Loading a framework class which is not in the SDK :) - Android Software/Hacking General [Developers Only]

Hi there. I need some help
I'm trying to make a radio app for HTC Desire but as you may know, there's no official API for that. So it's time for some hacking. By decompiling the FM Radio app and the framework.odex into .smali files I was able to find the path to a class that is used to control the FM tuner It's a system service. getSystemService with a string I've discovered returns an instance of the FmReceiver class.
So let's say FM_SERVICE is a string containing the service name.
Let's say FM_RECEIVER_PATH contains the path to the FmReceiver class (like com.something.FmReceiver)
By using the .slimi files I was able to see the methods inside the FmReceiver class. So I made a new abstract class and put all the methods I saw in the original FmReceiver.slimi file as abstract methods (because there's no way I can reconstruct their bodies). I renamed this file FmReceiver.java and put it in a package FM_RECEIVER_PATH into my Eclipse project.
So in the end I have a FmReceiver class in my project which does nothing (because all its methods are abstract) and a FmReceiver class which is on the device, in its framework.odex which has the same methods as my FmReceiver class except that they really have code inside and can do useful stuff.
To illustrate the things I've done so far:
Code:
Class<?> receiver_Class = Class.forName(FM_RECEIVER_PATH);
Object obj = getSystemService(FM_SERVICE);
Object instance = receiver_Class.cast(obj);
FmReceiver receiver = (FmReceiver) instance;
receiver_Class.isInstance(obj); //returns true
instance.getClass().getName().equals(FmReceiver.getClass().getName()); //returns true
I'm sure that the variable instance has the correct instance of the device's FmReceiver class. But can I cast instance to the class FmReceiver I've made like that? That code doesn't raise any errors but the functions are too complicated to track them to see whether they work.
So my question is - is this correct? Can I make such a cast to an abstract class and expect it to work properly afterward

Hah, you are using similar technique to mine in Google Maps mod You don't have to use Java reflection API, you could use your stub class as usual and at runtime the framework one will be used

Really?!? I haven't thought of that I'll try it

Oh yeah, oh yeah, oh yeah!!! It worked!!! Wow. Thank you man! I've been struggling with that for so long Actually it would have worked the way I did it as well, but now I discovered that I had an error in one of the methods in the abstract class Anyway I was so glad when that listener returned a value Cheers

