18

There are a lot of Android SDK APIs where callback handlers are registered. For a concrete example, with MediaPlayer you can set an onCompletionListener callback. Will these callbacks be called from the main (UI) thread? If the answer is "it depends", then I'm looking for some general rules for what callbacks will be called from the main thread versus another thread. The SDK documentation doesn't seem to spell it out. (Maybe I missed it.)

It seems important to know, because if I'm guaranteed main thread callbacks, then I can skip some thread synchronization on data shared between different places in code. If I'm forced to be pessimistic out of ignorance, then I have to write extra synch block code and worry about deadlocks, data integrity, and reduced performance.

7 Answers 7

24

When in doubt you can use Log.i("TAG", Thread.currentThread().getName()); and see :)

2
  • 3
    Why are you expecting the results of this experiment to be repeatable in future OS revs? How are you going to design the experiment to provoke situations where you might be called on another thread? How many results do you need to start to think this might be generalizable? Jul 15, 2012 at 22:01
  • @JamesMoore What do you mean? Aug 25, 2019 at 6:44
13

One case where Android will call your code on some other thread will be if you create a remote service, exposed via AIDL -- those AIDL methods will be called on a binder thread, not the main application thread.

However, that is the exception. As the others have noted, the vast majority of these are called on the main application thread.

2
  • 1
    I tried while running an asynchronous operation (using RxAndroid) in my service, to invoke the client callback provided for this operation using AndroidSchedulers.mainThread(). while debugging, I can acknowledge that the callback being called in the main application thread. However, after calling the callback, the code that runs inside the callback (at the client-side) is not in the main application thread. Nevertheless, is it possible to guarantee to my service clients that their callbacks code will run in the main application thread, so they won't need to handle it?
    – Eido95
    Nov 21, 2016 at 8:09
  • @Eido95: I suggest that you ask a separate Stack Overflow question, where you can explain in detail, with a minimal reproducible example, what your concern is. Nov 21, 2016 at 12:25
4

In my experience, those callbacks always come back on a non-UI thread. Have you tried Activity.runOnUiThread() to make sure your code runs on the UI thread? You would still take the performance hit because it takes longer for this code to run, but you would avoid some of the more common problems with thread synchronization.

1
  • I am facing a similar issue. My Data Source class (defined in a separate module) returns response in a callback (called from AsyncTask in DataSource) and I am not receiving any call from the place where I initiated the call. Used a handler created using Looper.getMainLooper() but the problem still exists. Feb 7, 2018 at 7:41
3

In general, the callbacks will occur on the thread where the event is running. If you register a callback and start something playing on a non-UI thread, then the callback will occur on the non-UI thread. However, Android won't go creating new threads in the background on its own.

All UI related events must occur on the UI thread, so you can gauarentee that click handler callbacks, etc will occur on the UI thread.

As Aaron C pointed out, you can use Activity.runOnUiThread to force things to occur there.

Additionally, the AsyncTask can be very useful for doing quick background work, where you need some completion step to be gauranteed to be on the uI thread.

edit: Example from the comments.

public void MyWorker {
   private OnCompleteListener onCompleteListener;

   public void setOnCompleteListener(OnCompleteListener onCompleteListener) {
     this.onCompleteListener = onCompleteListener;
   }

   public void doWork() {
     // do lots of work here
     onCompleteListener.onComplete();
   }
}

// somewhere in my Activity

public void onCreate() {
   final MyWorker worker = new MyWorker();
   worker.setOnCompleteListener(new OnCompleteListener() { ... });

   new Thread(new Runnable() {
       public void run() {
          worker.doWork();
       }
   }).start();
}

In this example, the onComplete "callback" will be run from the non-UI thread. The thread will exit after onComplete finishes.

7
  • I don't understand how the case you describe for non-UI works. It seems that the non-UI thread will not have the same dispatching loop running in it that the UI thread would. I.e. there is some code in the UI thread that calls methods for UI events, view rendering, registered callbacks. But if I just create some thread with a Runnable-extending class, I think the JVM is just launching the thread and exiting, with no Android SDK hooks in it to put callbacks on the same thread. Maybe you were describing something else. Oct 12, 2010 at 22:35
  • A "callback" does not necessarily involve a dispatching loop. Say you have some class that does complex work. It has a setOnCompleteListener function, and a start function. On some none UI thread, you give it a OnCompleteListener, then call start. It goes off and does its thing, when its done it will call registeredOnCompleteListener.onComplete(). This will cause the onComplete function in your listener to be called from the thread the object was running on. Oct 12, 2010 at 22:49
  • Just to understand your example correctly: On thread 1, start() is called. On thread 2, inside the run() method, setOnCompleteListener() is called. Will the onComplete method execute in thread 1 or thread 2? Oct 12, 2010 at 23:32
  • No, there is no "run". Sorry, I think you are confusing my random example with a java Runnable. In my example, everything occurs on one thread, it just doesn't happen to be the main UI thread. The only point really was that there is no dispatching involved. You give the class an implementation of a listener. When it feels like it, it calls methods on your listener. These method invocations will occur on whatever thread happens to be running. Oct 12, 2010 at 23:40
  • I think unless there is a dispatching mechanism involved, the callback would necessarily need to be executed on a separate thread from the initial one. To make it concrete, suppose I do put the setOnCompleteListener() and start call inside of a Runnable-extending class. In this case, in which thread does the onCompleteListener() get called? It can't be the thread executing inside of the run() method, because that thread will close after run() exits. Oct 13, 2010 at 0:29
1

Another exception is the When you are using WebView. When javascript calling a Java function, such invocation will not happen in main thread

0

Something similar came up when I was working on Location APIs. As we know, we provide a callback for Location services, so that we get notified once we have acquired a location. So I was doing something in this callback which were taking a long time like using Geocoder APIs.

I was under impression before that, this callback would be called from other thread and thus would not be executed on main UI thread. But I can see, its not the case.

So what ever code I write in this listener will be executed on the main thread.

Now what I don't understand is how do they manage to do that, is it by using a standerd function runOnUIThread() ???

0

I had this problem with Tasks the other day. You can check this link

Listeners attached to a thread are run on the application main (UI) thread by default. When attaching a listener, you can also specify an Executor that is used to schedule listeners.

// Create a new ThreadPoolExecutor with 2 threads for each processor on the
// device and a 60 second keep-alive time.
int numCores = Runtime.getRuntime().availableProcessors();
ThreadPoolExecutor executor = new ThreadPoolExecutor(numCores * 2, numCores *2,
        60L, TimeUnit.SECONDS, new LinkedBlockingQueue<Runnable>());

task.addOnCompleteListener(executor, new OnCompleteListener<AuthResult>() {
    @Override
    public void onComplete(@NonNull Task<AuthResult> task) {
        // ...
    }
});

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.