backup.jd revision 4d7bc65538c7cd9fbb1fbbcf22d1da47fcee1219
1page.title=Data Backup
2@jd:body
3
4
5<div id="qv-wrapper">
6<div id="qv">
7
8  <h2>Quickview</h2>
9  <ul>
10    <li>Back up the user's data to the cloud in case the user loses it</li>
11    <li>If the user upgrades to a new Android-powered device, your app can restore the user's
12data onto the new device</li>
13    <li>Easily back up SharedPreferences and private files with BackupAgentHelper</li>
14    <li>Requires API Level 8</li>
15  </ul>
16
17  <h2>In this document</h2>
18  <ol>
19    <li><a href="#Basics">The Basics</a></li>
20    <li><a href="#BackupManifest">Declaring the Backup Agent in Your Manifest</a></li>
21    <li><a href="#BackupKey">Registering for Android Backup Service</a></li>
22    <li><a href="#BackupAgent">Extending BackupAgent</a>
23      <ol>
24        <li><a href="#RequiredMethods">Required Methods</a></li>
25        <li><a href="#PerformingBackup">Performing backup</a></li>
26        <li><a href="#PerformingRestore">Performing restore</a></li>
27      </ol>
28    </li>
29    <li><a href="#BackupAgentHelper">Extending BackupAgentHelper</a>
30      <ol>
31        <li><a href="#SharedPreferences">Backing up SharedPreferences</a></li>
32        <li><a href="#Files">Backing up Private Files</a></li>
33      </ol>
34    </li>
35    <li><a href="#RestoreVersion">Checking the Restore Data Version</a></li>
36    <li><a href="#RequestingBackup">Requesting Backup</a></li>
37    <li><a href="#RequestingRestore">Requesting Restore</a></li>
38    <li><a href="#Testing">Testing Your Backup Agent</a></li>
39  </ol>
40
41  <h2>Key classes</h2>
42  <ol>
43    <li>{@link android.app.backup.BackupManager}</li>
44    <li>{@link android.app.backup.BackupAgent}</li>
45    <li>{@link android.app.backup.BackupAgentHelper}</li>
46  </ol>
47
48  <h2>See also</h2>
49  <ol>
50    <li><a href="{@docRoot}guide/developing/tools/bmgr.html">{@code bmgr} tool</a></li>
51  </ol>
52
53</div>
54</div>
55
56<p>Android's {@link android.app.backup backup} service allows you to copy your persistent
57application data to remote "cloud" storage, in order to provide a restore point for the
58application data and settings. If a user performs a factory reset or converts to a new
59Android-powered device, the system automatically restores your backup data when the application
60is re-installed. This way, your users don't need to reproduce their previous data or
61application settings. This process is completely transparent to the user and does not affect the
62functionality or user experience in your application.</p>
63
64<p>During a backup operation (which your application can request), Android's Backup Manager ({@link
65android.app.backup.BackupManager}) queries your application for backup data, then hands it to
66a backup transport, which then delivers the data to the cloud storage. During a
67restore operation, the Backup Manager retrieves the backup data from the backup transport and
68returns it to your application so your application can restore the data to the device. It's
69possible for your application to request a restore, but that shouldn't be necessary&mdash;Android
70automatically performs a restore operation when your application is installed and there exists
71backup data associated with the user. The primary scenario in which backup data is restored is when
72a user resets their device or upgrades to a new device and their previously installed
73applications are re-installed.</p>
74
75<p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> The backup service is <em>not</em> designed for
76synchronizing application data with other clients or saving data that you'd like to access during
77the normal application lifecycle. You cannot read or write backup data on demand and cannot access
78it in any way other than through the APIs provided by the Backup Manager.</p>
79
80<p>The backup transport is the client-side component of Android's backup framework, which is
81customizable by
82the device manufacturer and service provider. The backup transport may differ from device to device
83and which backup transport is available on any given device is transparent to your application. The
84Backup Manager APIs isolate your application from the actual backup transport available on a given
85device&mdash;your application communicates with the Backup Manager through a fixed set of APIs,
86regardless of the underlying transport.</p>
87
88<p>Data backup is <em>not</em> guaranteed to be available on all Android-powered
89devices. However, your application is not adversely affected in the event
90that a device does not provide a backup transport. If you believe that users will benefit from data
91backup in your application, then you can implement it as described in this document, test it, then
92publish your application without any concern about which devices actually perform backup. When your
93application runs on a device that does not provide a backup transport, your application operates
94normally, but will not receive callbacks from the Backup Manager to backup data.</p>
95
96<p>Although you cannot know what the current transport is, you are always assured that your
97backup data cannot be read by other applications on the device. Only the Backup Manager and backup
98transport have access to the data you provide during a backup operation.</p>
99
100<p class="caution"><strong>Caution:</strong> Because the cloud storage and transport service can
101differ from device to device, Android makes no guarantees about the security of your data while
102using backup. You should always be cautious about using backup to store sensitive data, such as
103usernames and passwords.</p>
104
105
106<h2 id="Basics">The Basics</h2>
107
108<p>To backup your application data, you need to implement a backup agent. Your backup
109agent is called by the Backup Manager to provide the data you want to back up. It is also called
