Service.java revision ab4a81b3c625e33d04ae8070fcce6b6baee6522c
1/*
2 * Copyright (C) 2006 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
17package android.app;
18
19import android.content.ComponentCallbacks2;
20import android.content.ComponentName;
21import android.content.Intent;
22import android.content.ContextWrapper;
23import android.content.Context;
24import android.content.res.Configuration;
25import android.os.Build;
26import android.os.RemoteException;
27import android.os.IBinder;
28import android.util.Log;
29
30import java.io.FileDescriptor;
31import java.io.PrintWriter;
32
33/**
34 * A Service is an application component representing either an application's desire
35 * to perform a longer-running operation while not interacting with the user
36 * or to supply functionality for other applications to use.  Each service
37 * class must have a corresponding
38 * {@link android.R.styleable#AndroidManifestService <service>}
39 * declaration in its package's <code>AndroidManifest.xml</code>.  Services
40 * can be started with
41 * {@link android.content.Context#startService Context.startService()} and
42 * {@link android.content.Context#bindService Context.bindService()}.
43 *
44 * <p>Note that services, like other application objects, run in the main
45 * thread of their hosting process.  This means that, if your service is going
46 * to do any CPU intensive (such as MP3 playback) or blocking (such as
47 * networking) operations, it should spawn its own thread in which to do that
48 * work.  More information on this can be found in
49 * <a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/fundamentals/processes-and-threads.html">Processes and
50 * Threads</a>.  The {@link IntentService} class is available
51 * as a standard implementation of Service that has its own thread where it
52 * schedules its work to be done.</p>
53 *
54 * <p>Topics covered here:
55 * <ol>
56 * <li><a href="#WhatIsAService">What is a Service?</a>
57 * <li><a href="#ServiceLifecycle">Service Lifecycle</a>
58 * <li><a href="#Permissions">Permissions</a>
59 * <li><a href="#ProcessLifecycle">Process Lifecycle</a>
60 * <li><a href="#LocalServiceSample">Local Service Sample</a>
61 * <li><a href="#RemoteMessengerServiceSample">Remote Messenger Service Sample</a>
62 * </ol>
63 *
64 * <div class="special reference">
65 * <h3>Developer Guides</h3>
66 * <p>For a detailed discussion about how to create services, read the
67 * <a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/fundamentals/services.html">Services</a> developer guide.</p>
68 * </div>
69 *
70 * <a name="WhatIsAService"></a>
71 * <h3>What is a Service?</h3>
72 *
73 * <p>Most confusion about the Service class actually revolves around what
74 * it is <em>not</em>:</p>
75 *
76 * <ul>
77 * <li> A Service is <b>not</b> a separate process.  The Service object itself
78 * does not imply it is running in its own process; unless otherwise specified,
79 * it runs in the same process as the application it is part of.
80 * <li> A Service is <b>not</b> a thread.  It is not a means itself to do work off
81 * of the main thread (to avoid Application Not Responding errors).
82 * </ul>
83 *
84 * <p>Thus a Service itself is actually very simple, providing two main features:</p>
85 *
86 * <ul>
87 * <li>A facility for the application to tell the system <em>about</em>
88 * something it wants to be doing in the background (even when the user is not
89 * directly interacting with the application).  This corresponds to calls to
90 * {@link android.content.Context#startService Context.startService()}, which
91 * ask the system to schedule work for the service, to be run until the service
92 * or someone else explicitly stop it.
93 * <li>A facility for an application to expose some of its functionality to
94 * other applications.  This corresponds to calls to
95 * {@link android.content.Context#bindService Context.bindService()}, which
96 * allows a long-standing connection to be made to the service in order to
97 * interact with it.