Related

Wanting to develop for WM haivng some problems

Hi I want to make an application using location, I found this tutorial
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dd938890.aspx#RetrievingLocationInformationthroughGPS
which looks very helpful but because I am new to visual studio I am having some problems.
1) is the article it says "This article includes complete sample code." but I cant find a download for all the code.
2) he only mentions referencing Microsoft.WindowsMobile.Samples.Location.dll which I have done but the class LatLong is still unknown
3) I made a sample program without the LatLong class just to experiment I get the following error on my device
"Microsoft.WindowsMobile.Samples.Location, Version=1.0.3448.25673, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=null, or one of its dependencies, was not found
any idea what this means?
4) Could all my problems be because I am using visual studio 2005 and not 2008? I found a code project that looked really helpful but when trying to open it it says that it cant because it is from a newer version of the software, anything that can be done?
5) I find MSDN confusing for finding out what to reference to add a class for example this is the page for the LatLong class http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc514548.aspx
with the java online info the first thing you always see is where the class is found but it seems to be missing for this class. Other basig classes appear similar to java.
below is my sample code its basically taken from the article but I have commented out the references to LatLong and put in checks instead
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.ComponentModel;
using System.Data;
using System.Drawing;
using System.Text;
using System.Windows.Forms;
using Microsoft.WindowsMobile.Samples.Location;
namespace DeviceApplication3
{
public partial class Form1 : Form
{
private Gps gps;
int count = 0;
public Form1()
{
InitializeComponent();
gps = new Gps();
gps.Open();
}
private void button1_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
textBox1.Text = (getGpsString());
}
private string getGpsString()
{
GpsPosition position = gps.GetPosition();
/*LatLong location = new LatLong();
if (position.LatitudeValid)
location.Latitude = position.Latitude;
if (position.LongitudeValid)
location.Longitude = position.Longitude;
if (position.HeadingValid)
location.Heading = position.Heading;*/
StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
sb.Append("\n");
sb.Append("Latitude = ");
if (position.LatitudeValid)
{
sb.Append(position.Latitude.ToString() + "\n");
}
else
{
sb.Append("Not found yet\n");
}
sb.Append("Longitude = ");
if (position.LongitudeValid)
{
sb.Append(position.Longitude.ToString() + "\n");
}
else
{
sb.Append("Not found yet\n");
}
sb.Append("Heading = ");
if (position.HeadingValid)
{
sb.Append(position.Heading.ToString() + "\n");
}
else
{
sb.Append("Not found yet\n");
}
return sb.ToString();
}
}
}
Microsoft.WindowsMobile.Samples.Location.dll
is this file located in bin\debug and or \bin\release
?
and does it only give runtime errors or also compile time ?
no it compiles fine, can you see anything wrong with my code? The weird thing is the form comes up using the emulator but not on the device. Could it be because I have a custom rom that seems to have compact framework 3.5? I would assume it would be back compatible?
How have you deployed it to the device? Have you copied the .exe and the Location.dll?
one thing you could also test was if you could disable the stuff in the gps
and just run a program without it to verify that it's not missing net3.5's fault
heliosdev said:
How have you deployed it to the device? Have you copied the .exe and the Location.dll?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hi thanks for this I didnt copy over the dll I'm very silly.
So what do you guys think about loading projects ment for vs 2008 in 2005 is this impossible ? or can i convert them somehow?
sure it's only the project and solution files which differ
add the cs files manualy and it should work fine
Use the same name to create the new project in vs2005 to have the same namespace.
You'll have to do some manual changes if the code uses c#3.0 .net 3.5 features.
Thanks guys your awesome,
very random and off topic but since your programming kings ill ask anyway,
I think I want to eventually work in the gaming industry, I'm close(3months) to finishing my MSc CompSci conversion course and I am looking for jobs, its quite aparent that most games companys don't want unexperienced people so do you guys have any ideas of places to apply for that will give the the necessary experience? btw I have no taught experience with C++ which I think is my biggest dissadvantage, I do know C and java quite well though and as you can tell just starting to play with C#.
your help is always appreciated.
well, continue with general programming (object oriented programming, ui development, database, network,...). There are so many different fields in software development!
For example take a look at the chapters of the books in the game programming gems series to see what (not only) gaming companies are working on. In general for beginning there is a lot of information online where you'll find tons of tutorials.
Try to get a profound base in programming.
Starting with your gps application, develop a gui, save/load the positions (database), visualize the points...
heliosdev said:
well, continue with general programming (object oriented programming, ui development, database, network,...). There are so many different fields in software development!
For example take a look at the chapters of the books in the game programming gems series to see what (not only) gaming companies are working on. In general for beginning there is a lot of information online where you'll find tons of tutorials.
Try to get a profound base in programming.
Starting with your gps application, develop a gui, save/load the positions (database), visualize the points...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hi sorry for the late reply I upgraded to windows 7 last night to try and improve my rubbish laptop, seems to be a bit better btw,
anyway just want to say thanks for the advice. also my app will use google maps yahoo zonetag and windows live earth (or bing maps if thats what there calling it now) I think for some of thoes services I will need to pay to realease my app to the public even if its free but what about testers would I be able to give it to say 10 people?

Scripting for Android?

I have not had the time to look into it myself but I was wondering if anyone has tried doing scripting such as file renaming in android. What I am thinking of specifically is checking for a file and appending .bak to its name and reversely removing it when triggered again.
/crap code, not quite what i want but it is close.
int main ()
{
int result;
char oldname[] ="htclockscreen.apk";
char newname[] ="htclockscreen.apk.old";
if (oldname)
result= rename( oldname , newname );
puts ( "Default lock screen activate" );
else (newname)
result= rename( newname , oldname );
puts ( "HTC lock screen activate" );
else
puts ( "Divided by zero eh?" );
return 0;
}
Why? I love the default lock screen but the lack of music buttons is annoying when ya have to unlock the screen to skip to the next song. I guess this could also be done by adding music controls to the lock screen like HTC did but that is beyond me in coding and way beyond me in time.
I assume that you are using ASE here?
ASE allows you to script using Python, JRUBY, JavaScript
HERE IS A LINK
Stuff is hosted on Google Code
Kcarpenter said:
I assume that you are using ASE here?
ASE allows you to script using Python, JRUBY, JavaScript
HERE IS A LINK
Stuff is hosted on Google Code
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for the link, my coding knowledge isn't very great, just a bit of c/c++, basic, Ladder Logic, lisp, and a bit of raw Assembly when it comes to memory hooks.
Nanan00 said:
Thanks for the link, my coding knowledge isn't very great, just a bit of c/c++, basic, Ladder Logic, lisp, and a bit of raw Assembly when it comes to memory hooks.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That should be more than enough for simple Python or JRuby scripting.
It's no worse off than an advanced level of shell.
I found an even easier way via an app called GScript lite, it lets you make scripts and run them in terminal.