110to restore your backup data when the application is re-installed. The Backup Manager handles all
111your data transactions with the cloud storage (using the backup transport) and your backup agent
112handles all your data transactions on the device.</p>
113
114<p>To implement a backup agent, you must:</p>
115
116<ol>
117  <li>Declare your backup agent in your manifest file with the <a
118href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/application-element.html#agent">{@code
119android:backupAgent}</a> attribute.</li>
120  <li>Register your application with a backup service. Google offers <a
121href="http://code.google.com/android/backup/index.html">Android Backup Service</a> as a backup
122service for most Android-powered devices, which requires that you register your application in
123order for it to work. Any other backup services available might also require you to register
124in order to store your data on their servers.</li>
125  <li>Define a backup agent by either:</p>
126    <ol type="a">
127      <li><a href="#BackupAgent">Extending BackupAgent</a>
128        <p>The {@link android.app.backup.BackupAgent} class provides the central interface with
129which your application communicates with the Backup Manager. If you extend this class
130directly, you must override {@link
131android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onBackup(ParcelFileDescriptor,BackupDataOutput,ParcelFileDescriptor)
132onBackup()} and {@link
133android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onRestore(BackupDataInput,int,ParcelFileDescriptor)
134onRestore()} to handle the backup and restore operations for your data.</p>
135        <p><em>Or</em></p>
136      <li><a href="#BackupAgentHelper">Extending BackupAgentHelper</a>
137        <p>The {@link android.app.backup.BackupAgentHelper} class provides a convenient
138wrapper around the {@link android.app.backup.BackupAgent} class, which minimizes the amount of code
139you need to write. In your {@link android.app.backup.BackupAgentHelper}, you must use one or more
140"helper" objects, which automatically backup and restore certain types of data, so that you do not
141need to implement {@link
142android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onBackup(ParcelFileDescriptor,BackupDataOutput,ParcelFileDescriptor)
143onBackup()} and {@link
144android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onRestore(BackupDataInput,int,ParcelFileDescriptor)
145onRestore()}.</p>
146        <p>Android currently provides backup helpers that will backup and restore complete files
147from {@link android.content.SharedPreferences} and <a
148href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/data/data-storage.html#filesInternal">internal storage</a>.</p>
149      </li>
150    </ol>
151  </li>
152</ol>
153
154
155
156<h2 id="BackupManifest">Declaring the Backup Agent in Your Manifest</h2>
157
158<p>This is the easiest step, so once you've decided on the class name for your backup agent, declare
159it in your manifest with the <a
160href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/application-element.html#agent">{@code
161android:backupAgent}</a> attribute in the <a
162href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/application-element.html">{@code
163&lt;application&gt;}</a> tag.</p>
164
165<p>For example:</p>
166
167<pre>
168&lt;manifest ... &gt;
169    ...
170    &lt;application android:label="MyApplication"
171                 <b>android:backupAgent="MyBackupAgent"</b>&gt;
172        &lt;activity ... &gt;
173            ...
174        &lt;/activity&gt;
175    &lt;/application&gt;
176&lt;/manifest&gt;
177</pre>
178
179<p>Another attribute you might want to use is <a
180href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/application-element.html#restoreany">{@code
181android:restoreAnyVersion}</a>. This attribute takes a boolean value to indicate whether you
182want to restore the application data regardless of the current application version compared to the
183version that produced the backup data. (The default value is "{@code false}".) See <a
184href="#RestoreVersion">Checking the Restore Data Version</a> for more information.</p>
185
186<p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> The backup service and the APIs you must use are
187available only on devices running API Level 8 (Android 2.2) or greater, so you should also
188set your <a
189href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/uses-sdk-element.html#min">{@code android:minSdkVersion}</a>
190attribute to "8". However, if you implement proper <a
191href="{@docRoot}resources/articles/backward-compatibility.html">backward compatibility</a> in
192your application, you can support this feature for devices running API Level 8 or greater, while
193remaining compatible with older devices.</p>
194
195
196
197
198<h2 id="BackupKey">Registering for Android Backup Service</h2>
199
200<p>Google provides a backup transport with <a
201href="http://code.google.com/android/backup/index.html">Android Backup Service</a> for most
202Android-powered devices running Android 2.2 or greater.</p>
203
204<p>In order for you application to perform backup using Android Backup Service, you must
205register your application with the service to receive a Backup Service Key, then
206declare the Backup Service Key in your Android manifest.</p>
207
208<p>To get your Backup Service Key, <a
209href="http://code.google.com/android/backup/signup.html">register for Android Backup Service</a>.
210When you register, you will be provided a Backup Service Key and the appropriate {@code
211&lt;meta-data&gt;} XML code for your Android manifest file, which you must include as a child of the
212{@code &lt;application&gt;} element. For example:</p>
213
214<pre>
215&lt;application android:label="MyApplication"
216             android:backupAgent="MyBackupAgent"&gt;
217    ...
