| page.title=Application Model |
| @jd:body |
| <h1>Android Application Model: Applications, Tasks, Processes, and Threads</h1> |
| |
| <p>In most operating systems, there is a strong 1-to-1 correlation between |
| the executable image (such as the .exe on Windows) that an application lives in, |
| the process it runs in, and the icon and application the user interacts with. |
| In Android these associations are much more fluid, and it is important to |
| understand how the various pieces can be put together.</p> |
| |
| <p>Because of the flexible nature of Android applications, there is some |
| basic terminology that needs to be understood when implementing the |
| various pieces of an application:</p> |
| |
| <ul> |
| <li><p>An <strong>android package</strong> (or <strong>.apk</strong> for short) |
| is the file containing an application's code and its resources. This is the |
| file that an application is distributed in and downloaded by the user when |
| installing that application on their device.</p></li> |
| |
| <li><p>A <strong>task</strong> is generally what the user perceives as |
| an "application" that can be launched: usually a task has an icon in the |
| home screen through which it is accessed, and it is available as a top-level |
| item that can be brought to the foreground in front of other |
| tasks.</p></li> |
| |
| <li><p>A <strong>process</strong> is a low-level kernel process in which |
| an application's code is running. Normally all of the code in a |
| .apk is run in one, dedicated process for that .apk; however, the |
| {@link android.R.styleable#AndroidManifestApplication_process process} tag |
| can be used to modify where that code is run, either for |
| {@link android.R.styleable#AndroidManifestApplication the entire .apk} |
| or for individual |
| {@link android.R.styleable#AndroidManifestActivity activity}, |
| {@link android.R.styleable#AndroidManifestReceiver receiver}, |
| {@link android.R.styleable#AndroidManifestService service}, or |
| {@link android.R.styleable#AndroidManifestProvider provider}, components.</p></li> |
| </ul> |
| |
| <h2 id="Tasks">Tasks</h2> |
| |
| <p>A key point here is: <em>when the user sees as an "application," what |
| they are actually dealing with is a task</em>. If you just create a .apk |
| with a number of activities, one of which is a top-level entry point (via |
| an {@link android.R.styleable#AndroidManifestIntentFilter intent-filter} for |
| the action <code>android.intent.action.MAIN</code> and |
| category <code>android.intent.category.LAUNCHER</code>), then there will indeed |
| be one task created for your .apk, and any activities you start from there |
| will also run as part of that task.</p> |
| |
| <p>A task, then, from the user's perspective your application; and from the |
| application developer's perspective it is one or more activities the user |
| has traversed through in that task and not yet closed, or an activity stack. |
| A new task is created by |
| starting an activity Intent with the {@link android.content.Intent#FLAG_ACTIVITY_NEW_TASK |
| Intent.FLAG_ACTIVITY_NEW_TASK} flag; this Intent will be used as the root Intent of |
| the task, defining what task it is. Any activity started without this flag |
| will run in the same task as the activity that is starting it (unless that |
| activity has requested a special launch mode, as discussed later). Tasks can |
| be re-ordered: if you use FLAG_ACTIVITY_NEW_TASK but there is already a task |
| running for that Intent, the current task's activity stack will be brought |
| to the foreground instead of starting a new task.</p> |
| |
| <p>FLAG_ACTIVITY_NEW_TASK must only be used with care: using it says that, |
| from the user's perspective, a new application starts at this point. If this |
| is not the behavior you desire, you should not be creating a new task. In |
| addition, you should only use the new task flag if it is possible for the user |
| to navigate from home back to where they are and launch the same Intent as a |
| new task. Otherwise, if the user presses HOME instead of BACK from the task |
| you have launched, your task and its activities will be ordered behind the |
| home screen without a way to return to them.</p> |
| |
| <h3>Task Affinities</h3> |
| |
| <p>In some cases Android needs to know which task an activity belongs to even when |
| it is not being launched in to a specific task. This is accomplished through |
| task affinities, which provide a unique static name for the task that one or more |
| activities are intended to run in. The default task affinity for an activity |
| is the name of the .apk package name the activity is implemented in. This |
| provides the normally expected behavior, where all of the activities in a |
| particular .apk are part of a single application to the user.</p> |
| |
| <p>When starting a new activity without the |
| {@link android.content.Intent#FLAG_ACTIVITY_NEW_TASK |
| Intent.FLAG_ACTIVITY_NEW_TASK} flag, task affinities have no impact on the |
| task the new activity will run in: it will always run in the task of the |
