   2139 shared storage provided MUST be at least 1GB in size.</p>
   2140 <p>Device implementations MUST be configured with shared storage mounted by
   2141 default, "out of the box". If the shared storage is not mounted on the Linux
   2142 path <code>/sdcard</code>, then the device MUST include a Linux symbolic link
   2143 from <code>/sdcard</code> to the actual mount point.</p>
   2144 <p>Device implementations MUST enforce as documented the
   2145 <code>android.permission.WRITE_EXTERNAL_STORAGE</code> permission on this
   2146 shared storage. Shared storage MUST otherwise be writable by any application
   2147 that obtains that permission.</p>
   2148 <p>Device implementations MAY have hardware for user-accessible removable
   2149 storage, such as a Secure Digital card. Alternatively, device implementations
   2150 MAY allocate internal (non-removable) storage as shared storage for apps.</p>
   2151 <p>Regardless of the form of shared storage used, device implementations MUST
   2152 provide some mechanism to access the contents of shared storage from a host
   2153 computer, such as USB mass storage (UMS) or Media Transfer Protocol (MTP). Device
   2154 implementations MAY use USB mass storage, but SHOULD use Media Transfer
   2155 Protocol. If the device implementation supports Media Transfer Protocol:</p>
   2156 <ul>
   2157 <li>The device implementation SHOULD be compatible with the reference Android
   2158 MTP host, Android File Transfer [<a href="#resources57">Resources, 57</a>].</li>
   2159 <li>The device implementation SHOULD report a USB device class of <code>0x00</code>.</li>
   2160 <li>The device implementation SHOULD report a USB interface name of 'MTP'.</li>
   2161 </ul>
   2162 <p>If the device implementation lacks USB ports, it MUST provide a host
   2163 computer with access to the contents of shared storage by some other means,
   2164 such as a network file system.</p>
   2165 <p>It is illustrative to consider two common examples. If a device
   2166 implementation includes an SD card slot to satisfy the shared storage
   2167 requirement, a FAT-formatted SD card 1GB in size or larger MUST be included
   2168 with the device as sold to users, and MUST be mounted by default.
   2169 Alternatively, if a device implementation uses internal fixed storage to
   2170 satisfy this requirement, that storage MUST be 1GB in size or larger
   2171 and mounted on <code>/sdcard</code> (or <code>/sdcard</code>
   2172 MUST be a symbolic link to the physical location if it is mounted elsewhere.)</p>
   2173 <p>Device implementations that include multiple shared storage paths (such as
   2174 both an SD card slot and shared internal storage) SHOULD modify the core
   2175 applications such as the media scanner and ContentProvider to transparently
   2176 support files placed in both locations.</p>
   2177 
   2178 <a name="section-7.7"></a><h3>7.7. USB</h3>
   2179 <p>Device implementations SHOULD include a USB client port, and SHOULD include
   2180 a USB host port.</p>
   2181 <p>If a device implementation includes a USB client port:</p>
   2182 <ul>
   2183 <li>the port MUST be connectable to a USB host with a standard USB-A port</li>
   2184 <li>the port SHOULD use the micro USB form factor on the device side</li>
   2185 <li>it MUST allow a host connected to the device to access the contents of the
   2186 shared storage volume using either USB mass storage or Media Transfer
   2187 Protocol</li>
   2188 <li>it MUST implement the Android Open Accessory API and specification as documented
   2189 in the Android SDK documentation, and MUST declare support for the hardware
   2190 feature <code>android.hardware.usb.accessory</code> [<a href="#resources52">Resources,
   2191 51</a>]</li>
   2192 </ul>
   2193 
   2194 <p>If a device implementation includes a USB host port:</p>
   2195 <ul>
   2196 <li>it MAY use a non-standard port form factor, but if so MUST ship with a
   2197 cable or cables adapting the port to standard USB-A</li>
   2198 <li>it MUST implement the Android USB host API as documented in the Android
   2199 SDK, and MUST declare support for the hardware feature
   2200 <code>android.hardware.usb.host</code> [<a href="#resources53">Resources,
   2201 52</a>]</li>
   2202 </ul>
   2203 <p>Device implementations MUST implement the Android Debug Bridge. If a device
   2204 implementation omits a USB client port, it MUST implement the Android Debug
   2205 Bridge via local-area network (such as Ethernet or 802.11)</p>
   2206 
   2207 <a name="section-8"></a><h2>8. Performance Compatibility</h2>
   2208 <p>Device implementations MUST meet the key performance metrics of an Android
   2209 4.0 compatible device defined in the table below:</p>
   2210 <table><tbody><tr>
   2211 <td><b>Metric</b></td>
   2212 <td><b>Performance Threshold</b></td>
   2213 <td><b>Comments</b></td>
   2214 </tr>
   2215 <tr>
   2216 <td>Application Launch Time</td>
   2217 <td>The following applications should launch within the specified time.<ul>
   2218 <li>Browser: less than 1300ms</li>
   2219 <li>Contacts: less than 700ms</li>
   2220 <li>Settings: less than 700ms</li>
   2221 </ul></td>
   2222 <td>The launch time is measured as the total time to
   2223 complete loading the default activity for the application, including the time
   2224 it takes to start the Linux process, load the Android package into the Dalvik
   2225 VM, and call onCreate.</td>
   2226 </tr>
   2227 <tr>
   2228 <td>Simultaneous Applications</td>
   2229 <td>When multiple applications have been launched, re-launching an
   2230 already-running application after it has been launched must take less than the
   2231 original launch time.</td>