98 * </ul>
99 *
100 * <p>When a Service component is actually created, for either of these reasons,
101 * all that the system actually does is instantiate the component
102 * and call its {@link #onCreate} and any other appropriate callbacks on the
103 * main thread.  It is up to the Service to implement these with the appropriate
104 * behavior, such as creating a secondary thread in which it does its work.</p>
105 *
106 * <p>Note that because Service itself is so simple, you can make your
107 * interaction with it as simple or complicated as you want: from treating it
108 * as a local Java object that you make direct method calls on (as illustrated
109 * by <a href="#LocalServiceSample">Local Service Sample</a>), to providing
110 * a full remoteable interface using AIDL.</p>
111 *
112 * <a name="ServiceLifecycle"></a>
113 * <h3>Service Lifecycle</h3>
114 *
115 * <p>There are two reasons that a service can be run by the system.  If someone
116 * calls {@link android.content.Context#startService Context.startService()} then the system will
117 * retrieve the service (creating it and calling its {@link #onCreate} method
118 * if needed) and then call its {@link #onStartCommand} method with the
119 * arguments supplied by the client.  The service will at this point continue
120 * running until {@link android.content.Context#stopService Context.stopService()} or
121 * {@link #stopSelf()} is called.  Note that multiple calls to
122 * Context.startService() do not nest (though they do result in multiple corresponding
123 * calls to onStartCommand()), so no matter how many times it is started a service
124 * will be stopped once Context.stopService() or stopSelf() is called; however,
125 * services can use their {@link #stopSelf(int)} method to ensure the service is
126 * not stopped until started intents have been processed.
127 *
128 * <p>For started services, there are two additional major modes of operation
129 * they can decide to run in, depending on the value they return from
130 * onStartCommand(): {@link #START_STICKY} is used for services that are
131 * explicitly started and stopped as needed, while {@link #START_NOT_STICKY}
132 * or {@link #START_REDELIVER_INTENT} are used for services that should only
133 * remain running while processing any commands sent to them.  See the linked
134 * documentation for more detail on the semantics.
135 *
136 * <p>Clients can also use {@link android.content.Context#bindService Context.bindService()} to
137 * obtain a persistent connection to a service.  This likewise creates the
138 * service if it is not already running (calling {@link #onCreate} while
139 * doing so), but does not call onStartCommand().  The client will receive the
140 * {@link android.os.IBinder} object that the service returns from its
141 * {@link #onBind} method, allowing the client to then make calls back
142 * to the service.  The service will remain running as long as the connection
143 * is established (whether or not the client retains a reference on the
144 * service's IBinder).  Usually the IBinder returned is for a complex
145 * interface that has been <a href="{@docRoot}guide/components/aidl.html">written
146 * in aidl</a>.
147 *
148 * <p>A service can be both started and have connections bound to it.  In such
149 * a case, the system will keep the service running as long as either it is
150 * started <em>or</em> there are one or more connections to it with the
151 * {@link android.content.Context#BIND_AUTO_CREATE Context.BIND_AUTO_CREATE}
152 * flag.  Once neither
153 * of these situations hold, the service's {@link #onDestroy} method is called
154 * and the service is effectively terminated.  All cleanup (stopping threads,
155 * unregistering receivers) should be complete upon returning from onDestroy().
156 *
157 * <a name="Permissions"></a>
158 * <h3>Permissions</h3>
159 *
160 * <p>Global access to a service can be enforced when it is declared in its
161 * manifest's {@link android.R.styleable#AndroidManifestService &lt;service&gt;}
162 * tag.  By doing so, other applications will need to declare a corresponding
163 * {@link android.R.styleable#AndroidManifestUsesPermission &lt;uses-permission&gt;}
164 * element in their own manifest to be able to start, stop, or bind to
165 * the service.
166 *
167 * <p>As of {@link android.os.Build.VERSION_CODES#GINGERBREAD}, when using
168 * {@link Context#startService(Intent) Context.startService(Intent)}, you can
169 * also set {@link Intent#FLAG_GRANT_READ_URI_PERMISSION
170 * Intent.FLAG_GRANT_READ_URI_PERMISSION} and/or {@link Intent#FLAG_GRANT_WRITE_URI_PERMISSION
171 * Intent.FLAG_GRANT_WRITE_URI_PERMISSION} on the Intent.  This will grant the
172 * Service temporary access to the specific URIs in the Intent.  Access will
173 * remain until the Service has called {@link #stopSelf(int)} for that start
174 * command or a later one, or until the Service has been completely stopped.
175 * This works for granting access to the other apps that have not requested
176 * the permission protecting the Service, or even when the Service is not
177 * exported at all.
178 *
179 * <p>In addition, a service can protect individual IPC calls into it with
180 * permissions, by calling the
181 * {@link #checkCallingPermission}
182 * method before executing the implementation of that call.
183 *
184 * <p>See the <a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/security/security.html">Security and Permissions</a>
185 * document for more information on permissions and security in general.
186 *
187 * <a name="ProcessLifecycle"></a>
188 * <h3>Process Lifecycle</h3>
189 *
190 * <p>The Android system will attempt to keep the process hosting a service
191 * around as long as the service has been started or has clients bound to it.
