Build autofill services

An autofill service is an app that makes it easier for users to fill out forms by injecting data into the views of other apps. Autofill services can also retrieve user data from the views in an app and store it for use at a later time. Autofill services are usually provided by apps that manage user data, such as password managers.

Android makes filling out forms easier with the autofill framework available in Android 8.0 (API level 26) and higher. Users can take advantage of autofill features only if there is an app that provides autofill services on their device.

This page shows how to implement an autofill service in your app. If you're looking for a code sample that shows how to implement a service, see the AutofillFramework sample in Java or Kotlin. For further details about how autofill services work, see the reference pages for the AutofillService and AutofillManager classes.

Manifest declarations and permissions

Apps that provide autofill services must include a declaration that describes the implementation of the service. To specify the declaration, include a <service> element in the app manifest. The <service> element must include the following attributes and elements:

The following example shows an autofill service declaration:

<service
    android:name=".MyAutofillService"
    android:label="My Autofill Service"
    android:permission="android.permission.BIND_AUTOFILL_SERVICE">
    <intent-filter>
        <action android:name="android.service.autofill.AutofillService" />
    </intent-filter>
    <meta-data
        android:name="android.autofill"
        android:resource="@xml/service_configuration" />
</service>

The <meta-data> element includes an android:resource attribute that points to an XML resource with further details about the service. The service_configuration resource in the previous example specifies an activity that allows users to configure the service. The following example shows the service_configuration XML resource:

<autofill-service
  xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
  android:settingsActivity="com.example.android.SettingsActivity" />

For more information about XML resources, see App resources overview.

Prompt to enable the service

An app is used as the autofill service after it declares the BIND_AUTOFILL_SERVICE permission and the user enables it in the device settings. An app can verify whether it's the currently enabled service by calling the hasEnabledAutofillServices() method of the AutofillManager class.

If the app isn't the current autofill service, then it can request the user to change the autofill settings by using the ACTION_REQUEST_SET_AUTOFILL_SERVICE intent. The intent returns a value of RESULT_OK if the user selects an autofill service that matches the package of the caller.

Fill out client views

The autofill service receives requests to fill out client views when the user interacts with other apps. If the autofill service has user data that satisfies the request, then it sends the data in the response. The Android system shows an autofill UI with the available data, as shown in figure 1:

Autofill UI

Figure 1. Autofill UI displaying a dataset.

The autofill framework defines a workflow to fill out views that is designed to minimize the time that the Android system is bound to the autofill service. In each request, the Android system sends an AssistStructure object to the service by calling the onFillRequest() method.

The autofill service checks whether it can satisfy the request with user data that it previously stored. If it can satisfy the request, then the service packages the data in Dataset objects. The service calls the onSuccess() method, passing a FillResponse object that contains the Dataset objects. If the service doesn't have data to satisfy the request, it passes null to the onSuccess() method.

The service calls the onFailure() method instead if there's an error processing the request. For a detailed explanation of the workflow, see the description on the AutofillService reference page.

The following code shows an example of the onFillRequest() method:

Kotlin

override fun onFillRequest(
    request: FillRequest,
    cancellationSignal: CancellationSignal,
    callback: FillCallback
) {
    // Get the structure from the request
    val context: List<FillContext> = request.fillContexts
    val structure: AssistStructure = context[context.size - 1].structure

    // Traverse the structure looking for nodes to fill out
    val parsedStructure: ParsedStructure = parseStructure(structure)

    // Fetch user data that matches the fields
    val (username: String, password: String) = fetchUserData(parsedStructure)

    // Build the presentation of the datasets
    val usernamePresentation = RemoteViews(packageName, android.R.layout.simple_list_item_1)
    usernamePresentation.setTextViewText(android.R.id.text1, "my_username")
    val passwordPresentation = RemoteViews(packageName, android.R.layout.simple_list_item_1)
    passwordPresentation.setTextViewText(android.R.id.text1, "Password for my_username")