   2232 <td>&nbsp;</td>
   2233 </tr>
   2234 </tbody>
   2235 </table>
   2236 
   2237 <a name="section-9"></a><h2>9. Security Model Compatibility</h2>
   2238 <p>Device implementations MUST implement a security model consistent with the
   2239 Android platform security model as defined in Security and Permissions
   2240 reference document in the APIs [<a href="#resources54">Resources, 54</a>] in the
   2241 Android developer documentation. Device implementations MUST support
   2242 installation of self-signed applications without requiring any additional
   2243 permissions/certificates from any third parties/authorities.  Specifically,
   2244 compatible devices MUST support the security mechanisms described in the
   2245 follow sub-sections.</p>
   2246 <a name="section-9.1"></a><h3>9.1. Permissions</h3>
   2247 <p>Device implementations MUST support the Android permissions model as
   2248 defined in the Android developer documentation [<a
   2249 href="#resources54">Resources, 54</a>]. Specifically,
   2250 implementations MUST enforce each permission defined as described in the SDK
   2251 documentation; no permissions may be omitted, altered, or ignored.
   2252 Implementations MAY add additional permissions, provided the new permission ID
   2253 strings are not in the android.* namespace.</p>
   2254 <a name="section-9.2"></a><h3>9.2. UID and Process Isolation</h3>
   2255 <p>Device implementations MUST support the Android application sandbox model,
   2256 in which each application runs as a unique Unix-style UID and in a separate
   2257 process.  Device implementations MUST support running multiple applications as
   2258 the same Linux user ID, provided that the applications are properly signed and
   2259 constructed, as defined in the Security and Permissions reference [<a
   2260 href="#resources54">Resources, 54</a>].</p>
   2261 <a name="section-9.3"></a><h3>9.3. Filesystem Permissions</h3>
   2262 <p>Device implementations MUST support the Android file access permissions
   2263 model as defined in as defined in the Security and Permissions reference [<a
   2264 href="#resources54">Resources, 54</a>].</p>
   2265 <a name="section-9.4"></a><h3>9.4. Alternate Execution Environments</h3>
   2266 <p>Device implementations MAY include runtime environments that execute
   2267 applications using some other software or technology than the Dalvik virtual
   2268 machine or native code. However, such alternate execution environments MUST
   2269 NOT compromise the Android security model or the security of installed Android
   2270 applications, as described in this section.</p>
   2271 <p>Alternate runtimes MUST themselves be Android applications, and abide by
   2272    the standard Android security model, as described elsewhere in Section 9.</p>
   2273 <p>Alternate runtimes MUST NOT be granted access to resources protected by
   2274    permissions not requested in the runtime's AndroidManifest.xml file via the
   2275    <code>&lt;uses-permission&gt;</code> mechanism.</p>
   2276 <p>Alternate runtimes MUST NOT permit applications to make use of features
   2277    protected by Android permissions restricted to system applications.</p>
   2278 <p>Alternate runtimes MUST abide by the Android sandbox model.  Specifically:</p>
   2279 <ul>
   2280 <li>Alternate runtimes SHOULD install apps via the PackageManager into
   2281     separate Android sandboxes (that is, Linux user IDs, etc.)</li>
   2282 <li>Alternate runtimes MAY provide a single Android sandbox shared by all
   2283     applications using the alternate runtime.</li>
   2284 <li>Alternate runtimes and installed applications using an alternate runtime
   2285     MUST NOT reuse the sandbox of any other app installed on the device, except
   2286     through the standard Android mechanisms of shared user ID and signing
   2287     certificate</li>
   2288 <li>Alternate runtimes MUST NOT launch with, grant, or be granted access to
   2289     the sandboxes corresponding to other Android applications.</li>
   2290 </ul>
   2291 <p>Alternate runtimes MUST NOT be launched with, be granted, or grant to other
   2292    applications any privileges of the superuser (root), or of any other user ID.</p>
   2293 <p>The .apk files of alternate runtimes MAY be included in the system image of
   2294    a device implementation, but MUST be signed with a key distinct
   2295    from the key used to sign other applications included with the device
   2296    implementation.</p>
   2297 <p>When installing applications, alternate runtimes MUST obtain user consent
   2298    for the Android permissions used by the application. That is, if an
   2299    application needs to make use of a device resource for which there is a
   2300    corresponding Android permission (such as Camera, GPS, etc.), the alternate
   2301    runtime MUST inform the user that the application will be able to access
   2302    that resource. If the runtime environment does not record application
   2303    capabilities in this manner, the runtime environment MUST list all
   2304    permissions held by the runtime itself when installing any application
   2305    using that runtime.</p>
   2306 
   2307 <a name="section-10"></a><h2>10. Software Compatibility Testing</h2>
   2308 <p>Device implementations MUST pass all tests described in this section.</p>
   2309 <p>However, note that no software test package is fully comprehensive. For
   2310 this reason, device implementers are very strongly encouraged to make the
   2311 minimum number of changes as possible to the reference and preferred
   2312 implementation of Android 4.0 available from the Android Open Source Project.