192 * When running low on memory and needing to kill existing processes, the
193 * priority of a process hosting the service will be the higher of the
194 * following possibilities:
195 *
196 * <ul>
197 * <li><p>If the service is currently executing code in its
198 * {@link #onCreate onCreate()}, {@link #onStartCommand onStartCommand()},
199 * or {@link #onDestroy onDestroy()} methods, then the hosting process will
200 * be a foreground process to ensure this code can execute without
201 * being killed.
202 * <li><p>If the service has been started, then its hosting process is considered
203 * to be less important than any processes that are currently visible to the
204 * user on-screen, but more important than any process not visible.  Because
205 * only a few processes are generally visible to the user, this means that
206 * the service should not be killed except in low memory conditions.  However, since
207 * the user is not directly aware of a background service, in that state it <em>is</em>
208 * considered a valid candidate to kill, and you should be prepared for this to
209 * happen.  In particular, long-running services will be increasingly likely to
210 * kill and are guaranteed to be killed (and restarted if appropriate) if they
211 * remain started long enough.
212 * <li><p>If there are clients bound to the service, then the service's hosting
213 * process is never less important than the most important client.  That is,
214 * if one of its clients is visible to the user, then the service itself is
215 * considered to be visible.  The way a client's importance impacts the service's
216 * importance can be adjusted through {@link Context#BIND_ABOVE_CLIENT},
217 * {@link Context#BIND_ALLOW_OOM_MANAGEMENT}, {@link Context#BIND_WAIVE_PRIORITY},
218 * {@link Context#BIND_IMPORTANT}, and {@link Context#BIND_ADJUST_WITH_ACTIVITY}.
219 * <li><p>A started service can use the {@link #startForeground(int, Notification)}
220 * API to put the service in a foreground state, where the system considers
221 * it to be something the user is actively aware of and thus not a candidate
222 * for killing when low on memory.  (It is still theoretically possible for
223 * the service to be killed under extreme memory pressure from the current
224 * foreground application, but in practice this should not be a concern.)
225 * </ul>
226 *
227 * <p>Note this means that most of the time your service is running, it may
228 * be killed by the system if it is under heavy memory pressure.  If this
229 * happens, the system will later try to restart the service.  An important
230 * consequence of this is that if you implement {@link #onStartCommand onStartCommand()}
231 * to schedule work to be done asynchronously or in another thread, then you
232 * may want to use {@link #START_FLAG_REDELIVERY} to have the system
233 * re-deliver an Intent for you so that it does not get lost if your service
234 * is killed while processing it.
235 *
236 * <p>Other application components running in the same process as the service
237 * (such as an {@link android.app.Activity}) can, of course, increase the
238 * importance of the overall
239 * process beyond just the importance of the service itself.
240 *
241 * <a name="LocalServiceSample"></a>
242 * <h3>Local Service Sample</h3>
243 *
244 * <p>One of the most common uses of a Service is as a secondary component
245 * running alongside other parts of an application, in the same process as
246 * the rest of the components.  All components of an .apk run in the same
247 * process unless explicitly stated otherwise, so this is a typical situation.
248 *
249 * <p>When used in this way, by assuming the
250 * components are in the same process, you can greatly simplify the interaction
251 * between them: clients of the service can simply cast the IBinder they
252 * receive from it to a concrete class published by the service.
253 *
254 * <p>An example of this use of a Service is shown here.  First is the Service
255 * itself, publishing a custom class when bound:
256 *
257 * {@sample development/samples/ApiDemos/src/com/example/android/apis/app/LocalService.java
258 *      service}
259 *
260 * <p>With that done, one can now write client code that directly accesses the
261 * running service, such as:
262 *
263 * {@sample development/samples/ApiDemos/src/com/example/android/apis/app/LocalServiceActivities.java
264 *      bind}
265 *
266 * <a name="RemoteMessengerServiceSample"></a>
267 * <h3>Remote Messenger Service Sample</h3>
268 *
269 * <p>If you need to be able to write a Service that can perform complicated
270 * communication with clients in remote processes (beyond simply the use of
271 * {@link Context#startService(Intent) Context.startService} to send
272 * commands to it), then you can use the {@link android.os.Messenger} class
273 * instead of writing full AIDL files.
