1page.title=Services 2@jd:body 3 4<div id="qv-wrapper"> 5<ol id="qv"> 6<h2>In this document</h2> 7<ol> 8<li><a href="#Basics">The Basics</a></li> 9<ol> 10 <li><a href="#Declaring">Declaring a service in the manifest</a></li> 11</ol> 12<li><a href="#CreatingAService">Creating a Started Service</a> 13 <ol> 14 <li><a href="#ExtendingIntentService">Extending the IntentService class</a></li> 15 <li><a href="#ExtendingService">Extending the Service class</a></li> 16 <li><a href="#StartingAService">Starting a service</a></li> 17 <li><a href="#Stopping">Stopping a service</a></li> 18 </ol> 19</li> 20<li><a href="#CreatingBoundService">Creating a Bound Service</a></li> 21<li><a href="#Notifications">Sending Notifications to the User</a></li> 22<li><a href="#Foreground">Running a Service in the Foreground</a></li> 23<li><a href="#Lifecycle">Managing the Lifecycle of a Service</a> 24<ol> 25 <li><a href="#LifecycleCallbacks">Implementing the lifecycle callbacks</a></li> 26</ol> 27</li> 28</ol> 29 30<h2>Key classes</h2> 31<ol> 32 <li>{@link android.app.Service}</li> 33 <li>{@link android.app.IntentService}</li> 34</ol> 35 36<h2>Samples</h2> 37<ol> 38 <li><a href="{@docRoot}resources/samples/ApiDemos/src/com/example/android/apis/app/ServiceStartArguments.html">{@code 39 ServiceStartArguments}</a></li> 40 <li><a href="{@docRoot}resources/samples/ApiDemos/src/com/example/android/apis/app/LocalService.html">{@code 41 LocalService}</a></li> 42</ol> 43 44<h2>See also</h2> 45<ol> 46<li><a href="{@docRoot}guide/components/bound-services.html">Bound Services</a></li> 47</ol> 48 49</div> 50 51 52<p>A {@link android.app.Service} is an application component that can perform 53long-running operations in the background and does not provide a user interface. Another 54application component can start a service and it will continue to run in the background even if the 55user switches to another application. Additionally, a component can bind to a service to 56interact with it and even perform interprocess communication (IPC). For example, a service might 57handle network transactions, play music, perform file I/O, or interact with a content provider, all 58from the background.</p> 59 60<p>A service can essentially take two forms:</p> 61 62<dl> 63 <dt>Started</dt> 64 <dd>A service is "started" when an application component (such as an activity) starts it by 65calling {@link android.content.Context#startService startService()}. Once started, a service 66can run in the background indefinitely, even if the component that started it is destroyed. Usually, 67a started service performs a single operation and does not return a result to the caller. 68For example, it might download or upload a file over the network. When the operation is done, the 69service should stop itself.</dd> 70 <dt>Bound</dt> 71 <dd>A service is "bound" when an application component binds to it by calling {@link 72android.content.Context#bindService bindService()}. A bound service offers a client-server 73interface that allows components to interact with the service, send requests, get results, and even 74do so across processes with interprocess communication (IPC). A bound service runs only as long as 75another application component is bound to it. Multiple components can bind to the service at once, 76but when all of them unbind, the service is destroyed.</dd> 77</dl> 78 79<p>Although this documentation generally discusses these two types of services separately, your 80service can work both ways—it can be started (to run indefinitely) and also allow binding. 81It's simply a matter of whether you implement a couple callback methods: {@link 82android.app.Service#onStartCommand onStartCommand()} to allow components to start it and {@link 83android.app.Service#onBind onBind()} to allow binding.</p> 84 85<p>Regardless of whether your application is started, bound, or both, any application component 86can use the service (even from a separate application), in the same way that any component can use 87an activity—by starting it with an {@link android.content.Intent}. However, you can declare 88the service as private, in the manifest file, and block access from other applications. This is 89discussed more in the section about <a href="#Declaring">Declaring the service in the 90manifest</a>.</p> 91 92<p class="caution"><strong>Caution:</strong> A service runs in the 93main thread of its hosting process—the service does <strong>not</strong> create its own thread 94and does <strong>not</strong> run in a separate process (unless you specify otherwise). This means 95that, if your service is going to do any CPU intensive work or blocking operations (such as MP3 96playback or networking), you should create a new thread within the service to do that work. By using 97a separate thread, you will reduce the risk of Application Not Responding (ANR) errors and the 98application's main thread can remain dedicated to user interaction with your activities.</p> 99 100 101<h2 id="Basics">The Basics</h2> 102 103<div class="sidebox-wrapper"> 104<div class="sidebox"> 105 <h3>Should you use a service or a thread?</h3> 106 <p>A service is simply a component that can run in the background even when the user is not 107interacting with your application. Thus, you should create a service only if that is what you 108need.</p> 109 <p>If you need to perform work outside your main thread, but only while the user is interacting 110with your application, then you should probably instead create a new thread and not a service. For 111example, if you want to play some music, but only while your activity is running, you might create 112a thread in {@link android.app.Activity#onCreate onCreate()}, start running it in {@link 113android.app.Activity#onStart onStart()}, then stop it in {@link android.app.Activity#onStop 114onStop()}. Also consider using {@link android.os.AsyncTask} or {@link android.os.HandlerThread}, 115instead of the traditional {@link java.lang.Thread} class. See the <a 116href="{@docRoot}guide/components/processes-and-threads.html#Threads">Processes and 117Threading</a> document for more information about threads.