17

I would like to use Androids new JobScheduler in my app but right now I don't know how to pass my object which contains the data (byte array) that should be sent via network by a job. I searched for an answer but so far found none I'm afraid.

I have a JobService:

public class MyJob extends JobService {

    @Override
    public boolean onStartJob(JobParameters jobParameters) {
        new JobTask(this).execute(jobParameters);
        return true;
    }

    @Override
    public boolean onStopJob(JobParameters params) {
        return false;
    }

    private static class JobTask extends AsyncTask<JobParameters, Void,       JobParameters> {
        private final JobService jobService;

        public JobTask(JobService jobService) {
            this.jobService = jobService;
        }

        @Override
        protected JobParameters doInBackground(JobParameters... params) {
            AnotherClass.post(myObject); // where does myObject come from?
            return params[0];
        }

        @Override
        protected void onPostExecute(JobParameters jobParameters) {
            jobService.jobFinished(jobParameters, false);
        }
    }
}

... am building a job like this:

PersistableBundle bundle = new PersistableBundle();
JobInfo job = new JobInfo.Builder(jobID, new ComponentName(context, AshServiceJob.class))
              .setRequiredNetworkType(JobInfo.NETWORK_TYPE_UNMETERED)
              .setPersisted(true)
              .setExtras(bundle)  // could bundle somehow contain myObject?
              .build();

OtherClass.addJobInBackground(job);

... and am scheduling the job:

public void addJobInBackground(final JobInfo job) {
        JobScheduler jobScheduler = (JobScheduler) getSystemService(Context.JOB_SCHEDULER_SERVICE);
        jobScheduler.schedule(job);
    }

Sooo ... I can't call any methods in MyJob directly, right? I then thought I could use .setExtras(bundle) to pass my object to the job, but as I found out you can only use a PersistableBundle which wouldn't take a serialized object like Bundle. Setting keys and values doesn't work, because you can only put booleans, ints, strings, etc. but not byte[], which is what I need.

Has anyone any idea? I'm quite stuck.

Thanks in advance, a-m

PS: Sorry, if I probably didn't use the right Code-Tags.

1
  • This is not tied specifically to passing objects to JobInfo. It is about using an Intent to pass objects between any two android components, options available have been discussed in detail in this question.
    – Mike
    Commented Jun 3, 2017 at 10:02

4 Answers 4

16

I know it is an old question, but I'll leave my solution for whoever finds it useful.

First I turn my object into json using the Google Gson library

MyCustomObject myObj = new MyCustomObject("data1", 123);
Gson g = new Gson();
String json = g.toJson(myObj);

PersistableBundle bundle = new PersistableBundle();
bundle.putString("MyObject", json);

Then you retrieve the string from the bundle and deserialize

String json = params.getExtras().getString("MyObject");
Gson g = new Gson();
MyCustomObject myObj = g.fromJson(json, MyCustomObject.class);
2
  • 1
    Your answer is perfect. This is just a warning for readers. I now only use putString and getString and I won't use the variants like putLong. I've had issues on one device with version 5.1.1 that was causing crashes related to job extras using putLong after calling getAllPendingJobs.
    – g2server
    Commented Mar 16, 2018 at 22:31
  • Just a note on why we have to use this work around instead of passing an object - "The set of types supported by this class is purposefully restricted to simple objects that can safely be persisted to and restored from disk." Commented Oct 1, 2019 at 15:49
7

Ok - I will answer myself.

It seems that passing more complex objects than String, ints, etc. to a JobService is not possible due to persistence reasons (code could have changed and not classes will not be able to work with old data). That of course makes sense but I think with that restriction it is very difficult to use the JobScheduling.

My "solution" now is saving my object in a File and pass the filename via

PersistableBundle bundle = new PersistableBundle();
bundle.putString("filename", object.getFilename());

In my JobService I am reading that file and am sending it's data via network. Maybe it is not really elegant, but I cannot think of another (better) way. Maybe this helps someone.

0

I tried that but with the FirebaseJobDispatcher:

  1. I made my CustomObject implements Parcelable
  2. I converted my CustomObject to a String
  3. I put it as an extra in a Bundle

To convert CustomObject that extends Parcelable to String:

    private String encodeToString(CustomObject customObject) {
        Parcel parcel = Parcel.obtain();
        List< CustomObject > temp = new ArrayList<>();
        temp.add(customObject);
        parcel.writeList(temp);
        byte[] byt = parcel.marshall();
        String data = Base64.encodeToString(byt, 0, byt.length, 0);
        parcel.recycle();

        return data;
    }

To retrieve CustomObject that extends Parcelable from String:

       private CustomObject decodeFromString (String data) {
            byte[] byt = Base64.decode(data, 0);

            Parcel parcel = Parcel.obtain();
            parcel.unmarshall(byt, 0, byt.length);
            parcel.setDataPosition(0);

            List<CustomObject> temp = new ArrayList<>();
            parcel.readList(temp, getClass().getClassLoader());
            parcel.recycle();

            if (temp.size()>0) {
                return temp.get(0);
            } else {
                return null;
            }
        }
0

Class loader information will be missing if custom object is passed through the intent in job service.

It can be solved by setting the extra class loader.

intent.setExtrasClassLoader(<CUSTOM CLASS>.class.getClassLoader());

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