| page.title=Android Compatibility |
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| <p>Android's purpose is to establish an open platform for developers to build innovative apps. |
| The Android Compatibility program defines the technical details of Android platform and provides |
| tools used by OEMs to ensure that developers' apps run on a variety of devices. The Android SDK |
| provides built-in tools that developers use to clearly state the device features their apps |
| require. And Google Play shows apps only to those devices that can properly run them. |
| </p> |
| |
| <h2 id="why-build-compatible-android-devices">Why build compatible Android devices?</h2> |
| <h3 id="users-want-a-customizable-device">Users want a customizable device.</h3> |
| <p>A mobile phone is a highly personal, always-on, always-present gateway to |
| the Internet. We haven't met a user yet who didn't want to customize it by |
| extending its functionality. That's why Android was designed as a robust |
| platform for running after-market applications.</p> |
| <h3 id="developers-outnumber-us-all">Developers outnumber us all.</h3> |
| <p>No device manufacturer can hope to write all the software that a person could |
| conceivably need. We need third-party developers to write the apps users want, |
| so the Android Open Source Project aims to make it as easy and open as |
| possible for developers to build apps.</p> |
| <h3 id="everyone-needs-a-common-ecosystem">Everyone needs a common ecosystem.</h3> |
| <p>Every line of code developers write to work around a particular phone's bug |
| is a line of code that didn't add a new feature. The more compatible phones |
| there are, the more apps there will be. By building a fully compatible Android |
| device, you benefit from the huge pool of apps written for Android, while |
| increasing the incentive for developers to build more of those apps.</p> |
| <h2 id="android-compatibility-is-free-and-its-easy">Android compatibility is free, and it's easy.</h2> |
| <p>If you are building a mobile device, you can follow these steps to make |
| sure your device is compatible with Android. For more details about the |
| Android compatibility program in general, see <a href="overview.html">the program overview</a>.</p> |
| <p>Building a compatible device is a three-step process:</p> |
| <ol> |
| <li> |
| <p><em>Obtain the Android software source code</em>. |
| This is <a href="{@docRoot}source/index.html">the source code for the Android platform</a>, that you port to your hardware.</p> |
| </li> |
| <li> |
| <p><em>Comply with Android Compatibility Definition Document (CDD)</em>. |
| The CDD enumerates the software and hardware requirements of a compatible Android device.</p> |
| </li> |
| <li> |
| <p><em>Pass the Compatibility Test Suite (CTS)</em>. |
| You can use the CTS (included in the Android source code) as an ongoing aid to compatibility during the development process.</p> |
| </li> |
| </ol> |
| |
| <h2 id="joining-the-ecosystem">Joining the Ecosystem</h2> |
| <p>Once you've built a compatible device, you may wish to include Google |
| Play to provide your users access to the third-party app ecosystem. |
| Unfortunately, for a variety of legal and business reasons, we aren't able to |
| automatically license Google Play to all compatible devices. To inquire |
| about access about Google Play, you can <a href="contact-us.html">contact us</a>.</p> |