</p> 118 <p>Remember that if you do use a service, it still runs in your application's main thread by 119default, so you should still create a new thread within the service if it performs intensive or 120blocking operations.</p> 121</div> 122</div> 123 124<p>To create a service, you must create a subclass of {@link android.app.Service} (or one 125of its existing subclasses). In your implementation, you need to override some callback methods that 126handle key aspects of the service lifecycle and provide a mechanism for components to bind to 127the service, if appropriate. The most important callback methods you should override are:</p> 128 129<dl> 130 <dt>{@link android.app.Service#onStartCommand onStartCommand()}</dt> 131 <dd>The system calls this method when another component, such as an activity, 132requests that the service be started, by calling {@link android.content.Context#startService 133startService()}. Once this method executes, the service is started and can run in the 134background indefinitely. If you implement this, it is your responsibility to stop the service when 135its work is done, by calling {@link android.app.Service#stopSelf stopSelf()} or {@link 136android.content.Context#stopService stopService()}. (If you only want to provide binding, you don't 137need to implement this method.)</dd> 138 <dt>{@link android.app.Service#onBind onBind()}</dt> 139 <dd>The system calls this method when another component wants to bind with the 140service (such as to perform RPC), by calling {@link android.content.Context#bindService 141bindService()}. In your implementation of this method, you must provide an interface that clients 142use to communicate with the service, by returning an {@link android.os.IBinder}. You must always 143implement this method, but if you don't want to allow binding, then you should return null.</dd> 144 <dt>{@link android.app.Service#onCreate()}</dt> 145 <dd>The system calls this method when the service is first created, to perform one-time setup 146procedures (before it calls either {@link android.app.Service#onStartCommand onStartCommand()} or 147{@link android.app.Service#onBind onBind()}). If the service is already running, this method is not 148called.</dd> 149 <dt>{@link android.app.Service#onDestroy()}</dt> 150 <dd>The system calls this method when the service is no longer used and is being destroyed. 151Your service should implement this to clean up any resources such as threads, registered 152listeners, receivers, etc. This is the last call the service receives.</dd> 153</dl> 154 155<p>If a component starts the service by calling {@link 156android.content.Context#startService startService()} (which results in a call to {@link 157android.app.Service#onStartCommand onStartCommand()}), then the service 158remains running until it stops itself with {@link android.app.Service#stopSelf()} or another 159component stops it by calling {@link android.content.Context#stopService stopService()}.</p> 160 161<p>If a component calls 162{@link android.content.Context#bindService bindService()} to create the service (and {@link 163android.app.Service#onStartCommand onStartCommand()} is <em>not</em> called), then the service runs 164only as long as the component is bound to it. Once the service is unbound from all clients, the 165system destroys it.</p> 166 167<p>The Android system will force-stop a service only when memory is low and it must recover system 168resources for the activity that has user focus. If the service is bound to an activity that has user 169focus, then it's less likely to be killed, and if the service is declared to <a 170href="#Foreground">run in the foreground</a> (discussed later), then it will almost never be killed. 171Otherwise, if the service was started and is long-running, then the system will lower its position 172in the list of background tasks over time and the service will become highly susceptible to 173killing—if your service is started, then you must design it to gracefully handle restarts 174by the system. If the system kills your service, it restarts it as soon as resources become 175available again (though this also depends on the value you return from {@link 176android.app.Service#onStartCommand onStartCommand()}, as discussed later). For more information 177about when the system might destroy a service, see the <a 178href="{@docRoot}guide/components/processes-and-threads.html">Processes and Threading</a> 179document.</p> 180 181<p>In the following sections, you'll see how you can create each type of service and how to use 182it from other application components.</p> 183 184 185 186<h3 id="Declaring">Declaring a service in the manifest</h3> 187 188<p>Like activities (and other components), you must declare all services in your application's 189manifest file.</p> 190 191<p>To declare your service, add a <a 192href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/service-element.html">{@code <service>}</a> element 193as a child of the <a 194href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/application-element.html">{@code <application>}</a> 195element. For example:</p> 196 197<pre> 198<manifest ... > 199 ... 200 <application ... > 201 <service android:name=".ExampleService" /> 202 ... 203 </application> 204</manifest> 205</pre> 206 207<p>See the <a 208href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/service-element.html">{@code <service>}</a> element 209reference for more information about declaring your service in the manifest.