    // Add a dataset to the response
    val fillResponse: FillResponse = FillResponse.Builder()
            .addDataset(Dataset.Builder()
                    .setValue(
                            parsedStructure.usernameId,
                            AutofillValue.forText(username),
                            usernamePresentation
                    )
                    .setValue(
                            parsedStructure.passwordId,
                            AutofillValue.forText(password),
                            passwordPresentation
                    )
                    .build())
            .build()

    // If there are no errors, call onSuccess() and pass the response
    callback.onSuccess(fillResponse)
}

data class ParsedStructure(var usernameId: AutofillId, var passwordId: AutofillId)

data class UserData(var username: String, var password: String)

Java

@Override
public void onFillRequest(FillRequest request, CancellationSignal cancellationSignal, FillCallback callback) {
    // Get the structure from the request
    List<FillContext> context = request.getFillContexts();
    AssistStructure structure = context.get(context.size() - 1).getStructure();

    // Traverse the structure looking for nodes to fill out
    ParsedStructure parsedStructure = parseStructure(structure);

    // Fetch user data that matches the fields
    UserData userData = fetchUserData(parsedStructure);

    // Build the presentation of the datasets
    RemoteViews usernamePresentation = new RemoteViews(getPackageName(), android.R.layout.simple_list_item_1);
    usernamePresentation.setTextViewText(android.R.id.text1, "my_username");
    RemoteViews passwordPresentation = new RemoteViews(getPackageName(), android.R.layout.simple_list_item_1);
    passwordPresentation.setTextViewText(android.R.id.text1, "Password for my_username");

    // Add a dataset to the response
    FillResponse fillResponse = new FillResponse.Builder()
            .addDataset(new Dataset.Builder()
                    .setValue(parsedStructure.usernameId,
                            AutofillValue.forText(userData.username), usernamePresentation)
                    .setValue(parsedStructure.passwordId,
                            AutofillValue.forText(userData.password), passwordPresentation)
                    .build())
            .build();

    // If there are no errors, call onSuccess() and pass the response
    callback.onSuccess(fillResponse);
}

class ParsedStructure {
    AutofillId usernameId;
    AutofillId passwordId;
}

class UserData {
    String username;
    String password;
}

A service can have more than one dataset that satisfies the request. In this case, the Android system shows multiple options—one for each dataset—in the autofill UI. The following code example shows how to provide multiple datasets in a response:

Kotlin

// Add multiple datasets to the response
val fillResponse: FillResponse = FillResponse.Builder()
        .addDataset(Dataset.Builder()
                .setValue(parsedStructure.usernameId,
                        AutofillValue.forText(user1Data.username), username1Presentation)
                .setValue(parsedStructure.passwordId,
                        AutofillValue.forText(user1Data.password), password1Presentation)
                .build())
        .addDataset(Dataset.Builder()
                .setValue(parsedStructure.usernameId,
                        AutofillValue.forText(user2Data.username), username2Presentation)
                .setValue(parsedStructure.passwordId,
                        AutofillValue.forText(user2Data.password), password2Presentation)
                .build())
        .build()

Java

// Add multiple datasets to the response
FillResponse fillResponse = new FillResponse.Builder()
        .addDataset(new Dataset.Builder()
                .setValue(parsedStructure.usernameId,
                        AutofillValue.forText(user1Data.username), username1Presentation)
                .setValue(parsedStructure.passwordId,
                        AutofillValue.forText(user1Data.password), password1Presentation)
                .build())
        .addDataset(new Dataset.Builder()
                .setValue(parsedStructure.usernameId,
                        AutofillValue.forText(user2Data.username), username2Presentation)
                .setValue(parsedStructure.passwordId,
                        AutofillValue.forText(user2Data.password), password2Presentation)
                .build())
        .build();

Autofill services can navigate the ViewNode objects in the AssistStructure to retrieve the autofill data required to fulfill the request. A service can retrieve autofill data using methods of the ViewNode class, such as getAutofillId().

