page.title=Keeping the Device Awake

trainingnavtop=true

@jd:body

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<h2>This lesson teaches you to</h2>
<ol>
  <li><a href="#screen">Keep the Screen On</a></li>
  <li><a href="#cpu">Keep the CPU On</a></li>
</ol>

<h2>Try it out</h2>

<div class="download-box">
  <a href="{@docRoot}shareables/training/Scheduler.zip"
class="button">Download the sample</a>
 <p class="filename">Scheduler.zip</p>
</div>

</div>
</div>


<p>To avoid draining the battery, an Android device that is left idle quickly falls asleep.
However, there are times when an application needs to wake up the screen or the CPU
and keep it awake to complete some work.</p>

<p>The approach you take depends on the needs of your app. However, a general rule of thumb
is that you should use the most lightweight approach possible for your app, to minimize your
app's impact on system resources. The following sections describe how to handle the cases
where the device's default sleep behavior is incompatible with the requirements of your app.</p>

<h2 id="screen">Keep the Screen On</h2>

<p>Certain apps need to keep the screen turned on, such as games or movie apps. The best
way to do this is to use the
{@link android.view.WindowManager.LayoutParams#FLAG_KEEP_SCREEN_ON FLAG_KEEP_SCREEN_ON}
in your activity (and only in an activity, never in a service or
other app component). For example:</p>

<pre>public class MainActivity extends Activity {
  &#64;Override
  protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
    super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
    setContentView(R.layout.activity_main);
    <strong>getWindow().addFlags(WindowManager.LayoutParams.FLAG_KEEP_SCREEN_ON);</strong>
  }</pre>

<p>The advantage of this approach is that unlike wake locks (discussed in <a href="#cpu">
Keep the CPU On</a>), it doesn't require special permission, and the platform correctly
manages the user moving between applications, without your app needing to worry about
releasing unused resources.</p>

<p>Another way to implement this is in your application's layout XML file, by using the
{@link android.R.attr#keepScreenOn android:keepScreenOn} attribute:</p>

<pre>&lt;RelativeLayout xmlns:android=&quot;http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android&quot;
    android:layout_width=&quot;match_parent&quot;
    android:layout_height=&quot;match_parent&quot;
    <strong>android:keepScreenOn=&quot;true&quot;&gt;</strong>
    ...
&lt;/RelativeLayout&gt;</pre>

<p>Using <code>android:keepScreenOn=&quot;true&quot;</code> is equivalent to using
{@link android.view.WindowManager.LayoutParams#FLAG_KEEP_SCREEN_ON FLAG_KEEP_SCREEN_ON}.
You can use whichever approach is best for your app. The advantage of setting the flag
programmatically in your activity is that it gives you the option of programmatically
clearing the flag later and thereby allowing the screen to turn off.</p>

<p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> You don't need to clear the
{@link android.view.WindowManager.LayoutParams#FLAG_KEEP_SCREEN_ON FLAG_KEEP_SCREEN_ON}
flag unless you no longer want the screen to
stay on in your running application (for example, if you want the screen to time out
after a certain period of inactivity). The window manager takes care of
ensuring that the right things happen when the app goes into the background or returns to
the foreground. But if you want to explicitly clear the flag and thereby allow the screen to
turn off again, use {@link android.view.Window#clearFlags clearFlags()}:
{@code getWindow().clearFlags(WindowManager.LayoutParams.FLAG_KEEP_SCREEN_ON)}.</p>

<h2 id="cpu">Keep the CPU On</h2>

<div class="sidebox-wrapper">
<div class="sidebox">
  <h2>Alternatives to using wake locks</h2>

<ul>

<li>If your app is performing long-running HTTP downloads, consider using
{@link android.app.DownloadManager}.</li>

<li>If your app is synchronizing data from an external server, consider creating a
<a href="{@docRoot}training/sync-adapters/index.html">sync
adapter</a>.</li>

<li>If your app relies on background services, consider using
<a href="{@docRoot}training/scheduling/alarms.html">repeating alarms</a>
or <a href="{@docRoot}google/gcm/index.html">Google Cloud Messaging</a> to trigger these
services at specific intervals.</li>

</ul>
</div>
</div>


<p>If you need to keep the CPU running in order to complete some work before the device goes
to sleep, you can use a {@link android.os.PowerManager} system service feature called
wake locks. Wake locks allow your application to control the power state of the host device.</p>

