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Can you please help me understand what the difference between an IntentService and a Service is?

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8 Answers 8

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Service is a base class of service implementation. Service runs on the application's main thread which may reduce the application performance. Thus, IntentService, which is a direct subclass of Service is available to make things easier.

The IntentService is used to perform a certain task in the background. Once done, the instance of IntentService terminates itself automatically. Examples for its usage would be to download a certain resource from the Internet.

Differences

  1. Service class uses the application's main thread, while IntentService creates a worker thread and uses that thread to run the service.
  2. IntentService creates a queue that passes one intent at a time to onHandleIntent(). Thus, implementing a multi-thread should be made by extending Service class directly. Service class needs a manual stop using stopSelf(). Meanwhile, IntentService automatically stops itself when it finishes execution.
  3. IntentService implements onBind() that returns null. This means that the IntentService can not be bound by default.
  4. IntentService implements onStartCommand() that sends Intent to queue and to onHandleIntent().

In brief, there are only two things to do to use IntentService. Firstly, to implement the constructor. And secondly, to implement onHandleIntent(). For other callback methods, the super is needed to be called so that it can be tracked properly.

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  • Nice Explaination. I am making Music app. So, which one be nice for it? Service or IntentService ? Jun 6, 2013 at 9:57
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    for music app i think you have to use Service because, as default, IntentService is unbinddable and, i think, you have to bind your music app with music service to start, to stop. As already said, IntentService is better for "start and forget"
    – Premier
    Jul 10, 2013 at 5:57
  • @Premier Wouldn't IntentService be similar to Service.START_NOT_STICKY? As that is also "start and forget" according to your example. Oct 29, 2013 at 18:42
  • i have an app which can sync data after some time through service so what should i use Service or Intent Service ?
    – M.Raheel
    Sep 25, 2014 at 9:55
  • @M.Raheel Syncing data can result in long running operation, so i think you should use IntentService for your work
    – Kushal
    Sep 5, 2016 at 11:32
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In short, a Service is a broader implementation for the developer to set up background operations, while an IntentService is useful for "fire and forget" operations, taking care of background Thread creation and cleanup.

From the docs:

Service A Service is an application component representing either an application's desire to perform a longer-running operation while not interacting with the user or to supply functionality for other applications to use.

IntentService Service is a base class for IntentService Services that handle asynchronous requests (expressed as Intents) on demand. Clients send requests through startService(Intent) calls; the service is started as needed, handles each Intent in turn using a worker thread, and stops itself when it runs out of work.

Refer this doc - http://developer.android.com/reference/android/app/IntentService.html

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    IntentService is not base class of Services. Reverse of it is true. Check - developer.android.com/reference/android/app/IntentService.html
    – Darpan
    Nov 12, 2014 at 10:34
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    @Darpan It is a base class for "Services that handle asynchronous requests", not for simply "Services". That's why the sentence above is correct.
    – afrish
    Jan 14, 2015 at 20:14
  • Hi all, can i write an IntentService within a Service? If yes, can anyone please provide an example/code snippet. Thanks Feb 27, 2015 at 7:24
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    @Phix i am making an app in which i need to scan the local database in every half an hour which would be better IntentService or Service ?? Mar 14, 2015 at 7:10
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service: It runs in the background on your system. For example,

  1. If you went to a hotel and you give your order for a soup to a server
  2. The server gets your order and sends to chef
  3. You don't know how the soup is made in the kitchen and what processes are required for making the soup
  4. Once your order is ready, the server brings you the soup.

background process: chef making soup

IntentService:- it's consecutive service.. (i.e) when you order many food items at a time to server but the server delivers those items one by one and not deliver them all at once.

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  • 8
    I like your style of explaining. Aug 12, 2014 at 14:34
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    Sorry , but it is missing important differences between the two..
    – eRaisedToX
    Mar 2, 2017 at 7:32
  • What do you mean by "consecutive service"? Apr 27, 2017 at 10:27
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    This explanation is incorrect. A service does not run in background but in the foreground.
    – krtkush
    Dec 7, 2017 at 7:58
  • Explanation is impressive.
    – Nikhil
    May 19, 2021 at 10:34
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See Tejas Lagvankar's post about this subject. Below are some key differences between Service and IntentService and other components.

enter image description here

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  • 1
    nice tabular information Feb 15, 2017 at 6:48
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Service

  • Task with no UI,but should not use for long Task. Use Thread within service for long Task
  • Invoke by onStartService()
  • Triggered from any Thread
  • Runs On Main Thread
  • May block main(UI) thread

IntentService

  • Long task usually no communication with main thread if communication is needed then it is done by Handler or broadcast
  • Invoke via Intent
  • triggered from Main Thread (Intent is received on main Thread and worker thread is spawned)
  • Runs on separate thread
  • We can't run task in parallel and multiple intents are Queued on the same worker thread.
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Service runs actually in the same thread of your app; when you extends Service, you must manually spawn new threads to run CPU blocking operations.

vs

IntentService is a subclass of Service which spawns a thread to do background work from there(No need to create a new thread to do CPU blocking operations).

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  • isn't it to prevent CPU blocking operations, not run them? Im not sure though Nov 20, 2014 at 6:32
  • thats true, service neew a new thread to run CPU blocking operations Aug 18, 2016 at 2:45
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Service: Works in the main thread so it will cause an ANR (Android Not Responding) after a few seconds.

IntentService: Service with another background thread working separately to do something without interacting with the main thread.

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    Service: Works in the main thread so it will cause an ANR (Android Not Responding) after a few seconds. - I can have a service running for hours and hours and I've never seen an ANR, so I doubt that is true.
    – Tim
    Nov 10, 2015 at 9:39
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Intent service is child of Service

IntentService: If you want to download a bunch of images at the start of opening your app. It's a one-time process and can clean itself up once everything is downloaded.

Service: A Service which will constantly be used to communicate between your app and back-end with web API calls. Even if it is finished with its current task, you still want it to be around a few minutes later, for more communication

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