</p> 210 211<p>There are other attributes you can include in the <a 212href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/service-element.html">{@code <service>}</a> element to 213define properties such as permissions required to start the service and the process in 214which the service should run. The <a 215href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/service-element.html#nm">{@code android:name}</a> 216attribute is the only required attribute—it specifies the class name of the service. Once 217you publish your application, you should not change this name, because if you do, you risk breaking 218code due to dependence on explicit intents to start or bind the service (read the blog post, <a 219href="http://android-developers.blogspot.com/2011/06/things-that-cannot-change.html">Things 220That Cannot Change</a>). 221 222<p>To ensure your app is secure, <strong>always use an explicit intent when starting or binding 223your {@link android.app.Service}</strong> and do not declare intent filters for the service. If 224it's critical that you allow for some amount of ambiguity as to which service starts, you can 225supply intent filters for your services and exclude the component name from the {@link 226android.content.Intent}, but you then must set the package for the intent with {@link 227android.content.Intent#setPackage setPackage()}, which provides sufficient disambiguation for the 228target service.</p> 229 230<p>Additionally, you can ensure that your service is available to only your app by 231including the <a 232href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/service-element.html#exported">{@code android:exported}</a> 233attribute and setting it to {@code "false"}. This effectively stops other apps from starting your 234service, even when using an explicit intent.</p> 235 236 237 238 239<h2 id="CreatingStartedService">Creating a Started Service</h2> 240 241<p>A started service is one that another component starts by calling {@link 242android.content.Context#startService startService()}, resulting in a call to the service's 243{@link android.app.Service#onStartCommand onStartCommand()} method.</p> 244 245<p>When a service is started, it has a lifecycle that's independent of the 246component that started it and the service can run in the background indefinitely, even if 247the component that started it is destroyed. As such, the service should stop itself when its job 248is done by calling {@link android.app.Service#stopSelf stopSelf()}, or another component can stop it 249by calling {@link android.content.Context#stopService stopService()}.</p> 250 251<p>An application component such as an activity can start the service by calling {@link 252android.content.Context#startService startService()} and passing an {@link android.content.Intent} 253that specifies the service and includes any data for the service to use. The service receives 254this {@link android.content.Intent} in the {@link android.app.Service#onStartCommand 255onStartCommand()} method.</p> 256 257<p>For instance, suppose an activity needs to save some data to an online database. The activity can 258start a companion service and deliver it the data to save by passing an intent to {@link 259android.content.Context#startService startService()}. The service receives the intent in {@link 260android.app.Service#onStartCommand onStartCommand()}, connects to the Internet and performs the 261database transaction. When the transaction is done, the service stops itself and it is 262destroyed.</p> 263 264<p class="caution"><strong>Caution:</strong> A services runs in the same process as the application 265in which it is declared and in the main thread of that application, by default. So, if your service 266performs intensive or blocking operations while the user interacts with an activity from the same 267application, the service will slow down activity performance. To avoid impacting application 268performance, you should start a new thread inside the service.</p> 269 270<p>Traditionally, there are two classes you can extend to create a started service:</p> 271<dl> 272 <dt>{@link android.app.Service}</dt> 273 <dd>This is the base class for all services. When you extend this class, it's important that 274you create a new thread in which to do all the service's work, because the service uses your 275application's main thread, by default, which could slow the performance of any activity your 276application is running.</dd> 277 <dt>{@link android.app.IntentService}</dt> 278 <dd>This is a subclass of {@link android.app.Service} that uses a worker thread to handle all 279start requests, one at a time. This is the best option if you don't require that your service 280handle multiple requests simultaneously. All you need to do is implement {@link 281android.app.IntentService#onHandleIntent onHandleIntent()}, which receives the intent for each 282start request so you can do the background work.</dd> 283</dl> 284 285<p>The following sections describe how you can implement your service using either one for these 286classes.</p> 287 288 289<h3 id="ExtendingIntentService">Extending the IntentService class</h3> 290 291<p>Because most started services don't need to handle multiple requests simultaneously 292(which can actually be a dangerous multi-threading scenario), it's probably best if you 293implement your service using the {@link android.app.IntentService} class.</p> 294 295<p>The {@link android.app.IntentService} does the following:</p> 296 297<ul> 298 <li>Creates a default worker thread that executes all intents delivered to {@link 299android.app.Service#onStartCommand onStartCommand()} separate from your application's main 300thread.</li> 301 <li>Creates a work queue that passes one intent at a time to your {@link 302android.app.IntentService#onHandleIntent onHandleIntent()} implementation, so you never have to 303worry about multi-threading.