My app creates mails with attachments, and uses an intent with Intent.ACTION_SEND to launch a mail app.
It works with all the mail apps I tested with, except for the new Gmail 5.0 (it works with Gmail 4.9), where the mail opens without attachment, showing the error: "Permission denied for the attachment".
There are no useful messages from Gmail on logcat. I only tested Gmail 5.0 on Android KitKat, but on multiple devices.
I create the file for the attachment like this:
String fileName = "file-name_something_like_this";
FileOutputStream output = context.openFileOutput(
fileName, Context.MODE_WORLD_READABLE);
// Write data to output...
output.close();
File fileToSend = new File(context.getFilesDir(), fileName);
I'm aware of the security concerns with MODE_WORLD_READABLE.
I send the intent like this:
public static void compose(
Context context,
String address,
String subject,
String body,
File attachment) {
Intent emailIntent = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_SEND);
emailIntent.setType("message/rfc822");
emailIntent.putExtra(
Intent.EXTRA_EMAIL, new String[] { address });
emailIntent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_SUBJECT, subject);
emailIntent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_TEXT, body);
emailIntent.putExtra(
Intent.EXTRA_STREAM,
Uri.fromFile(attachment));
Intent chooser = Intent.createChooser(
emailIntent,
context.getString(R.string.send_mail_chooser));
context.startActivity(chooser);
}
Is there anything I do wrong when creating the file or sending the intent? Is there a better way to start a mail app with attachment? Alternatively - has someone encountered this problem and found a workaround for it?
Thanks!
I was able to pass a screenshot .jpeg file from my app to GMail 5.0 through an Intent. The key was in this answer.
Everything I have from #natasky 's code is nearly identical but instead, I have the file's directory as
context.getExternalCacheDir();
Which "represents the external storage directory where you should save cache files" (documentation)
GMail 5.0 added some security checks to attachments it receives from an Intent. These are unrelated to unix permissions, so the fact that the file is readable doesn't matter.
When the attachment Uri is a file://, it'll only accept files from external storage, the private directory of gmail itself, or world-readable files from the private data directory of the calling app.
The problem with this security check is that it relies on gmail being able to find the caller app, which is only reliable when the caller has asked for result. In your code above, you do not ask for result and therefore gmail does not know who the caller is, and rejects your file.
Since it worked for you in 4.9 but not in 5.0, you know it's not a unix permission problem, so the reason must be the new checks.
TL;DR answer:
replace startActivity with startActivityForResult.
Or better yet, use a content provider.
Use getExternalCacheDir() with File.createTempFile.
Use the following to create a temporary file in the external cache directory:
File tempFile = File.createTempFile("fileName", ".txt", context.getExternalCacheDir());
Then copy your original file's content to tempFile,
FileWriter fw = new FileWriter(tempFile);
FileReader fr = new FileReader(Data.ERR_BAK_FILE);
int c = fr.read();
while (c != -1) {
fw.write(c);
c = fr.read();
}
fr.close();
fw.flush();
fw.close();
now put your file to intent,
emailIntent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_STREAM, Uri.fromFile(tempFile));
You should implement a FileProvider, which can create Uris for your app's internal files. Other apps are granted permission to read these Uris. Then, simply instead of calling Uri.fromFile(attachment), you instantiate your FileProvider and use:
fileProvider.getUriForFile(attachment);
Google have an answer for that issue:
Store the data in your own ContentProvider, making sure that other apps have the correct permission to access your provider. The preferred mechanism for providing access is to use per-URI permissions which are temporary and only grant access to the receiving application. An easy way to create a ContentProvider like this is to use the FileProvider helper class.
Use the system MediaStore. The MediaStore is primarily aimed at video, audio and image MIME types, however beginning with Android 3.0 (API level 11) it can also store non-media types (see MediaStore.Files for more info). Files can be inserted into the MediaStore using scanFile() after which a content:// style Uri suitable for sharing is passed to the provided onScanCompleted() callback. Note that once added to the system MediaStore the content is accessible to any app on the device.
Also you can try set permissions for your file:
emailIntent.addFlags(Intent.FLAG_GRANT_READ_URI_PERMISSION);
And finally you can copy/store your files in external storage - permissions not needed there.
