This quickstart is written specifically for native Android apps that are written in Java and use Volley
for making the API calls that you wish to protect with Approov. If this is not your situation then check if there is a more relevant Quickstart guide available.
This page provides all the steps for integrating Approov into your app. Additionally, a step-by-step tutorial guide using our Shapes App Example is also available.
To follow this guide you should have received an onboarding email for a trial or paid Approov account.
The Approov integration is available via jitpack
. This allows inclusion into the project by simply specifying a dependency in the gradle
files for the app.
Firstly, jitpack
needs to be added to the end the repositories
section in the build.gradle
file at the top root level of the project:
allprojects {
repositories {
...
maven { url 'https://jitpack.io' }
}
}
Secondly, add the dependency in your app's build.gradle
:
dependencies {
implementation 'com.github.approov:approov-service-volley:3.2.2'
}
Make sure you do a Gradle sync (by selecting Sync Now
in the banner at the top of the modified .gradle
file) after making these changes.
This package is actually an open source wrapper layer that allows you to easily use Approov with Volley
. This has a further dependency to the closed source Approov SDK.
The following app permissions need to be available in the manifest to use Approov:
<uses-permission android:name="android.permission.ACCESS_NETWORK_STATE" />
<uses-permission android:name="android.permission.INTERNET" />
Note that the minimum SDK version you can use with the Approov package is 21 (Android 5.0).
Please read this section of the reference documentation if targeting Android 11 (API level 30) or above.
In order to use the ApproovService
you should create a VolleyService
class:
import io.approov.service.volley.ApproovService;
public class VolleyService {
private static Context appContext;
private static RequestQueue requestQueue;
public static synchronized void initialize(Context context) {
appContext = context;
ApproovService.initialize(appContext, "<enter-your-config-string-here>")
}
public static synchronized RequestQueue getRequestQueue() {
if (requestQueue == null) {
requestQueue = Volley.newRequestQueue(appContext, ApproovService.getBaseHttpStack());
}
return requestQueue;
}
}
The <enter-your-config-string-here>
is a custom string that configures your Approov account access. This will have been provided in your Approov onboarding email.
You must initialize this when your app is created, usually in the onCreate
method:
public class YourApp extends Application {
@Override
public void onCreate() {
super.onCreate();
VolleyService.initialize(getApplicationContext());
}
}
You can then make Approov enabled Volley
API calls by using the RequestQueue
available from the VolleyService
:
VolleyService.getRequestQueue().add(request);
This uses the ApproovService
base http
stack to include an interceptor to add the Approov-Token
header and pins the connections.
Approov errors will generate an ApproovException
, which is a type of volley AuthFailureError
. This may be further specialized into an ApproovNetworkException
, indicating an issue with networking that should provide an option for a user initiated retry.
Initially you won't have set which API domains to protect, so the interceptor will not add anything. It will have called Approov though and made contact with the Approov cloud service. You will see logging from Approov saying UNKNOWN_URL
.
Your Approov onboarding email should contain a link allowing you to access Live Metrics Graphs. After you've run your app with Approov integration you should be able to see the results in the live metrics within a minute or so. At this stage you could even release your app to get details of your app population and the attributes of the devices they are running upon.
To actually protect your APIs and/or secrets there are some further steps. Approov provides two different options for protection:
-
API PROTECTION: You should use this if you control the backend API(s) being protected and are able to modify them to ensure that a valid Approov token is being passed by the app. An Approov Token is short lived crytographically signed JWT proving the authenticity of the call.
-
SECRETS PROTECTION: This allows app secrets, including API keys for 3rd party services, to be protected so that they no longer need to be included in the released app code. These secrets are only made available to valid apps at runtime.
Note that it is possible to use both approaches side-by-side in the same app.
See REFERENCE for a complete list of all of the ApproovService
methods.