218    &lt;meta-data android:name="com.google.android.backup.api_key"
219        android:value="AEdPqrEAAAAIDaYEVgU6DJnyJdBmU7KLH3kszDXLv_4DIsEIyQ" /&gt;
220&lt;/application&gt;
221</pre>
222
223<p>The <code>android:name</code> must be <code>"com.google.android.backup.api_key"</code> and
224the <code>android:value</code> must be the Backup Service Key received from the Android Backup
225Service registration.</p>
226
227<p>If you have multiple applications, you must register each one, using the respective package
228name.</p>
229
230<p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> The backup transport provided by Android Backup Service is
231not guaranteed to be available
232on all Android-powered devices that support backup. Some devices might support backup
233using a different transport, some devices might not support backup at all, and there is no way for
234your application to know what transport is used on the device. However, if you implement backup for
235your application, you should always include a Backup Service Key for Android Backup Service so
236your application can perform backup when the device uses the Android Backup Service transport. If
237the device does not use Android Backup Service, then the {@code &lt;meta-data&gt;} element with the
238Backup Service Key is ignored.</p>
239
240
241
242
243<h2 id="BackupAgent">Extending BackupAgent</h2>
244
245<p>Most applications shouldn't need to extend the {@link android.app.backup.BackupAgent} class
246directly, but should instead <a href="#BackupAgentHelper">extend BackupAgentHelper</a> to take
247advantage of the built-in helper classes that automatically backup and restore your files. However,
248you might want to extend {@link android.app.backup.BackupAgent} directly if you need to:</p>
249<ul>
250  <li>Version your data format. For instance, if you anticipate the need to revise the
251format in which you write your application data, you can build a backup agent to cross-check your
252application version during a restore operation and perform any necessary compatibility work if the
253version on the device is different than that of the backup data. For more information, see <a
254href="#RestoreVersion">Checking the Restore Data Version</a>.</li>
255  <li>Instead of backing up an entire file, you can specify the portions of data the should be
256backed up and how each portion is then restored to the device. (This can also help you manage
257different versions, because you read and write your data as unique entities, rather than
258complete files.)</li>
259  <li>Back up data in a database. If you have an SQLite database that you want to restore when
260the user re-installs your application, you need to build a custom {@link
261android.app.backup.BackupAgent} that reads the appropriate data during a backup operation, then
262create your table and insert the data during a restore operation.</li>
263</ul>
264
265<p>If you don't need to perform any of the tasks above and want to back up complete files from
266{@link android.content.SharedPreferences} or <a
267href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/data/data-storage.html#filesInternal">internal storage</a>, you
268should skip to <a href="#BackupAgentHelper">Extending BackupAgentHelper</a>.</p>
269
270
271
272<h3 id="RequiredMethods">Required Methods</h3>
273
274<p>When you create a backup agent by extending {@link android.app.backup.BackupAgent}, you
275must implement the following callback methods:</p>
276
277<dl>
278  <dt>{@link
279android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onBackup(ParcelFileDescriptor,BackupDataOutput,ParcelFileDescriptor)
280onBackup()}</dt>
281    <dd>The Backup Manager calls this method after you <a href="#RequestingBackup">request a
282backup</a>. In this method, you read your application data from the device and pass the data you
283want to back up to the Backup Manager, as described below in <a href="#PerformingBackup">Performing
284backup</a>.</dd>
285
286  <dt>{@link
287android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onRestore(BackupDataInput,int,ParcelFileDescriptor)
288onRestore()}</dt>
289    <dd>The Backup Manager calls this method during a restore operation (you can <a
290href="#RequestingRestore">request a restore</a>, but the system automatically performs restore when
291the user re-installs your application). When it calls this method, the Backup Manager delivers your
292backup data, which you then restore to the device, as described below in <a
293href="#PerformingRestore">Performing restore</a>.</dd>
294</dl>
295
296
297
298<h3 id="PerformingBackup">Performing backup</h3>
299
300
301<p>When it's time to back up your application data, the Backup Manager calls your {@link
302android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onBackup(ParcelFileDescriptor,BackupDataOutput,ParcelFileDescriptor)
303onBackup()} method. This is where you must provide your application data to the Backup Manager so
304it can be saved to cloud storage.</p>
305
306<p>Only the Backup Manager can call your backup agent's {@link
307android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onBackup(ParcelFileDescriptor,BackupDataOutput,ParcelFileDescriptor)
308onBackup()} method. Each time that your application data changes and you want to perform a backup,
309you must request a backup operation by calling {@link
310android.app.backup.BackupManager#dataChanged()} (see <a href="#RequestingBackup">Requesting
311Backup</a> for more information). A backup request does not result in an immediate call to your
312{@link
313android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onBackup(ParcelFileDescriptor,BackupDataOutput,ParcelFileDescriptor)
314onBackup()} method. Instead, the Backup Manager waits for an appropriate time, then performs
315backup for all applications that have requested a backup since the last backup was performed.</p>
316
317<p class="note"><strong>Tip:</strong> While developing your application, you can initiate an
318immediate backup operation from the Backup Manager with the <a
319href="{@docRoot}guide/developing/tools/bmgr.html">{@code bmgr} tool</a>.</p>
320
321<p>When the Backup Manager calls your {@link
322android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onBackup(ParcelFileDescriptor,BackupDataOutput,ParcelFileDescriptor)
