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This is a simple question, seeing that there is a huge post about this on G+ (here), and lack of information on official docs (here ):

What happens to the app's services when the device goes to "doze" mode?

What does it do to background/foreground services (bound/unbound, started/not-started), with/without partial/full wakelocks?

What would you do, for example, in order to create a service that plays an audio stream while the device's screen is turned off? What if the audio stream is not from a local file, but from the network?

Seeing that there was a claim by Google developer:

Apps that have been running foreground services (with the associated notification) are not restricted by doze.

-yet a lot of discussion after that, claiming this is not entirely true, I think it's quite confusing to know what special background-operations apps should do.

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  • I'm trying to solve that problem in my app for 2 weeks and I didn't find the solution... I have a radio streaming application and I don't know what to solve this.. :( Oct 26, 2016 at 13:47
  • @Terranology I've read somewhere that Android N has a bug on Doze mode, that your service should run on a new process in order to solve this. Have you tried it? Oct 26, 2016 at 18:09

1 Answer 1

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Processes which have a current running foreground service are supposed to be unaffected by Doze. Bound/unbound, started/not-started, and wakelocks do not affect this whitelisting process.

However, there is an issue on Android M devices where foreground services are not properly whitelisted when the foreground service is the in the same process as the top activity and improperly dozed.

The fix is available on AOSP and will be included in builds of Android N. It would be up to OEMs to integrate that patch into any Android M builds they produce.

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    Services that are not specifically a foreground service (i.e., they have not called [startForeground](developer.android.com/reference/android/app/…, android.app.Notification))) receive all of the restrictions that apply when dozed - they are not whitelisted. A music playback app should always be a foreground service when actively playing audio as per the Best Practices in Media Playback talk at I/O 2016 and are strongly recommended to be in a separate process (both because it is a good idea and the bug) Jun 16, 2016 at 21:33
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    Doze affects all apps, no matter what targetSdkVersion they use Jun 19, 2016 at 12:51
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    @user1026605 - no, that's the only way to set the process used by a service. Sep 6, 2016 at 17:23
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    Tested with sample app, I have a background sticky service running continuously(Service has a endless thread ) which does it work and sleeps for 1 minute and wake up again to do it work, still the background service is getting killed and running threads get suspended. Also, tried to run the service in separate process but in vain. If anyone can confirm this behavior as this behavior is not documented anywhere?
    – Amritesh
    May 25, 2017 at 7:47
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    Does a foreground service require a (partial) wake lock? I can't figure that out. Nov 13, 2018 at 21:58

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