How can I cache images after they are downloaded from web?
18 Answers
And now the punchline: use the system cache.
URL url = new URL(strUrl);
URLConnection connection = url.openConnection();
connection.setUseCaches(true);
Object response = connection.getContent();
if (response instanceof Bitmap) {
Bitmap bitmap = (Bitmap)response;
}
Provides both memory and flash-rom cache, shared with the browser.
grr. I wish somebody had told ME that before i wrote my own cache manager.
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1Wow, this was an incredibly elegant way to do this, thanks a lot. It is in no way slower than my own simple cache manager, and now I don't need to do housekeeping on a SD card folder. Oct 16, 2010 at 20:44
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11
connection.getContent()
always returns an InputStream for me, what am I doing wrong? Jul 7, 2011 at 18:36 -
3If I could now also set an expiration date on the content for the cache my life would be so much easier :)– JanuszJul 12, 2011 at 7:11
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11@Scienceprodigy no idea what that BitmapLoader is, certainly isn't in any standard android library I know of, but it at least led me in the right direction.
Bitmap response = BitmapFactory.decodeStream((InputStream)connection.getContent());
Sep 30, 2011 at 18:07 -
6Be sure to see Joe's answer below about the extra steps you need to take to get the cache working– KeithNov 1, 2011 at 18:22
Regarding the elegant connection.setUseCaches
solution above: sadly, it won't work without some additional effort. You will need to install a ResponseCache
using ResponseCache.setDefault
. Otherwise, HttpURLConnection
will silently ignore the setUseCaches(true)
bit.
See the comments at the top of FileResponseCache.java
for details:
(I'd post this in a comment, but I apparently don't have enough SO karma.)
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2When you use an
HttpResponseCache
, you might find theHttpResponseCache.getHitCount()
returning 0. I'm not sure but I think it's because the webserver you're requesting doesn't use caching headers in that case. To make caching work anyway, useconnection.addRequestProperty("Cache-Control", "max-stale=" + MAX_STALE_CACHE);
.– AlmerMar 18, 2013 at 14:51 -
1
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Also, I'm not sure whether or not this behavior is now fixed. For some reason returning 304 from the server would hang HUC when using
.getContent()
method because 304 responses don't have an associated response body by RFC standard. Jul 16, 2019 at 16:58
Convert them into Bitmaps and then either store them in a Collection(HashMap,List etc.) or you can write them on the SDcard.
When storing them in application space using the first approach, you might want to wrap them around a java.lang.ref.SoftReference specifically if their numbers is large (so that they are garbage collected during crisis). This could ensue a Reload though.
HashMap<String,SoftReference<Bitmap>> imageCache =
new HashMap<String,SoftReference<Bitmap>>();
writing them on SDcard will not require a Reload; just a user-permission.
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To save images on SD card: You can either commit the Image Streams read from the remote server to memory using normal File I/O operations or if you have converted your images into Bitmap objects you can use Bitmap.compress() method.– SamuhDec 22, 2009 at 11:39
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@d-man I'd suggest writing the to disk first and then obtaining a
Uri
path reference that you can pass toImageView
and other custom views. Because each time youcompress
, you'll be losing quality. Of course this is true for lossy algorithms only. This method would also allow you to even store a hash of the file and use it next time you request for the file from the server throughIf-None-Match
andETag
headers. Jul 16, 2019 at 17:03 -
@TheRealChx101 could you please help to understand what you mean next time you request for the file from the server through If-None-Match and ETag headers, I'm basically looking for solution approach where image should remain to use form local cache for defined period OR if this can not be achieved then whenever content for URL get change, it should reflect in application with the latest one and cached it.– CoDeAug 24, 2019 at 1:06
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Use LruCache
to cache images efficiently. You can read about LruCache
from Android Developer site
I've used below solution for Images download and caching in android. You can follow steps below:
STEP 1:
make Class Named ImagesCache
. I've used Singleton object for this class
import android.graphics.Bitmap;
import android.support.v4.util.LruCache;
public class ImagesCache
{
private LruCache<String, Bitmap> imagesWarehouse;
private static ImagesCache cache;
public static ImagesCache getInstance()
{
if(cache == null)
{
cache = new ImagesCache();
}
return cache;
}
public void initializeCache()
{
final int maxMemory = (int) (Runtime.getRuntime().maxMemory() /1024);
final int cacheSize = maxMemory / 8;
System.out.println("cache size = "+cacheSize);
imagesWarehouse = new LruCache<String, Bitmap>(cacheSize)
{
protected int sizeOf(String key, Bitmap value)
{
// The cache size will be measured in kilobytes rather than number of items.