274 *
275 * <p>An example of a Service that uses Messenger as its client interface
276 * is shown here.  First is the Service itself, publishing a Messenger to
277 * an internal Handler when bound:
278 *
279 * {@sample development/samples/ApiDemos/src/com/example/android/apis/app/MessengerService.java
280 *      service}
281 *
282 * <p>If we want to make this service run in a remote process (instead of the
283 * standard one for its .apk), we can use <code>android:process</code> in its
284 * manifest tag to specify one:
285 *
286 * {@sample development/samples/ApiDemos/AndroidManifest.xml remote_service_declaration}
287 *
288 * <p>Note that the name "remote" chosen here is arbitrary, and you can use
289 * other names if you want additional processes.  The ':' prefix appends the
290 * name to your package's standard process name.
291 *
292 * <p>With that done, clients can now bind to the service and send messages
293 * to it.  Note that this allows clients to register with it to receive
294 * messages back as well:
295 *
296 * {@sample development/samples/ApiDemos/src/com/example/android/apis/app/MessengerServiceActivities.java
297 *      bind}
298 */
299public abstract class Service extends ContextWrapper implements ComponentCallbacks2 {
300    private static final String TAG = "Service";
301
302    public Service() {
303        super(null);
304    }
305
306    /** Return the application that owns this service. */
307    public final Application getApplication() {
308        return mApplication;
309    }
310
311    /**
312     * Called by the system when the service is first created.  Do not call this method directly.
313     */
314    public void onCreate() {
315    }
316
317    /**
318     * @deprecated Implement {@link #onStartCommand(Intent, int, int)} instead.
319     */
320    @Deprecated
321    public void onStart(Intent intent, int startId) {
322    }
323
324    /**
325     * Bits returned by {@link #onStartCommand} describing how to continue
326     * the service if it is killed.  May be {@link #START_STICKY},
327     * {@link #START_NOT_STICKY}, {@link #START_REDELIVER_INTENT},
328     * or {@link #START_STICKY_COMPATIBILITY}.
329     */
330    public static final int START_CONTINUATION_MASK = 0xf;
331
332    /**
333     * Constant to return from {@link #onStartCommand}: compatibility
334     * version of {@link #START_STICKY} that does not guarantee that
335     * {@link #onStartCommand} will be called again after being killed.
336     */
337    public static final int START_STICKY_COMPATIBILITY = 0;
338
339    /**
340     * Constant to return from {@link #onStartCommand}: if this service's
341     * process is killed while it is started (after returning from
342     * {@link #onStartCommand}), then leave it in the started state but
343     * don't retain this delivered intent.  Later the system will try to
344     * re-create the service.  Because it is in the started state, it will
345     * guarantee to call {@link #onStartCommand} after creating the new
346     * service instance; if there are not any pending start commands to be
347     * delivered to the service, it will be called with a null intent
348     * object, so you must take care to check for this.
349     *
350     * <p>This mode makes sense for things that will be explicitly started
351     * and stopped to run for arbitrary periods of time, such as a service
352     * performing background music playback.
353     */
354    public static final int START_STICKY = 1;
355
356    /**
357     * Constant to return from {@link #onStartCommand}: if this service's
358     * process is killed while it is started (after returning from
359     * {@link #onStartCommand}), and there are no new start intents to
360     * deliver to it, then take the service out of the started state and
361     * don't recreate until a future explicit call to
362     * {@link Context#startService Context.startService(Intent)}.  The
363     * service will not receive a {@link #onStartCommand(Intent, int, int)}
364     * call with a null Intent because it will not be re-started if there
365     * are no pending Intents to deliver.
366     *
367     * <p>This mode makes sense for things that want to do some work as a
368     * result of being started, but can be stopped when under memory pressure
369     * and will explicit start themselves again later to do more work.  An
370     * example of such a service would be one that polls for data from
371     * a server: it could schedule an alarm to poll every N minutes by having
372     * the alarm start its service.  When its {@link #onStartCommand} is
373     * called from the alarm, it schedules a new alarm for N minutes later,
374     * and spawns a thread to do its networking.  If its process is killed
375     * while doing that check, the service will not be restarted until the
376     * alarm goes off.
