With Fedor's solution I've experienced multiple execution of the callback gotLocation.
It seems to be due to a race condition in the overridden LocationListener.onLocationChanged method, when gotLocation method is 'long enough'. I'm not sure, but I guess removeUpdates prevents the enqueueing of new messages in the Looper queue, but it doesn't remove those already enqueued but not yet consumed. Hence the race condition.
To reduce the probability of this wrong behavior it's possible to call removeUpdates before firing the onLocationChanged event, but still we have the race condition.
The best solution I found is to replace requestLocationUpdates with requestSingleUpdate.
This is my version, based on Fedor's solution, using an Handler to send a message to the looper thread:
public class LocationResolver {
private Timer timer;
private LocationManager locationManager;
private LocationResult locationResult;
private boolean gpsEnabled = false;
private boolean networkEnabled = false;
private Handler locationTimeoutHandler;
private final Callback locationTimeoutCallback = new Callback() {
public boolean handleMessage(Message msg) {
locationTimeoutFunc();
return true;
}
private void locationTimeoutFunc() {
locationManager.removeUpdates(locationListenerGps);
locationManager.removeUpdates(locationListenerNetwork);
Location networkLocation = null, gpsLocation = null;
if (gpsEnabled)
gpsLocation = locationManager.getLastKnownLocation(LocationManager.GPS_PROVIDER);
if (networkEnabled)
networkLocation = locationManager.getLastKnownLocation(LocationManager.NETWORK_PROVIDER);
// if there are both values use the latest one
if (gpsLocation != null && networkLocation != null) {
if (gpsLocation.getTime() > networkLocation.getTime())
locationResult.gotLocation(gpsLocation);
else
locationResult.gotLocation(networkLocation);
return;
}
if (gpsLocation != null) {
locationResult.gotLocation(gpsLocation);
return;
}
if (networkLocation != null) {
locationResult.gotLocation(networkLocation);
return;
}
locationResult.gotLocation(null);
}
};
private final LocationListener locationListenerGps = new LocationListener() {
public void onLocationChanged(Location location) {
timer.cancel();
locationResult.gotLocation(location);
locationManager.removeUpdates(this);
locationManager.removeUpdates(locationListenerNetwork);
}
public void onProviderDisabled(String provider) {
}
public void onProviderEnabled(String provider) {
}
public void onStatusChanged(String provider, int status, Bundle extras) {
}
};
private final LocationListener locationListenerNetwork = new LocationListener() {
public void onLocationChanged(Location location) {
timer.cancel();
locationResult.gotLocation(location);
locationManager.removeUpdates(this);
locationManager.removeUpdates(locationListenerGps);
}
public void onProviderDisabled(String provider) {
}
public void onProviderEnabled(String provider) {
}
public void onStatusChanged(String provider, int status, Bundle extras) {
}
};
public void prepare() {
locationTimeoutHandler = new Handler(locationTimeoutCallback);
}
public synchronized boolean getLocation(Context context, LocationResult result, int maxMillisToWait) {
locationResult = result;
if (locationManager == null)
locationManager = (LocationManager) context.getSystemService(Context.LOCATION_SERVICE);
// exceptions will be thrown if provider is not permitted.
try {
gpsEnabled = locationManager.isProviderEnabled(LocationManager.GPS_PROVIDER);
} catch (Exception ex) {
}
try {
networkEnabled = locationManager.isProviderEnabled(LocationManager.NETWORK_PROVIDER);
} catch (Exception ex) {
}
// don't start listeners if no provider is enabled
if (!gpsEnabled && !networkEnabled)
return false;
if (gpsEnabled)
locationManager.requestSingleUpdate(LocationManager.GPS_PROVIDER, locationListenerGps, Looper.myLooper());
//locationManager.requestLocationUpdates(LocationManager.GPS_PROVIDER, 0, 0, locationListenerGps);
if (networkEnabled)
locationManager.requestSingleUpdate(LocationManager.NETWORK_PROVIDER, locationListenerNetwork, Looper.myLooper());
//locationManager.requestLocationUpdates(LocationManager.NETWORK_PROVIDER, 0, 0, locationListenerNetwork);
timer = new Timer();
timer.schedule(new GetLastLocationTask(), maxMillisToWait);
return true;
}
private class GetLastLocationTask extends TimerTask {
@Override
public void run() {
locationTimeoutHandler.sendEmptyMessage(0);
}
}
public static abstract class LocationResult {
public abstract void gotLocation(Location location);
}
}
I use this class from a customized looper thread, like the following one:
public class LocationGetter {
private final Context context;
private Location location = null;
private final Object gotLocationLock = new Object();
private final LocationResult locationResult = new LocationResult() {
@Override
public void gotLocation(Location location) {
synchronized (gotLocationLock) {
LocationGetter.this.location = location;
gotLocationLock.notifyAll();
Looper.myLooper().quit();
}
}
};
public LocationGetter(Context context) {
if (context == null)
throw new IllegalArgumentException("context == null");
this.context = context;
}
public synchronized Coordinates getLocation(int maxWaitingTime, int updateTimeout) {
try {
final int updateTimeoutPar = updateTimeout;
synchronized (gotLocationLock) {
new Thread() {
public void run() {
Looper.prepare();
LocationResolver locationResolver = new LocationResolver();
locationResolver.prepare();
locationResolver.getLocation(context, locationResult, updateTimeoutPar);
Looper.loop();
}
}.start();
gotLocationLock.wait(maxWaitingTime);
}
} catch (InterruptedException e1) {
e1.printStackTrace();
}
if (location != null)
coordinates = new Coordinates(location.getLatitude(), location.getLongitude());
else
coordinates = Coordinates.UNDEFINED;
return coordinates;
}
}
where Coordinates is a simple class with two properties: latitude and longitude.