Posts

Hardening the Gates: The Definitive Guide to Android IPC & Service Security

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 Beyond android:exported: Secure Android IPC with signature permissions, caller validation, and Confused Deputy attack prevention TL;DR Explicit Over Implicit:  Since Android 12, always set  android:exported  explicitly. Trust the Signature:  Use  protectionLevel="signature"  for internal app-to-app communication. Identity = Signature:  Verify callers using UID and Certificate Hashes, not just package names. Lock the Intent:  Default to  FLAG_IMMUTABLE  for all  PendingIntent  objects. Zero Trust:  Treat every incoming IPC  Intent  as an untrusted external web request. In the Android ecosystem, Inter-Process Communication (IPC) is the bridge between apps. However, a bridge without a sophisticated checkpoint is a liability. While most developers understand  android:exported , the nuances of  Signature-level permissions ,  UID mapping , and  PendingIntent mutability  are where true sec...

The "Sticky" Trap: Surviving Null Intents and Pending Queues in Android

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 Mastering state restoration, null intents, and lifecycle-aware background tasks in modern Android development. Ever had your Android app crash in the background while the user wasn’t even using it? Welcome to the “Sticky Trap.” While  START_STICKY  is a fundamental tool for background execution, it hides a massive catch: when the system brings your service back from the dead, it might not bring the original  Intent data  with it. The Real-World Scenario Imagine you are building a  File Sync Service . The user starts a large 500MB sync. The user switches to a heavy game, pushing your app into the background. The Android Low Memory Killer (LMK) kills your process to reclaim RAM. Minutes later, the system recreates your service because you returned  START_STICKY . The Crash:  Your code tries to read  intent.getStringExtra("FILE_PATH") . But since the intent is  null , your app throws a  NullPointerException  and crashes again. Un...