A service must be able to describe the contents of a view to check whether it can satisfy the request. Using the autofillHints attribute is the first approach that a service must use to describe the contents of a view. However, client apps must explicitly provide the attribute in their views before it is available to the service.

If a client app doesn't provide the autofillHints attribute, a service must use its own heuristics to describe the contents. The service can use methods from other classes, such as getText() or getHint(), to get information about the contents of the view. For more information, see Provide hints for autofill.

The following example shows how to traverse the AssistStructure and retrieve autofill data from a ViewNode object:

Kotlin

fun traverseStructure(structure: AssistStructure) {
    val windowNodes: List<AssistStructure.WindowNode> =
            structure.run {
                (0 until windowNodeCount).map { getWindowNodeAt(it) }
            }

    windowNodes.forEach { windowNode: AssistStructure.WindowNode ->
        val viewNode: ViewNode? = windowNode.rootViewNode
        traverseNode(viewNode)
    }
}

fun traverseNode(viewNode: ViewNode?) {
    if (viewNode?.autofillHints?.isNotEmpty() == true) {
        // If the client app provides autofill hints, you can obtain them using
        // viewNode.getAutofillHints();
    } else {
        // Or use your own heuristics to describe the contents of a view
        // using methods such as getText() or getHint()
    }

    val children: List<ViewNode>? =
            viewNode?.run {
                (0 until childCount).map { getChildAt(it) }
            }

    children?.forEach { childNode: ViewNode ->
        traverseNode(childNode)
    }
}

Java

public void traverseStructure(AssistStructure structure) {
    int nodes = structure.getWindowNodeCount();

    for (int i = 0; i < nodes; i++) {
        WindowNode windowNode = structure.getWindowNodeAt(i);
        ViewNode viewNode = windowNode.getRootViewNode();
        traverseNode(viewNode);
    }
}

public void traverseNode(ViewNode viewNode) {
    if(viewNode.getAutofillHints() != null && viewNode.getAutofillHints().length > 0) {
        // If the client app provides autofill hints, you can obtain them using
        // viewNode.getAutofillHints();
    } else {
        // Or use your own heuristics to describe the contents of a view
        // using methods such as getText() or getHint()
    }

    for(int i = 0; i < viewNode.getChildCount(); i++) {
        ViewNode childNode = viewNode.getChildAt(i);
        traverseNode(childNode);
    }
}

Save user data

An autofill service needs user data to fill out views in apps. When users manually fill out a view, they're prompted to save the data to the current autofill service, as shown in figure 2.

Autofill save UI

Figure 2. Autofill save UI.

To save the data, the service must indicate it is interested in storing the data for future use. Before the Android system sends a request to save the data, there is a fill request where the service has the opportunity to fill out the views. To indicate that it is interested in saving the data, the service includes a SaveInfo object in the response to the fill request. The SaveInfo object contains at least the following data:

  • The type of user data that is saved. For a list of the available SAVE_DATA values, see SaveInfo.
  • The minimum set of views that need to be changed to trigger a save request. For example, a login form typically requires the user to update the username and password views to trigger a save request.

A SaveInfo object is associated with a FillResponse object, as shown in the following code example:

Kotlin

override fun onFillRequest(
    request: FillRequest,
    cancellationSignal: CancellationSignal,
    callback: FillCallback
) {
    ...
    // Builder object requires a non-null presentation
    val notUsed = RemoteViews(packageName, android.R.layout.simple_list_item_1)

    val fillResponse: FillResponse = FillResponse.Builder()
            .addDataset(
                    Dataset.Builder()
                            .setValue(parsedStructure.usernameId, null, notUsed)
                            .setValue(parsedStructure.passwordId, null, notUsed)
                            .build()
            )
            .setSaveInfo(
                    SaveInfo.Builder(
                            SaveInfo.SAVE_DATA_TYPE_USERNAME or SaveInfo.SAVE_DATA_TYPE_PASSWORD,
                            arrayOf(parsedStructure.usernameId, parsedStructure.passwordId)
                    ).build()
            )
            .build()
    ...
}

