I have tried various ways to achieve this, but my service eventually gets killed.
I want to use AlarmManager to trigger a class every one hour. Even if the device is sleeping, it should sent a flashing LED alert, vibration or sound. In any case, it should run forever.
I have noticed that Whatsapp is always running, even though I kill all the running apps and clear the memory, put the device to sleep, and still Whatsapp receive messages and alerts me. How are they doing it? I want to do the same with my app.
Step 1 − Create a new project in Android Studio, go to File ⇒ New Project and fill all required details to create a new project. Step 2 − Add the following code to res/layout/activity_main. xml. In the above code, we have taken text view, when user click on text view, it will start service and stop service.
NOTE: NOW THIS ANSWER IS ONLY VALID FOR ANDROID 7 AND BELOW. SINCE ANDROID 8 GOOGLE HAS CHANGED HOW BACKGROUND TASKS ARE HANDLED
Since I posted this question, I have implemented two different approaches to this solution into multiple apps.
APPROACH 1
This extract is from an app where I use push notifications, which need instant wake up calls for the device. Here what I do is
Manifest:
<uses-permission android:name="android.permission.WAKE_LOCK" />
WakeLocker class:
public abstract class WakeLocker { private static PowerManager.WakeLock wakeLock; public static void acquire(Context context) { if (wakeLock != null) wakeLock.release(); PowerManager pm = (PowerManager) context.getSystemService(Context.POWER_SERVICE); wakeLock = pm.newWakeLock(PowerManager.FULL_WAKE_LOCK | PowerManager.ACQUIRE_CAUSES_WAKEUP | PowerManager.ON_AFTER_RELEASE, "WakeLock"); wakeLock.acquire(); } public static void release() { if (wakeLock != null) wakeLock.release(); wakeLock = null; } }
Activity class example:
private final BroadcastReceiver receiver = new BroadcastReceiver() { @Override public void onReceive(Context context, Intent intent) { // Waking up mobile if it is sleeping WakeLocker.acquire(getApplicationContext()); // do something WakeLocker.release(); }
APPROACH 2
Best when you want to give Android control over wake up, and can live with periodically waking up your code. Simply use an AlarmManager to invoke a Service class at regular intervals. Here is some code from my LifeLog24 app:
MainActivity
Intent ll24 = new Intent(context, AlarmReceiverLifeLog.class); PendingIntent recurringLl24 = PendingIntent.getBroadcast(context, 0, ll24, PendingIntent.FLAG_CANCEL_CURRENT); AlarmManager alarms = (AlarmManager) getSystemService(Context.ALARM_SERVICE); alarms.setRepeating(AlarmManager.RTC_WAKEUP, first_log.getTime(), AlarmManager.INTERVAL_HOUR, recurringLl24); // Log repetition
Alarm Class
public class AlarmReceiverLifeLog extends BroadcastReceiver { private static final String TAG = "LL24"; static Context context; @Override public void onReceive(Context context, Intent intent) { Log.v(TAG, "Alarm for LifeLog..."); Intent ll24Service = new Intent(context, LifeLogService.class); context.startService(ll24Service); } }
and LifeLogService.class is where I do my stuff. Alarm wakes up every hour in this case and triggers the BroadcastReceiver which in return runs the service. There is more to it, to make sure service is not run twice and so on, but you get the point how it is done. And AlarmManager is actually the best way to do it since you don't worry about battery usage, etc. and Android takes care of waking up your Service at regular intervals.
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