Ideal way to set global uncaught exception Handler in Android

大兔子大兔子 提交于 2019-11-26 01:21:53

That should be all you need to do. (Make sure you cause the process to halt afterward -- things could be in an uncertain state.)

The first thing to check is whether the Android handler is still getting called. It's possible that your version is being called but failing fatally and the system_server is showing a generic dialog when it sees the process crash.

Add some log messages at the top of your handler to see if it's getting there. Print the result from getDefaultUncaughtExceptionHandler and then throw an uncaught exception to cause a crash. Keep an eye on the logcat output to see what's going on.

Idolon

I posted the simple solution for custom handling of Android crashes a long ago. It's a little hacky however it works on all Android versions (including the Lollipop).

First a little bit of theory. The main issues when you use uncaught exception handler in Android come with the exceptions thrown in the main (aka UI) thread. And here is why. When the app starts system calls ActivityThread.main method which prepares and starts the Main looper of your app:

public static void main(String[] args) {
  …
  …
    Looper.prepareMainLooper();
  …
    Looper.loop();
    throw new RuntimeException("Main thread loop unexpectedly exited");
}

Main looper is responsible for processing messages posted in the UI thread (including all messages related to UI rendering and interaction). If an exception is thrown in the UI thread it will be caught by your exception handler, but since you're out of loop() method you won't be able to show any dialog or activity to the user as there's no one left to process UI messages for you.

The proposed solution is quite simple. We run Looper.loop method by our own and surround it with try-catch block. When an exception is caught we process it as we want (for example start our custom report activity) and call Looper.loop method again.

The following method demonstrates this technique (it should be called from the Application.onCreate listener):

private void startCatcher() {
    UncaughtExceptionHandler systemUncaughtHandler = Thread.getDefaultUncaughtExceptionHandler();

    // the following handler is used to catch exceptions thrown in background threads
    Thread.setDefaultUncaughtExceptionHandler(new UncaughtHandler(new Handler()));

    while (true) {
        try {
            Looper.loop();
            Thread.setDefaultUncaughtExceptionHandler(systemUncaughtHandler);
            throw new RuntimeException("Main thread loop unexpectedly exited");
        } catch (Throwable e) {
            showCrashDisplayActivity(e);
        }
    }
}

As you can see the uncaught exception handler is used only for the exceptions thrown in background threads. The following handler catches those exceptions and propagates them to the UI thread:

static class UncaughtHandler implements UncaughtExceptionHandler {

    private final Handler mHandler;

    UncaughtHandler(Handler handler) {
        mHandler = handler;
    }

    public void uncaughtException(Thread thread, final Throwable e) {
        mHandler.post(new Runnable() {
            public void run() {
                throw new BackgroundException(e);
            }
        });
    }
}

An example project which uses this technique is available on my GitHub repo: https://github.com/idolon-github/android-crash-catcher

Richard Le Mesurier

FWIW I know this is slightly off-topic, but we've been using Crittercism's free plan with success. They also offer some premium features, like handling the exception so the app doesn't crash.

In the free version, the user still sees the crash, but at least I get the email and the stack trace.

We also use the iOS version (but I've heard from my colleagues that it is not quite as good).


Here are similar questions:

Robby Pond

I think to disable that in your uncaughtException() method do not call previousHandler.uncaughtException() where previousHandler is set by

previousHandler = Thread.getDefaultUncaughtExceptionHandler();
Joseph_Marzbani

It doesn't work until you call

android.os.Process.killProcess(android.os.Process.myPid());

at the very end of your UncaughtExceptionHandler.

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