Java

@Override
public void onFillRequest(FillRequest request, CancellationSignal cancellationSignal, FillCallback callback) {
    ...
    // Builder object requires a non-null presentation
    RemoteViews notUsed = new RemoteViews(getPackageName(), android.R.layout.simple_list_item_1);

    FillResponse fillResponse = new FillResponse.Builder()
            .addDataset(new Dataset.Builder()
                    .setValue(parsedStructure.usernameId, null, notUsed)
                    .setValue(parsedStructure.passwordId, null, notUsed)
                    .build())
            .setSaveInfo(new SaveInfo.Builder(
                    SaveInfo.SAVE_DATA_TYPE_USERNAME | SaveInfo.SAVE_DATA_TYPE_PASSWORD,
                    new AutofillId[] {parsedStructure.usernameId, parsedStructure.passwordId})
                    .build())
            .build();
    ...
}

The autofill service can implement logic to persist the user data in the onSaveRequest() method, which is usually called after the client activity finishes or when the client app calls commit(). The following code shows an example of the onSaveRequest() method:

Kotlin

override fun onSaveRequest(request: SaveRequest, callback: SaveCallback) {
    // Get the structure from the request
    val context: List<FillContext> = request.fillContexts
    val structure: AssistStructure = context[context.size - 1].structure

    // Traverse the structure looking for data to save
    traverseStructure(structure)

    // Persist the data - if there are no errors, call onSuccess()
    callback.onSuccess()
}

Java

@Override
public void onSaveRequest(SaveRequest request, SaveCallback callback) {
    // Get the structure from the request
    List<FillContext> context = request.getFillContexts();
    AssistStructure structure = context.get(context.size() - 1).getStructure();

    // Traverse the structure looking for data to save
    traverseStructure(structure);

    // Persist the data - if there are no errors, call onSuccess()
    callback.onSuccess();
}

Autofill services must encrypt sensitive data before persisting it. However, user data can include labels or data that isn't sensitive. For example, a user account can include a label that marks the data as a work or a personal account. Services must not encrypt labels. By not encrypting labels, services can use the labels in presentation views if the user hasn't authenticated. Then, services can substitute the labels with the actual data after the user authenticates.

Postpone the autofill save UI

Starting with Android 10, if you use multiple screens to implement an autofill workflow—for example, one screen for the username field and another for the password—you can postpone the autofill save UI by using the SaveInfo.FLAG_DELAY_SAVE flag.

If this flag is set, the autofill save UI isn't triggered when the autofill context associated with the SaveInfo response is committed. Instead, you can use a separate activity within the same task to deliver future fill requests and then show the UI via a save request. For more information, see SaveInfo.FLAG_DELAY_SAVE.

Require user authentication

Autofill services can provide an additional level of security by requiring the user to authenticate before it can fill out views. The following scenarios are good candidates to implement user authentication:

  • The user data in the app needs to be unlocked using a primary password or a fingerprint scan.
  • A specific dataset needs to be unlocked, such as credit card details by using a card verification code (CVC).

In a scenario where the service requires user authentication before unlocking the data, the service can present boilerplate data or a label and specify the Intent that takes care of authentication. If you need additional data to process the request after the authentication flow is done, you can add such data to the intent. Your authentication activity can then return the data to the AutofillService class in your app.

The following code example shows how to specify that the request requires authentication:

Kotlin

val authPresentation = RemoteViews(packageName, android.R.layout.simple_list_item_1).apply {
    setTextViewText(android.R.id.text1, "requires authentication")
}
val authIntent = Intent(this, AuthActivity::class.java).apply {
    // Send any additional data required to complete the request
    putExtra(MY_EXTRA_DATASET_NAME, "my_dataset")
}

val intentSender: IntentSender = PendingIntent.getActivity(
        this,
        1001,
        authIntent,
        PendingIntent.FLAG_CANCEL_CURRENT
).intentSender