323onBackup()} method, it passes three parameters:</p>
324
325<dl>
326  <dt>{@code oldState}</dt>
327    <dd>An open, read-only {@link android.os.ParcelFileDescriptor} pointing to the last backup
328state provided by your application. This is not the backup data from cloud storage, but a
329local representation of the data that was backed up the last time {@link
330android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onBackup(ParcelFileDescriptor,BackupDataOutput,ParcelFileDescriptor)
331onBackup()} was called (as defined by {@code newState}, below, or from {@link
332android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onRestore(BackupDataInput,int,ParcelFileDescriptor)
333onRestore()}&mdash;more about this in the next section). Because {@link
334android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onBackup(ParcelFileDescriptor,BackupDataOutput,ParcelFileDescriptor)
335onBackup()} does not allow you to read existing backup data in
336the cloud storage, you can use this local representation to determine whether your data has changed
337since the last backup.</dd>
338  <dt>{@code data}</dt>
339    <dd>A {@link android.app.backup.BackupDataOutput} object, which you use to deliver your backup
340data to the Backup Manager.</dd>
341  <dt>{@code newState}</dt>
342    <dd>An open, read/write {@link android.os.ParcelFileDescriptor} pointing to a file in which
343you must write a representation of the data that you delivered to {@code data} (a representation
344can be as simple as the last-modified timestamp for your file). This object is
345returned as {@code oldState} the next time the Backup Manager calls your {@link
346android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onBackup(ParcelFileDescriptor,BackupDataOutput,ParcelFileDescriptor)
347onBackup()} method. If you do not write your backup data to {@code newState}, then {@code oldState}
348will point to an empty file next time Backup Manager calls {@link
349android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onBackup(ParcelFileDescriptor,BackupDataOutput,ParcelFileDescriptor)
350onBackup()}.</dd>
351</dl>
352
353<p>Using these parameters, you should implement your {@link
354android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onBackup(ParcelFileDescriptor,BackupDataOutput,ParcelFileDescriptor)
355onBackup()} method to do the following:</p>
356
357<ol>
358  <li>Check whether your data has changed since the last backup by comparing {@code oldState} to
359your current data. How you read data in {@code oldState} depends on how you originally wrote it to
360{@code newState} (see step 3). The easiest way to record the state of a file is with its
361last-modified timestamp. For example, here's how you can read and compare a timestamp from {@code
362oldState}:
363    <pre>
364// Get the oldState input stream
365FileInputStream instream = new FileInputStream(oldState.getFileDescriptor());
366DataInputStream in = new DataInputStream(instream);
367
368try {
369    // Get the last modified timestamp from the state file and data file
370    long stateModified = in.readLong();
371    long fileModified = mDataFile.lastModified();
372
373    if (stateModified != fileModified) {
374        // The file has been modified, so do a backup
375        // Or the time on the device changed, so be safe and do a backup
376    } else {
377        // Don't back up because the file hasn't changed
378        return;
379    }
380} catch (IOException e) {
381    // Unable to read state file... be safe and do a backup
382}
383</pre>
384    <p>If nothing has changed and you don't need to back up, skip to step 3.</p>
385  </li>
386  <li>If your data has changed, compared to {@code oldState}, write the current data to
387{@code data} to back it up to the cloud storage.
388    <p>You must write each chunk of data as an "entity" in the {@link
389android.app.backup.BackupDataOutput}. An entity is a flattened binary data
390record that is identified by a unique key string. Thus, the data set that you back up is
391conceptually a set of key-value pairs.</p>
392    <p>To add an entity to your backup data set, you must:</p>
393    <ol>
394      <li>Call {@link android.app.backup.BackupDataOutput#writeEntityHeader(String,int)
395writeEntityHeader()}, passing a unique string key for the data you're about to write and the data
396size.</li>
397      <li>Call {@link android.app.backup.BackupDataOutput#writeEntityData(byte[],int)
398writeEntityData()}, passing a byte buffer that contains your data and the number of bytes to write
399from the buffer (which should match the size passed to {@link
400android.app.backup.BackupDataOutput#writeEntityHeader(String,int) writeEntityHeader()}).</li>
401    </ol>
402    <p>For example, the following code flattens some data into a byte stream and writes it into a
403single entity:</p>
404    <pre>
405// Create buffer stream and data output stream for our data
406ByteArrayOutputStream bufStream = new ByteArrayOutputStream();
407DataOutputStream outWriter = new DataOutputStream(bufStream);
408// Write structured data
409outWriter.writeUTF(mPlayerName);
410outWriter.writeInt(mPlayerScore);
411// Send the data to the Backup Manager via the BackupDataOutput
412byte[] buffer = bufStream.toByteArray();
413int len = buffer.length;
414data.writeEntityHeader(TOPSCORE_BACKUP_KEY, len);
415data.writeEntityData(buffer, len);
416</pre>
417    <p>Perform this for each piece of data that you want to back up. How you divide your data into
418entities is up to you (and you might use just one entity).</p>
419  </li>
420  <li>Whether or not you perform a backup (in step 2), write a representation of the current data to
421the {@code newState} {@link android.os.ParcelFileDescriptor}. The Backup Manager retains this object
422locally as a representation of the data that is currently backed up. It passes this back to you as
423{@code oldState} the next time it calls {@link
424android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onBackup(ParcelFileDescriptor,BackupDataOutput,ParcelFileDescriptor)
425onBackup()} so you can determine whether another backup is necessary (as handled in step 1). If you
426do not write the current data state to this file, then
427{@code oldState} will be empty during the next callback.