</li> 304 <li>Stops the service after all start requests have been handled, so you never have to call 305{@link android.app.Service#stopSelf}.</li> 306 <li>Provides default implementation of {@link android.app.IntentService#onBind onBind()} that 307returns null.</li> 308 <li>Provides a default implementation of {@link android.app.IntentService#onStartCommand 309onStartCommand()} that sends the intent to the work queue and then to your {@link 310android.app.IntentService#onHandleIntent onHandleIntent()} implementation.</li> 311</ul> 312 313<p>All this adds up to the fact that all you need to do is implement {@link 314android.app.IntentService#onHandleIntent onHandleIntent()} to do the work provided by the 315client. (Though, you also need to provide a small constructor for the service.)</p> 316 317<p>Here's an example implementation of {@link android.app.IntentService}:</p> 318 319<pre> 320public class HelloIntentService extends IntentService { 321 322 /** 323 * A constructor is required, and must call the super {@link android.app.IntentService#IntentService} 324 * constructor with a name for the worker thread. 325 */ 326 public HelloIntentService() { 327 super("HelloIntentService"); 328 } 329 330 /** 331 * The IntentService calls this method from the default worker thread with 332 * the intent that started the service. When this method returns, IntentService 333 * stops the service, as appropriate. 334 */ 335 @Override 336 protected void onHandleIntent(Intent intent) { 337 // Normally we would do some work here, like download a file. 338 // For our sample, we just sleep for 5 seconds. 339 long endTime = System.currentTimeMillis() + 5*1000; 340 while (System.currentTimeMillis() < endTime) { 341 synchronized (this) { 342 try { 343 wait(endTime - System.currentTimeMillis()); 344 } catch (Exception e) { 345 } 346 } 347 } 348 } 349} 350</pre> 351 352<p>That's all you need: a constructor and an implementation of {@link 353android.app.IntentService#onHandleIntent onHandleIntent()}.</p> 354 355<p>If you decide to also override other callback methods, such as {@link 356android.app.IntentService#onCreate onCreate()}, {@link 357android.app.IntentService#onStartCommand onStartCommand()}, or {@link 358android.app.IntentService#onDestroy onDestroy()}, be sure to call the super implementation, so 359that the {@link android.app.IntentService} can properly handle the life of the worker thread.</p> 360 361<p>For example, {@link android.app.IntentService#onStartCommand onStartCommand()} must return 362the default implementation (which is how the intent gets delivered to {@link 363android.app.IntentService#onHandleIntent onHandleIntent()}):</p> 364 365<pre> 366@Override 367public int onStartCommand(Intent intent, int flags, int startId) { 368 Toast.makeText(this, "service starting", Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show(); 369 return super.onStartCommand(intent,flags,startId); 370} 371</pre> 372 373<p>Besides {@link android.app.IntentService#onHandleIntent onHandleIntent()}, the only method 374from which you don't need to call the super class is {@link android.app.IntentService#onBind 375onBind()} (but you only need to implement that if your service allows binding).</p> 376 377<p>In the next section, you'll see how the same kind of service is implemented when extending 378the base {@link android.app.Service} class, which is a lot more code, but which might be 379appropriate if you need to handle simultaneous start requests.</p> 380 381 382<h3 id="ExtendingService">Extending the Service class</h3> 383 384<p>As you saw in the previous section, using {@link android.app.IntentService} makes your 385implementation of a started service very simple. If, however, you require your service to 386perform multi-threading (instead of processing start requests through a work queue), then you 387can extend the {@link android.app.Service} class to handle each intent.</p> 388 389<p>For comparison, the following example code is an implementation of the {@link 390android.app.Service} class that performs the exact same work as the example above using {@link 391android.app.IntentService}. That is, for each start request, it uses a worker thread to perform the 392job and processes only one request at a time.</p> 393 394<pre> 395public class HelloService extends Service { 396 private Looper mServiceLooper; 397 private ServiceHandler mServiceHandler; 398 399 // Handler that receives messages from the thread 400 private final class ServiceHandler extends Handler { 401 public ServiceHandler(Looper looper) { 402 super(looper); 403 } 404 @Override 405 public void handleMessage(Message msg) { 406 // Normally we would do some work here, like download a file. 407 // For our sample, we just sleep for 5 seconds. 408 long endTime = System.currentTimeMillis() + 5*1000; 409 while (System.currentTimeMillis() < endTime) { 410 synchronized (this) { 411 try { 412 wait(endTime - System.currentTimeMillis()); 413 } catch (Exception e) { 414 } 415 } 416 } 417 // Stop the service using the startId, so that we don't stop 418 // the service in the middle of handling another job 419 stopSelf(msg.arg1); 420 } 421 } 422 423 @Override 424 public void onCreate() { 425 // Start up the thread running the service. Note that we create a 426 // separate thread because the service normally runs in the process's 427 // main thread, which we don't want to block. We also make it 428 // background priority so CPU-intensive work will not disrupt our UI. 429 HandlerThread thread = new HandlerThread("ServiceStartArguments", 430 Process.THREAD_PRIORITY_BACKGROUND); 431 thread.start(); 432 433 // Get the HandlerThread's Looper and use it for our Handler 434 mServiceLooper = thread.getLooper(); 435 