int bitmapByteCount = value.getRowBytes() * value.getHeight();
return bitmapByteCount / 1024;
}
};
}
public void addImageToWarehouse(String key, Bitmap value)
{
if(imagesWarehouse != null && imagesWarehouse.get(key) == null)
{
imagesWarehouse.put(key, value);
}
}
public Bitmap getImageFromWarehouse(String key)
{
if(key != null)
{
return imagesWarehouse.get(key);
}
else
{
return null;
}
}
public void removeImageFromWarehouse(String key)
{
imagesWarehouse.remove(key);
}
public void clearCache()
{
if(imagesWarehouse != null)
{
imagesWarehouse.evictAll();
}
}
}
STEP 2:
make another class named DownloadImageTask which is used if bitmap is not available in cache it will download it from here:
public class DownloadImageTask extends AsyncTask<String, Void, Bitmap>
{
private int inSampleSize = 0;
private String imageUrl;
private BaseAdapter adapter;
private ImagesCache cache;
private int desiredWidth, desiredHeight;
private Bitmap image = null;
private ImageView ivImageView;
public DownloadImageTask(BaseAdapter adapter, int desiredWidth, int desiredHeight)
{
this.adapter = adapter;
this.cache = ImagesCache.getInstance();
this.desiredWidth = desiredWidth;
this.desiredHeight = desiredHeight;
}
public DownloadImageTask(ImagesCache cache, ImageView ivImageView, int desireWidth, int desireHeight)
{
this.cache = cache;
this.ivImageView = ivImageView;
this.desiredHeight = desireHeight;
this.desiredWidth = desireWidth;
}
@Override
protected Bitmap doInBackground(String... params)
{
imageUrl = params[0];
return getImage(imageUrl);
}
@Override
protected void onPostExecute(Bitmap result)
{
super.onPostExecute(result);
if(result != null)
{
cache.addImageToWarehouse(imageUrl, result);
if(ivImageView != null)
{
ivImageView.setImageBitmap(result);
}
else if(adapter != null)
{
adapter.notifyDataSetChanged();
}
}
}
private Bitmap getImage(String imageUrl)
{
if(cache.getImageFromWarehouse(imageUrl) == null)
{
BitmapFactory.Options options = new BitmapFactory.Options();
options.inJustDecodeBounds = true;
options.inSampleSize = inSampleSize;
try
{
URL url = new URL(imageUrl);
HttpURLConnection connection = (HttpURLConnection)url.openConnection();
InputStream stream = connection.getInputStream();
image = BitmapFactory.decodeStream(stream, null, options);
int imageWidth = options.outWidth;
int imageHeight = options.outHeight;
if(imageWidth > desiredWidth || imageHeight > desiredHeight)
{
System.out.println("imageWidth:"+imageWidth+", imageHeight:"+imageHeight);
inSampleSize = inSampleSize + 2;
getImage(imageUrl);
}
else
{
options.inJustDecodeBounds = false;
connection = (HttpURLConnection)url.openConnection();
stream = connection.getInputStream();
image = BitmapFactory.decodeStream(stream, null, options);
return image;
}
}
catch(Exception e)
{
Log.e("getImage", e.toString());
}
}
return image;
}
STEP 3: Usage from your Activity
or Adapter
Note: If you want to load image from url from Activity
Class. Use the second Constructor of DownloadImageTask
, but if you want to display image from Adapter
use first Constructor of DownloadImageTask
(for example you have a image in ListView
and you are setting image from 'Adapter')
USAGE FROM ACTIVITY:
ImageView imv = (ImageView) findViewById(R.id.imageView);
ImagesCache cache = ImagesCache.getInstance();//Singleton instance handled in ImagesCache class.