428    <p>The following example saves a representation of the current data into {@code newState} using
429the file's last-modified timestamp:</p>
430    <pre>
431FileOutputStream outstream = new FileOutputStream(newState.getFileDescriptor());
432DataOutputStream out = new DataOutputStream(outstream);
433
434long modified = mDataFile.lastModified();
435out.writeLong(modified);
436</pre>
437  </li>
438</ol>
439
440<p class="caution"><strong>Caution:</strong> If your application data is saved to a file, make sure
441that you use synchronized statements while accessing the file so that your backup agent does not
442read the file while an Activity in your application is also writing the file.</p>
443
444
445
446
447<h3 id="PerformingRestore">Performing restore</h3>
448
449<p>When it's time to restore your application data, the Backup Manager calls your backup
450agent's {@link android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onRestore(BackupDataInput,int,ParcelFileDescriptor)
451onRestore()} method. When it calls this method, the Backup Manager delivers your backup data so
452you can restore it onto the device.</p>
453
454<p>Only the Backup Manager can call {@link
455android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onRestore(BackupDataInput,int,ParcelFileDescriptor)
456onRestore()}, which happens automatically when the system installs your application and
457finds existing backup data. However, you can request a restore operation for
458your application by calling {@link
459android.app.backup.BackupManager#requestRestore(RestoreObserver) requestRestore()} (see <a
460href="#RequestingRestore">Requesting restore</a> for more information).</p>
461
462<p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> While developing your application, you can also request a
463restore operation with the <a href="{@docRoot}guide/developing/tools/bmgr.html">{@code bmgr}
464tool</a>.</p>
465
466<p>When the Backup Manager calls your {@link
467android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onRestore(BackupDataInput,int,ParcelFileDescriptor)
468onRestore()} method, it passes three parameters:</p>
469
470<dl>
471  <dt>{@code data}</dt>
472    <dd>A {@link android.app.backup.BackupDataInput}, which allows you to read your backup
473data.</dd>
474  <dt>{@code appVersionCode}</dt>
475    <dd>An integer representing the value of your application's <a
476href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/manifest-element.html#vcode">{@code android:versionCode}</a>
477manifest attribute, as it was when this data was backed up. You can use this to cross-check the
478current application version and determine if the data format is compatible. For more
479information about using this to handle different versions of restore data, see the section
480below about <a href="#RestoreVersion">Checking the Restore Data Version</a>.</dd>
481  <dt>{@code newState}</dt>
482    <dd>An open, read/write {@link android.os.ParcelFileDescriptor} pointing to a file in which
483you must write the final backup state that was provided with {@code data}. This object is
484returned as {@code oldState} the next time {@link
485android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onBackup(ParcelFileDescriptor,BackupDataOutput,ParcelFileDescriptor)
486onBackup()} is called. Recall that you must also write the same {@code newState} object in the
487{@link
488android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onBackup(ParcelFileDescriptor,BackupDataOutput,ParcelFileDescriptor)
489onBackup()} callback&mdash;also doing it here ensures that the {@code oldState} object given to
490{@link
491android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onBackup(ParcelFileDescriptor,BackupDataOutput,ParcelFileDescriptor)
492onBackup()} is valid even the first time {@link
493android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onBackup(ParcelFileDescriptor,BackupDataOutput,ParcelFileDescriptor)
494onBackup()} is called after the device is restored.</dd>
495</dl>
496
497<p>In your implementation of {@link
498android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onRestore(BackupDataInput,int,ParcelFileDescriptor)
499onRestore()}, you should call {@link android.app.backup.BackupDataInput#readNextHeader()} on the
500{@code data} to iterate
501through all entities in the data set. For each entity found, do the following:</p>
502
503<ol>
504  <li>Get the entity key with {@link android.app.backup.BackupDataInput#getKey()}.</li>
505  <li>Compare the entity key to a list of known key values that you should have declared as static
506final strings inside your {@link android.app.backup.BackupAgent} class. When the key matches one of
507your known key strings, enter into a statement to extract the entity data and save it to the device:
508    <ol>
509      <li>Get the entity data size with {@link
510android.app.backup.BackupDataInput#getDataSize()} and create a byte array of that size.</li>
511      <li>Call {@link android.app.backup.BackupDataInput#readEntityData(byte[],int,int)
512readEntityData()} and pass it the byte array, which is where the data will go, and specify the
513start offset and the size to read.</li>
514      <li>Your byte array is now full and you can read the data and write it to the device
515however you like.</li>
516    </ol>
517  </li>
518  <li>After you read and write your data back to the device, write the state of your data to the
519{@code newState} parameter the same as you do during {@link
520android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onBackup(ParcelFileDescriptor,BackupDataOutput,ParcelFileDescriptor)
521onBackup()}.
522</ol>
523
524<p>For example, here's how you can restore the data backed up by the example in the previous
525section:</p>
526
527<pre>
528&#64;Override
529public void onRestore(BackupDataInput data, int appVersionCode,
530                      ParcelFileDescriptor newState) throws IOException {
531    // There should be only one entity, but the safest
532    // way to consume it is using a while loop
533    while (data.readNextHeader()) {
534        String key = data.getKey();
535        int dataSize = data.getDataSize();
536
537        // If the key is ours (for saving top score). Note this key was used when
538        // we wrote the backup entity header
539        if (TOPSCORE_BACKUP_KEY.equals(key)) {
540            // Create an input stream for the BackupDataInput
541            byte[] dataBuf = new byte[dataSize];
542            data.readEntityData(dataBuf, 0, dataSize);
543            ByteArrayInputStream baStream = new ByteArrayInputStream(dataBuf);
544            DataInputStream in = new DataInputStream(baStream);
545
546            // Read the player name and score from the backup data
547            mPlayerName = in.readUTF();
548            mPlayerScore = in.readInt();
549
550            // Record the score on the device (to a file or something)
551            recordScore(mPlayerName, mPlayerScore);
552        } else {
553            // We don't know this entity key. Skip it. (Shouldn't happen.)