mServiceHandler = new ServiceHandler(mServiceLooper); 436 } 437 438 @Override 439 public int onStartCommand(Intent intent, int flags, int startId) { 440 Toast.makeText(this, "service starting", Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show(); 441 442 // For each start request, send a message to start a job and deliver the 443 // start ID so we know which request we're stopping when we finish the job 444 Message msg = mServiceHandler.obtainMessage(); 445 msg.arg1 = startId; 446 mServiceHandler.sendMessage(msg); 447 448 // If we get killed, after returning from here, restart 449 return START_STICKY; 450 } 451 452 @Override 453 public IBinder onBind(Intent intent) { 454 // We don't provide binding, so return null 455 return null; 456 } 457 458 @Override 459 public void onDestroy() { 460 Toast.makeText(this, "service done", Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show(); 461 } 462} 463</pre> 464 465<p>As you can see, it's a lot more work than using {@link android.app.IntentService}.</p> 466 467<p>However, because you handle each call to {@link android.app.Service#onStartCommand 468onStartCommand()} yourself, you can perform multiple requests simultaneously. That's not what 469this example does, but if that's what you want, then you can create a new thread for each 470request and run them right away (instead of waiting for the previous request to finish).</p> 471 472<p>Notice that the {@link android.app.Service#onStartCommand onStartCommand()} method must return an 473integer. The integer is a value that describes how the system should continue the service in the 474event that the system kills it (as discussed above, the default implementation for {@link 475android.app.IntentService} handles this for you, though you are able to modify it). The return value 476from {@link android.app.Service#onStartCommand onStartCommand()} must be one of the following 477constants:</p> 478 479<dl> 480 <dt>{@link android.app.Service#START_NOT_STICKY}</dt> 481 <dd>If the system kills the service after {@link android.app.Service#onStartCommand 482onStartCommand()} returns, <em>do not</em> recreate the service, unless there are pending 483intents to deliver. This is the safest option to avoid running your service when not necessary 484and when your application can simply restart any unfinished jobs.</dd> 485 <dt>{@link android.app.Service#START_STICKY}</dt> 486 <dd>If the system kills the service after {@link android.app.Service#onStartCommand 487onStartCommand()} returns, recreate the service and call {@link 488android.app.Service#onStartCommand onStartCommand()}, but <em>do not</em> redeliver the last intent. 489Instead, the system calls {@link android.app.Service#onStartCommand onStartCommand()} with a 490null intent, unless there were pending intents to start the service, in which case, 491those intents are delivered. This is suitable for media players (or similar services) that are not 492executing commands, but running indefinitely and waiting for a job.</dd> 493 <dt>{@link android.app.Service#START_REDELIVER_INTENT}</dt> 494 <dd>If the system kills the service after {@link android.app.Service#onStartCommand 495onStartCommand()} returns, recreate the service and call {@link 496android.app.Service#onStartCommand onStartCommand()} with the last intent that was delivered to the 497service. Any pending intents are delivered in turn. This is suitable for services that are 498actively performing a job that should be immediately resumed, such as downloading a file.</dd> 499</dl> 500<p>For more details about these return values, see the linked reference documentation for each 501constant.</p> 502 503 504 505<h3 id="StartingAService">Starting a Service</h3> 506 507<p>You can start a service from an activity or other application component by passing an 508{@link android.content.Intent} (specifying the service to start) to {@link 509android.content.Context#startService startService()}. The Android system calls the service's {@link 510android.app.Service#onStartCommand onStartCommand()} method and passes it the {@link 511android.content.Intent}. (You should never call {@link android.app.Service#onStartCommand 512onStartCommand()} directly.)</p> 513 514<p>For example, an activity can start the example service in the previous section ({@code 515HelloSevice}) using an explicit intent with {@link android.content.Context#startService 516startService()}:</p> 517 518<pre> 519Intent intent = new Intent(this, HelloService.class); 520startService(intent); 521</pre> 522 523<p>The {@link android.content.Context#startService startService()} method returns immediately and 524the Android system calls the service's {@link android.app.Service#onStartCommand 525onStartCommand()} method. If the service is not already running, the system first calls {@link 526android.app.Service#onCreate onCreate()}, then calls {@link android.app.Service#onStartCommand 527onStartCommand()}.</p> 528 529<p>If the service does not also provide binding, the intent delivered with {@link 530android.content.Context#startService startService()} is the only mode of communication between the 531application component and the service. However, if you want the service to send a result back, then 532the client that starts the service can create a {@link android.app.PendingIntent} for a broadcast 533(with {@link android.app.PendingIntent#getBroadcast getBroadcast()}) and deliver it to the service 534in the {@link android.content.Intent} that starts the service. The service can then use the 535broadcast to deliver a result.</p> 536 537<p>Multiple requests to start the service result in multiple corresponding calls to the service's 538{@link android.app.Service#onStartCommand onStartCommand()}. However, only one request to stop 539the service (with {@link android.app.Service#stopSelf stopSelf()} or {@link 540android.content.Context#stopService stopService()}) is required to stop it.