Android uses a file system that's similar to disk-based file systems on other platforms. This lesson describes how to work with the Android file system to read and write files with the
File APIs.
When saving a file to internal storage, you can acquire the appropriate directory as a
File by calling one of two methods:getFilesDir()- Returns a
Filerepresenting an internal directory for your app. getCacheDir()- Returns a
Filerepresenting an internal directory for your app's temporary cache files. Be sure to delete each file once it is no longer needed and implement a reasonable size limit for the amount of memory you use at any given time, such as 1MB. If the system begins running low on storage, it may delete your cache files without warning.
To create a new file in one of these directories, you can use the
File() constructor, passing the File provided by one of the above methods that specifies your internal storage directory. For example:File file = new File(context.getFilesDir(), filename);
Alternatively, you can call
openFileOutput() to get a FileOutputStream that writes to a file in your internal directory. For example, here's how to write some text to a file:String filename = "myfile"; String string = "Hello world!"; FileOutputStream outputStream; try { outputStream = openFileOutput(filename, Context.MODE_PRIVATE); outputStream.write(string.getBytes()); outputStream.close(); } catch (Exception e) { e.printStackTrace(); }
Or, if you need to cache some files, you should instead use
createTempFile(). For example, the following method extracts the file name from a URL and creates a file with that name in your app's internal cache directory:public File getTempFile(Context context, String url) { File file; try { String fileName = Uri.parse(url).getLastPathSegment(); file = File.createTempFile(fileName, null, context.getCacheDir()); } catch (IOException e) { // Error while creating file } return file; }
Note: Your app's internal storage directory is specified by your app's package name in a special location of the Android file system. Technically, another app can read your internal files if you set the file mode to be readable. However, the other app would also need to know your app package name and file names. Other apps cannot browse your internal directories and do not have read or write access unless you explicitly set the files to be readable or writable. So as long as you use
MODE_PRIVATE for your files on the internal storage, they are never accessible to other apps.Save a File on External Storage
Because the external storage may be unavailable—such as when the user has mounted the storage to a PC or has removed the SD card that provides the external storage—you should always verify that the volume is available before accessing it. You can query the external storage state by calling
getExternalStorageState(). If the returned state is equal to MEDIA_MOUNTED, then you can read and write your files. For example, the following methods are useful to determine the storage availability:/* Checks if external storage is available for read and write */ public boolean isExternalStorageWritable() { String state = Environment.getExternalStorageState(); if (Environment.MEDIA_MOUNTED.equals(state)) { return true; } return false; } /* Checks if external storage is available to at least read */ public boolean isExternalStorageReadable() { String state = Environment.getExternalStorageState(); if (Environment.MEDIA_MOUNTED.equals(state) || Environment.MEDIA_MOUNTED_READ_ONLY.equals(state)) { return true; } return false; }
Although the external storage is modifiable by the user and other apps, there are two categories of files you might save here:
- Public files
- Files that should be freely available to other apps and to the user. When the user uninstalls your app, these files should remain available to the user.For example, photos captured by your app or other downloaded files.
- Private files
- Files that rightfully belong to your app and should be deleted when the user uninstalls your app. Although these files are technically accessible by the user and other apps because they are on the external storage, they are files that realistically don't provide value to the user outside your app. When the user uninstalls your app, the system deletes all files in your app's external private directory.For example, additional resources downloaded by your app or temporary media files.
If you want to save public files on the external storage, use the
getExternalStoragePublicDirectory() method to get a File representing the appropriate directory on the external storage. The method takes an argument specifying the type of file you want to save so that they can be logically organized with other public files, such asDIRECTORY_MUSIC or DIRECTORY_PICTURES. For example:public File getAlbumStorageDir(String albumName) { // Get the directory for the user's public pictures directory. File file = new File(Environment.getExternalStoragePublicDirectory( Environment.DIRECTORY_PICTURES), albumName); if (!file.mkdirs()) { Log.e(LOG_TAG, "Directory not created"); } return file; }
If you want to save files that are private to your app, you can acquire the appropriate directory by calling
getExternalFilesDir() and passing it a name indicating the type of directory you'd like. Each directory created this way is added to a parent directory that encapsulates all your app's external storage files, which the system deletes when the user uninstalls your app.
For example, here's a method you can use to create a directory for an individual photo album:
public File getAlbumStorageDir(Context context, String albumName) { // Get the directory for the app's private pictures directory. File file = new File(context.getExternalFilesDir( Environment.DIRECTORY_PICTURES), albumName); if (!file.mkdirs()) { Log.e(LOG_TAG, "Directory not created"); } return file; }
If none of the pre-defined sub-directory names suit your files, you can instead call
getExternalFilesDir() and passnull. This returns the root directory for your app's private directory on the external storage.
Remember that
getExternalFilesDir() creates a directory inside a directory that is deleted when the user uninstalls your app. If the files you're saving should remain available after the user uninstalls your app—such as when your app is a camera and the user will want to keep the photos—you should instead usegetExternalStoragePublicDirectory().
Regardless of whether you use
getExternalStoragePublicDirectory() for files that are shared orgetExternalFilesDir() for files that are private to your app, it's important that you use directory names provided by API constants like DIRECTORY_PICTURES. These directory names ensure that the files are treated properly by the system. For instance, files saved in DIRECTORY_RINGTONES are categorized by the system media scanner as ringtones instead of music.Query Free Space
If you know ahead of time how much data you're saving, you can find out whether sufficient space is available without causing an
IOException by calling getFreeSpace() or getTotalSpace(). These methods provide the current available space and the total space in the storage volume, respectively. This information is also useful to avoid filling the storage volume above a certain threshold.
However, the system does not guarantee that you can write as many bytes as are indicated by
getFreeSpace(). If the number returned is a few MB more than the size of the data you want to save, or if the file system is less than 90% full, then it's probably safe to proceed. Otherwise, you probably shouldn't write to storage.
Note: You aren't required to check the amount of available space before you save your file. You can instead try writing the file right away, then catch an
IOException if one occurs. You may need to do this if you don't know exactly how much space you need. For example, if you change the file's encoding before you save it by converting a PNG image to JPEG, you won't know the file's size beforehand.Delete a File
You should always delete files that you no longer need. The most straightforward way to delete a file is to have the opened file reference call
delete() on itself.myFile.delete();
If the file is saved on internal storage, you can also ask the
Context to locate and delete a file by calling deleteFile():myContext.deleteFile(fileName);
Note: When the user uninstalls your app, the Android system deletes the following:
- All files you saved on internal storage
- All files you saved on external storage using
getExternalFilesDir().
getCacheDir() on a regular basis and also regularly delete other files you no longer need.
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