// Build a FillResponse object that requires authentication
val fillResponse: FillResponse = FillResponse.Builder()
        .setAuthentication(autofillIds, intentSender, authPresentation)
        .build()

Java

RemoteViews authPresentation = new RemoteViews(getPackageName(), android.R.layout.simple_list_item_1);
authPresentation.setTextViewText(android.R.id.text1, "requires authentication");
Intent authIntent = new Intent(this, AuthActivity.class);

// Send any additional data required to complete the request
authIntent.putExtra(MY_EXTRA_DATASET_NAME, "my_dataset");
IntentSender intentSender = PendingIntent.getActivity(
                this,
                1001,
                authIntent,
                PendingIntent.FLAG_CANCEL_CURRENT
        ).getIntentSender();

// Build a FillResponse object that requires authentication
FillResponse fillResponse = new FillResponse.Builder()
        .setAuthentication(autofillIds, intentSender, authPresentation)
        .build();

Once the activity completes the authentication flow, it must call the setResult() method, passing a RESULT_OK value, and set the EXTRA_AUTHENTICATION_RESULT extra to the FillResponse object that includes the populated dataset. The following code shows an example of how to return the result once the authentication flows completes:

Kotlin

// The data sent by the service and the structure are included in the intent
val datasetName: String? = intent.getStringExtra(MY_EXTRA_DATASET_NAME)
val structure: AssistStructure = intent.getParcelableExtra(EXTRA_ASSIST_STRUCTURE)
val parsedStructure: ParsedStructure = parseStructure(structure)
val (username, password) = fetchUserData(parsedStructure)

// Build the presentation of the datasets
val usernamePresentation =
        RemoteViews(packageName, android.R.layout.simple_list_item_1).apply {
            setTextViewText(android.R.id.text1, "my_username")
        }
val passwordPresentation =
        RemoteViews(packageName, android.R.layout.simple_list_item_1).apply {
            setTextViewText(android.R.id.text1, "Password for my_username")
        }

// Add the dataset to the response
val fillResponse: FillResponse = FillResponse.Builder()
        .addDataset(Dataset.Builder()
                .setValue(
                        parsedStructure.usernameId,
                        AutofillValue.forText(username),
                        usernamePresentation
                )
                .setValue(
                        parsedStructure.passwordId,
                        AutofillValue.forText(password),
                        passwordPresentation
                )
                .build()
        ).build()

val replyIntent = Intent().apply {
    // Send the data back to the service
    putExtra(MY_EXTRA_DATASET_NAME, datasetName)
    putExtra(EXTRA_AUTHENTICATION_RESULT, fillResponse)
}

setResult(Activity.RESULT_OK, replyIntent)

Java

Intent intent = getIntent();

// The data sent by the service and the structure are included in the intent
String datasetName = intent.getStringExtra(MY_EXTRA_DATASET_NAME);
AssistStructure structure = intent.getParcelableExtra(EXTRA_ASSIST_STRUCTURE);
ParsedStructure parsedStructure = parseStructure(structure);
UserData userData = fetchUserData(parsedStructure);

// Build the presentation of the datasets
RemoteViews usernamePresentation = new RemoteViews(getPackageName(), android.R.layout.simple_list_item_1);
usernamePresentation.setTextViewText(android.R.id.text1, "my_username");
RemoteViews passwordPresentation = new RemoteViews(getPackageName(), android.R.layout.simple_list_item_1);
passwordPresentation.setTextViewText(android.R.id.text1, "Password for my_username");

// Add the dataset to the response
FillResponse fillResponse = new FillResponse.Builder()
        .addDataset(new Dataset.Builder()
                .setValue(parsedStructure.usernameId,
                        AutofillValue.forText(userData.username), usernamePresentation)
                .setValue(parsedStructure.passwordId,
                        AutofillValue.forText(userData.password), passwordPresentation)
                .build())
        .build();

Intent replyIntent = new Intent();