I tested it and I found out that it was definitely private storage access problem.
When you attach some file to Gmail (over 5.0) do not use the file from private storage such as /data/data/package/. Try to use /storage/sdcard.
You can successfully attach your file.
Not sure why GMail 5.0 doesn't like certain file paths (which I've confirmed it does have read access to), but an apparently better solution is to implement your own ContentProvider class to serve the file. It's actually somewhat simple, and I found a decent example here: http://stephendnicholas.com/archives/974
Be sure to add the tag to your app manifest, and include a "android:grantUriPermissions="true"" within that. You'll also want to implement getType() and return the appropriate MIME type for the file URI, otherwise some apps wont work with this... There's an example of that in the comment section on the link.
I was having this problem and finally found an easy way to send email with attachment. Here is the code
public void SendEmail(){
try {
//saving image
String randomNameOfPic = Calendar.DAY_OF_YEAR+DateFormat.getTimeInstance().toString();
File file = new File(ActivityRecharge.this.getCacheDir(), "slip"+ randomNameOfPic+ ".jpg");
FileOutputStream fOut = new FileOutputStream(file);
myPic.compress(Bitmap.CompressFormat.JPEG, 100, fOut);
fOut.flush();
fOut.close();
file.setReadable(true, false);
//sending email
Intent intent = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_SEND);
intent.setType("text/plain");
intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_EMAIL, new String[]{"zohabali5#gmail.com"});
intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_SUBJECT, "Recharge Account");
intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_TEXT, "body text");
//Uri uri = Uri.parse("file://" + fileAbsolutePath);
intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_STREAM, Uri.fromFile(file));
intent.addFlags(Intent.FLAG_GRANT_READ_URI_PERMISSION);
startActivityForResult(Intent.createChooser(intent, "Send email..."),12);
}catch (Exception e){
Toast.makeText(ActivityRecharge.this,"Unable to open Email intent",Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
}
}
In this code "myPic" is bitmap which was returned by camera intent
Step 1: Add authority in your attached URI
Uri uri = FileProvider.getUriForFile(context, ""com.yourpackage", file);
Same as your manifest file provide name
android:authorities="com.yourpackage"
Step 2`; Add flag for allow to read
myIntent.setFlags(Intent.FLAG_GRANT_READ_URI_PERMISSION);
I use a simple Query Code to display Toastr in my application. This is the code:
<script>
document.getElementById("test").onclick = function() {
$.toaster({
priority : 'success',
title : 'yassine Jennane',
message : 'yassine jennane test toster'
});
};
</script>
My problem is when there is another user connected in my application, he isn't receiving the notification at the same moment as the first one do. Why?
Link of the notification script + demo: jQuery & Bootstrap Based Toast Notification Plugin
This won't work like that. You need to create Event Classes and Broadcasting Channels. Further you need to have some socket.io node.js side so that the notifications are shown live on the client side.
You probably don't have experience in this subject, so I would suggest to do following things:
Have a look at following in the documentation: https://laravel.com/docs/5.7/broadcasting
Watch following tutorial on laracasts: https://laracasts.com/series/real-time-laravel-with-socket-io/episodes/1
Of course you can have a look at some other tutorials you find on the internet.
The plugin you're using is a Jquery plugin that makes toasts in user browser, it works only for connected user, if you want to show notification for all the users using your application, you should use Cloud Messaging service, Firebase is good one.
My app uses Google API client library for .NET to send emails with attachments.
When using Send(), I'm facing some limitations when it comes to file size of the attachments. So, I guess switching to Resumable upload as upload method may help. But it's pretty much undocumented.
Looking into source code, I guess using different Send() overload may be the way forward, but I can't figure out how to use it properly.
So, instead of attaching the files into message and calling it like this:
var gmailResult = gmail.Users.Messages.Send(new Message
{
Raw = base64UrlEncodedMessage
}, "me").Execute();
I should not attach the files to message and do something like following?
var gmailResult = gmail.Users.Messages.Send(new Message
{
Raw = base64UrlEncodedMessage
}, "me", fileStream, contentType).Upload();
The second version does not return any API error, but does nothing. I'm obviously missing something here.