   2313 This will minimize the risk of introducing bugs that create incompatibilities
   2314 requiring rework and potential device updates.</p>
   2315 <a name="section-10.1"></a><h3>10.1. Compatibility Test Suite</h3>
   2316 <p>Device implementations MUST pass the Android Compatibility Test Suite (CTS)
   2317 [<a href="#resources02">Resources, 2</a>] available from the Android Open Source
   2318 Project, using the final shipping software on the device. Additionally, device
   2319 implementers SHOULD use the reference implementation in the Android Open
   2320 Source tree as much as possible, and MUST ensure compatibility in cases of
   2321 ambiguity in CTS and for any reimplementations of parts of the reference
   2322 source code.</p>
   2323 <p>The CTS is designed to be run on an actual device. Like any software, the
   2324 CTS may itself contain bugs.  The CTS will be versioned independently of this
   2325 Compatibility Definition, and multiple revisions of the CTS may be released
   2326 for Android 4.0. Device implementations MUST pass the latest CTS version
   2327 available at the time the device software is completed.</p>
   2328 <a name="section-10.2"></a><h3>10.2. CTS Verifier</h3>
   2329 <p>Device implementations MUST correctly execute all applicable cases in the
   2330 CTS Verifier. The CTS Verifier is included with the Compatibility Test Suite,
   2331 and is intended to be run by a human operator to test functionality that
   2332 cannot be tested by an automated system, such as correct functioning of a
   2333 camera and sensors.</p>
   2334 <p>The CTS Verifier has tests for many kinds of hardware, including some
   2335 hardware that is optional. Device implementations MUST pass all tests for
   2336 hardware which they possess; for instance, if a device possesses an
   2337 accelerometer, it MUST correctly execute the Accelerometer test case in the
   2338 CTS Verifier. Test cases for features noted as optional by this Compatibility
   2339 Definition Document MAY be skipped or omitted.</p>
   2340 <p>Every device and every build MUST correctly run the CTS Verifier, as noted
   2341 above. However, since many builds are very similar, device implementers are
   2342 not expected to explicitly run the CTS Verifier on builds that differ only in
   2343 trivial ways. Specifically, device implementations that differ from an
   2344 implementation that has passed the CTS Verfier only by the set of included
   2345 locales, branding, etc. MAY omit the CTS Verifier test.</p>
   2346 <a name="section-10.3"></a><h3>10.3. Reference Applications</h3>
   2347 <p>Device implementers MUST test implementation compatibility using the
   2348 following open source applications:</p>
   2349 <ul>
   2350 <li>The "Apps for Android" applications [<a href="#resources55">Resources, 55</a>].</li>
   2351 <li>Replica Island (available in Android Market)</li>
   2352 </ul>
   2353 <p>Each app above MUST launch and behave correctly on the implementation, for
   2354 the implementation to be considered compatible.</p>
   2355 
   2356 
   2357 <a name="section-11"></a><h2>11. Updatable Software</h2>
   2358 <p>Device implementations MUST include a mechanism to replace the entirety of
   2359 the system software. The mechanism need not perform "live" upgrades - that
   2360 is, a device restart MAY be required.</p>
   2361 <p>Any method can be used, provided that it can replace the entirety of the
   2362 software preinstalled on the device. For instance, any of the following
   2363 approaches will satisfy this requirement:</p>
   2364 <ul>
   2365 <li>Over-the-air (OTA) downloads with offline update via reboot</li>
   2366 <li>"Tethered" updates over USB from a host PC</li>
   2367 <li>"Offline" updates via a reboot and update from a file on removable
   2368 storage</li>
   2369 </ul>
   2370 <p>The update mechanism used MUST support updates without wiping user data.
