I'm working on an Android application which uses AlarmManager as follows:
Long startTime = Calendar.getInstance().getTimeInMillis();
alarm.setRepeating(
AlarmManager.RTC_WAKEUP,
startTime,
15* 60 * 1000,
PendingIntent.getBroadcast(this, 1, intent, PendingIntent.FLAG_UPDATE_CURRENT));
I want to calculate the startTime. Let's say I need to run some code repeatedly after 15 minutes, but this after 15 minutes should not start from now (current time) but right from the next slot. Whenever I enable the alarm it should start it from the next available slot (which means I need to calculate the start time).
Example 1: If current time is 10:8, then the first run should be at 10:15.
Example 2: If it's 10:17, then first the run should be at 10:30.
Example 3: If it's 10:38, then the first run should be at 10:45.
As AlarmManager takes 2 time parameters in milliseconds, the first one when to start the alarm and the second as the repeat time in milliseconds (15 minutes).
If it's still unclear then I would say I need to run my code when minutes of the device are either one of the following values:
00, 15, 30, 45 irrespective of the hour value of the device.
First, bear in mind that Doze mode and app standby on Android 6.0+ will mean that you will not always get control when you want.
That being said, you need to adjust startTime. Call get(Calendar.MINUTE) on it to get the current minutes. Determine how many minutes you need to add to get to the next quarter-hour. Then, call add(Calendar.MINUTE, ...), where ... is the amount you need to add to get the minute value to the next quarter-hour. Using add() will handle incrementing the hour, day, etc. as needed.
Related
I've just learned about the AlarmManager and tried to play around with it. As I understood the alarms are set by saying that it needs to be called after X miliseconds like in the code below:
am.set(AlarmManager.RTC_WAKEUP, System.currentTimeMillis() + (sec * 1000), pendingIntent);
However, I'm concerned about the performance of system when it comes to long periods of time.
If I need to set alarm that will activate notification say after 10 months, what should I do? Do I need to convert needed period of time into miliseconds and pass it in the same way? Or there are other more efficient ways to work with long periods of time?
Yes, you have to pass it as milliseconds. I'm not sure why you're concerned about performance from that, there's no loss in performance form passing a large value instead of a small one. Your only real problem is that doing in X months, the length of a month isn't regular. I'd create a Calendar object for the end time and convert that to milliseconds to get it right.
Use like this
int month = 2;
alarmMgr.setRepeating(AlarmManager.RTC_WAKEUP,calendar.getTimeInMillis(),AlarmManager.INTERVAL_DAY * 30*month, pendingIntent);
How to set alarm for long duration has already been discusses above.
You just need to keep a check that if device gets restarted you reset your alarm because alarms gets canceled once system goes off.
link here
I want to popup an alarm on selected day i.e. Monday ,Tuesday and so on. And at selected time on every week. I've an idea about interval but I don't know how to get the next day and popup alarm ?
You need to use the AlarmManager and get a WakeClock while processing the Intent in Service (make sure to release it and chose the right kind).
Here is a great example :
https://stackoverflow.com/a/8801990/220710
To get the day current day of the week, look at this question :
Android: how to get the current day of the week (Monday, etc...) in the user's language?
Then you would use :
setInexactRepeating(int type, long triggerAtMillis, long intervalMillis, PendingIntent operation)
Schedule a repeating alarm
that has inexact trigger time requirements; for example, an alarm that
repeats every hour, but not necessarily at the top of every hour.
Then you would need to set :
type = RTC_WAKEUP
intervalMillis = ms in a week
triggerAtMillis = System.currentTimeMillis() + ms to the next Monday, Tuesday or
whatever
intent = the intent you want to fire to a Service that
will process it.
I am developing small android application. And I want to do something in my application after some minutes. These minutes are not static one these are dynamic ones.
So i am using android calender setInexactRepeating for this.
