CommCare is an easily customizable, open source mobile platform that supports frontline workers in low-resource settings. By replacing paper-based forms, frontline workers can use CommCare to track and support their clients with registration forms, checklists, SMS reminders, and multimedia.
This repository represents the Android version of CommCare. It depends on the CommCare Core repository, which contains the XForm engine and case/lookup table implementations.
CommCare Android is a mobile CommCare Platform client runtime, and requires a backend environment for full end-to-end usage and to test platform development.
If you don't have an access to another backend, or if you will be doing full platform development, after completing this setup you can follow the end-to-end development guide which explains how to establish a local environment for CommCare's full client/server software.
To set up an Android dev environment for commcare-android, do the following:
- Install Android Studio.
- Install Java 17 if you don't have it yet. For ease of test suite setup (see below) OpenJDK is preferred over Oracle's version of Java.
Go ahead and open Android Studio if this is your first time using it; it may take you through some sort of setup wizard, and it's nice to get that out of the way. If it's not the first time, ensure that there are no references to removed Java options in your environment, most commonly found are MaxPermSize and PermSize
Android Studio's default project space is ~/AndroidStudioProjects
so I'm going to use that in the example.
CommCare Android depends on CommCare Core, and CommCare Android expects the core directory to live side by side
in your directory structure. You can acheive this with the following commands (in bash):
cd ~/AndroidStudioProjects
mkdir CommCare
cd CommCare
git clone https://github.com/dimagi/commcare-android.git
git clone https://github.com/dimagi/commcare-core.git
- Open Android Studio
- If this is your first time using Android Studio, click "Config" and setup the Android SDK.
- Download the Android 12 (API 31) SDK Platform and the Google APIs for 31.
- Now go back to the Android Studio Welcome dashboard and click "Import project (Eclipse ADT, Gradle, etc.)"
- Select AndroidStudioProjects > CommCare > commcare-android and hit OK
- Click "OK" to use the Gradle wrapper
- Wait while Android Studio spins its wheels
- Download any build dependencies that the SDK Manager tells you you need.
Now you're basically ready to go. To build CommCare Android and get it running on your phone, plug in an android phone that
- is in developer mode has USB debugging enabled
- doesn't have CommCare Android installed on it
In Android Studio, hit the build button (a green "play" symbol in the toolbar). The first build will take a minute. Then it'll ask you what device to run it on
- Make sure your screen is unlocked (or else you'll see something like this)
- select your device
Enjoy!
CommCare has several different build variants. The normal build variant is commcare
and can built built from the command-line with the following command:
cd commcare-android
./gradlew assembleCommcareDebug
# the apk can now be found in the build/outputs/apk/ directory
The commcare-android repository uses Robolectric, which provides mocks, allowing you to run Android specific code on your local machine.
cd commcare-android
./gradlew testCommcareDebug
and view the results from the output file generated.
Create a new Android Studio JUnit Build configuration using the following steps.
- Click Run -> Edit Configruations and create a new JUnit configuration by pressing the green plus button.
- Set Name to "commcare android test suite"
- Set Test kind to "All in directory"
- set Directory to
/absolute/path/to/commcare-android/app/unit-tests/src/
- Right click on this directory and click the "Create 'All Tests'" option that should be listed more than half-way down the list.
- Set VM options to
-ea -noverify
- Set Working directory to
/absolute/path/to/commcare-android/app/
- Set Use classpath of module to app
- Click
OK
to finish creating the configuration. - Select the "commcare android test suite" under the configuration drop down to the left of the green play button.
- Press the green play button to run the tests.
The commcare-android repository uses Espresso to write UI tests.
You need to have two keys in your gradle.properties
before being able to run any instrumentation tests. But make sure you never commit these keys to github.
HQ_API_USERNAME=<ASK_ANOTHER_DEV_FOR_KEY>
HQ_API_PASSWORD=<ASK_ANOTHER_DEV_FOR_KEY>
cd commcare-android
./gradlew connectedCommcareDebugAndroidTest
It's also a common requirement to run a particular test, such as when you’re fixing a bug or developing a new test. You can achieve the same in command-line using:
./gradlew connectedCommcareDebugAndroidTest -Pandroid.testInstrumentationRunnerArguments.class=<FULLY_QUALIFIED_NAME_OF_YOUR_TEST>
You can view the results from the output file generated.
Before running tests from Android-Studio make sure you've disabled animations in your device. Note, this is only required when you're running tests from Android Studio
Go to Setting -> Developer Options, and under the Drawing section, switch all of the following options:
Window animation scale -> off
Transition animation scale -> off
Animator duration scale -> off
Create a new Android Studio Android Instrumented Test Build configuration using the following steps.
- Click Run -> Edit Configruations and create a new Android Instrumented Test configuration by pressing the green plus button.
- Set Name to "commcare android instrumentation tests"
- Set Test kind to "All in Package"
- set Package to
org.commcare.androidTests
- Click
OK
to finish creating the configuration. - Select the "commcare android instrumentation tests" under the configuration drop down to the left of the green play button.
- Press the green play button to run the tests.
cd commcare-android
./gradlew connectedCommcareDebugAndroidTest -Pandroid.testInstrumentationRunnerArguments.notAnnotation=org.commcare.annotations.BrowserstackTests
In order to comply with code style guidelines we follow, please use Commcare Coding Style file and Commcare Inspection Profile as your respective code style and inpection profile in Android Studio. To do so follow these instructions
- Copy the config files to your Android Studio installation as follows (Replace AndroidStudio3.0 with the respective directory for the AS version you are using) -
cp .android_studio_settings/inspection/CommCare\ Inpsection\ Profile.xml ~/Library/Preferences/AndroidStudio3.0/inspection/.
cp .android_studio_settings/codestyles/CommCare\ Coding\ Style.xml ~/Library/Preferences/AndroidStudio3.0/codestyles/.
-
Restart Android Studio
-
Go to AS preferences -> Editor -> Code Style and select Scheme as 'Commcare Coding Style' and to AS preferences -> Editor -> Inspections and select Profile as 'Commcare Inspection Profile'
If you experience the following exception when running individual tests from Android Studio Editor on Mac
No such manifest file: build/intermediates/bundles/debug/AndroidManifest.xml
If you are on a Mac, you will probably need to configure the default JUnit test runner configuration in order to work around a bug where IntelliJ / Android Studio does not set the working directory to the module being tested. This can be accomplished by editing the run configurations, Defaults -> JUnit and changing the working directory value to
Android Monitor in Android Studio shows the following exceptions:
java.lang.RuntimeException: CommCare ran into an issue deserializing data while inflating type
...
Caused by: org.javarosa.core.util.externalizable.DeserializationException:
No datatype registered to serialization code [4b a9 e5 89]
Resolution:
-
Disable Instant Run found in Settings > Build, Execution, Deployment > Instant Run.
-
Maybe also edit ~/.gradle/gradle.properties (may not exist) and add a line like
org.gradle.jvmargs=-Xmx1536M
if the build fails due to OOM or you see a message like the following during the build:To run dex in process, the Gradle daemon needs a larger heap. It currently has 1024 MB. For faster builds, increase the maximum heap size for the Gradle daemon to at least 1536 MB. To do this set org.gradle.jvmargs=-Xmx1536M in the project gradle.properties.
-
Click Run 'app' to rebuid and run on phone.