1

I have some confusion with android service As per the documentation It will keep on running in the background on main thread . It doesn't run in a different thread.

My doubt is what is the meaning of keep on running in background . Will it execute the onStartCommand() again and again. I am really very confused with this line (Keep on running in background )

if it will not execute onStartCommand again and again then what is the benefit of Keep on running and if it executes onStartCommand again and again then it is using cpu more and more

Line which confused me is highlighted in the image please have a look enter image description here

12
  • How did you conclude from the documentation that a "service will keep on running in the background on the man/UI thread"? That's simply not the case. Feb 1, 2013 at 11:10
  • I have developed an app in which I have implemented a service and that service was always running . Which is easily visible from running services option on phone
    – Naga
    Feb 1, 2013 at 11:15
  • I have edited the question and added one image please have a look on highlighted line in the image
    – Naga
    Feb 1, 2013 at 11:26
  • 1
    I hope you'll never publish an app which runs a task all the time and waste energy and cpu cycles to poll for an event. Nobody will like your app anyways. Do it event driven! Of course there's a way. You want to read stackoverflow.com/questions/6896746/… Feb 1, 2013 at 14:00
  • 1
    If you found my comments and/or answer helpful, please mark them accordingly. I like to support people but I also like to be rewarded for it. Thank you. Feb 5, 2013 at 7:54

2 Answers 2

1

As already noted in a comment, for your particular purpose (monitoring a setting, here: volume), you can follow a non-polling approach which is described e.g. here: Is there a broadcast action for volume changes?

In general, on a modern (though not perfect) environment like Android, there's almost never a reason to actively poll something, because nobody could afford wasting so much resources, and also, you'll always risk to miss events, so you'd be tempted to poll more frequently -- this is a race which your implementation is always going to lose.

Once more, the following statements are plain wrong:

  • A Service runs on your app's main/UI thread. If you think this is the case then you need to read about the android:process attribute of the manifest's activity tag. Also. even if you do not let your service run in a separate process, the phrase a service runs on your app's main/UI thread suggests that your main/UI thread gets blocked by your service. Of course, hopefully nobody leaves iot art that; it's easy to just process the service's events on your app's main/UI thread and delegate the tasks to worker threads, which is what every sane implementation should do.

  • With START_STICKY, you can ensure that your service will always be running after it got started. Of course, this is naive and means that whoever claims this has not completely understood the meaning of this flag in conjunction with the description of the process lifecylce for Android Services. Quote: Note this means that most of the time your service is running, it may be killed by the system if it is under heavy memory pressure. If you read the section, you will know that Android is going to kill the process with your running service at any time without notice if it needs memory for another task with higher priority and your service is not related to an app which the user currently looks at. In other words, if the system is low on memory and the user opens a spreadsheet which requires most of the system's memory, then the background internet radio media player and all fancy stuff is likely to get killed, period.

0

A Service runs on the thread of your app and after started it keeps running until it calls finish() or android needs memory.

But the running doesn't necessary means that it is processing something. onStartCommand() is called only when someone calls startService() on your service.

So the service instead of running always it's always in memory ready to be run when needed. The main use of service is to do some processing that keeps running even if you change activities, like a music player that keeps playing when you are changing activity looking for the next music to play.

Edit: On Documentation "A Service is not a separate process....A Service is not a thread. It is not a means itself to do work off of the main thread". A Service is "A facility for the application to tell the system about something it wants to be doing in the background"

"A service can be both started and have connections bound to it. In such a case, the system will keep the service running as long as either it is started or there are one or more connections to it with the Context.BIND_AUTO_CREATE flag. Once neither of these situations hold, the service's onDestroy() method is called and the service is effectively terminated."

Service Documentation

13
  • I think there are several aspects in your answer which aren't accurate enough for an answer to a newbie, really. First, what do you mean by thread of your app? Second, a service is not always present in memory, not even after it has been started once. Third, for processing things while you change activities, you don't need a service. Feb 1, 2013 at 11:47
  • By thread of the app I mean that the service running in background doesn't mean that it's on another thread or process. About the memory, if you return START_STICKY on onStartCommand() it will be on until someone kills it. And I know that you can use AsyncTasks and Loaders now, but in old versions of android you only have services to do that and the most common example of service usage was playing music. Feb 1, 2013 at 12:16
  • I think you need to get your facts straight. All of your three points are wrong. Feb 1, 2013 at 12:22
  • Ahh this discussion is going somewhere else ..Okay as per documentation START_STICKY is used to run service continuously.So what we can achieve if service is running continuously .
    – Naga
    Feb 1, 2013 at 13:20
  • One example I used for running a service continuously is that android has some Broadcasts that only works when registering it in code and not the Manifest, in this case I started a service that registered for this broadcast and will be running continuously, waiting for a broadcast. Feb 1, 2013 at 16:38

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.