7

When the user logs in into my app. I am starting an asynctask to maintain the user session. And that async task is running indefinitely till the user logs out. My problem is that when I try to start other asynctasks, their doInBackground() method is never executed.

I read somewhere that if an async task is already running, we cannot start new async task. I can confirm this because when i removed the user session async task, it worked properly. Is there a workaround?

P.S.: I have already used executeOnExecutor() method. but it didn't help.

7
  • 9
    Rather than work around it I would recommend using the asyncTask properly for its designed purpose of executing a long running operation on a background thread and find another solution for maintaining your user session.
    – Kuffs
    Dec 11, 2013 at 14:00
  • 1
    stackoverflow.com/questions/4068984/…
    – NigelK
    Dec 11, 2013 at 14:01
  • @Kuffs Can you suggest me another solution to maintain the user session.
    – Rookie
    Dec 11, 2013 at 14:27
  • Depends on what that actually means to you. If you simply want to keep a variable set for the life of the application, you could extend your application class and store it in there. e.g intertech.com/Blog/androids-application-class
    – Kuffs
    Dec 11, 2013 at 14:33
  • 2
    For this, you could store the current time in your extended app class whenever an activity closes and clear it whenever an activity opens. If the stored value is more than 15 minutes ago when the activity starts, restart the app. This also has the advantage of not running an unnecessary process continually on the device. If your API levels allows, you can use registerActivityLifecycleCallbacks for this. Otherwise extending a base activity would make this easier to handle.
    – Kuffs
    Dec 11, 2013 at 14:43

7 Answers 7

6
+50

For potentially long running operations I suggest you to use Service rather than asynctask.

Start the service when the user logs in

Intent i= new Intent(context, YourService.class);
i.putExtra("KEY1", "Value to be used by the service");
context.startService(i); 

And stop the service when the user logs out

stopService(new Intent(this,YourService.class));

To get to know more about Service you can refer this

Service : Android developers

Service : Vogella

To know more about asynctask vs service you can refer this

Android: AsyncTask vs Service

When to use a Service or AsyncTask or Handler?

4

I read somewhere that if an async task is already running, we cannot start new async task.

Yes,That is fact that you can't run more then 5 (five) AsyncTaskat same time below the API 11 but for more yes you can using executeOnExecutor.

AsyncTask uses a thread pool pattern for running the stuff from doInBackground(). The issue is initially (in early Android OS versions) the pool size was just 1, meaning no parallel computations for a bunch of AsyncTasks. But later they fixed that and now the size is 5, so at most 5 AsyncTasks can run simultaneously.

I have figure out Some Threading rules and i found one major rule is below ,

The task can be executed only once (an exception will be thrown if a second execution is attempted.) 

What is definition of AsyncTask?

AsyncTask enables proper and easy use of the UI thread. This class allows to perform background operations and publish results on the UI thread without having to manipulate threads and/or handlers.

How & Where use it?

AsyncTask is designed to be a helper class around Thread and Handler and does not constitute a generic threading framework. AsyncTasks should ideally be used for short operations (a few seconds at the most.) If you need to keep threads running for long periods of time, it is highly recommended to use it.

Why you can't use multiple AsyncTask at same time ?

There are a few threading rules that must be followed for this class to work properly:

Try Executor

You should go with Executor that will mange your multiple thread parallel.

Executor executor = anExecutor;
executor.execute(new RunnableTask1());
executor.execute(new RunnableTask2());
...
0
3

Just like a few others here, I object to the premise of the question.

Your core problem is that you are using an AsyncTask to perform a task beyond its scope. Others have noted this too. Those who offer solutions that can mitigate your problem through low-level threads (even java.util.Concurrent is low-level which is why Scala uses Akka actors as an abstraction), Service, etc. are quite clever, but they are treating the symptom rather than curing the disease.

As for what you should be doing, you are not the first to want to maintain a user session in an Android application. This is a solved problem. The common thread (no pun intended) in these solutions is the use of SharedPreferences. Here is a straightforward example of doing this. This Stack Overflow user combines SharedPreferences with OAuth to do something more sophisticated.

It is common in software development to solve problems by preventing them from happening in the first place. I think you can solve the problem of running simultaneous AsyncTasks by not running simultaneous AsyncTasks. User session management is simply not what an AsyncTask is for.

2

If you are developing for API 11 or higher, you can use AsyncTask.executeOnExecutor() allowing for multiple AsyncTasks to be run at once.

http://developer.android.com/reference/android/os/AsyncTask.html#executeOnExecutor(java.util.concurrent.Executor, Params...)

2

I'll share with you, what we do on our App.

To keep user Session (We use OAuth with access/refresh tokens), we create a Singleton in our Application extended class. Why we declare this Singleton inside the MainApplication class? (Thats the name of our class), because your Singleton's life will be tided to the Activity that has created it, so if your Application is running on low memory and Garbage Collector collects your paused Activities, it will release your Singleton instance because it's associated to that Activity.

Creating it inside your Application class will let it live inside your RAM as long as the user keeps using your app.

Then, to persists that session cross application uses, we save the credentials inside SharedPreferences encrypting the fields.

1

yes starting 2 or more asynctasks simultaneously may cause issues on some devices. i had experienced this issue few months back. i could not predict when the 2nd asyncTask would fail to run. The issue was intermittent may caused by usage of memory as i was executing ndk code in asynctask. but i remember well that it depended on memory of device.

1

Similar question had been asked before. I would post the link for the similar question.

AsyncTask.executeOnExecutor() before API Level 11

Some users suggest go for Service. My advice is don't go for that path yet. Using service is much more complicated. Even you are using service, you still have to deal with threading, as

Note that services, like other application objects, run in the main thread of their hosting process. This means that, if your service is going to do any CPU intensive (such as MP3 playback) or blocking (such as networking) operations, it should spawn its own thread in which to do that work....

If we can solve a problem in elegant way, don't go for the complicated way.

I would suggest that, try one of the APIs in java.util.concurrent as suggested in below

AsyncTask is designed to be a helper class around Thread and Handler and does not constitute a generic threading framework. AsyncTasks should ideally be used for short operations (a few seconds at the most.) If you need to keep threads running for long periods of time, it is highly recommended you use the various APIs provided by the java.util.concurrent pacakge such as Executor, ThreadPoolExecutor and FutureTask.

I can't give you any code example so far, as I do not know how you design your session managing mechanism.

If you think your long running session managing task shouldn't bind to the life cycle of your main application life cycle, then only you might want to consider Service. However, bear in mind that, communication among your main application and Service is much more cumbersome and complicated.

For more details, please refer to http://developer.android.com/guide/components/services.html, under section Should you use a service or a thread?

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.