117

Can anybody tell me the reason for failed binder transaction error? I can see this error message in logcat. I am getting this error while trying to put an bitmap dynamically in a widget...

6 Answers 6

92

This is caused because all the changes to the RemoteViews are serialised (e.g. setInt and setImageViewBitmap ). The bitmaps are also serialised into an internal bundle. Unfortunately this bundle has a very small size limit.

You can solve it by scaling down the image size this way:

 public static Bitmap scaleDownBitmap(Bitmap photo, int newHeight, Context context) {

 final float densityMultiplier = context.getResources().getDisplayMetrics().density;        

 int h= (int) (newHeight*densityMultiplier);
 int w= (int) (h * photo.getWidth()/((double) photo.getHeight()));

 photo=Bitmap.createScaledBitmap(photo, w, h, true);

 return photo;
 }

Choose newHeight to be small enough (~100 for every square it should take on the screen) and use it for your widget, and your problem will be solved :)

2
  • 1
    What I don't quite understand is what happens here exactly. I'm using a ViewPager with a fairly large dataset, yet it does remember everything between pages despite the binder error spam. Does the bundle get written to local storage and then prefetched or what? Can I possibly lose data if I add more pages?
    – G_V
    Dec 3, 2014 at 8:18
  • 7
    But this will reduce the image quality
    – John Joe
    Dec 31, 2015 at 4:16
65

You can compress the bitmap as an byte's array and then uncompress it in another activity, like this.

Compress!!

        ByteArrayOutputStream stream = new ByteArrayOutputStream();
        bmp.compress(Bitmap.CompressFormat.PNG, 100, stream);
        byte[] bytes = stream.toByteArray(); 
        setresult.putExtra("BMP",bytes);

Uncompress!!

        byte[] bytes = data.getByteArrayExtra("BMP");
        Bitmap bmp = BitmapFactory.decodeByteArray(bytes, 0, bytes.length);
6
  • 1
    Perfect, this significantly reduces the bitmap size.
    – Navin
    Apr 28, 2014 at 9:16
  • 1
    why not use JPEG instead of PNG? isnt it better compressed? Apr 6, 2015 at 12:20
  • 3
    @mehmet6parmak PNG is used because it is lossless, unlike JPEG. Yes, JPEG compresses better, but the quality (somewhat) suffers as a result.
    – Petzku
    Jun 18, 2015 at 8:39
  • doesn't work for me :( stackoverflow.com/questions/34540819/…
    – John Joe
    Dec 31, 2015 at 4:11
  • Kudos! Great workaround for a temporary implementation I was working on. Although passing heavy data should be avoided while using Bundles/Intents.
    – sud007
    Jul 28, 2017 at 12:01
38

The Binder transaction buffer has a limited fixed size, currently 1Mb, which is shared by all transactions in progress for the process. Consequently this exception can be thrown when there are many transactions in progress even when most of the individual transactions are of moderate size.

refer this link

13

See my answer in this thread.

intent.putExtra("Some string",very_large_obj_for_binder_buffer);

You are exceeding the binder transaction buffer by transferring large element(s) from one activity to another activity.

1
  • I had same issue I just remove putExtra problem sorted!
    – Ivor
    Mar 29, 2016 at 13:38
8

I have solved this issue by storing images on internal storage and then using .setImageURI() rather than .setBitmap().

1
  • 1
    and don't pass the images through Parcelable from screen to screen or so, I guess that's worst in this case
    – MartinC
    Jun 5, 2013 at 11:33
3

The right approach is to use setImageViewUri() (slower) or the setImageViewBitmap() and recreating RemoteViews every time you update the notification.

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