8

I have a use case which I want to use coroutine but a little confused how to implement it.

A ViewModel which has a scope and bind to the UI lifecycle and call an API from the repository:

class UserViewModel(): CoroutineScope {

    private val job = Job()
    override val coroutineContext: CoroutineContext
        get() = Dispatchers.Main + job

    fun showUser() { 
       launch {
          val user = repo.getUser() 
          livedata = user
       }
    }

    fun onClean() {
       job.cancel()
    }
}

The repository use coroutine to build the network call like this:

suspend fun getUser() = GlobalScope { ... }

The use case is the repository function need to be always fully executed once the API is called from ViewModel since we need to capture all the network response from the server.

How I can make sure the coroutine in the repository is always executed but the ViewModel coroutines will be canceled to avoid memory leak once view model is cleared?

2
  • Why would a getUser operation have to be completed? It's read-only. Nov 25, 2018 at 23:06
  • The getUser is performing a network request, but no matter how the response is handled in viewmodel we need to capture all the exceptions and mutate the app statue inside this function if necessary
    – iammini
    Nov 25, 2018 at 23:58

2 Answers 2

5
+50

According to the documentation of the GlobalScope I think we can rely that coroutine, launched using the global CoroutineScope, is always executed. The documentation says:

Global scope is used to launch top-level coroutines which are operating on the whole application lifetime and are not cancelled prematurely.

I've implemented some test code, and when the job was canceled inside the UserViewModel the coroutine in repository continued executing. Here is the code with my comments:

class UserViewModel(): CoroutineScope {
    private val job = Job()
    override val coroutineContext: CoroutineContext
        get() = Dispatchers.Main + job

    fun showUser() {
        launch {
            val repo = Repository()
            val userDeferred = repo.getUser()
            // if onClean() is called before the coroutine in Repository finishes,
            // this line will not be called, but coroutine in Repository will continue executing
            val result = userDeferred.await() // wait for result of I/O operation without blocking the main thread
        }
    }

    fun onClean() {
        job.cancel()
    }
}

class Repository {
    fun getUser() = GlobalScope.async {
        delay(4000)
        // this line is executed no matter whether the job in UserViewModel was canceled or not
        "User returned"
    }
}

Additionally we can reduce showUser() function:

fun showUser() = repo.getUser().then(this) {
    // `it` contains the result
    // here is the main thread, use `it` to update UI
}

using extension function then:

fun <T> Deferred<T>.then(scope: CoroutineScope = GlobalScope, uiFun: (T) -> Unit) {
    scope.launch { uiFun([email protected]()) }
}

If you develop for Android and want to be sure your IO operation is executed completely even after cleaning up the ViewModel, use WorkManager. It is intended for asynchronous and deferrable tasks that require a guarantee that the system will run them even if the app exits.

3
  • await is going to block on the coroutine ? which means i can't do it with the dispatchers.main ?
    – iammini
    Dec 7, 2018 at 22:23
  • await will block the coroutine but not the main thread, you can use it with Dispatchers.Main
    – Sergio
    Dec 8, 2018 at 15:03
  • Saying that await blocks the coroutine is a bit misleading. You should rather say that it suspends the coroutine.
    – marstran
    Dec 11, 2018 at 11:40
1

ViewModel only survives configuration changes and doesn't survive the destruction of activity in general.

If you want your operation to continue beyond the destruction of activity you should use a component with a lifecycle beyond that of activity i.e Service.

Furthermore if you want to make sure your operation is "always" executed you should use a Foreground service which will need to have an undismissable notification while the service is running.

A started service can use the startForeground(int, Notification) API to put the service in a foreground state, where the system considers it to be something the user is actively aware of and thus not a candidate for killing when low on memory.

4
  • it is not applicable for my case, the service is not recommended for the light async operation.
    – iammini
    Dec 7, 2018 at 23:19
  • 1
    Async operations should be cancelled when their component is destroyed. If you want something to always finish you should use a component that never gets destroyed. Making async operations beyond the lifecycle of component is a recepie for memory leaks
    – saiedmomen
    Dec 8, 2018 at 6:38
  • if repositories are a singleton and we use GlobalScope, how is there a leak after viewmodels that launch the repositories function is cleared?
    – iamsujan
    Jan 20, 2019 at 18:56
  • 1
    Its depends but in general its a bad practice and should be avoided medium.com/@elizarov/…
    – saiedmomen
    Feb 8, 2019 at 20:38

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