cache.initializeCache();
String img = "your_image_url_here";
Bitmap bm = cache.getImageFromWarehouse(img);
if(bm != null)
{
imv.setImageBitmap(bm);
}
else
{
imv.setImageBitmap(null);
DownloadImageTask imgTask = new DownloadImageTask(cache, imv, 300, 300);//Since you are using it from `Activity` call second Constructor.
imgTask.execute(img);
}
USAGE FROM ADAPTER:
ImageView imv = (ImageView) rowView.findViewById(R.id.imageView);
ImagesCache cache = ImagesCache.getInstance();
cache.initializeCache();
String img = "your_image_url_here";
Bitmap bm = cache.getImageFromWarehouse(img);
if(bm != null)
{
imv.setImageBitmap(bm);
}
else
{
imv.setImageBitmap(null);
DownloadImageTask imgTask = new DownloadImageTask(this, 300, 300);//Since you are using it from `Adapter` call first Constructor.
imgTask.execute(img);
}
Note:
cache.initializeCache()
you can use this statement in the very first Activity of your application. Once you've initialized the cache you would never need to initialized it every time if you are using ImagesCache
instance.
I am never good at explaining things but hope this will help the beginners that how to cache using LruCache
and its usage :)
EDIT:
Now a days there are very famous libraries known as Picasso
and Glide
which can be used to load images very efficiently in android app. Try this very simple and usefull library Picasso for android and Glide For Android. You do not need to worry about cache images.
Picasso allows for hassle-free image loading in your application—often in one line of code!
Glide, just like Picasso, can load and display images from many sources, while also taking care of caching and keeping a low memory impact when doing image manipulations. It has been used by official Google apps (like the app for Google I/O 2015) and is just as popular as Picasso. In this series, we're going to explore the differences and advantages of Glide over Picasso.
You can also visit blog for difference between Glide and Picasso
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3Outstanding answer and explanation! I think this is the best solution since it works when offline and uses Android LruCache. I found edrowland's solution did not work in airplane mode even with Joe's addition which required more effort to integrate. Btw, it seems like Android or network provides a significant amount of caching even if you do nothing extra. (One minor nit: for sample usage getImageFromWareHouse, the 'H' should be lowercase to match.) Thanks! Sep 6, 2014 at 18:36
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Could you explain the getImage() method, in particular what it does to the image size and how it happens. I do not understand for example why you call the function inside itself again and how it works. Apr 28, 2015 at 22:12
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@Greyshack. Basically
LruCache
has key-value pair and whenever you've get the image urlgetImage()
will download the image from url. The Url of the image will be thekey
ofLruCache
and Bitmap will be the value and if you take a closer look atDownloadImageTask
you can setdesiredWidth
anddesiredHeight
value the lesser width and height you set the lower image quality you will see. Apr 29, 2015 at 4:00 -
1
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1Also see my Edited answer at the end. I've mentioned about famous libraries used by most of developers now a days. Try those Picasso: square.github.io/picasso and Glide: futurestud.io/blog/glide-getting-started Apr 26, 2016 at 5:59
To download an image and save to the memory card you can do it like this.
//First create a new URL object
URL url = new URL("http://www.google.co.uk/logos/holiday09_2.gif")
//Next create a file, the example below will save to the SDCARD using JPEG format
File file = new File("/sdcard/example.jpg");
//Next create a Bitmap object and download the image to bitmap
Bitmap bitmap = BitmapFactory.decodeStream(url.openStream());
//Finally compress the bitmap, saving to the file previously created
bitmap.compress(CompressFormat.JPEG, 100, new FileOutputStream(file));
Don't forget to add the Internet permission to your manifest:
<uses-permission android:name="android.permission.INTERNET" />
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11Why are you decoding the JPEG and then re-encoding it? You are better served downloading the URL to a byte array, then using that byte array to create your Bitmap and write out to a File. Every time you decode and re-encode a JPEG, the image quality gets worse. Dec 22, 2009 at 16:33
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2Fair point, was more for speed then anything. Although, if saved as a byte array and the source file was not a JPEG wouldn't the file need to be converted anyways? "decodeByteArray" from the SDK Returns "The decoded bitmap, or null if the image data could not be decoded" so this makes me think its always decoding the image data so would this not need re-encoding again?– LjdawsonDec 22, 2009 at 17:32
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Speaking of efficiency, wouldn't it be efficient if instead of passing FileOutputStream we pass BufferedOutputStream?– SamuhDec 23, 2009 at 4:18
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1i don't suggest caching images to your SD card. once the application is uninstalled, the images do not get removed, causing the sd card to be filled up with useless garbage. saving images to the application's cache directory is preferred IMO– jamesJan 28, 2011 at 20:52
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With an APK limit of 50mb now, caching to the SD card may be the only way for developers.– LjdawsonJan 28, 2011 at 21:24
I would consider using droidfu's image cache. It implements both an in-memory and disk-based image cache. You also get a WebImageView that takes advantage of the ImageCache library.