| activity that is starting it. However, if the NEW_TASK flag is being used, |
| then the affinity will be used to determine if a task already exists with |
| the same affinity. If so, that task will be brought to the front and the |
| new activity launched at the top of that task.</p> |
| |
| <p>This behavior is most useful for situations where you must use the |
| NEW_TASK flag, in particular launching activities from status bar notifications |
| or home screen shortcuts. The result is that, when the user launches your |
| application this way, its current task state will be brought to the foreground, |
| and the activity they now want to look at placed on top of it.</p> |
| |
| <p>You can assign your own task affinities in your manifest's |
| {@link android.R.styleable#AndroidManifestApplication application} tag for |
| all activities in the .apk, or the |
| {@link android.R.styleable#AndroidManifestActivity activity} tag of |
| individual activities. Some examples of how this can be used are:</p> |
| |
| <ul> |
| <li>If your .apk contains multiple top-level applications that the user can |
| launch, then you will probably want to assign different affinities to each |
| of the activities that the users sees for your .apk. A good convention for |
| coming up with distinct names is to append your .apk's package name with |
| a colon separated string. For example, the "com.android.contacts" .apk |
| may have the affinities "com.android.contacts:Dialer" and |
| "com.android.contacts:ContactsList".</ul> |
| <li>If you are replacing a notification, shortcut, or other such "inner" |
| activity of an application that can be launched from outside of it, you may |
| need to explicitly set the taskAffinity of your replacement activity to be |
| the same as the application you are replacing. For example, if you are |
| replacing the contacts details view (which the user can make and invoke |
| shortcuts to), you would want to set the taskAffinity to |
| "com.android.contacts".</li> |
| </ul> |
| |
| <h3>Launch Modes and Launch Flags</h3> |
| |
| <p>The main way you control how activities interact with tasks is through |
| the activity's |
| {@link android.R.styleable#AndroidManifestActivity_launchMode launchMode} |
| attribute and the {@link android.content.Intent#setFlags flags} associated |
| with an Intent. These two parameters can work together in various ways |
| to control the outcome of the activity launch, as described in their |
| associated documentation. Here we will look at some common use cases and |
| combinations of these parameters.</p> |
| |
| <p>The most common launch mode you will use (besides the default |
| <code>standard</code> mode) is <code>singleTop</code>. This does not have |
| an impact on tasks; it just avoids starting the same activity multiple times |
| on the top of a stack. |
| |
| <p>The <code>singleTask</code> launch mode has a major |
| impact on tasks: it causes the activity to always be started in |
| a new task (or its existing task to be brought to the foreground). Using |
| this mode requires a lot of care in how you interact with the rest of the |
| system, as it impacts every path in to the activity. It should only be used |
| with activities that are front doors to the application (that is, which |
| support the MAIN action and LAUNCHER category).</p> |
| |
| <p>The <code>singleInstance</code> launch mode is even more specialized, and |
| should only be used in applications that are implemented entirely as one |
| activity.</p> |
| |
| <p>A situation you will often run in to is when another entity (such as the |
| {@link android.app.SearchManager} or {@link android.app.NotificationManager}) |
| starts one of your activities. In this case, the |
| {@link android.content.Intent#FLAG_ACTIVITY_NEW_TASK |
| Intent.FLAG_ACTIVITY_NEW_TASK} flag must be used, because the activity is |
| being started outside of a task (and the application/task may not even |
| exist). As described previously, the standard behavior in this situation |
| is to bring to the foreground the current task matching the new activity's |
| affinity and start the new activity at the top of it. There are, however, |
| other types of behavior that you can implement.</p> |
| |
| <p>One common approach is to also use the |
| {@link android.content.Intent#FLAG_ACTIVITY_CLEAR_TOP |
| Intent.FLAG_ACTIVITY_CLEAR_TOP} flag in conjunction with NEW_TASK. By doing so, |
| if your task is already running, then it will be brought to the foreground, |
| all of the activities on its stack cleared except the root activity, and the |
| root activity's {@link android.app.Activity#onNewIntent} called with the |
| Intent being started. Note that the activity often also use the <code>singleTop</code> |
| or <code>singleTask</code> launch mode when using this approach, so that |
| the current instance is given the new intent instead of requiring that it |
| be destroyed and a new instance started.</p> |
| |
| <p>Another approach you can take is to set the notification activity's |