554            data.skipEntityData();
555        }
556    }
557
558    // Finally, write to the state blob (newState) that describes the restored data
559    FileOutputStream outstream = new FileOutputStream(newState.getFileDescriptor());
560    DataOutputStream out = new DataOutputStream(outstream);
561    out.writeUTF(mPlayerName);
562    out.writeInt(mPlayerScore);
563}
564</pre>
565
566<p>In this example, the {@code appVersionCode} parameter passed to {@link
567android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onRestore onRestore()} is not used. However, you might want to use
568it if you've chosen to perform backup when the user's version of the application has actually moved
569backward (for example, the user went from version 1.5 of your app to 1.0). For more information, see
570the section about <a href="#RestoreVersion">Checking the Restore Data Version</a>.</p>
571
572<div class="special">
573<p>For an example implementation of {@link android.app.backup.BackupAgent}, see the <a
574href="{@docRoot}resources/samples/BackupRestore/src/com/example/android/backuprestore/ExampleAgent.html">{@code
575ExampleAgent}</a> class in the <a
576href="{@docRoot}resources/samples/BackupRestore/index.html">Backup and Restore</a> sample
577application.</p>
578</div>
579
580
581
582
583
584
585<h2 id="BackupAgentHelper">Extending BackupAgentHelper</h2>
586
587<p>You should build your backup agent using {@link android.app.backup.BackupAgentHelper} if you want
588to back up complete files (from either {@link android.content.SharedPreferences} or <a
589href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/data/data-storage.html#filesInternal">internal storage</a>).
590Building your backup agent with {@link android.app.backup.BackupAgentHelper} requires far less
591code than extending {@link android.app.backup.BackupAgent}, because you don't have to implement
592{@link
593android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onBackup(ParcelFileDescriptor,BackupDataOutput,ParcelFileDescriptor)
594onBackup()} and {@link
595android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onRestore(BackupDataInput,int,ParcelFileDescriptor)
596onRestore()}.</p>
597
598<p>Your implementation of {@link android.app.backup.BackupAgentHelper} must
599use one or more backup helpers. A backup helper is a specialized
600component that {@link android.app.backup.BackupAgentHelper} summons to perform backup and
601restore operations for a particular type of data. The Android framework currently provides two
602different helpers:</p>
603<ul>
604  <li>{@link android.app.backup.SharedPreferencesBackupHelper} to backup {@link
605android.content.SharedPreferences} files.</li>
606  <li>{@link android.app.backup.FileBackupHelper} to backup files from <a
607href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/data/data-storage.html#filesInternal">internal storage</a>.</li>
608</ul>
609
610<p>You can include multiple helpers in your {@link android.app.backup.BackupAgentHelper}, but only
611one helper is needed for each data type. That is, if you have multiple {@link
612android.content.SharedPreferences} files, then you need only one {@link
613android.app.backup.SharedPreferencesBackupHelper}.</p>
614
615<p>For each helper you want to add to your {@link android.app.backup.BackupAgentHelper}, you must do
616the following during your {@link android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onCreate()} method:</p>
617<ol>
618  <li>Instantiate in instance of the desired helper class. In the class constructor, you must
619specify the appropriate file(s) you want to backup.</li>
620  <li>Call {@link android.app.backup.BackupAgentHelper#addHelper(String,BackupHelper) addHelper()}
621to add the helper to your {@link android.app.backup.BackupAgentHelper}.</li>
622</ol>
623
624<p>The following sections describe how to create a backup agent using each of the available
625helpers.</p>
626
627
628
629<h3 id="SharedPreferences">Backing up SharedPreferences</h3>
630
631<p>When you instantiate a {@link android.app.backup.SharedPreferencesBackupHelper}, you must
632include the name of one or more {@link android.content.SharedPreferences} files.</p>
633
634<p>For example, to back up a {@link android.content.SharedPreferences} file named
635"user_preferences", a complete backup agent using {@link android.app.backup.BackupAgentHelper} looks
636like this:</p>
637
638<pre>
639public class MyPrefsBackupAgent extends BackupAgentHelper {
640    // The name of the SharedPreferences file
641    static final String PREFS = "user_preferences";
642
643    // A key to uniquely identify the set of backup data
644    static final String PREFS_BACKUP_KEY = "prefs";
645
646    // Allocate a helper and add it to the backup agent
647    &#64;Override
648    public void onCreate() {
649        SharedPreferencesBackupHelper helper = new SharedPreferencesBackupHelper(this, PREFS);
650        addHelper(PREFS_BACKUP_KEY, helper);
651    }
652}
653</pre>
654
655<p>That's it! That's your entire backup agent. The {@link
656android.app.backup.SharedPreferencesBackupHelper} includes all the code
657needed to backup and restore a {@link android.content.SharedPreferences} file.</p>
658
659<p>When the Backup Manager calls {@link
660android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onBackup(ParcelFileDescriptor,BackupDataOutput,ParcelFileDescriptor)
661onBackup()} and {@link
662android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onRestore(BackupDataInput,int,ParcelFileDescriptor)
663onRestore()}, {@link android.app.backup.BackupAgentHelper} calls your backup helpers to perform
664backup and restore for your specified files.</p>
665
666<p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> {@link android.content.SharedPreferences} are threadsafe, so
667you can safely read and write the shared preferences file from your backup agent and
668other activities.</p>
669
670
671
672<h3 id="Files">Backing up other files</h3>
673
674<p>When you instantiate a {@link android.app.backup.FileBackupHelper}, you must include the name of
675one or more files that are saved to your application's <a
676href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/data/data-storage.html#filesInternal">internal storage</a>
677(as specified by {@link android.content.ContextWrapper#getFilesDir()}, which is the same
678location where {@link android.content.Context#openFileOutput(String,int) openFileOutput()} writes
679files).</p>
680
681<p>For example, to backup two files named "scores" and "stats," a backup agent using {@link
682android.app.backup.BackupAgentHelper} looks like this:</p>
683
684<pre>
685public class MyFileBackupAgent extends BackupAgentHelper {
686    // The name of the SharedPreferences file
687    static final String TOP_SCORES = "scores";
688    static final String PLAYER_STATS = "stats";
689
690    // A key to uniquely identify the set of backup data
691    static final String FILES_BACKUP_KEY = "myfiles";
692
693    // Allocate a helper and add it to the backup agent
694    void onCreate() {
695        FileBackupHelper helper = new FileBackupHelper(this, TOP_SCORES, PLAYER_STATS);
696        addHelper(FILES_BACKUP_KEY, helper);
697    }
698}
699</pre>
700
701<p>The {@link android.app.backup.FileBackupHelper} includes all the code necessary to backup and
