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authorScott Main <smain@google.com>2009-11-15 19:18:45 -0800
committerandroid-build SharedAccount <android-build@sekiwake.mtv.corp.google.com>2009-11-16 13:05:59 -0800
commita5efea8e6d637f40ddcc3fe5a4e8390569ec60a3 (patch)
tree43307773567d9a43bfc69266720bc193d28b0ca3
parent972a7aee99a07a0225020b0cc79fc8ef38703163 (diff)
downloadbase-a5efea8e6d637f40ddcc3fe5a4e8390569ec60a3.tar.gz
am 59450740: Merge change I0b0a4d6a into eclair-sdk
Merge commit '59450740c72c8642c25e2fa757754dc32252d1a2' into eclair * commit '59450740c72c8642c25e2fa757754dc32252d1a2': docs: update the publishing guide to revise the updating section
-rw-r--r--docs/html/guide/publishing/publishing.jd74
1 files changed, 21 insertions, 53 deletions
diff --git a/docs/html/guide/publishing/publishing.jd b/docs/html/guide/publishing/publishing.jd
index 3aea3cf58c13..c027f4d97be0 100644
--- a/docs/html/guide/publishing/publishing.jd
+++ b/docs/html/guide/publishing/publishing.jd
@@ -18,7 +18,7 @@ page.title=Publishing Your Applications
<ol>
<li><a href="#overview">Publishing on Android Market</a>
<ol>
- <li><a href="#marketupgrade">Publishing Upgrades on Android Market</a>
+ <li><a href="#marketupgrade">Publishing Updates on Android Market</a>
<li><a href="#marketintent">Using Intents to Launch the Market Application</a></li>
</ol></li>
<!--
@@ -89,9 +89,11 @@ server when you upload the application.</p>
<li>Your application must be signed with a cryptographic private key whose
validity period ends after <span style="color:red">22 October 2033</span>. </li>
<li>Your application must define both an <code>android:versionCode</code> and an
-<code>android:versionName</code> attribute in the <code>&lt;manifest&gt;</code>
+<code>android:versionName</code> attribute in the
+<a
+href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/manifest-element.html"><code>&lt;manifest&gt;</code></a>
element of its manifest. The server uses the <code>android:versionCode</code> as
-the basis for identifying the application internally and handling upgrades, and
+the basis for identifying the application internally and handling updates, and
it displays the <code>android:versionName</code> to users as the application's
version.</li>
<li>Your application must define both an <code>android:icon</code> and an
@@ -100,58 +102,24 @@ element of its manifest.</li>
</ol>
</div>
-<h3 id="marketupgrade">Publishing Upgrades on Android Market</h3>
+<h3 id="marketupgrade">Publishing Updates on Android Market</h3>
-<p>The beta version of Android Market does not support notifying your users when
-you publish a new version of your application. This capability will be
-added soon, but currently the user must independently initiate download of an
-upgraded application. When you publish an upgrade, you can assist users by
-notifying them that the upgrade is available and giving them a way to download
-the upgraded application from Android Market.</p>
+<p>At any time after publishing an application on Android Market, you can upload
+and publish an update to the same application package. When you publish an
+update to an application, users who have already installed the
+application will automatically receive a notification that an update is
+available for the application. They can then choose to update the application
+to the latest version.</p>
-<p>Here is a suggested way of tracking installed application versions and
-notifying users that an upgrade is available:</p>
+<p>Before uploading the updated application, be sure that you have incremented
+the <code>android:versionCode</code> and <code>android:versionName</code>
+attributes in the <a
+href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/manifest-element.html"><code>&lt;manifest&gt;</code></a>
+element of the manifest file. Also, the package name must be the same and the
+.apk must be signed with the same private key. If the package name and signing
+certificate do <em>not</em> match those of the existing version, Market will
+consider it a new application and will not offer it to users as an update.</p>
-<ol>
-<li>Have your app occasionally check in with a web-service that you're
-running. This web service should return two values: the latest available
-version number for the application (corresponding to
-<code>android:versionCode</code>) and a URI string that your application
-can later send in an Intent, to launch Market and search for the
-upgraded application for the user.
-
-<p>The URI that your web service returns should be properly formatted to
-search Android Market for your upgraded application. See
-<a href="#marketintent">Using Intents to Launch the Market Application</a>
-for more information. The URI should specify the upgraded
-application's package name as the query parameter, since the package name
-is guaranteed to be unique on Android Market. The URI format for the
-package name search is: </p>
-
-<p><code>http://market.android.com/search?q=pname:&lt;package&gt;</code> or
-<br><code>market://search?q=pname:&lt;package&gt;</code></p>
-
-</li>
-<li>Your application can then compare its own version number against
-that retrieved. If the retrieved value is greater, your application can
-show a dialog informing the user that a new version is available. The
-dialog can offer buttons to begin the download or cancel. </li> <li>If
-the user clicks the button to begin the download, your application can
-call startActivity() using the ACTION_VIEW Intent, passing the URI
-received from your web service. The Intent launches the Market
-application on the device and initiates an immediate search on the
-Android Market site, based on the query parameters in the URI. When the
-result is displayed, the user can view the details of the upgraded
-application and begin the download.
-
-<p>Note that, because the URI string is received from your web
-service and not hard-coded into your application, you can easily change
-the Market launch behaviors whenever needed, without
-having to change your application. </p></li></ol>
-
-<p>For more information about URIs you can pass to the Market application at
-launch, see <a href="#marketintent">Using Intents to Launch the Market
-Application</a>, below.</p>
<h3 id="marketintent">Using Intents to Launch the Market Application on
a Device</h3>
@@ -163,7 +131,7 @@ download/install applications.</p>
<p>You can launch the Market application from another Android
application by sending an Intent to the system. You might want to do
-this, for example, to help the user locate and download an upgrade to an
+this, for example, to help the user locate and download an update to an
installed application, or to let the user know about related
applications that are available for download. </p>