377     */
378    public static final int START_NOT_STICKY = 2;
379
380    /**
381     * Constant to return from {@link #onStartCommand}: if this service's
382     * process is killed while it is started (after returning from
383     * {@link #onStartCommand}), then it will be scheduled for a restart
384     * and the last delivered Intent re-delivered to it again via
385     * {@link #onStartCommand}.  This Intent will remain scheduled for
386     * redelivery until the service calls {@link #stopSelf(int)} with the
387     * start ID provided to {@link #onStartCommand}.  The
388     * service will not receive a {@link #onStartCommand(Intent, int, int)}
389     * call with a null Intent because it will will only be re-started if
390     * it is not finished processing all Intents sent to it (and any such
391     * pending events will be delivered at the point of restart).
392     */
393    public static final int START_REDELIVER_INTENT = 3;
394
395    /**
396     * Special constant for reporting that we are done processing
397     * {@link #onTaskRemoved(Intent)}.
398     * @hide
399     */
400    public static final int START_TASK_REMOVED_COMPLETE = 1000;
401
402    /**
403     * This flag is set in {@link #onStartCommand} if the Intent is a
404     * re-delivery of a previously delivered intent, because the service
405     * had previously returned {@link #START_REDELIVER_INTENT} but had been
406     * killed before calling {@link #stopSelf(int)} for that Intent.
407     */
408    public static final int START_FLAG_REDELIVERY = 0x0001;
409
410    /**
411     * This flag is set in {@link #onStartCommand} if the Intent is a
412     * retry because the original attempt never got to or returned from
413     * {@link #onStartCommand(Intent, int, int)}.
414     */
415    public static final int START_FLAG_RETRY = 0x0002;
416
417    /**
418     * Called by the system every time a client explicitly starts the service by calling
419     * {@link android.content.Context#startService}, providing the arguments it supplied and a
420     * unique integer token representing the start request.  Do not call this method directly.
421     *
422     * <p>For backwards compatibility, the default implementation calls
423     * {@link #onStart} and returns either {@link #START_STICKY}
424     * or {@link #START_STICKY_COMPATIBILITY}.
425     *
426     * <p>If you need your application to run on platform versions prior to API
427     * level 5, you can use the following model to handle the older {@link #onStart}
428     * callback in that case.  The <code>handleCommand</code> method is implemented by
429     * you as appropriate:
430     *
431     * {@sample development/samples/ApiDemos/src/com/example/android/apis/app/ForegroundService.java
432     *   start_compatibility}
433     *
434     * <p class="caution">Note that the system calls this on your
435     * service's main thread.  A service's main thread is the same
436     * thread where UI operations take place for Activities running in the
437     * same process.  You should always avoid stalling the main
438     * thread's event loop.  When doing long-running operations,
439     * network calls, or heavy disk I/O, you should kick off a new
440     * thread, or use {@link android.os.AsyncTask}.</p>
441     *
442     * @param intent The Intent supplied to {@link android.content.Context#startService},
443     * as given.  This may be null if the service is being restarted after
444     * its process has gone away, and it had previously returned anything
445     * except {@link #START_STICKY_COMPATIBILITY}.
446     * @param flags Additional data about this start request.  Currently either
447     * 0, {@link #START_FLAG_REDELIVERY}, or {@link #START_FLAG_RETRY}.
448     * @param startId A unique integer representing this specific request to
449     * start.  Use with {@link #stopSelfResult(int)}.
450     *
451     * @return The return value indicates what semantics the system should
452     * use for the service's current started state.  It may be one of the
453     * constants associated with the {@link #START_CONTINUATION_MASK} bits.
454     *
455     * @see #stopSelfResult(int)
456     */
457    public int onStartCommand(Intent intent, int flags, int startId) {
458        onStart(intent, startId);
459        return mStartCompatibility ? START_STICKY_COMPATIBILITY : START_STICKY;
460    }
461
462    /**
463     * Called by the system to notify a Service that it is no longer used and is being removed.  The
464     * service should clean up any resources it holds (threads, registered
465     * receivers, etc) at this point.  Upon return, there will be no more calls
466     * in to this Service object and it is effectively dead.  Do not call this method directly.
467     */
468    public void onDestroy() {
469    }
470
471    public void onConfigurationChanged(Configuration newConfig) {
472    }
473
474    public void onLowMemory() {
475    }
476
477    public void onTrimMemory(int level) {
478    }
479
480    /**
481     * Return the communication channel to the service.  May return null if
482     * clients can not bind to the service.  The returned
483     * {@link android.os.IBinder} is usually for a complex interface
484     * that has been <a href="{@docRoot}guide/components/aidl.html">described using
485     * aidl</a>.