App Development - GridView

I have finally sat myself down and gone over Google's tutorials for building Views in Eclipse and I'm trying the Grid View. I have edited what I've needed to edit, and copied and pasted what the Android Developer site said to paste. I figured out what I need to do for most of the errors that I had, mainly having to rename my pictures from the sample_thumbs to my own image names, but I am still getting an error at one spot, which gets me because I copied and pasted it, but I have a feeling that there is something I'm supposed to edit myself here but I don't know exactly what it is
Toast.makeText(HelloGridView.this, "" + position, toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
HelloGridView cannot be resolved to a type. that's the error that I'm given.
Can anyone help me here? Thanks in advance to any assistance, I spent a little while narrowing down about 25 errors to this last one and don't know what is going on here.
I actually figured out this problem. Its is a quite quirky little error. It was actually a problem with the labeling of the Activity
public class HelloGridViewActivity extends Activity {
--should be
public class HelloGridView extends Activity {
but it is not, so you have to change all other instances of HelloGridView to HelloGridViewActivity
This causes a problem with the later code that is simply (HelloGridView.this, ""
.....it is referencing the Activity HelloGridView and gets mixed up because the public class is HelloGridView, so if at any time you need to use methods of the class HelloGridView, and Eclipse labels your class HelloGridViewActivity, then it will not work.
lemonoid said:
I actually figured out this problem. Its is a quite quirky little error. It was actually a problem with the labeling of the Activity
public class HelloGridViewActivity extends Activity {
--should be
public class HelloGridView extends Activity {
but it is not, so you have to change all other instances of HelloGridView to HelloGridViewActivity
This causes a problem with the later code that is simply (HelloGridView.this, ""
.....it is referencing the Activity HelloGridView and gets mixed up because the public class is HelloGridView, so if at any time you need to use methods of the class HelloGridView, and Eclipse labels your class HelloGridViewActivity, then it will not work.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You also need to import Toast.
Code:
import android.widget.Toast
Your code doesn't have to exactly match the tutorial. If you intend on using it in your own app, HelloGridView should be the name of the class that displays your GridView. Thusly, any line of code that references the class should be the name of the class as well, such as the Toast.