702restore files that are saved to your application's <a
703href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/data/data-storage.html#filesInternal">internal storage</a>..</p>
704
705<p>However, reading and writing to files on internal storage is <strong>not threadsafe</strong>. To
706ensure that your backup agent does not read or write your files at the same time as your activities,
707you must use synchronized statements each time you perform a read or write. For example,
708in any Activity where you read and write the file, you need an object to use as the intrinsic
709lock for the synchronized statements:</p>
710
711<div class="sidebox-wrapper">
712<div class="sidebox">
713<p><strong>Interesting Fact:</strong></p>
714<p>A zero-length array is lighter-weight than a normal Object, so it's great for an
715intrinsic lock.</p>
716</div>
717</div>
718
719<pre>
720// Object for intrinsic lock
721static final Object[] sDataLock = new Object[0];
722</pre>
723
724<p>Then create a synchronized statement with this lock each time you read or write the files. For
725example, here's a synchronized statement for writing the latest score in a game to a file:</p>
726
727<pre>
728try {
729    synchronized (MyActivity.sDataLock) {
730        File dataFile = new File({@link android.content.Context#getFilesDir()}, TOP_SCORES);
731        RandomAccessFile raFile = new RandomAccessFile(dataFile, "rw");
732        raFile.writeInt(score);
733    }
734} catch (IOException e) {
735    Log.e(TAG, "Unable to write to file");
736}
737</pre>
738
739<p>You should synchronize your read statements with the same lock.</p>
740
741<p>Then, in your {@link android.app.backup.BackupAgentHelper}, you must override {@link
742android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onBackup(ParcelFileDescriptor,BackupDataOutput,ParcelFileDescriptor)
743onBackup()} and {@link
744android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onRestore(BackupDataInput,int,ParcelFileDescriptor)
745onRestore()} to synchronize the backup and restore operations with the same
746intrinsic lock. For example, the {@code MyFileBackupAgent} example from above needs the following
747methods:</p>
748
749<pre>
750&#64;Override
751public void onBackup(ParcelFileDescriptor oldState, BackupDataOutput data,
752          ParcelFileDescriptor newState) throws IOException {
753    // Hold the lock while the FileBackupHelper performs backup
754    synchronized (MyActivity.sDataLock) {
755        super.onBackup(oldState, data, newState);
756    }
757}
758
759&#64;Override
760public void onRestore(BackupDataInput data, int appVersionCode,
761        ParcelFileDescriptor newState) throws IOException {
762    // Hold the lock while the FileBackupHelper restores the file
763    synchronized (MyActivity.sDataLock) {
764        super.onRestore(data, appVersionCode, newState);
765    }
766}
767</pre>
768
769<p>That's it. All you need to do is add your {@link android.app.backup.FileBackupHelper} in the
770{@link android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onCreate()} method and override {@link
771android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onBackup(ParcelFileDescriptor,BackupDataOutput,ParcelFileDescriptor)
772onBackup()} and {@link
773android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onRestore(BackupDataInput,int,ParcelFileDescriptor)
774onRestore()} to synchronize read and write operations.</p>
775
776<div class="special">
777<p>For an example implementation of {@link
778android.app.backup.BackupAgentHelper} with {@link android.app.backup.FileBackupHelper}, see the
779{@code FileHelperExampleAgent} class in the <a
780href="{@docRoot}resources/samples/BackupRestore/index.html">Backup and Restore</a> sample
781application.</p>
782</div>
783
784
785
786
787
788
789<h2 id="RestoreVersion">Checking the Restore Data Version</h2>
790
791<p>When the Backup Manager saves your data to cloud storage, it automatically includes the version
792of your application, as defined by your manifest file's <a
793href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/manifest-element.html#vcode">{@code android:versionCode}</a>
794attribute. Before the Backup Manager calls your backup agent to restore your data, it
795looks at the <a
796href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/manifest-element.html#vcode">{@code
797android:versionCode}</a> of the installed application and compares it to the value
798recorded in the restore data set. If the version recorded in the restore data set is
799<em>newer</em> than the application version on the device, then the user has downgraded their
800application. In this case, the Backup Manager will abort the restore operation for your application
801and not call your {@link
802android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onRestore(BackupDataInput,int,ParcelFileDescriptor) onRestore()}
803method, because the restore set is considered meaningless to an older version.</p>
804
805<p>You can override this behavior with the <a
806href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/application-element.html#restoreany">{@code
807android:restoreAnyVersion}</a> attribute. This attribute is either "{@code true}" or "{@code
808false}" to indicate whether you want to restore the application regardless of the restore set
809version. The default value is "{@code false}". If you define this to be "{@code true}" then the
810Backup Manager will ignore the <a
811href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/manifest-element.html#vcode">{@code android:versionCode}</a>
812and call your {@link
813android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onRestore(BackupDataInput,int,ParcelFileDescriptor) onRestore()}
814method in all cases. In doing so, you can manually check for the version difference in your {@link
815android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onRestore(BackupDataInput,int,ParcelFileDescriptor) onRestore()}
816method and take any steps necessary to make the data compatible if the versions conflict.</p>
817
818<p>To help you handle different versions during a restore operation, the {@link
819android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onRestore(BackupDataInput,int,ParcelFileDescriptor) onRestore()}
820method passes you the version code included with the restore data set as the {@code appVersionCode}
821parameter. You can then query the current application's version code with the {@link
822android.content.pm.PackageInfo#versionCode PackageInfo.versionCode} field. For example:</p>
823
824<pre>
825PackageInfo info;
826try {
827    String name = {@link android.content.ContextWrapper#getPackageName() getPackageName}();
828    info = {@link android.content.ContextWrapper#getPackageManager
829getPackageManager}().{@link android.content.pm.PackageManager#getPackageInfo(String,int)
830getPackageInfo}(name,0);
831} catch (NameNotFoundException nnfe) {
832    info = null;
833}
834
835int version;
836if (info != null) {
837    version = info.versionCode;
838}
839</pre>
840
841<p>Then simply compare the {@code version} acquired from {@link android.content.pm.PackageInfo}
842to the {@code appVersionCode} passed into {@link
843android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onRestore(BackupDataInput,int,ParcelFileDescriptor) onRestore()}.
