I\'m looking into implementing an over-Bluetooth video streaming service for Android.
How can I ensure that:
There are two important things you need to do to make sure your service keeps running:
Make sure you call startService()
instead of (or in addition to) binding. This will make sure that the service continues running, even if the Activity that created it is killed.
Use startForegroud()
to run the service in the foreground, so that Android won't reclaim it when memory is needed. It requires that you also create a Notification
that gets published when the service actually starts, putting an icon in the notification area and letting the user know your service is still running.
For more information:
http://developer.android.com/reference/android/app/Service.html http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/fundamentals/bound-services.html
If you are/were in the same situation as me, being forced to use bindService(), the solution was to set the
Context.BIND_IMPORTANT
flag in that call. That raises the service's priority to that of the binding app, which if it is the foreground app, is the highest possible. If you don't use that flag, the service needs to fight over a measly 10% of resources with all the other background services. (the other 90% are reserved for the foreground app).
Note that manually setting the service's thread priority, without setting this flag during bindService(), makes no difference.