Android accelerometer not working when screen is turned off

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[愿得一人]
[愿得一人] 2020-11-29 17:38

I\'m developing an application for my final thesis on computer science, and I need to collect and log accelerometer data. I need to acquire it for a whole day long, so there

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  • 2020-11-29 18:17

    If the partial wake lock option is not available for your phone it means the driver for the sensor has early_suspend enabled.

    There are two options.

    1: Disable EARLY_SUSPEND in the driver

    2: Add a run time flag that can enable/disable early_suspend functionality at the driver level.

    ex. cat /sys/module/earlysuspend/sensor 1/0

    IMO the second option should have been there from the beginning.

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  • 2020-11-29 18:18

    I've ran into similar problems with the Samsung Nexus running Android 4.0.2 using other system services that stop/pause while the screen is off even though a PARTIAL_WAKE_LOCK is acquired. My solution was to use a SCREEN_DIM_WAKE_LOCK as in:

     lockStatic = mgr.newWakeLock(PowerManager.SCREEN_DIM_WAKE_LOCK,NAME);
    

    It would be far better to have the screen fully off, but at least this solution works although it would be even better if I could limit using a SCREEN_DIM_WAKE_LOCK to only those devices/OSes that require it.

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  • 2020-11-29 18:28

    I applied the PARTIAL_WAKE_LOCK and it worked like charm to me. Tested on OS 5.0, 6.0 & 7.0. Here's my code to acquire and release wake lock. Be careful it increased the battery drainage, so acquire and release it intelligently.

    public void acquireWakeLock() {
        final PowerManager powerManager = (PowerManager) mContext.getSystemService(Context.POWER_SERVICE);
        releaseWakeLock();
        //Acquire new wake lock
        mWakeLock = powerManager.newWakeLock(PowerManager.PARTIAL_WAKE_LOCK, "PARTIAL_WAKE_LOCK");
        mWakeLock.acquire();
    }
    
    public void releaseWakeLock() {
        if (mWakeLock != null && mWakeLock.isHeld()) {
            mWakeLock.release();
            mWakeLock = null;
        }
    }
    

    Ref: https://developer.android.com/training/scheduling/wakelock.html#cpu

    I am working on a prediction sdk, who use device sensors (accelerometer/gyroscope) data and predicts the user events. I experienced the same issue.

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  • 2020-11-29 18:28

    I hate to disappoint you, but some devices just don't keep acceleromet on while they are in a sleep mode. Some do, others don't. You can check any pedometer weight loss app on store most of them explicitly state that this won't work on some devices.

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  • 2020-11-29 18:33

    Basically, it is a problem with my phone. Other users have reported this also happens with their phones, from different brands but same Android version. Other persons have no problem at all - strongly indicating that this is not a problem with the stock version of android but from the implementations of each company for their hardware drivers.

    I need constant accelerometer data delivered and cannot have a dongle measure this data for me - I have an Arduino with Bluetooth and accelerometer, so I could have implemented this solution. So I decided that the temporary solution for my cellphone was to let the screen on (dimmed) and ignore battery consumption. Later on I will perform the tests for battery usage using another android phone which works with the screen turned off.

    More information about the bug

    I've researched some more and found reports from other Android users and I think maybe I understand what is happening. The library libsensors.so which has the drivers for the phone sensors is not developed by Google but by each cellphone vendor - of course, because each cellphone has its own specific hardware. Google only provides a C header file so that the developers know what they have to implement. On some implementations for these drivers, the developers simply turn the accelerometer off when the screen goes off, thus preventing the sensor event listener to receive new events.

    I also tested this with CyanogenMod RC7.2 but it did not work either, because accelerometer drivers are original from LG.

    E-mails exchanged with HR department of LG

    I sent an e-mail to the developers of the LG P990 and finally got some concrete answers! This may be of great help to some people like me that are experiencing these issues with Android. I wrote the following question

    Hello! I am developing my thesis in computer science and currently I am fetching data from accelerometer hardware. As of now, I found out that the accelerometers do not send events when the screen is off, so even when I grab a wakelock from within one of my programs, I can verify that my program is still running (through LOGcat output) but no accelerometer event comes out. I have to dim my screen on (which I cannot afford, the battery drains too fast) to start receiving accelerometer events again. I also tried accessing it through native C code, registering on the accelerometer events but the result was the same, the accelerometer did not throw any values, even though I was rotating my device. So I was wondering if I could have direct access to the hardware, with native code, without having to register to a listener. Is this possible? If so, could you kindly give some further advice? I would appreciate very much any help! Martin

    For what I received this response:

    Dear Martin, We received the answer from Dev. Team. They said that you can’t get accelerometer event while your phone screen is off. Because HAL layer didn’t implement sysFS path to get H/W event such as accelerometer and there is no public API to get event. Thank you. Best Regards. (Sean Kim)

    I then sent an e-mail back, saying among other things, that I considered this a bug, since one should have access to all the hardware when acquiring a wake lock:

    [...] I asked this question because I have some friends that also have Android phones with the same gingerbread version but from other cellphone brands, and some of them reported they receive events from the accelerometers when the screen is turned off. I read on some forums that this bug - I consider it a bug, since when I acquire a Wakelock I would expect to have some processing going on - depends on the sensor drivers that the vendors implement for their cellphones. Is there any possibility that these drivers can be updated or will this bug be corrected at some point? This would help me enormously with my ongoing work [...]

    And then I received this answer:

    In my knowledge from Dev. Team, That isn’t bug. That is a limitless of this phone because of H/W architecture. We need to redesign the HAL architecture and device driver to support your request. But, as you know that is too difficult due to lack of resource. We are trying to help you with our all efforts but we cannot support your request as I mentioned. (Sean Kim)

    So they apparently know about this but are not trying to correct this because either they don't think it is a bug - which I still strongly believe is a logical flaw - or they don't have the time/resources to correct it.

    Bottom line If you have a cellphone that does not send accelerometer events with the screen off, try updating your firmware. If this does not solve and you really want to do some serious hacking, re implement your hardware layer - hint: it's probably something to do with libsensors.so.

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  • 2020-11-29 18:39

    I am not sure if this will actually assist you, but I have found a work around (Not sure how well if will help the battery saving though).

    Using bash I have a while loop cat-ing /sys/devices/virtual/accelerometer/accelerometer/acc_file, and when I turn off the screen via the power button the output continues, but is frozen. (I had sshd running in a chroot hence the being able to see it.)

    However, in echoing 0 > /sys/devices/platform/msm_fb.196609/leds/lcd-backlight/brightness. The screen turns off, and the output is continuous.

    This is on a SGH-T589W, running android version 2.3.6.

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