// Send the data back to the service
replyIntent.putExtra(MY_EXTRA_DATASET_NAME, datasetName);
replyIntent.putExtra(EXTRA_AUTHENTICATION_RESULT, fillResponse);

setResult(RESULT_OK, replyIntent);

In the scenario where a credit card dataset needs to be unlocked, the service can display a UI asking for the CVC. You can hide the data until the dataset is unlocked by presenting boilerplate data, such as the name of the bank and the last four digits of the credit card number. The following example shows how to require authentication for a dataset and hide the data until the user provides the CVC:

Kotlin

// Parse the structure and fetch payment data
val parsedStructure: ParsedStructure = parseStructure(structure)
val paymentData: Payment = fetchPaymentData(parsedStructure)

// Build the presentation that shows the bank and the last four digits of the
// credit card number, such as 'Bank-1234'
val maskedPresentation: String = "${paymentData.bank}-" +
        paymentData.creditCardNumber.substring(paymentData.creditCardNumber.length - 4)
val authPresentation = RemoteViews(packageName, android.R.layout.simple_list_item_1).apply {
    setTextViewText(android.R.id.text1, maskedPresentation)
}

// Prepare an intent that displays the UI that asks for the CVC
val cvcIntent = Intent(this, CvcActivity::class.java)
val cvcIntentSender: IntentSender = PendingIntent.getActivity(
        this,
        1001,
        cvcIntent,
        PendingIntent.FLAG_CANCEL_CURRENT
).intentSender

// Build a FillResponse object that includes a Dataset that requires authentication
val fillResponse: FillResponse = FillResponse.Builder()
        .addDataset(
                Dataset.Builder()
                        // The values in the dataset are replaced by the actual
                        // data once the user provides the CVC
                        .setValue(parsedStructure.creditCardId, null, authPresentation)
                        .setValue(parsedStructure.expDateId, null, authPresentation)
                        .setAuthentication(cvcIntentSender)
                        .build()
        ).build()

Java

// Parse the structure and fetch payment data
ParsedStructure parsedStructure = parseStructure(structure);
Payment paymentData = fetchPaymentData(parsedStructure);

// Build the presentation that shows the bank and the last four digits of the
// credit card number, such as 'Bank-1234'
String maskedPresentation = paymentData.bank + "-" +
    paymentData.creditCardNumber.subString(paymentData.creditCardNumber.length - 4);
RemoteViews authPresentation = new RemoteViews(getPackageName(), android.R.layout.simple_list_item_1);
authPresentation.setTextViewText(android.R.id.text1, maskedPresentation);

// Prepare an intent that displays the UI that asks for the CVC
Intent cvcIntent = new Intent(this, CvcActivity.class);
IntentSender cvcIntentSender = PendingIntent.getActivity(
        this,
        1001,
        cvcIntent,
        PendingIntent.FLAG_CANCEL_CURRENT
).getIntentSender();

// Build a FillResponse object that includes a Dataset that requires authentication
FillResponse fillResponse = new FillResponse.Builder()
        .addDataset(new Dataset.Builder()
                // The values in the dataset are replaced by the actual
                // data once the user provides the CVC
                .setValue(parsedStructure.creditCardId, null, authPresentation)
                .setValue(parsedStructure.expDateId, null, authPresentation)
                .setAuthentication(cvcIntentSender)
                .build())
        .build();

Once the activity validates the CVC, it should call the setResult() method, passing a RESULT_OK value, and set the EXTRA_AUTHENTICATION_RESULT extra to a Dataset object that contains the credit card number and expiration date. The new dataset replaces the dataset that requires authentication, and the views are filled out immediately. The following code shows an example of how to return the dataset once the user provides the CVC:

Kotlin

// Parse the structure and fetch payment data.
val parsedStructure: ParsedStructure = parseStructure(structure)
val paymentData: Payment = fetchPaymentData(parsedStructure)

// Build a non-null RemoteViews object to use as the presentation when
// creating the Dataset object. This presentation isn't actually used, but the
// Builder object requires a non-null presentation.
val notUsed = RemoteViews(packageName, android.R.layout.simple_list_item_1)