<p>Creating and holding wake locks can have a dramatic impact on the host device's battery
life. Thus you should use wake locks only when strictly necessary
and hold them for as short a time as possible. For example, you should never need to use a
wake lock in an activity. As described above, if you want
to keep the screen on in your activity, use
{@link android.view.WindowManager.LayoutParams#FLAG_KEEP_SCREEN_ON FLAG_KEEP_SCREEN_ON}.</p>


<p>One legitimate case for using a wake lock might be a background service
that needs to grab a wake lock to keep the CPU running to do work while the screen is off.
Again, though, this practice should be minimized because of its impact on battery life.</p>

<p>To use a wake lock, the first step is to add the {@link android.Manifest.permission#WAKE_LOCK}
 permission to your application's manifest file:</p>

<pre>&lt;uses-permission android:name=&quot;android.permission.WAKE_LOCK&quot; /&gt;</pre>

<p>If your app includes a broadcast receiver that uses a service to do some
work, you can manage your wake lock through a
{@link android.support.v4.content.WakefulBroadcastReceiver}, as described in
<a href="#wakeful">Using a WakefulBroadcastReceiver</a>. This is the preferred approach.
If your app doesn't follow that pattern, here is how you set a wake lock
directly:</p>

<pre>
PowerManager powerManager = (PowerManager) getSystemService(POWER_SERVICE);
WakeLock wakeLock = powerManager.newWakeLock(PowerManager.PARTIAL_WAKE_LOCK,
        "MyWakelockTag");
wakeLock.acquire();</pre>

<p>To release the wake lock, call
{@link android.os.PowerManager.WakeLock#release wakelock.release()}. This releases your
claim to the CPU. It's important to release a wake lock as soon as your app is finished
using it to avoid draining the battery.</p>

<h3 id="wakeful">Using WakefulBroadcastReceiver</h3>

<p>Using a broadcast receiver in conjunction with a service lets you manage the life cycle
of a background task.</p>

<p>A {@link android.support.v4.content.WakefulBroadcastReceiver} is a special type of
broadcast receiver that takes care of
creating and managing a
{@link android.os.PowerManager#PARTIAL_WAKE_LOCK} for your app. A
{@link android.support.v4.content.WakefulBroadcastReceiver}
passes off the work to a {@link android.app.Service}
(typically an
{@link android.app.IntentService}), while ensuring that the device does not
go back to sleep in the transition. If you don't hold a wake lock while transitioning
the work to a service, you are effectively allowing the device to go back to sleep before
the work completes. The net result is that the app might not finish doing the work until
some arbitrary point in the future, which is not what you want.</p>

<p>The first step in using a
{@link android.support.v4.content.WakefulBroadcastReceiver} is to add it to your
manifest, as with any other broadcast receiver:</p>

<pre>&lt;receiver android:name=&quot;.MyWakefulReceiver&quot;&gt;&lt;/receiver&gt;</pre>

<p>The following code starts {@code MyIntentService} with the method
{@link android.support.v4.content.WakefulBroadcastReceiver#startWakefulService startWakefulService()}.
This method is comparable to {@link android.content.Context#startService startService()}, except that
the {@link android.support.v4.content.WakefulBroadcastReceiver} is holding a
wake lock when the service starts. The intent that is passed with
{@link android.support.v4.content.WakefulBroadcastReceiver#startWakefulService startWakefulService()}
holds an extra identifying the wake lock:</p>

<pre>public class MyWakefulReceiver extends WakefulBroadcastReceiver {

    &#64;Override
    public void onReceive(Context context, Intent intent) {

        // Start the service, keeping the device awake while the service is
        // launching. This is the Intent to deliver to the service.
        Intent service = new Intent(context, MyIntentService.class);
        startWakefulService(context, service);
    }
}</pre>

<p>When the service is finished, it calls
{@link android.support.v4.content.WakefulBroadcastReceiver#completeWakefulIntent MyWakefulReceiver.completeWakefulIntent()}
to release the wake lock. The
{@link android.support.v4.content.WakefulBroadcastReceiver#completeWakefulIntent completeWakefulIntent()}
method has as its parameter the same intent that was
passed in from the {@link android.support.v4.content.WakefulBroadcastReceiver}:</p>
<pre>
public class MyIntentService extends IntentService {
    public static final int NOTIFICATION_ID = 1;
    private NotificationManager mNotificationManager;
    NotificationCompat.Builder builder;
    public MyIntentService() {
        super("MyIntentService");
    }
    &#64;Override
    protected void onHandleIntent(Intent intent) {
        Bundle extras = intent.getExtras();
        // Do the work that requires your app to keep the CPU running.
        // ...
        // Release the wake lock provided by the WakefulBroadcastReceiver.
        MyWakefulReceiver.completeWakefulIntent(intent);
    }
}</pre>