</p> 541 542 543<h3 id="Stopping">Stopping a service</h3> 544 545<p>A started service must manage its own lifecycle. That is, the system does not stop or 546destroy the service unless it must recover system memory and the service 547continues to run after {@link android.app.Service#onStartCommand onStartCommand()} returns. So, 548the service must stop itself by calling {@link android.app.Service#stopSelf stopSelf()} or another 549component can stop it by calling {@link android.content.Context#stopService stopService()}.</p> 550 551<p>Once requested to stop with {@link android.app.Service#stopSelf stopSelf()} or {@link 552android.content.Context#stopService stopService()}, the system destroys the service as soon as 553possible.</p> 554 555<p>However, if your service handles multiple requests to {@link 556android.app.Service#onStartCommand onStartCommand()} concurrently, then you shouldn't stop the 557service when you're done processing a start request, because you might have since received a new 558start request (stopping at the end of the first request would terminate the second one). To avoid 559this problem, you can use {@link android.app.Service#stopSelf(int)} to ensure that your request to 560stop the service is always based on the most recent start request. That is, when you call {@link 561android.app.Service#stopSelf(int)}, you pass the ID of the start request (the <code>startId</code> 562delivered to {@link android.app.Service#onStartCommand onStartCommand()}) to which your stop request 563corresponds. Then if the service received a new start request before you were able to call {@link 564android.app.Service#stopSelf(int)}, then the ID will not match and the service will not stop.</p> 565 566<p class="caution"><strong>Caution:</strong> It's important that your application stops its services 567when it's done working, to avoid wasting system resources and consuming battery power. If necessary, 568other components can stop the service by calling {@link 569android.content.Context#stopService stopService()}. Even if you enable binding for the service, 570you must always stop the service yourself if it ever received a call to {@link 571android.app.Service#onStartCommand onStartCommand()}.</p> 572 573<p>For more information about the lifecycle of a service, see the section below about <a 574href="#Lifecycle">Managing the Lifecycle of a Service</a>.</p> 575 576 577 578<h2 id="CreatingBoundService">Creating a Bound Service</h2> 579 580<p>A bound service is one that allows application components to bind to it by calling {@link 581android.content.Context#bindService bindService()} in order to create a long-standing connection 582(and generally does not allow components to <em>start</em> it by calling {@link 583android.content.Context#startService startService()}).</p> 584 585<p>You should create a bound service when you want to interact with the service from activities 586and other components in your application or to expose some of your application's functionality to 587other applications, through interprocess communication (IPC).</p> 588 589<p>To create a bound service, you must implement the {@link 590android.app.Service#onBind onBind()} callback method to return an {@link android.os.IBinder} that 591defines the interface for communication with the service. Other application components can then call 592{@link android.content.Context#bindService bindService()} to retrieve the interface and 593begin calling methods on the service. The service lives only to serve the application component that 594is bound to it, so when there are no components bound to the service, the system destroys it 595(you do <em>not</em> need to stop a bound service in the way you must when the service is started 596through {@link android.app.Service#onStartCommand onStartCommand()}).</p> 597 598<p>To create a bound service, the first thing you must do is define the interface that specifies 599how a client can communicate with the service. This interface between the service 600and a client must be an implementation of {@link android.os.IBinder} and is what your service must 601return from the {@link android.app.Service#onBind 602onBind()} callback method. Once the client receives the {@link android.os.IBinder}, it can begin 603interacting with the service through that interface.</p> 604 605<p>Multiple clients can bind to the service at once. When a client is done interacting with the 606service, it calls {@link android.content.Context#unbindService unbindService()} to unbind. Once 607there are no clients bound to the service, the system destroys the service.</p> 608 609<p>There are multiple ways to implement a bound service and the implementation is more 610complicated than a started service, so the bound service discussion appears in a separate 611document about <a 612href="{@docRoot}guide/components/bound-services.html">Bound Services</a>.</p> 613 614 615 616<h2 id="Notifications">Sending Notifications to the User</h2> 617 618<p>Once running, a service can notify the user of events using <a 619href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/ui/notifiers/toasts.html">Toast Notifications</a> or <a 620href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/ui/notifiers/notifications.html">Status Bar Notifications</a>.</p> 621 622<p>A toast notification is a message that appears on the surface of the current window for a 623moment then disappears, while a status bar notification provides an icon in the status bar with a 624message, which the user can select in order to take an action (such as start an activity).