Here is the full description of droidfu and WebImageView: http://brainflush.wordpress.com/2009/11/23/droid-fu-part-2-webimageview-and-webgalleryadapter/
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He's refactored his code since 2010; here's the root link: github.com/kaeppler/droid-fu– esilverApr 1, 2012 at 22:33
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3That link still doesn't work. I wrote a similar library called Android-ImageManager github.com/felipecsl/Android-ImageManager Feb 12, 2013 at 5:58
I've tried SoftReferences, they are too aggressively reclaimed in android that I felt there was no point using them
As Thunder Rabbit suggested, ImageDownloader is the best one for the job. I also found a slight variation of the class at:
http://theandroidcoder.com/utilities/android-image-download-and-caching/
The main difference between the two is that the ImageDownloader uses the Android caching system, and the modified one uses internal and external storage as caching, keeping the cached images indefinitely or until the user removes it manually. The author also mentions Android 2.1 compatibility.
This is a good catch by Joe. The code example above has two problems - one - the response object isn't an instance of Bitmap (when my URL references a jpg, like http:\website.com\image.jpg, its a
org.apache.harmony.luni.internal.net.www.protocol.http.HttpURLConnectionImpl$LimitedInputStream).
Second, as Joe points out, no caching occurs without a response cache being configured. Android developers are left to roll their own cache. Here's an example for doing so, but it only caches in memory, which really isn't the full solution.
http://codebycoffee.com/2010/06/29/using-responsecache-in-an-android-app/
The URLConnection caching API is described here:
http://download.oracle.com/javase/6/docs/technotes/guides/net/http-cache.html
I still think this is an OK solution to go this route - but you still have to write a cache. Sounds like fun, but I'd rather write features.
There is a special entry on the official training section of Android about this: http://developer.android.com/training/displaying-bitmaps/cache-bitmap.html
The section is quite new, it was not there when the question was asked.
The suggested solution is to use a LruCache. That class was introduced on Honeycomb, but it is also included on the compatibility library.
You can initialize a LruCache by setting the maximum number or entries and it will automatically sort them your you and clean them less used ones when you go over the limit. Other than that it is used as a normal Map.
The sample code from the official page:
private LruCache mMemoryCache;
@Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
...
// Get memory class of this device, exceeding this amount will throw an
// OutOfMemory exception.
final int memClass = ((ActivityManager) context.getSystemService(
Context.ACTIVITY_SERVICE)).getMemoryClass();
// Use 1/8th of the available memory for this memory cache.
final int cacheSize = 1024 * 1024 * memClass / 8;
mMemoryCache = new LruCache(cacheSize) {
@Override
protected int sizeOf(String key, Bitmap bitmap) {
// The cache size will be measured in bytes rather than number of items.
return bitmap.getByteCount();
}
};
...
}
public void addBitmapToMemoryCache(String key, Bitmap bitmap) {
if (getBitmapFromMemCache(key) == null) {
mMemoryCache.put(key, bitmap);
}
}
public Bitmap getBitmapFromMemCache(String key) {
return mMemoryCache.get(key);
}
Previously SoftReferences were a good alternative, but not anymore, quoting from the official page:
Note: In the past, a popular memory cache implementation was a SoftReference or WeakReference bitmap cache, however this is not recommended. Starting from Android 2.3 (API Level 9) the garbage collector is more aggressive with collecting soft/weak references which makes them fairly ineffective. In addition, prior to Android 3.0 (API Level 11), the backing data of a bitmap was stored in native memory which is not released in a predictable manner, potentially causing an application to briefly exceed its memory limits and crash.