   2371 That is, the update mechanism MUST preserve application private data
   2372 and application shared data. Note that the upstream Android software includes
   2373 an update mechanism that satisfies this requirement.</p>
   2374 <p>If an error is found in a device implementation after it has been released
   2375 but within its reasonable product lifetime that is determined in consultation
   2376 with the Android Compatibility Team to affect the compatibility of third-party
   2377 applications, the device implementer MUST correct the error via a software
   2378 update available that can be applied per the mechanism just described.</p>
   2379 
   2380 <a name="section-12"></a><h2>12. Contact Us</h2>
   2381 <p>You can contact the document authors at <a
   2382 href="mailto:compatibility (a] android.com">compatibility (a] android.com</a> for
   2383 clarifications and to bring up any issues that you think the document does not
   2384 cover.</p>
   2385 
   2386 <div style="page-break-before: always;"></div>
   2387 
   2388 <a name="appendix-A"></a><h2>Appendix A - Bluetooth Test Procedure</h2>
   2389 <p>The Compatibility Test Suite includes cases that cover basic operation of
   2390 the Android RFCOMM Bluetooth API. However, since Bluetooth is a communications
   2391 protocol between devices, it cannot be fully tested by unit tests running on a
   2392 single device. Consequently, device implementations MUST also pass the
   2393 human-operated Bluetooth test procedure described below.</p>
   2394 <p>The test procedure is based on the BluetoothChat sample app included in the
   2395 Android open source project tree. The procedure requires two devices:</p>
   2396 <ul>
   2397 <li>a candidate device implementation running the software build to be tested</li>
   2398 <li>a separate device implementation already known to be compatible, and of a
   2399     model from the device implementation being tested - that is, a "known
   2400     good" device implementation</li>
   2401 </ul>
   2402 <p>The test procedure below refers to these devices as the "candidate" and "known
   2403 good" devices, respectively.</p>
   2404 <h3>Setup and Installation</h3>
   2405 <ol>
   2406 <li>Build BluetoothChat.apk via 'make samples' from an Android source code tree.</li>
   2407 <li>Install BluetoothChat.apk on the known-good device.</li>
   2408 <li>Install BluetoothChat.apk on the candidate device.</li>
   2409 </ol>
   2410 <h3>Test Bluetooth Control by Apps</h3>
   2411 <ol>
   2412 <li>Launch BluetoothChat on the candidate device, while Bluetooth is disabled.</li>
   2413 <li>Verify that the candidate device either turns on Bluetooth, or prompts the user with a dialog to turn on Bluetooth.</li>
   2414 </ol>
   2415 <h3>Test Pairing and Communication</h3>
   2416 <ol>
   2417 <li>Launch the Bluetooth Chat app on both devices.</li>
   2418 <li>Make the known-good device discoverable from within BluetoothChat (using the Menu).</li>
   2419 <li>On the candidate device, scan for Bluetooth devices from within BluetoothChat (using the Menu) and pair with the known-good device.</li>
   2420 <li>Send 10 or more messages from each device, and verify that the other device receives them correctly.</li>
   2421 <li>Close the BluetoothChat app on both devices by pressing <b>Home</b>.</li>
   2422 <li>Unpair each device from the other, using the device Settings app.</li>
   2423 </ol>
   2424 <h3>Test Pairing and Communication in the Reverse Direction</h3>
   2425 <ol>
   2426 <li>Launch the Bluetooth Chat app on both devices.</li>
   2427 <li>Make the candidate device discoverable from within BluetoothChat (using the Menu).</li>
   2428 <li>On the known-good device, scan for Bluetooth devices from within BluetoothChat (using the Menu) and pair with the candidate device.</li>
   2429 <li>Send 10 or messages from each device, and verify that the other device receives them correctly.</li>
   2430 <li>Close the Bluetooth Chat app on both devices by pressing Back repeatedly to get to the Launcher.</li>
   2431 </ol>
   2432 <h3>Test Re-Launches</h3>
   2433 <ol>
   2434 <li>Re-launch the Bluetooth Chat app on both devices.</li>
   2435 <li>Send 10 or messages from each device, and verify that the other device receives them correctly.</li>
   2436 </ol>
   2437 <p>Note: the above tests have some cases which end a test section by using
   2438 Home, and some using Back. These tests are not redundant and are not optional:
   2439 the objective is to verify that the Bluetooth API and stack works correctly
   2440 both when Activities are explicitly terminated (via the user pressing Back,
   2441 which calls finish()), and implicitly sent to background (via the user
   2442 pressing Home.) Each test sequence MUST be performed as described.</p>
   2443 
   2444 <div id="footerContent" xmlns:pdf="http://whatever">
   2445 <pdf:pagenumber/>
   2446 </div>
   2447 </body>
   2448 </html>
   2449