</p> 625 626<p>Usually, a status bar notification is the best technique when some background work has completed 627(such as a file completed 628downloading) and the user can now act on it. When the user selects the notification from the 629expanded view, the notification can start an activity (such as to view the downloaded file).</p> 630 631<p>See the <a 632href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/ui/notifiers/toasts.html">Toast Notifications</a> or <a 633href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/ui/notifiers/notifications.html">Status Bar Notifications</a> 634developer guides for more information.</p> 635 636 637 638<h2 id="Foreground">Running a Service in the Foreground</h2> 639 640<p>A foreground service is a service that's considered to be something the 641user is actively aware of and thus not a candidate for the system to kill when low on memory. A 642foreground service must provide a notification for the status bar, which is placed under the 643"Ongoing" heading, which means that the notification cannot be dismissed unless the service is 644either stopped or removed from the foreground.</p> 645 646<p>For example, a music player that plays music from a service should be set to run in the 647foreground, because the user is explicitly aware 648of its operation. The notification in the status bar might indicate the current song and allow 649the user to launch an activity to interact with the music player.</p> 650 651<p>To request that your service run in the foreground, call {@link 652android.app.Service#startForeground startForeground()}. This method takes two parameters: an integer 653that uniquely identifies the notification and the {@link 654android.app.Notification} for the status bar. For example:</p> 655 656<pre> 657Notification notification = new Notification(R.drawable.icon, getText(R.string.ticker_text), 658 System.currentTimeMillis()); 659Intent notificationIntent = new Intent(this, ExampleActivity.class); 660PendingIntent pendingIntent = PendingIntent.getActivity(this, 0, notificationIntent, 0); 661notification.setLatestEventInfo(this, getText(R.string.notification_title), 662 getText(R.string.notification_message), pendingIntent); 663startForeground(ONGOING_NOTIFICATION_ID, notification); 664</pre> 665 666<p class="caution"><strong>Caution:</strong> The integer ID you give to {@link 667android.app.Service#startForeground startForeground()} must not be 0.</p> 668 669 670<p>To remove the service from the foreground, call {@link 671android.app.Service#stopForeground stopForeground()}. This method takes a boolean, indicating 672whether to remove the status bar notification as well. This method does <em>not</em> stop the 673service. However, if you stop the service while it's still running in the foreground, then the 674notification is also removed.</p> 675 676<p>For more information about notifications, see <a 677href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/ui/notifiers/notifications.html">Creating Status Bar 678Notifications</a>.</p> 679 680 681 682<h2 id="Lifecycle">Managing the Lifecycle of a Service</h2> 683 684<p>The lifecycle of a service is much simpler than that of an activity. However, it's even more important 685that you pay close attention to how your service is created and destroyed, because a service 686can run in the background without the user being aware.</p> 687 688<p>The service lifecycle—from when it's created to when it's destroyed—can follow two 689different paths:</p> 690 691<ul> 692<li>A started service 693 <p>The service is created when another component calls {@link 694android.content.Context#startService startService()}. The service then runs indefinitely and must 695stop itself by calling {@link 696android.app.Service#stopSelf() stopSelf()}. Another component can also stop the 697service by calling {@link android.content.Context#stopService 698stopService()}. When the service is stopped, the system destroys it..</p></li> 699 700<li>A bound service 701 <p>The service is created when another component (a client) calls {@link 702android.content.Context#bindService bindService()}. The client then communicates with the service 703through an {@link android.os.IBinder} interface. The client can close the connection by calling 704{@link android.content.Context#unbindService unbindService()}. Multiple clients can bind to 705the same service and when all of them unbind, the system destroys the service. (The service 706does <em>not</em> need to stop itself.)</p></li> 707</ul> 708 709<p>These two paths are not entirely separate. That is, you can bind to a service that was already 710started with {@link android.content.Context#startService startService()}. For example, a background 711music service could be started by calling {@link android.content.Context#startService 712startService()} with an {@link android.content.Intent} that identifies the music to play. Later, 713possibly when the user wants to exercise some control over the player or get information about the 714current song, an activity can bind to the service by calling {@link 715android.content.Context#bindService bindService()}. In cases like this, {@link 716android.content.Context#stopService stopService()} or {@link android.app.Service#stopSelf 717stopSelf()} does not actually stop the service until all clients unbind. </p> 718 719 720<h3 id="LifecycleCallbacks">Implementing the lifecycle callbacks</h3> 721 722<p>Like an activity, a service has lifecycle callback methods that you can implement to monitor 723changes in the service's state and perform work at the appropriate times. The following skeleton 724service demonstrates each of the lifecycle methods:</p> 725 726<pre> 727public class ExampleService extends Service { 728 int mStartMode; // indicates how to behave if the service is killed 729 IBinder mBinder; // interface for clients that bind 730 boolean mAllowRebind; // indicates whether onRebind should be used 