486     *
487     * <p><em>Note that unlike other application components, calls on to the
488     * IBinder interface returned here may not happen on the main thread
489     * of the process</em>.  More information about the main thread can be found in
490     * <a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/fundamentals/processes-and-threads.html">Processes and
491     * Threads</a>.</p>
492     *
493     * @param intent The Intent that was used to bind to this service,
494     * as given to {@link android.content.Context#bindService
495     * Context.bindService}.  Note that any extras that were included with
496     * the Intent at that point will <em>not</em> be seen here.
497     *
498     * @return Return an IBinder through which clients can call on to the
499     *         service.
500     */
501    public abstract IBinder onBind(Intent intent);
502
503    /**
504     * Called when all clients have disconnected from a particular interface
505     * published by the service.  The default implementation does nothing and
506     * returns false.
507     *
508     * @param intent The Intent that was used to bind to this service,
509     * as given to {@link android.content.Context#bindService
510     * Context.bindService}.  Note that any extras that were included with
511     * the Intent at that point will <em>not</em> be seen here.
512     *
513     * @return Return true if you would like to have the service's
514     * {@link #onRebind} method later called when new clients bind to it.
515     */
516    public boolean onUnbind(Intent intent) {
517        return false;
518    }
519
520    /**
521     * Called when new clients have connected to the service, after it had
522     * previously been notified that all had disconnected in its
523     * {@link #onUnbind}.  This will only be called if the implementation
524     * of {@link #onUnbind} was overridden to return true.
525     *
526     * @param intent The Intent that was used to bind to this service,
527     * as given to {@link android.content.Context#bindService
528     * Context.bindService}.  Note that any extras that were included with
529     * the Intent at that point will <em>not</em> be seen here.
530     */
531    public void onRebind(Intent intent) {
532    }
533
534    /**
535     * This is called if the service is currently running and the user has
536     * removed a task that comes from the service's application.  If you have
537     * set {@link android.content.pm.ServiceInfo#FLAG_STOP_WITH_TASK ServiceInfo.FLAG_STOP_WITH_TASK}
538     * then you will not receive this callback; instead, the service will simply
539     * be stopped.
540     *
541     * @param rootIntent The original root Intent that was used to launch
542     * the task that is being removed.
543     */
544    public void onTaskRemoved(Intent rootIntent) {
545    }
546
547    /**
548     * Stop the service, if it was previously started.  This is the same as
549     * calling {@link android.content.Context#stopService} for this particular service.
550     *
551     * @see #stopSelfResult(int)
552     */
553    public final void stopSelf() {
554        stopSelf(-1);
555    }
556
557    /**
558     * Old version of {@link #stopSelfResult} that doesn't return a result.
559     *
560     * @see #stopSelfResult
561     */
562    public final void stopSelf(int startId) {
563        if (mActivityManager == null) {
564            return;
565        }
566        try {
567            mActivityManager.stopServiceToken(
568                    new ComponentName(this, mClassName), mToken, startId);
569        } catch (RemoteException ex) {
570        }
571    }
572
573    /**
574     * Stop the service if the most recent time it was started was
575     * <var>startId</var>.  This is the same as calling {@link
576     * android.content.Context#stopService} for this particular service but allows you to
577     * safely avoid stopping if there is a start request from a client that you
578     * haven't yet seen in {@link #onStart}.
579     *
580     * <p><em>Be careful about ordering of your calls to this function.</em>.
581     * If you call this function with the most-recently received ID before
582     * you have called it for previously received IDs, the service will be
583     * immediately stopped anyway.  If you may end up processing IDs out
584     * of order (such as by dispatching them on separate threads), then you
585     * are responsible for stopping them in the same order you received them.</p>
586     *
587     * @param startId The most recent start identifier received in {@link
588     *                #onStart}.
589     * @return Returns true if the startId matches the last start request
590     * and the service will be stopped, else false.
591     *
592     * @see #stopSelf()
593     */
594    public final boolean stopSelfResult(int startId) {
595        if (mActivityManager == null) {
596            return false;
597        }
598        try {
599            return mActivityManager.stopServiceToken(
600                    new ComponentName(this, mClassName), mToken, startId);
601        } catch (RemoteException ex) {
602        }
603        return false;
604    }
605
606    /**
607     * @deprecated This is a now a no-op, use
608     * {@link #startForeground(int, Notification)} instead.  This method
609     * has been turned into a no-op rather than simply being deprecated
610     * because analysis of numerous poorly behaving devices has shown that
611     * increasingly often the trouble is being caused in part by applications
612     * that are abusing it.  Thus, given a choice between introducing
613     * problems in existing applications using this API (by allowing them to
614     * be killed when they would like to avoid it), vs allowing the performance
615     * of the entire system to be decreased, this method was deemed less
616     * important.