Link contact adress to Nokia Drive

I use my7rom on my Omnia 7.
Is there anyway to link a contacts adress to Nokia Drive instead of Maps (stock wp7 app). It would be much more practical if Nokia Drive opened a navigation session instead.
Anyone up for the challenge? A reg-tweak perhaps?
// Manneman
Skickat från Windows Phone 7.8
There's two parts here. The first is identifying the correct "filetype" or URI scheme that is used for navigation. That shouldn't be too hard; a little digging in HKCU should reveal it. We already know about ones like callto: and http: and I'm actually (slowly) working on an app to allow people to easily change them. The second part is finding the correct command to load that address or route in the Nokia Maps app. If the app supports pinning routes or destinations to Start, this is probably possible. If not, it may not be possible in the app. Most apps aren't designed to accept command-line parameters, so even if you make them the default handler for a given filetype or URI scheme, they ignore the value you send them and just start as though launched from Start.
GoodDayToDie said:
If the app supports pinning routes or destinations to Start, this is probably possible.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Nokia Drive supports pinning to start so it should be possible. Unfortunately I can't tell you exact command line parameters 'cause my Lumia 900 still "in jail"
Let me see if I have a copy of the Nokia Drive XAP handy. I'll need to decompile it to figure out the correct parameters for launching it with the intent of navigating to a specific location. Note also that this might not be possible directly - for example, the app might store a list of locations internally, and the tiles only provide an index into that list rather than providing the location directly - but that just requires another layer of indirection.
In that case, you create an app that gets registered as the navigation handler, and in response to a navigation request, it writes the requested location into the Nokia Drive app and then chain-launches Nokia Drive with the index of the newly written location. That's just an example of one way that this might go wrong, but overall, the odds are actually pretty good. Obviously, all of this will require, at a minimum, write access to the HKCR hive in the registry.
Ah, guys! You are so kind helping me out. I´m really certain alot of members in the WP7 section would love for this to work!
// Manneman
GoodDayToDie said:
I'll need to decompile it to figure out the correct parameters for launching it with the intent of navigating to a specific location
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
GoodDayToDie, you may try much simpler solution. Just create assembly (dll) to show startup parameters in message box, and replace main Nokia Drive dll (but pin some location first).
That's actually harder than it sounds; even if the app is sideloaded (which would mean I already have the DLL) my fake would have to mimic the internal structure of the real app to a degree (namespaces, class names, default actions, etc.). That's not hard, but decompiling .NET is pretty trivial too.
AFAIR, Nokia Drive is obfuscated (but I'm not 100% sure). Also, you don't need to duplicate all names and structures; just a stuff mentioned in WMAppManifest (I hope so). BTW, I forgot: I still have unlocked handset; if I'll found time, will try today later.
Update: tried but without of luck What I did:
- installed Nokia Drive first;
- downloaded map and pinned current location;
- created fake app with same app guid and namespace name ("Drive"), and performed app update (that operation completely override whole solution but NokiaDrive tile still pinned to the start screen);
- tried a few different page names (_default.xaml, QuickStartPage.xaml, DestinationPickerPage.xaml, FavoritesPage.xaml) with code
Code:
protected override void OnNavigatedTo(System.Windows.Navigation.NavigationEventArgs e)
{
MessageBox.Show("Hello from fake dll");
if (e.NavigationMode == System.Windows.Navigation.NavigationMode.New)
{
string[] keys = NavigationContext.QueryString.Keys.ToArray();
string[] values = NavigationContext.QueryString.Values.ToArray();
string param = "";
for (int i = 0; i < keys.Length; i++)
{
param += keys[i] + " -> " + values[i] + "\n";
}
MessageBox.Show("parameters: " + param);
}
}
But result always the same: app doesn't start from the pinned tile
Update 2: Finally, I did it
The trick is:
- do the same as I've described above (you should have pinned tile from ND);
- add following code to the start page:
Code:
public MainPage()
{
InitializeComponent();
var appTile = ShellTile.ActiveTiles.Last();
if (appTile != null)
{
//MessageBox.Show(appTile.NavigationUri.OriginalString);
EmailComposeTask emailTask = new EmailComposeTask();
emailTask.Subject = "NokiaDrive pinned parameters";
emailTask.Body = appTile.NavigationUri.OriginalString;
try
{
emailTask.Show();
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
MessageBox.Show(ex.Message, "Error", MessageBoxButton.OK);
}
}
}
- run app as usual (not from tile);
We allset - all params are sent to our email (I'm too lazy to manually copy all stuff )
Here we are (start parameters; bold values are changed for privacy reason ):
/_default?destination.name=200 SomeName Street&destination.latitude=49.5255378801376&destination.longitude=-72.4296837244183&destination.address.street=SomeName Street&destination.address.houseno=200&destination.address.district=&destination.address.county=&destination.address.city=SomeCity&destination.address.state=&destination.address.country=USA&destination.address.postcode=05720&destination.hashCode=371767793destination.address.statecode=MA&pinnedFrom=Favorites
P.S. Just found: Navigon also has ability to pin address to the start tile So, if you find the way to modify map protocol (or how it calls), it will be a really nice hack! BTW, could you remind me: do we have ability to launch assembly by GUID (on the full-/policy-unlocked phones)? If "yes", it's possible to write a real nice "proxy" app to handle map requests
I don't know about launching assemblies directly, but it's certainly possible to launch apps by GUID. It doesn't even require anything more than dev-unlock in fact (although of course you can only launch apps that you could launch anyhow). So yes, a proxy app is totally possible. That's actually what I'm working on (started as a project to make a Kindle ebook file loader, that would pur .mobi/.prc file in the Kindle app's folder and then launch the app).
GoodDayToDie, could you please, take a look to the registry, for default map protocol handler and figure out how to change that stuff? I'm pretty busy these days (and probably will be extremely busy couple of next months) but we can cooperate and create this app...
I'll investigate, but you're not the only one busy. If you've noticed a lack of software from me recently, it's due to the nex job I got some months back; I love it, but it leaves me with a lot less time for phone hacking if I want to still have a life outside of that.
With that said, this actually ties into the work I'm already doing with things like filetype handling and default browser switching. I can send you my HKCRlib, at a minimum; it's a library that simplifies interacting with HKCR, including creating backups of important values when they change, and reverting the backups.
GoodDayToDie, truly, I'm not much interested (personally) in that hack 'cause I can't use it for my Lumia 900. So it's only for the community needs but because of lack of time, I believe, we may put it on hold.

