
Devices list ( Management > Devices) or Device page (Management > Devices > Device) under Managed Google Play -dropdown and the action Allow managed Google Play application installation.Application version page ( Management > Applications > Application > Managed Google Play store version) under Actions-dropdown.
Applications list ( Management > Applications) under Managed Google Play -dropdown. As an administrator, you can define the allowed applications with Miradore from: The administrator can allow installations for a device and the managed Google Play store layout shows only the applications available for the signed-in user. How to allow managed Google Play application installation?Īdministrators can control, which managed Google Play applications users can access and install with their devices. To allow application installations, the device must have a user and a managed Google Play account. Managed Google Play Enterprise has been configured. How to see the allowed applications for devices?. How to allow managed Google Play application installation?. Last remark: your device must be rooted for SDMaid to work. And as "nice-to-have", the app also brings a file manager, file searcher, app control (freezing apps etc), and more. So the big pro for the "average user" here is not only that he can avoid the command line, but also does not need to figure out tha apps "technical name", as SDMaid does that itself. Reading the list of installed apps, SDMaid thus does not find it - so the folder /data/data/ would be identified as "corpse" and offered for cleaning. In your case, you've uninstalled the "foobar" app, which has the "package-name" of "". SDMaid: "Corpse Finder" and "System Cleaner" (Source: Google Play click images to enlarge) To do so, it reads the list of installed apps from the package manager, and then checks for e.g.
On the Google Playstore you can find the app SD Maid, which (amongst other things) can take care for "left-overs" of uninstalled apps, which it calls "corpses" (so the part relating to this is the "corpses finder"). Glad you've found a working solution! To make it easier for people being afraid of working with the terminal: