Blockstack Android Save Abandoned

The Blockstack Android library for identity, auth and storage

Project README

Blockstack Android SDK (Pre-release)

Blockstack is a platform for developing a new, decentralized internet, where users control and manage their own information. Interested developers can create applications for this new internet using the Blockstack platform.

This repository contains a pre-release for Android developers:

All of the material in this is a pre-release, if you encounter an issue please feel free to log it on this repository.

Upgrade to 0.5.0

Apps using SDK version below 0.5.0 need to make following changes:

  • Use BlockstackSignIn.redirectUserToSignIn instead of BlockstackSession.redirectUserToSignIn.
  • Replace result handling in callbacks of BlockstackSession.getFile by directly handling the result.
  • Handle IllegalStateException exception when calling BlockstackSession.loadUserData while the user is not signed in.
  • Handle Result.error as type ResultError, not as type String.

For a complete list of changes with the 0.5.0 upgrade, see this commit.

Get started

Use the detailed tutorial and to build your first Blockstack Android application with React. You can also work through three example apps in module (/example), (/example-multi-activity) and (/example-service).

Adding to your project

    repositories {
          maven { url 'https://jitpack.io' }
    }

    dependencies {
        implementation 'com.github.blockstack:blockstack-android:$blockstack_sdk_version'
    }

Handling Blockstack sessions

BlockstackSessions use a session store to persist their state.

The default implementation of ISessionStore uses the default shared preferences. If an apps needs to use two BlockstackSessions then both should use the same session store instance. Failure to use the same session store instance can cause situations where a user is logged out of one session while still being logged into the other.

The example applications and tutorial uses a custom url scheme to handle the redirect from the sign-in process. While suitable for samples, do not use this scheme in a production app.

In production, handle the redirect with app links such that no other apps could hijack the custom url scheme. Hijacking in this manner is not a security risk; It is simply a bad user experience if an app chooser pops up and the user has to choose how to finish the sign-in.

Replace the custom scheme intent filter with the intent filter with your domain/host name like this:

   <activity android:name="./SignInActivity"
     ...>
     <intent-filter>
       <action android:name="android.intent.action.VIEW" />
       <category android:name="android.intent.category.DEFAULT" />
       <category android:name="android.intent.category.BROWSABLE" />
       <data android:scheme="https" android:host="example.com" />
     </intent-filter>
     ...
   </activity>

Note, when using app links you do not need a web server anymore that redirects to the custom scheme. All you need to host is a manifest.json file for the app details and the assetlinks.json file for the app links.

Thread Handling

The Android SDK uses Kotlin's Coroutines. Network requests are using the Dispatchers.IO dispatcher.

Sign-In Flow

To sign-in a user with Blockstack your app should use BlockstackSignIn.redirectUserToSignIn and BlockstackSession.handlePendingAuthResponse. After the auth response is handled, use BlockstackSession to manage the user's data.

In the simple example, both sign-in and data management happens in the same activity. However, applications usually have a separate activity to handle user sign-in.

In the multi activity example a sign-in flow with two separate activities is implemented, one for the main activity and one for the account handling. The account handling activity updates the session data and the main activity uses the same session store to retrieve the session data. The SessionStore is using the default SharedPreferences`, therefore, the session data is shared between the two activities of the app.

Document Provider

Files stored on a gaia hub can be included in the user's device using Android Storage Access Framework (SAF). You should consider providing a document provider that allows the user to access the files in the context of other apps as well.

The Android documentation provides a details guide how to build a document provider. There exist open source examples provided by the community, e.g. OI ConvertCSV.

API Reference Documentation

Please see generated documenatation.

Regulatory Notes

Export Compliance

The Blockstack Android SDK includes methods to encrypt data. Please consider whether you have to be compliant with US export law when you distribute your app via Google Play. See for example Export Compliance

Privacy and Data Protection

Blockstack helps you to create privacy-by-design apps as for example required by GDPR.

In the context of GDPR, you should consider features to export and delete gaia files.

Contributing

Please see the contribution guidelines.

License

Please see license file

Open Source Agenda is not affiliated with "Blockstack Android" Project. README Source: stacks-archive/blockstack-android
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