844</p>
845
846<p class="caution"><strong>Caution:</strong> Be certain you understand the consequences of setting
847<a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/application-element.html#restoreany">{@code
848android:restoreAnyVersion}</a> to "{@code true}" for your application. If each version of your
849application that supports backup does not properly account for variations in your data format during
850{@link
851android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onRestore(BackupDataInput,int,ParcelFileDescriptor) onRestore()},
852then the data on the device could be saved in a format incompatible with the version currently
853installed on the device.</p>
854
855
856
857<h2 id="RequestingBackup">Requesting Backup</h2>
858
859<p>You can request a backup operation at any time by calling {@link
860android.app.backup.BackupManager#dataChanged()}. This method notifies the Backup Manager that you'd
861like to backup your data using your backup agent. The Backup Manager then calls your backup
862agent's {@link
863android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onBackup(ParcelFileDescriptor,BackupDataOutput,ParcelFileDescriptor)
864onBackup()} method at an opportune time in the future. Typically, you should
865request a backup each time your data changes (such as when the user changes an application
866preference that you'd like to back up). If you call {@link
867android.app.backup.BackupManager#dataChanged()} several times consecutively, before the Backup
868Manager requests a backup from your agent, your agent still receives just one call to {@link
869android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onBackup(ParcelFileDescriptor,BackupDataOutput,ParcelFileDescriptor)
870onBackup()}.</p>
871
872<p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> While developing your application, you can request a
873backup and initiate an immediate backup operation with the <a
874href="{@docRoot}guide/developing/tools/bmgr.html">{@code bmgr}
875tool</a>.</p>
876
877
878<h2 id="RequestingRestore">Requesting Restore</h2>
879
880<p>During the normal life of your application, you shouldn't need to request a restore operation.
881They system automatically checks for backup data and performs a restore when your application is
882installed. However, you can manually request a restore operation by calling {@link
883android.app.backup.BackupManager#requestRestore(RestoreObserver) requestRestore()}, if necessary. In
884which case, the Backup Manager calls your {@link
885android.app.backup.BackupAgent#onRestore(BackupDataInput,int,ParcelFileDescriptor) onRestore()}
886implementation, passing the data from the current set of backup data.</p>
887
888<p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> While developing your application, you can request a
889restore operation with the <a href="{@docRoot}guide/developing/tools/bmgr.html">{@code bmgr}
890tool</a>.</p>
891
892
893<h2 id="Testing">Testing Your Backup Agent</h2>
894
895<p>Once you've implemented your backup agent, you can test the backup and restore functionality
896with the following procedure, using <a
897href="{@docRoot}guide/developing/tools/bmgr.html">{@code bmgr}</a>.</p>
898
899<ol>
900  <li>Install your application on a suitable Android system image
901    <ul>
902      <li>If using the emulator, create and use an AVD with Android 2.2 (API Level 8).</li>
903      <li>If using a device, the device must be running Android 2.2 or greater and have Google
904Play built in.</li>
905    </ul>
906  </li>
907  <li>Ensure that backup is enabled
908    <ul>
909      <li>If using the emulator, you can enable backup with the following command from your SDK
910{@code tools/} path:
911<pre class="no-pretty-print">adb shell bmgr enable true</pre>
912      </li>
913      <li>If using a device, open the system <b>Settings</b>, select <b>Privacy</b>, then enable
914<b>Back up my data</b> and <b>Automatic restore</b>.
915    </ul>
916  </li>
917  <li>Open your application and initialize some data
918    <p>If you've properly implemented backup in your application, then it should request a
919backup each time the data changes. For example, each time the user changes some data, your app
920should call {@link android.app.backup.BackupManager#dataChanged()}, which adds a backup request to
921the Backup Manager queue. For testing purposes, you can also make a request with the following
922{@code bmgr} command:</p>
923<pre class="no-pretty-print">adb shell bmgr backup <em>your.package.name</em></pre>
924  </li>
925  <li>Initiate a backup operation:
926<pre class="no-pretty-print">adb shell bmgr run</pre>
927    <p>This forces the Backup Manager to perform all backup requests that are in its
928queue.</p>
929  <li>Uninstall your application:
930<pre class="no-pretty-print">adb uninstall <em>your.package.name</em></pre>
931  </li>
932  <li>Re-install your application.</li>
933</ol>
934
935<p>If your backup agent is successful, all the data you initialized in step 4 is restored.</p>
936
937
938