// Create a dataset with the credit card number and expiration date.
val responseDataset: Dataset = Dataset.Builder()
        .setValue(
                parsedStructure.creditCardId,
                AutofillValue.forText(paymentData.creditCardNumber),
                notUsed
        )
        .setValue(
                parsedStructure.expDateId,
                AutofillValue.forText(paymentData.expirationDate),
                notUsed
        )
        .build()

val replyIntent = Intent().apply {
    putExtra(EXTRA_AUTHENTICATION_RESULT, responseDataset)
}

Java

// Parse the structure and fetch payment data.
ParsedStructure parsedStructure = parseStructure(structure);
Payment paymentData = fetchPaymentData(parsedStructure);

// Build a non-null RemoteViews object to use as the presentation when
// creating the Dataset object. This presentation isn't actually used, but the
// Builder object requires a non-null presentation.
RemoteViews notUsed = new RemoteViews(getPackageName(), android.R.layout.simple_list_item_1);

// Create a dataset with the credit card number and expiration date.
Dataset responseDataset = new Dataset.Builder()
        .setValue(parsedStructure.creditCardId,
                AutofillValue.forText(paymentData.creditCardNumber), notUsed)
        .setValue(parsedStructure.expDateId,
                AutofillValue.forText(paymentData.expirationDate), notUsed)
        .build();

Intent replyIntent = new Intent();
replyIntent.putExtra(EXTRA_AUTHENTICATION_RESULT, responseDataset);

Organize the data in logical groups

Autofill services must organize the data in logical groups that isolate concepts from different domains. In this page, these logical groups are referred to as partitions. The following list shows typical examples of partitions and fields:

  • Credentials, which includes username and password fields.
  • Address, which includes street, city, state, and ZIP code fields.
  • Payment information, which includes credit card number, expiration date, and verification code fields.

An autofill service that correctly partitions data is able to better protect the data of its users by not exposing data from more than one partition in a dataset. For example, a dataset that includes credentials doesn't need to include payment information. Organizing data in partitions allows your service to expose the minimum amount of relevant information required to satisfy a request.

Organizing data in partitions enables services to fill activities that have views from multiple partitions while sending the minimum amount of relevant data to the client app. For example, consider an activity that includes views for username, password, street, and city, and an autofill service that has the following data:

Partition Field 1 Field 2
Credentials work_username work_password
personal_username personal_password
Address work_street work_city
personal_street personal_city

The service can prepare a dataset that includes the credentials partition for both the work and personal accounts. When the user chooses a dataset, a subsequent autofill response can provide either the work or personal address, depending on the user's first choice.

A service can identify the field that originated the request by calling the isFocused() method while traversing the AssistStructure object. This allows the service to prepare a FillResponse with the appropriate partition data.

SMS one-time code autofill

Your autofill service can assist the user with filling one-time codes sent via SMS by using the SMS Retriever API.

To use this feature, the following requirements must be met:

  • The autofill service is running on Android 9 (API level 28) or higher.
  • The user grants consent for your autofill service to read one-time codes from SMS.
  • The application that you are providing autofill for is not already using the SMS Retriever API to read one-time codes.

Your autofill service can use SmsCodeAutofillClient, available by calling SmsCodeRetriever.getAutofillClient() from Google Play Services 19.0.56 or higher.

The primary steps for using this API in an autofill service are:

  1. In the autofill service, use hasOngoingSmsRequest from SmsCodeAutofillClient to determine whether there are any requests active for the package name of the application you're autofilling. Your autofill service must only display a suggestion prompt if this returns false.
  2. In the autofill service, use checkPermissionState from SmsCodeAutofillClient to check whether the autofill service has permission to autofill one-time codes. This permission state can be NONE, GRANTED, or DENIED. The autofill service must display a suggestion prompt for NONE and GRANTED states.
  3. In the autofill authentication activity, use the SmsRetriever.SEND_PERMISSION permission to register a BroadcastReceiver listening for SmsCodeRetriever.SMS_CODE_RETRIEVED_ACTION to receive the SMS code result when it's available.
  4. Call startSmsCodeRetriever on SmsCodeAutofillClient to start listening for one-time codes sent via SMS. If the user grants permissions for your autofill service to retrieve one-time codes from SMS, this looks for SMS messages received in the last one to five minutes from now.

