In my Application I am not having any UI part, so I need to start a Service as soon as the Applicaton gets installed on the Device. I saw many links from which the answer wa
HEY I think using a BroadcastRecivier to automatically start the app on restart of device hence it will automatically start on device start.Hope this will help
Fortunately, Plan B does not work on Android 3.1+, as tested on a XOOM and a Galaxy Nexus.
What Plan B does is exploit a security hole that could be used by drive-by malware, which is specifically why Android prevents it from happening anymore.
UPDATE
To clarify: As inazaruk posted and I put into comments on other answers, all applications, upon installation, are placed in a "stopped" state. This is the same state that the application winds up in after the user force-stops the app from the Settings application. While in this "stopped" state, the application will not run for any reason, except by a manual launch of an activity. Notably, no BroadcastReceviers
will be invoked, regardless of the event for which they have registered, until the user runs the app manually.
This block covers the Plan B scenario of remote-install-and-run, which they were taking advantage of previously. After all, with that, anyone with a hacked Google account would be at risk of having their device infected, hands-free as it were.
So, when the OP says:
I need to start a Service as soon as the Applicaton gets installed on the Device
the OP will be unsuccessful and will need to redesign the application to avoid this purported "need".
As stated by CommonsWare in the answer to this question (which I suppose you have all ready seen, but chose to ignore) starting a Service on install is not possible - it is simply not a thing that is implemented into the platform.
Starting it automaticly at the next boot is however possible.
As stated in the Technical Details for PlanB:
Plan B will attempt to launch as soon as it downloads, but in some cases you will need to send an SMS to get it started.
My guess is that on a rooted phone you might be able to start the Service
on install - but there's no guarantee that the phone is rooted, which is why PlanB will require recieving a text in some cases because that can be registered by the IntentFilter
of the app and then used to start the Service
.
Applications installed on the /system partition are not subject to being placed into the "stopped" state after installation. If you have root, you can do,
$ adb root
$ adb remount
$ adb push your.apk /system/app
And it can immediately receive broadcast intents. This certainly doesn't provide a general purpose solution, but i wanted to mention it for completeness.
EDIT: Keep in mind that different versions of Android locate system APKs in different places. For example, Android 8 puts them under /system/app//.apk. Shell into your device and poke around and follow the same scheme used for other system APKs.
I agree with CommonsWare's answer to question: How to start android service on installation. In other words, you can't automatically start your service after you've just been installed.
One more thing about newer Android platforms: if you don't have UI at all, you'll have trouble starting your service even when using BOOT_COMPLETE
intent on Android 3.1+.
That's because all installed applications are in stopped state. In this state applications will not receive ANY broadcast notifications.
In order to activate your application some other application (or user) needs to start your service or activity, or content provider. The usual workflow is when user clicks on your application's icon.
I've written a detailed explanations about this in my blog post.
I don't think so You can start service immediately after installed your application on device,
The application must first be invoked by the user through some sort of Activity
.The only things you have to register some Broadcast Receiver
with appropriate intents in manifest which invoke you service when something is happening on device but this remaing to Android 3.1 version.
EDIT:
After Android 3.1+ onwards you can not use any Broadcast
for starting your application, because all application remains in inactive state after completion of device boot and to launch the application the user have to invoke it.(By touching the app icon).