How do I attach more than one attachment?
This is kind of an old question, but putting an answer here just in case anyone else needs it:
I was able to achieve this by converting my mime message into a stream (attachment(s) included), and then calling this overload on Send:
UsersResource.MessagesResource.SendMediaUpload googleSendRequest = service.Users.Messages.Send(null, "youremail#gmail.com", mimeMessageStream, "message/rfc822");
IUploadProgress created = googleSendRequest.Upload();
This will upload all of the attachments with the email message content and then send it off. I was able to send two 5 megabyte attachments in an email. Previously I was not able to send even one of those via the other Send method that takes in a base64 encoded mime message.
Is there any way to provide RedirectURL then using GoogleWebAuthorizationBroker?
Here is the sample code in C#:
Task<UserCredential> credential = GoogleWebAuthorizationBroker.AuthorizeAsync(secrets, scopes, GoogleDataStore.User, cancellationToken, dataStore);
Or we have to use different approach?
I have an "installed application" that runs on a user's desktop, not a website. By default, when I create an "installed application" project in the API console, the redirect URI seems to be set to local host by default.
What ends up happening is that after the authentication sequence the user gets redirected to localhost and receives a browser error. I would like to prevent this from happening by providing my own redirect URI: urn:ietf:wg:oauth:2.0:oob:auto
This seems to be possible using Python version of the Google Client API, but I find it difficult to find any reference to this with .NET.
Take a look in the implementation of PromptCodeReceiver, as you can see it contains the redirect uri.
You can implement your own ICodeReceiver with your prefer redirect uri, and call it from a WebBroker which should be similar to GoogleWebAuthorizationBroker.
I think it would be great to understand why can't you just use PrompotCodeReceiver or LocalServerCodeReceiver.
And be aware that we just released a new library last week, so you should update it to 1.9.0.
UPDATE (more details, Nov 25th 2014):
You can create your own ICodeReceiver. You will have to do the following:
* The code was never tested... sorry.
public class MyNewCodeReceiver : ICodeReceiver
{
public string RedirectUri
{
get { return YOU_REDIRECT_URI; }
}
public Task<AuthorizationCodeResponseUrl> ReceiveCodeAsync(
AuthorizationCodeRequestUrl url,
CancellationToken taskCancellationToken)
{
// YOUR CODE HERE FOR RECEIVING CODE FROM THE URL.
// TAKE A LOOK AT THE FOLLOWING:
// PromptCodeReceiver AND LocalServerCodeReceiver
// FOR EXAMPLES.
}
}
PromptCodeReceiver
and LocalServerCodeReceiver.
Then you will have to do the following
(instead of using the GoogleWebAuthorizationBroker.AuthorizeAsync method):
var initializer = new GoogleAuthorizationCodeFlow.Initializer
{
ClientSecrets = secrets,
Scopes = scopes,
DataStore = new FileDataStore("Google.Apis.Auth");
};
await new AuthorizationCodeInstalledApp(
new GoogleAuthorizationCodeFlow(initializer),
new MyNewCodeReceiver())
.AuthorizeAsync(user, taskCancellationToken);
In addition:
I'll be happy to understand further why you need to set a different redirect uri, so we will be able to improve the library accordingly.
When I create an installed application the current PromptCodeReceiver and LocalServerCodeReceiver work for me, so I'm not sure what's the problem with your code.
My drupal developer given a url like:http://feed.local/feed/services/rest/viewget/test.json
then am getting the out put as(when am browsing from chrome browser) below:
[{"nid":"133","node_title":"What is life really all about?"},{"nid":"139","node_title":"What went wrong?"}]
I am using sumitk tutorial that is how to develop iphone app using drupal as base system with titanium.
My problem is how can i parse the above in titanium .Can any one help.....
Or else If any one help me how can i use this in xcode........
You can use Titanium.JSON.parse
JSON.parse will help you, it is a function included by Titanium. Make sure you encapsulate it within a try {} catch(excp) {}
For example:
try
{
var data = JSON.parse('[{"nid":"133","node_title":"What is life really all about?"},{"nid":"139","node_title":"What went wrong?"}]');
}
catch (excp)
{
alert('JSON parse error');
}