How does WeChat store animated emojis (stickers)?

Hi,
I hope this is the right section for app-specific questions (if not, please move the thread)...
My wife recently got into that sticker/emoji-collecting-thing on WeChat (god knows why) and she would like to use the WeChat stickers on other messengers like Whatsapp (or have access to the image files in general). There are millions of tutorials how to make your own animated stickers for WeChat, but unfortunately there is zero information how to get them out of WeChat... Apparently everything is stored in the folder "Phone\tencent\MicroMsg\--some-md5-like-number--\emoji". Therein are subfolders like "com.tencent.xin.emoticon.NAME", I guess for each sticker creator, and the image files themselves have cryptic filenames like "fd0476f63c51690b88dd17d9be63af1c" without any extension. The good news is that PNGs and JPGs are saved "natively" - such files can be easily recognized by any image viewer via the header. However, animated stickers (typically discernible by the much larger file size) are apparently stored in a kind of proprietary format. It's not GIF or any image format I know of (or rather tried it with), it's also not a common compressed container, and the hex editor doesn't reveal anything useful, just densely packed gibberish...
Is there any kind of documentation on how WeChat stores animated images and how they can be converted back into something useful like GIF?
I was wondering this as well. I did the same digging as the OP, with one thing to add. I took a look at one of the said files – this one is 13Kb and about 1kb from the beginning there is a 648-byte xml rdf metadata tag. It shows that whatever this thing is, it was made with Photoshop. I took out the id's and hashes:
Code:
<rdf:Description rdf:about="" xmlns:xmpMM="http ://ns.adobe.com/xap/1.0/mm/" xmlns:stRef="http ://ns.adobe.com/xap/1.0/sType/ResourceRef#" xmlns:xmp="http ://ns.adobe.com/xap/1.0/" xmpMM:eek:riginalDocumentID="xmp.did:…" xmpMM:DocumentID="xmp.did:…" xmpMM:InstanceID="xmp.iid:…" xmp:CreatorTool="Adobe Photoshop CC 2015 (Windows)"> <xmpMM:DerivedFrom stRef:instanceID="xmp.iid:…" stRef:documentID="adobe:docid:photoshop:…"/> </rdf:Description> </rdf:RDF> </x:xmpmeta> <?xpacket end="r"?>
Looking for the same answer
It's been forever since this question was posted, but I still kinda want to know. I don't think anyone's figured out how. XD;;
Nope, I gave up and urged my wife to find a new hobby
Drats, the stickers are so adorable tho... iiOTL
The files are stored in the WXAM format (an in-house proprietary format). The most I found was this post detailing an exploit for WXGF (that's the name of the format), which includes POC code in Python (see zip at end of post) that encrypts a file to WXGF. In it, you can see the code calculating the encryption key - which, I imagine the way to decrypt them would be to do the opposite (obviously)
Python:
imei = '358035085174146'
key = hashlib.md5(imei).hexdigest()[0:16]
cipher = AES.new(key, AES.MODE_ECB)
result[0:1024] = cipher.encrypt(buffer[0:1024])
As for converting the unencrypted file - whether Android or Windows, it's contained in a dll or so file.
On Windows, the decompilation code can be found at
Code:
C:\Program Files (x86)\Tencent\WeChat\WXAMDecoder.dll
, while on Android it can be found at
Code:
libwechatcommon.so
Particularly on Android, the Java class located in
Code:
com.tencent.mm.plugin.gif.MMWXGFJNI
contains the java -> native implementation, with functions such as
Code:
nativePic2Wxam()
As for documenting the internal native code -> It's too much past my ability / time at the moment. Maybe this can be for someone for another day~ That being said, decryption isn't impossible as you saw above, related to IMEI and AES keys.
The particular function you were looking for was - sadly, using it would be a bit hard. But I imagine that you could take the so file, wire it up to an Android app with the same declarations here, and pass in the Wxam file in a byte[] array to get the result back -> You wouldn't have to know the internal code for that either, and since the type is byte[], we don't need to even reverse engineer the code to see what it supplied. Clearly it is a byte[] array of the files contents.