    If your autofill service needs to request user permission to read one-time codes, then the Task returned by startSmsCodeRetriever might fail with a ResolvableApiException returned. If this happens, you need to call the ResolvableApiException.startResolutionForResult() method to display a consent dialog for the permission request.

  5. Receive the SMS code result from the intent and then return the SMS code as an autofill response.

Advanced autofill scenarios

Integrate with keyboard
Beginning with Android 11, the platform allows keyboards and other input-method editors (IMEs) to display autofill suggestions inline, instead of using a pulldown menu. For more information on how your autofill service can support this functionality, see Integrate autofill with keyboards.
Paginate datasets
A large autofill response can exceed the allowed transaction size of the Binder object that represents the remotable object required to process the request. To prevent the Android system from throwing an exception in these scenarios, you can keep the FillResponse small by adding no more than 20 Dataset objects at a time. If your response needs more datasets, you can add a dataset that lets users know that there's more information and retrieves the next group of datasets when selected. For more information, see addDataset(Dataset).
Save data split in multiple screens

Apps often split user data in multiple screens in the same activity, especially in activities used to create a new user account. For example, the first screen asks for a username, and if the username is available, a second screen asks for a password. In these situations, the autofill service must wait until the user enters both fields before the autofill save UI can be shown. Follow these steps to handle such scenarios:

  1. In the first fill request, add a client state bundle in the response that contains the autofill IDs of the partial fields present in the screen.
  2. In the second fill request, retrieve the client state bundle, get the autofill IDs set in the previous request from the client state, and add these IDs and the FLAG_SAVE_ON_ALL_VIEWS_INVISIBLE flag to the SaveInfo object used in the second response.
  3. In the save request, use the proper FillContext objects to get the value of each field. There is one fill context per fill request.

For more information, see Save when data is split in multiple screens.

Provide initialization and teardown logic for each request

Every time there's an autofill request, the Android system binds to the service and calls its onConnected() method. Once the service processes the request, the Android system calls the onDisconnected() method and unbinds from the service. You can implement onConnected()to provide code that runs before processing a request and onDisconnected() to provide code that runs after processing a request.

Customize the autofill save UI

Autofill services can customize the autofill save UI to help users decide whether they want to let the service save their data. Services can provide additional information about what is saved either through a simple text or through a customized view. Services can also change the appearance of the button that cancels the save request and get a notification when the user taps that button. For more information, see the SaveInfo reference page.

Compatibility mode

The compatibility mode allows autofill services to use the accessibility virtual structure for autofill purposes. It's particularly useful for providing autofill functionality in browsers that don't explicitly implement the autofill APIs.

To test your autofill service using compatibility mode, explicitly allowlist the browser or app that requires compatibility mode. You can check which packages are already allowlisted by running the following command:

$ adb shell settings get global autofill_compat_mode_allowed_packages

If the package you're testing isn't listed, add it by running the following command, where pkgX is the package of the app:

$ adb shell settings put global autofill_compat_mode_allowed_packages pkg1[resId1]:pkg2[resId1,resId2]

If the app is a browser, then use resIdx to specify the resource ID of the input field that contains the URL of the rendered page.

Compatibility mode has the following limitations:

  • A save request is triggered when the service uses the FLAG_SAVE_ON_ALL_VIEWS_INVISIBLE flag or the setTrigger() method is called. FLAG_SAVE_ON_ALL_VIEWS_INVISIBLE is set by default when using compatibility mode.
  • The text value of the nodes might not be available in the onSaveRequest(SaveRequest, SaveCallback) method.

For more information about compatibility mode, including the limitations associated with it, see the AutofillService class reference.