731 732 @Override 733 public void {@link android.app.Service#onCreate onCreate}() { 734 // The service is being created 735 } 736 @Override 737 public int {@link android.app.Service#onStartCommand onStartCommand}(Intent intent, int flags, int startId) { 738 // The service is starting, due to a call to {@link android.content.Context#startService startService()} 739 return <em>mStartMode</em>; 740 } 741 @Override 742 public IBinder {@link android.app.Service#onBind onBind}(Intent intent) { 743 // A client is binding to the service with {@link android.content.Context#bindService bindService()} 744 return <em>mBinder</em>; 745 } 746 @Override 747 public boolean {@link android.app.Service#onUnbind onUnbind}(Intent intent) { 748 // All clients have unbound with {@link android.content.Context#unbindService unbindService()} 749 return <em>mAllowRebind</em>; 750 } 751 @Override 752 public void {@link android.app.Service#onRebind onRebind}(Intent intent) { 753 // A client is binding to the service with {@link android.content.Context#bindService bindService()}, 754 // after onUnbind() has already been called 755 } 756 @Override 757 public void {@link android.app.Service#onDestroy onDestroy}() { 758 // The service is no longer used and is being destroyed 759 } 760} 761</pre> 762 763<p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> Unlike the activity lifecycle callback methods, you are 764<em>not</em> required to call the superclass implementation of these callback methods.</p> 765 766<img src="{@docRoot}images/service_lifecycle.png" alt="" /> 767<p class="img-caption"><strong>Figure 2.</strong> The service lifecycle. The diagram on the left 768shows the lifecycle when the service is created with {@link android.content.Context#startService 769startService()} and the diagram on the right shows the lifecycle when the service is created 770with {@link android.content.Context#bindService bindService()}.</p> 771 772<p>By implementing these methods, you can monitor two nested loops of the service's lifecycle: </p> 773 774<ul> 775<li>The <strong>entire lifetime</strong> of a service happens between the time {@link 776android.app.Service#onCreate onCreate()} is called and the time {@link 777android.app.Service#onDestroy} returns. Like an activity, a service does its initial setup in 778{@link android.app.Service#onCreate onCreate()} and releases all remaining resources in {@link 779android.app.Service#onDestroy onDestroy()}. For example, a 780music playback service could create the thread where the music will be played in {@link 781android.app.Service#onCreate onCreate()}, then stop the thread in {@link 782android.app.Service#onDestroy onDestroy()}. 783 784<p>The {@link android.app.Service#onCreate onCreate()} and {@link android.app.Service#onDestroy 785onDestroy()} methods are called for all services, whether 786they're created by {@link android.content.Context#startService startService()} or {@link 787android.content.Context#bindService bindService()}.</p></li> 788 789<li>The <strong>active lifetime</strong> of a service begins with a call to either {@link 790android.app.Service#onStartCommand onStartCommand()} or {@link android.app.Service#onBind onBind()}. 791Each method is handed the {@link 792android.content.Intent} that was passed to either {@link android.content.Context#startService 793startService()} or {@link android.content.Context#bindService bindService()}, respectively. 794<p>If the service is started, the active lifetime ends the same time that the entire lifetime 795ends (the service is still active even after {@link android.app.Service#onStartCommand 796onStartCommand()} returns). If the service is bound, the active lifetime ends when {@link 797android.app.Service#onUnbind onUnbind()} returns.</p> 798</li> 799</ul> 800 801<p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> Although a started service is stopped by a call to 802either {@link android.app.Service#stopSelf stopSelf()} or {@link 803android.content.Context#stopService stopService()}, there is not a respective callback for the 804service (there's no {@code onStop()} callback). So, unless the service is bound to a client, 805the system destroys it when the service is stopped—{@link 806android.app.Service#onDestroy onDestroy()} is the only callback received.</p> 807 808<p>Figure 2 illustrates the typical callback methods for a service. Although the figure separates 809services that are created by {@link android.content.Context#startService startService()} from those 810created by {@link android.content.Context#bindService bindService()}, keep 811in mind that any service, no matter how it's started, can potentially allow clients to bind to it. 812So, a service that was initially started with {@link android.app.Service#onStartCommand 813onStartCommand()} (by a client calling {@link android.content.Context#startService startService()}) 814can still receive a call to {@link android.app.Service#onBind onBind()} (when a client calls 815{@link android.content.Context#bindService bindService()}).</p> 816 817<p>For more information about creating a service that provides binding, see the <a 818href="{@docRoot}guide/components/bound-services.html">Bound Services</a> document, 819which includes more information about the {@link android.app.Service#onRebind onRebind()} 820callback method in the section about <a 821href="{@docRoot}guide/components/bound-services.html#Lifecycle">Managing the Lifecycle of 822a Bound Service</a>.</p> 823 824 825<!-- 826<h2>Beginner's Path</h2> 827 828<p>To learn how to query data from the system or other applications (such as contacts or media 829stored on the device), continue with the <b><a 830href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/providers/content-providers.html">Content Providers</a></b> 831document.</p> 832--> 833