Pro Android with Kotlin
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@de android telegram Pro Android with Kotlin Developing Modern Mobile
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CHAPTER 4: Services Starting with Android 8.0 (API level 26), a couple of limitations hold if you are instantiating background services the old way, and a shift toward using the JobScheduler methodology is recommended. Apps running on Android 8.0 or newer are considered to run in the background, if none of the following is true: The app has a visible activity, currently active or paused. The app has a foreground service, in other words, a service has called startForegound() during its operation. Another foreground app is connected to it, either by using one of its services or by using it as a content provider. Once an Android 8.0 app starts its life as a background app or is switched to being a background app, it has a window of a couple of minutes before it is considered idle. Once idle, the background services of an app get stopped. As an exception to this, a background app will go on a whitelist and is allowed to execute background services if it handles tasks visible to the user. Examples include handling a “Firebase Cloud Messaging” message, receiving a broadcast such as an SMS or MMS message, executing a PendingIntent from a notification (an intent to be executed by a different app with the originating app’s permission), or starting a VpnService. Most things that were formerly accomplished by executing background jobs as of Android 8.0 are considered to be eligible to be handled by the JobScheduler API; see Chapter 8 for more information. Declaring Services Services get declared inside the app’s AndroidManifest.xml file as follows: android:enabled="true" android:exported="true"> See Table 4-1 for the flags available. |
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