Code:
public static native byte[] nativeWxamToGif(byte[] bArr);
In fact, now that I think about it, I'd like to try it myself now and see what happens lol.
Edit: Yup, it works. I just decoded a few files. Working on decryption now. Sorry, I can't share it since I don't wanna get in trouble. But there's the information above ^^ If you can make Android apps and know enough, it's not hard
BBRecon said:
The files are stored in the WXAM format (an in-house proprietary format). The most I found was this post detailing an exploit for WXGF (that's the name of the format), which includes POC code in Python (see zip at end of post) that encrypts a file to WXGF. In it, you can see the code calculating the encryption key - which, I imagine the way to decrypt them would be to do the opposite (obviously)
Python:
imei = '358035085174146'
key = hashlib.md5(imei).hexdigest()[0:16]
cipher = AES.new(key, AES.MODE_ECB)
result[0:1024] = cipher.encrypt(buffer[0:1024])
As for converting the unencrypted file - whether Android or Windows, it's contained in a dll or so file.
On Windows, the decompilation code can be found at
Code:
C:\Program Files (x86)\Tencent\WeChat\WXAMDecoder.dll
, while on Android it can be found at
Code:
libwechatcommon.so
Particularly on Android, the Java class located in
Code:
com.tencent.mm.plugin.gif.MMWXGFJNI
contains the java -> native implementation, with functions such as
Code:
nativePic2Wxam()
As for documenting the internal native code -> It's too much past my ability / time at the moment. Maybe this can be for someone for another day~ That being said, decryption isn't impossible as you saw above, related to IMEI and AES keys.
The particular function you were looking for was - sadly, using it would be a bit hard. But I imagine that you could take the so file, wire it up to an Android app with the same declarations here, and pass in the Wxam file in a byte[] array to get the result back -> You wouldn't have to know the internal code for that either, and since the type is byte[], we don't need to even reverse engineer the code to see what it supplied. Clearly it is a byte[] array of the files contents.
Code:
public static native byte[] nativeWxamToGif(byte[] bArr);
In fact, now that I think about it, I'd like to try it myself now and see what happens lol.
Edit: Yup, it works. I just decoded a few files. Working on decryption now. Sorry, I can't share it since I don't wanna get in trouble. But there's the information above ^^ If you can make Android apps and know enough, it's not hard
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm using nativeWxamToGif(), but I keep getting a return value of null. Do you know if it is still supposed to work? I tried the libwechatcommon.so in wechat versions 7 and 8 and still no luck.
My decryption code is almost the same as the encryption code. The only difference is that I strip off the trailing 0-pad and then reuse the imei-generated (using my own imei) key to decrypt.
Were you able to use nativePic2Wxam? The signature is too complex so it's too hard for me to guess what parameters to pass in.
Code:
private static native int nativePic2Wxam(String paramString1, String paramString2, int paramInt1, int paramInt2, int paramInt3, int paramInt4, int paramInt5);
Since I don't know how to use nativePic2Wxam, I'm just blindly trusting you that I should be able to decrypt one of the wxgf into wxam and then use nativeWxamToGif() to convert it to a gif. But I'm not sure why my gifs are always null.
I think I do have the libwechatcommon.so lib working because I am able to use other simple functions such as the following:
Code:
public static native int nativeRewindBuffer(long paramLong);
public static native int nativeUninit(long paramLong);
Does nativeWxamToGif() return null if the input byte array is invalid wxam or something?

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