Consider using Universal Image Loader library by Sergey Tarasevich. It comes with:
- Multithread image loading. It lets you can define the thread pool size
- Image caching in memory, on device's file sytem and SD card.
- Possibility to listen to loading progress and loading events
Universal Image Loader allows detailed cache management for downloaded images, with the following cache configurations:
UsingFreqLimitedMemoryCache
: The least frequently used bitmap is deleted when the cache size limit is exceeded.LRULimitedMemoryCache
: The least recently used bitmap is deleted when the cache size limit is exceeded.FIFOLimitedMemoryCache
: The FIFO rule is used for deletion when the cache size limit is exceeded.LargestLimitedMemoryCache
: The largest bitmap is deleted when the cache size limit is exceeded.LimitedAgeMemoryCache
: The Cached object is deleted when its age exceeds defined value.WeakMemoryCache
: A memory cache with only weak references to bitmaps.
A simple usage example:
ImageView imageView = groupView.findViewById(R.id.imageView);
String imageUrl = "http://site.com/image.png";
ImageLoader imageLoader = ImageLoader.getInstance();
imageLoader.init(ImageLoaderConfiguration.createDefault(context));
imageLoader.displayImage(imageUrl, imageView);
This example uses the default UsingFreqLimitedMemoryCache
.
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When used intensively, Universal Image Loader will cause a lot of memory leaks. I suspect this happens because it uses singletons in the code (see 'getInstance()' in the example). After loading a lot of images and then rotating my screen a couple of times, my app crashed all the time because OutOfMemoryErrors in UIL. It's a great library but it's a well known fact thet you should NEVER use singletons, especially not in Android... Jul 4, 2013 at 12:25
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1
What actually worked for me was setting ResponseCache on my Main class:
try {
File httpCacheDir = new File(getApplicationContext().getCacheDir(), "http");
long httpCacheSize = 10 * 1024 * 1024; // 10 MiB
HttpResponseCache.install(httpCacheDir, httpCacheSize);
} catch (IOException e) { }
and
connection.setUseCaches(true);
when downloading bitmap.
http://practicaldroid.blogspot.com/2013/01/utilizing-http-response-cache.html
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is it possible to use lrucache in conjuction with httpresponsecache Feb 14, 2017 at 6:34
Google's libs-for-android has a nice libraries for managing image and file cache.
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1
I had been wrestling with this for some time; the answers using SoftReferences would lose their data too quickly. The answers that suggest instantiating a RequestCache were too messy, plus I could never find a full example.
But ImageDownloader.java works wonderfully for me. It uses a HashMap until the capacity is reached or until the purge timeout occurs, then things get moved to a SoftReference, thereby using the best of both worlds.
I suggest IGNITION this is even better than Droid fu
https://github.com/kaeppler/ignition
https://github.com/kaeppler/ignition/wiki/Sample-applications
Even later answer, but I wrote an Android Image Manager that handles caching transparently (memory and disk). The code is on Github https://github.com/felipecsl/Android-ImageManager
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1I added this to a ListView and it doesn't seem to handle that very well. Is there some special implementation for ListViews?– user901309Feb 26, 2013 at 22:13
Late answer, but I figured I should add a link to my site because I have written a tutorial how to make an image cache for android: http://squarewolf.nl/2010/11/android-image-cache/ Update: the page has been taken offline as the source was outdated. I join @elenasys in her advice to use Ignition.
So to all the people who stumble upon this question and haven't found a solution: hope you enjoy! =D
Late answer but I think this library will help a lot with caching images : https://github.com/crypticminds/ColdStorage.
Simply annotate the ImageView with @LoadCache(R.id.id_of_my_image_view, "URL_to_downlaod_image_from) and it will take care of downloading the image and loading it into the image view. You can also specify a placeholder image and loading animation.
Detailed documentation of the annotation is present here :- https://github.com/crypticminds/ColdStorage/wiki/@LoadImage-annotation