This is a sample app that shows a possible use case for HMKit. We connect to a vehicle/emulator via Bluetooth or Telematics and send some commands like lock doors and turn on lights.
- Android 5.0 Lollipop or higher.
- hmkit-android
- auto-api-java
- command-queue-android
- sandbox-ui
Dependencies are managed via gradle repositories.
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run
git submodule update --init --recursive
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Import the Gradle project with Android Studio 3+.
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Initialise the HMKit with a certificate from the Developer Center. The flow is described in the comments of the BaseActivity.java
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Run BaseActivity.java.
After initialisation, the sandboxui module is loaded. All of the app logic is in that package.
Instrumentation tests cover bluetooth and telematics commands. For them to work, ble-explorer-app/src/main/java/res/values/credentials.xml should have the following keys:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<resources>
<string name="environment">prod</string> <!-- dev or prod -->
<!-- name prefix is either dev or prod, according to the environment -->
<string name="prodAccessToken"></string>
<string name="prodDeviceCert"></string>
<string name="prodPrivateKey"></string>
<string name="prodIssuerPublicKey"></string>
<string name="prodWebUrl"></string>
<string name="prodVehicleSerial"></string>
</resources>
An emulator should be opened with these credentials. If the phone vibrates, bluetooth should manually be connected in the emulator.
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