N.B.: This question about the serial number of the physical SD card, not the UUID of the mounted volume. These are two independent pieces of data.
In some versions of Android, and other variants of Linux, it's possible to get the serial number of a mounted SD card, e.g. by reading the contents of /sys/class/mmc_host/mmc0/mmc0:0001/serial
or /sys/block/mmcblk0/device/serial
(specific numbers may vary). In my testing this has worked pretty reliably, as long as the SD card is inserted in a built-in SD card slot (not mounted via USB adapter).
But as of Android 7.0 Nougat, the OS is said to be blocking access to this information, at least on some devices. I tested this by running a test app on a new Alcatel A30 GSM (Android 7.0), and in fact the above approach fails with a permission error:
java.io.FileNotFoundException: /sys/block/mmcblk0/device/serial (Permission denied)
at java.io.FileInputStream.open(Native Method)
For future reference, we (testing from an adb shell) have permissions to ls -ld
the following:
/sys/class/mmc_host
but not/sys/class/mmc_host/mmc0
/sys/block
but not/sys/block/mmcblk0
Since the above approach no longer works,
Is there another way to obtain the serial number of a mounted SD card in Android 7.0 or later?
Failing that, is there any documentation or other statement from Google on plans for providing or not providing this function? I haven't found anything in the Android issue tracker, but maybe I'm not searching right.
To make sure the question is clear, I'm talking about what an ordinary (non-system) app running on a non-rooted device can do, with any permissions that an app can normally request and receive.
FYI, the /sbin
directory doesn't seem to be readable, so commands like /sbin/udevadm
aren't an option.