How double-click power launches the camera

as of august 2020

Sequence of events

  1. PhoneWindowManager.java is responsible for all power button presses (see interceptPowerKeyDown).
  2. Even though PWMgr has a lot of logic to detect all manner of power button multipresses and gestures, it also checks with GestureLauncherService, which is also offered the chance to intercept the power key.
  3. GLS is responsible for the camera timeout, and if it detects one, it forwards it to the StatusBarManagerService (which hands it off to SystemUI).
  4. Inside SystemUI, onCameraLaunchDetected looks at the keyguard state and determines
    1. whether the camera is even allowed
    2. whether the screen is on; if not, we need to delay until that happens
    3. whether the device is locked (defined as “keyguard is showing”).
  5. If the device is unlocked (no keyguard), the camera is launched immediately. Callsite in onCameraLaunchGestureDetected.
  6. If the keyguard is up, however, KeyguardBottomAreaView.launchCamera takes over to handle the “secure camera” (a different intent, usually directing to the same app, but giving that app the cue to not allow access to the photo roll, etc).
  7. If the intent would have to launch a resolver (the user has multiple cameras installed and hasn’t chosen one to always launch for the SECURE_CAMERA_INTENT),
    1. In order to show the resolver, the lockscreen “bouncer” (authentication method) is first presented.
  8. Otherwise (just one secure camera), it is launched (with some window animation gymnastics).

Which intent launches?

  • If the keyguard is not showing (device is unlocked)
    • CameraIntents.getInsecureCameraIntent(), defined to be MediaStore.INTENT_ACTION_STILL_IMAGE_CAMERA.
    • Callsite in StatusBar.java.
  • If the keyguard is showing (device locked)
    • KeyguardBottomAreaView.getCameraIntent() is consulted, which allows the “keyguard right button” (which we don’t actually show) to control the camera intent. The default implementation returns one of CameraIntents.getInsecureCameraIntent() or CameraIntents.getSecureCameraIntent(), which are MediaStore.INTENT_ACTION_STILL_IMAGE_CAMERA and MediaStore.INTENT_ACTION_STILL_IMAGE_CAMERA_SECURE, respectively.
    • Callsite in KeyguardBottomAreaView.java.
  • Note that starting in Android 12, as required by some OEMs, if the special string resource config_cameraGesturePackage is nonempty, this will be treated as a package name to be added to the insecure camera intent, constraining the invocation to that single app and typically preventing implicit intent resolution. This package must be on the device or the camera gesture will no longer work properly.