617     *
618     * @hide
619     */
620    @Deprecated
621    public final void setForeground(boolean isForeground) {
622        Log.w(TAG, "setForeground: ignoring old API call on " + getClass().getName());
623    }
624
625    /**
626     * Make this service run in the foreground, supplying the ongoing
627     * notification to be shown to the user while in this state.
628     * By default services are background, meaning that if the system needs to
629     * kill them to reclaim more memory (such as to display a large page in a
630     * web browser), they can be killed without too much harm.  You can set this
631     * flag if killing your service would be disruptive to the user, such as
632     * if your service is performing background music playback, so the user
633     * would notice if their music stopped playing.
634     *
635     * <p>If you need your application to run on platform versions prior to API
636     * level 5, you can use the following model to call the the older setForeground()
637     * or this modern method as appropriate:
638     *
639     * {@sample development/samples/ApiDemos/src/com/example/android/apis/app/ForegroundService.java
640     *   foreground_compatibility}
641     *
642     * @param id The identifier for this notification as per
643     * {@link NotificationManager#notify(int, Notification)
644     * NotificationManager.notify(int, Notification)}; must not be 0.
645     * @param notification The Notification to be displayed.
646     *
647     * @see #stopForeground(boolean)
648     */
649    public final void startForeground(int id, Notification notification) {
650        try {
651            mActivityManager.setServiceForeground(
652                    new ComponentName(this, mClassName), mToken, id,
653                    notification, true);
654        } catch (RemoteException ex) {
655        }
656    }
657
658    /**
659     * Remove this service from foreground state, allowing it to be killed if
660     * more memory is needed.
661     * @param removeNotification If true, the notification previously provided
662     * to {@link #startForeground} will be removed.  Otherwise it will remain
663     * until a later call removes it (or the service is destroyed).
664     * @see #startForeground(int, Notification)
665     */
666    public final void stopForeground(boolean removeNotification) {
667        try {
668            mActivityManager.setServiceForeground(
669                    new ComponentName(this, mClassName), mToken, 0, null,
670                    removeNotification);
671        } catch (RemoteException ex) {
672        }
673    }
674
675    /**
676     * Print the Service's state into the given stream.  This gets invoked if
677     * you run "adb shell dumpsys activity service &lt;yourservicename&gt;"
678     * (note that for this command to work, the service must be running, and
679     * you must specify a fully-qualified service name).
680     * This is distinct from "dumpsys &lt;servicename&gt;", which only works for
681     * named system services and which invokes the {@link IBinder#dump} method
682     * on the {@link IBinder} interface registered with ServiceManager.
683     *
684     * @param fd The raw file descriptor that the dump is being sent to.
685     * @param writer The PrintWriter to which you should dump your state.  This will be
686     * closed for you after you return.
687     * @param args additional arguments to the dump request.
688     */
689    protected void dump(FileDescriptor fd, PrintWriter writer, String[] args) {
690        writer.println("nothing to dump");
691    }
692
693    // ------------------ Internal API ------------------
694
695    /**
696     * @hide
697     */
698    public final void attach(
699            Context context,
700            ActivityThread thread, String className, IBinder token,
701            Application application, Object activityManager) {
702        attachBaseContext(context);
703        mThread = thread;           // NOTE:  unused - remove?
704        mClassName = className;
705        mToken = token;
706        mApplication = application;
707        mActivityManager = (IActivityManager)activityManager;
708        mStartCompatibility = getApplicationInfo().targetSdkVersion
709                < Build.VERSION_CODES.ECLAIR;
710    }
711
712    final String getClassName() {
713        return mClassName;
714    }
715
716    // set by the thread after the constructor and before onCreate(Bundle icicle) is called.
717    private ActivityThread mThread = null;
718    private String mClassName = null;
719    private IBinder mToken = null;
720    private Application mApplication = null;
721    private IActivityManager mActivityManager = null;
722    private boolean mStartCompatibility = false;
723}
724