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I have an asynctask which retrieve data from webserviece. I want to run this task every 5 minutes to get the updated data from the server, but till now I don't know how can I do it.

I tried this code but my AsyncTask didn't stop

    //...
    Timer timer = new Timer();
    timer.schedule(new TimerTask() {
    public void run() {
    new AddStringTask().execute();
    }
  }, 0, 5000);
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    Timer won't go when your app is not the foreground process. If you want to run some script every five minutes wheter your app is launched or not (not recommended) then AlarmManager is your friend: developer.android.com/reference/android/app/AlarmManager.html Sep 19, 2012 at 21:52
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    You should NOT connect to the internet every 5 mins, you will kill the user's battery very, very quickly because you wont let the cell radio go into low-power mode. More info: stackoverflow.com/questions/12378289/… Note: this may not apply as much if the user is on WiFi, but it still applies. Check out C2DM if you need push noptifications.
    – pjco
    Sep 19, 2012 at 22:01
  • if I want it for each 15 minutes what is the solution for this .
    – Basant
    Sep 19, 2012 at 22:08

2 Answers 2

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As being suggested from others, you should use Push (GCM) instead of Poll. taken from this say:

Poll might easy to implement, but you will never be actually real-time. If you polling interval is 30 min, you can get a message that is 29 minutes and 59 seconds late. Moreover, polling more often than every 15-30 min will kill your battery pretty quickly: https://labs.ericsson.com/apis/mobile-java-push/blog/save-device-battery-mobile-java-push

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As Michal K said, you can use AlarmManager with a Service and/or BroadcastReceiver to wake your app periodically.

However, in order to preserve the user's battery I highly recommend not polling the connection.

Instead, you can use Google Cloud Messaging for Android or GCM (formerly called C2DM)

Here's the site: http://developer.android.com/guide/google/gcm/index.html

EDIT

The main benefit here is that Android phones that have Google accounts will already poll Google's servers periodically. They do this with cooperation from the carriers (like Verizon/AT&T). Because of this, the radio can go into low power mode and receive push notifications. By using Google's service, you enable a way for your app to receive data via push notifications without causing any extra battery drain.

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(Also, here is some of the info from my other post about this).

There was a very interesting Google IO talk this year about how the cell radio sits in an idle/low-power state most of the time, and takes a few seconds to "warm up". They also discuss the perils of how polling the internet periodically will really drain the battery.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PwC1OlJo5VM

Battery talk starts about 17:12

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PwC1OlJo5VM&feature=player_detailpage#t=1032s

A slide from the presentation:

enter image description here

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  • Your BroadcastReciver should start your own Service, where you can call AsyncTasks and do work there. BroadcastReceivers are not meant to do any heavy lifting.
    – pjco
    Sep 20, 2012 at 19:28

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