| <code>android:taskAffinity</code> to the empty string "" (indicating no affinity) |
| and setting the |
| <code>{@link android.R.styleable#AndroidManifestActivity_noHistory |
| android:noHistory}</code> and |
| <code>{@link android.R.styleable#AndroidManifestActivity_excludeFromRecents |
| android:excludeFromRecents}</code> attributes. |
| This approach is useful if you would like the notification |
| to take the user to a separate activity describing it, rather than return |
| to the application's task. By specifying these attributes, the activity will |
| be finished whether the user leaves it with BACK or HOME and it will not |
| show up in the recent tasks list; if the <code>noHistory</code> attribute |
| isn't specified, pressing HOME will result in the activity and its task |
| remaining in the system, possibly with no way to return to it.</p> |
| |
| <p>Be sure to read the documentation on the |
| {@link android.R.styleable#AndroidManifestActivity_launchMode launchMode attribute} |
| and the {@link android.content.Intent#setFlags Intent flags} for the details |
| on these options.</p> |
| |
| <h2 id="Processes">Processes</h2> |
| |
| <p>In Android, processes are entirely an implementation detail of applications |
| and not something the user is normally aware of. Their main uses are simply:</p> |
| |
| <ul> |
| <li> Improving stability or security by putting untrusted or unstable code |
| into another process. |
| <li> Reducing overhead by running the code of multiple .apks in the same |
| process. |
| <li> Helping the system manage resources by putting heavy-weight code in |
| a separate process that can be killed independently of other parts of the |
| application. |
| </ul> |
| |
| <p>As described previously, the |
| {@link android.R.styleable#AndroidManifestApplication_process process} attribute |
| is used to control the process that particular application components run in. |
| Note that this attribute can not be used to violate security of the system: if |
| two .apks that are not sharing the same user ID try to run in the same process, |
| this will not be allowed and different distinct processes will be created for |
| each of them.</p> |
| |
| <p>See the <a href="{@docRoot}devel/security.html">security</a> document for |
| more information on these security restrictions.</p> |
| |
| <h2 id="Threads">Threads</h2> |
| |
| <p>Every process has one or more threads running in it. In most situations, Android |
| avoids creating additional threads in a process, keeping an application |
| single-threaded unless it creates its own threads. An important repercussion |
| of this is that all calls to {@link android.app.Activity}, |
| {@link android.content.BroadcastReceiver}, and {@link android.app.Service} |
| instances are made only from the main thread of the process they are running in.</p> |
| |
| <p>Note that a new thread is <strong>not</strong> created for each |
| Activity, BroadcastReceiver, Service, or ContentProvider instance: |
| these application components are instantiated in the desired process (all in the |
| same process unless otherwise specified), in the main thread of that process. |
| This means that none of these components (including services) should perform |
| long or blocking operations (such as networking calls or computation loops) |
| when called by the system, since this will block |
| all other components in the process. You can use the standard library |
| {@link java.lang.Thread} class or Android's {@link android.os.HandlerThread} |
| convenience class to perform long operations on another thread.</p> |
| |
| <p>There are a few important exceptions to this threading rule:</p> |
| |
| <ul> |
| <li><p>Calls on to an {@link android.os.IBinder} or interface implemented on |
| an IBinder are dispatched from the thread calling them or a thread pool in the |
| local process if coming from another process, <em>not</em> |
| from the main thread of their process. In particular, calls on to the IBinder |
| of a {@link android.app.Service} will be called this way. (Though |
| calls to methods on Service itself are done from the main thread.) |
| This means that <em>implementations of IBinder interfaces must always be |
| written in a thread-safe way, since they can be called from any number of |
| arbitrary threads at the same time</em>.</p></li> |
| |
| <li><p>Calls to the main methods of {@link android.content.ContentProvider} |
| are dispatched from the calling thread or main thread as with IBinder. The |
| specific methods are documented in the ContentProvider class. |
| This means that <em>implementations of these methods must always be |
| written in a thread-safe way, since they can be called from any number of |
| arbitrary threads at the same time</em>.</p></li> |
| |
| <li><p>Calls on {@link android.view.View} and its subclasses are made from the |
| thread that the view's window is running in. Normally this will be the main |
| thread of the process, however if you create a thread and show a window from |
| there then the window's view hierarchy will be called from that thread.</p></li> |
| </ul> |