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Intro

I am using the library, SQLCipher in my Android project, which allows me to access a pre-encrypted SQLite v3 database from within my application.

The only downside is that there is currently a lot of overhead when creating a new database connection (getReadableDatabase() and getWritableDatabase()calls), due to all the encryption stuff that goes on every time the database is opened. These calls are currently slowing down my application significantly.

What I am trying to achieve

So, I am seeking to minimise the number of times that I needs to make these calls, by holding a single active connection to my database across all of my activities.

How I intend to achieve this

  1. Instantiate connection to database upon application start
  2. For each activity, maintain a special flag
  3. Whenever an activity is switched to another (via an intent), this boolean flag is set true
  4. Each activity's onDestroy() method will close the application's connection to the database, unless that activity's flag is true (i.e., application isn't being destroyed, we are simply moving to a different activity)

An example

public class ExampleActivity extends Activity {

    // Used to determine whether we are destroying the activity due to an intent.
    private boolean isIntent = false;

    public void someMethod() {
        isIntent = true;
        Intent intent = new Intent(this, SomeOtherActivity.class);
        startActivity(intent);
        finish();
    }

    @Override
    public void onDestroy() {
        super.onDestroy();
        if (!isIntent)
            // We haven't started another activity, so we should close the open
            // database connection.
            DatabaseHelper.close();
    }

}

Questions

  1. Are there any issues to this approach that I haven't considered? I haven't seen it done before, so I am wary.

  2. Is there a better way of achieving the desired result?

1 Answer 1

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You can create a singleton class around your subclass of the SQLCipher-based SQLiteOpenHelper. Within the SQLiteOpenHelper, calls to getWritableDatabase() internally cache the returned database object, so key derivation is not occurring each time that method is called.

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  • Can you please expand on this answer?
    – user839040
    Oct 9, 2014 at 17:40
  • The first time getWritableDatabase(…) is called with a non-null key value, key derivation occurs, however the database instance is cached internally (see here) so as long as you maintain a singleton of your subclassed SQLiteOpenHelper you will minimize the delay in accessing your data. Dec 14, 2016 at 21:33

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