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      1 /*
      2  * Copyright (C) 2008 The Android Open Source Project
      3  *
      4  * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
      5  * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
      6  * You may obtain a copy of the License at
      7  *
      8  *      http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
      9  *
     10  * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
     11  * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
     12  * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
     13  * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
     14  * limitations under the License.
     15  */
     16 
     17 package android.app;
     18 
     19 import android.annotation.WorkerThread;
     20 import android.annotation.Nullable;
     21 import android.content.Intent;
     22 import android.os.Handler;
     23 import android.os.HandlerThread;
     24 import android.os.IBinder;
     25 import android.os.Looper;
     26 import android.os.Message;
     27 
     28 /**
     29  * IntentService is a base class for {@link Service}s that handle asynchronous
     30  * requests (expressed as {@link Intent}s) on demand.  Clients send requests
     31  * through {@link android.content.Context#startService(Intent)} calls; the
     32  * service is started as needed, handles each Intent in turn using a worker
     33  * thread, and stops itself when it runs out of work.
     34  *
     35  * <p>This "work queue processor" pattern is commonly used to offload tasks
     36  * from an application's main thread.  The IntentService class exists to
     37  * simplify this pattern and take care of the mechanics.  To use it, extend
     38  * IntentService and implement {@link #onHandleIntent(Intent)}.  IntentService
     39  * will receive the Intents, launch a worker thread, and stop the service as
     40  * appropriate.
     41  *
     42  * <p>All requests are handled on a single worker thread -- they may take as
     43  * long as necessary (and will not block the application's main loop), but
     44  * only one request will be processed at a time.
     45  *
     46  * <div class="special reference">
     47  * <h3>Developer Guides</h3>
     48  * <p>For a detailed discussion about how to create services, read the
     49  * <a href="{@docRoot}guide/components/services.html">Services</a> developer
     50  * guide.</p>
     51  * </div>
     52  *
     53  * @see android.os.AsyncTask
     54  */
     55 public abstract class IntentService extends Service {
     56     private volatile Looper mServiceLooper;
     57     private volatile ServiceHandler mServiceHandler;
     58     private String mName;
     59     private boolean mRedelivery;
     60 
     61     private final class ServiceHandler extends Handler {
     62         public ServiceHandler(Looper looper) {
     63             super(looper);
     64         }
     65 
     66         @Override
     67         public void handleMessage(Message msg) {
     68             onHandleIntent((Intent)msg.obj);
     69             stopSelf(msg.arg1);
     70         }
     71     }
     72 
     73     /**
     74      * Creates an IntentService.  Invoked by your subclass's constructor.
     75      *
     76      * @param name Used to name the worker thread, important only for debugging.
     77      */
     78     public IntentService(String name) {
     79         super();
     80         mName = name;
     81     }
     82 
     83     /**
     84      * Sets intent redelivery preferences.  Usually called from the constructor
     85      * with your preferred semantics.
     86      *
     87      * <p>If enabled is true,
     88      * {@link #onStartCommand(Intent, int, int)} will return
     89      * {@link Service#START_REDELIVER_INTENT}, so if this process dies before
     90      * {@link #onHandleIntent(Intent)} returns, the process will be restarted
     91      * and the intent redelivered.  If multiple Intents have been sent, only
     92      * the most recent one is guaranteed to be redelivered.
     93      *
     94      * <p>If enabled is false (the default),
     95      * {@link #onStartCommand(Intent, int, int)} will return
     96      * {@link Service#START_NOT_STICKY}, and if the process dies, the Intent
     97      * dies along with it.
     98      */
     99     public void setIntentRedelivery(boolean enabled) {
    100         mRedelivery = enabled;
    101     }
    102 
    103     @Override
    104     public void onCreate() {
    105         // TODO: It would be nice to have an option to hold a partial wakelock
    106         // during processing, and to have a static startService(Context, Intent)
    107         // method that would launch the service & hand off a wakelock.
    108 
    109         super.onCreate();
    110         HandlerThread thread = new HandlerThread("IntentService[" + mName + "]");
    111         thread.start();
    112 
    113         mServiceLooper = thread.getLooper();
    114         mServiceHandler = new ServiceHandler(mServiceLooper);
    115     }
    116 
    117     @Override
    118     public void onStart(@Nullable Intent intent, int startId) {
    119         Message msg = mServiceHandler.obtainMessage();
    120         msg.arg1 = startId;
    121         msg.obj = intent;
    122         mServiceHandler.sendMessage(msg);
    123     }
    124 
    125     /**
    126      * You should not override this method for your IntentService. Instead,
    127      * override {@link #onHandleIntent}, which the system calls when the IntentService
    128      * receives a start request.
    129      * @see android.app.Service#onStartCommand
    130      */
    131     @Override
    132     public int onStartCommand(@Nullable Intent intent, int flags, int startId) {
    133         onStart(intent, startId);
    134         return mRedelivery ? START_REDELIVER_INTENT : START_NOT_STICKY;
    135     }
    136 
    137     @Override
    138     public void onDestroy() {
    139         mServiceLooper.quit();
    140     }
    141 
    142     /**
    143      * Unless you provide binding for your service, you don't need to implement this
    144      * method, because the default implementation returns null.
    145      * @see android.app.Service#onBind
    146      */
    147     @Override
    148     @Nullable
    149     public IBinder onBind(Intent intent) {
    150         return null;
    151     }
    152 
    153     /**
    154      * This method is invoked on the worker thread with a request to process.
    155      * Only one Intent is processed at a time, but the processing happens on a
    156      * worker thread that runs independently from other application logic.
    157      * So, if this code takes a long time, it will hold up other requests to
    158      * the same IntentService, but it will not hold up anything else.
    159      * When all requests have been handled, the IntentService stops itself,
    160      * so you should not call {@link #stopSelf}.
    161      *
    162      * @param intent The value passed to {@link
    163      *               android.content.Context#startService(Intent)}.
    164      *               This may be null if the service is being restarted after
    165      *               its process has gone away; see
    166      *               {@link android.app.Service#onStartCommand}
    167      *               for details.
    168      */
    169     @WorkerThread
    170     protected abstract void onHandleIntent(@Nullable Intent intent);
    171 }
    172