My code looks like this
Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
// Start something after 4 minutes
cal.add(Calendar.MINUTE, 4);
get_alaram_service().setInexactRepeating(AlarmManager.RTC_WAKEUP,
cal.getTimeInMillis(), 1000*300, get_pendingintent());
So this will work setInexactRepeating after 4 min it will run my pending intent and after that it will keep repeating this for this much amount of time. (1000*300).
So my problem is that in setInexactRepeating 2nd parameter is for at what time I want to start my timer and 3rd parameter for repeating this thing. Now 2nd parameter tales value in milisec. I tried to pass my own value of minutes in milisec like(1000*300) then its not working properly. I don't how its working properly. When I checked cal.getTimeInMillis() it is very big integer number. what is that actually.
Am i doing something wrong need your help thank you...
Although this isn't explicitly stated in the documentation the second parameter (triggerAtMillis) is time in milliseconds since the Epoch. This is what Calendar.getInstance() returns. Calling this method will return the current time. This is a big number, since it is actually the number of milliseconds after 1/1/1970. You then need to add something to it (e.g. 4 minutes) to define when the AlarmManager will first fire.
I have tried to do this without bothering the experts and have read numerous threads here and on other sites. It is clearly my brain not understanding what needs to be done in order for this to work.
My goal is that the app allows the user to enter a time and one or more days in a week. All of the GUI side and storing of the dates and times I have done, however to get the alarm manager to repeat, lets say every Monday at 14:00 and then can send at 14:02 . I have used the java Calendar object to hold the times and days of the week or even used date and day of the week of the month. These are then , as needed, converted to milliseconds for it to be read in by the alarm manager.
I then have used either the alarm manager set or set repeat methods to repeat the event. All I am able to do is get it to occur once and then if I change the emulator date and time to another Monday nothing happens.
The GUI holds the hours and minutes in required variables and then these are used against the calendar objects.
The alarm manager calls a broadcast receiver for the event to occur.
Please can someone simply give an example on how to set specific days such as Monday , Wednesday Friday. I know that separate alarm managers are needed for each day and at the moment I have just focused on Monday as my main test.
Links viewed:
How can i Repeat the Alarm in android for only Monday, Tuesday and Friday
How to repeat the alarm for "n" days at a particular time
how to repeat alarm after 1 day in android
Managed to figure this out now and so follows my answer:
The following code calculates the remaining days between now and the day needed for the scheduled task. the variable whichday is passed via parameter from the method this code belongs to. In the understanding of this whichday represents days of the week 1 through to 7 where 1 is Sunday , 2 is Monday and so .
//This gets the current day of the week as of TODAY / NOW
int checkcurrentday = getcurtime.get(Calendar.DAY_OF_WEEK);
// This calculates the days between now and the day needed which is represented by whichday.
int numberofdays = Calendar.SATURDAY + whichday - checkcurrentday;
//Now add NOT set the difference of the days to your Calendar object
tMondayOn.add(Calendar.DATE, numberofdays);
Well, you need to first use the Java Calendar API (or Joda!) to figure out when the next monday is. Set the alarm to to that time in milliseconds then use setRepeating and pass in a long that represents the interval of one week.
I want to use and alarmManager that sets a repeating alarm to go off on the hour, every hour. I know how to set a repeating alarm every hour but not how to actually set it from the top of the hour, I need to know this value for the 'whatTime' variable below.
AlarmManager am = (AlarmManager)getSystemService(ALARM_SERVICE);
am.setRepeating(AlarmManager.ELAPSED_REALTIME, whatTime, 1*60*60*1000, operation);
Also I want to be able to set a flag that for e.g. - if the time happens to be between 4 and 8 in the daytime, perform some operations, otherwise don't bother.
So I really need to know how to find out the hour of the day, can anyone tell me how to do this? Many thanks
Try:
int hour = Calendar.getInstance().get(Calendar.HOUR_OF_DAY);
Calendar.HOUR_OF_DAY gives you the 24-hour time.
Calendar.HOUR gives you the 12-hour time.