AsyncTask
abstract classAsyncTask<Params : Any!, Progress : Any!, Result : Any!>
kotlin.Any | |
↳ | android.os.AsyncTask |
AsyncTask was intended to enable proper and easy use of the UI thread. However, the most common use case was for integrating into UI, and that would cause Context leaks, missed callbacks, or crashes on configuration changes. It also has inconsistent behavior on different versions of the platform, swallows exceptions from doInBackground
, and does not provide much utility over using Executor
s directly.
AsyncTask is designed to be a helper class around Thread
and Handler
and does not constitute a generic threading framework. AsyncTasks should ideally be used for short operations (a few seconds at the most.) If you need to keep threads running for long periods of time, it is highly recommended you use the various APIs provided by the java.util.concurrent
package such as Executor
, ThreadPoolExecutor
and FutureTask
.
An asynchronous task is defined by a computation that runs on a background thread and whose result is published on the UI thread. An asynchronous task is defined by 3 generic types, called Params
, Progress
and Result
, and 4 steps, called onPreExecute
, doInBackground
, onProgressUpdate
and onPostExecute
.
Usage
AsyncTask must be subclassed to be used. The subclass will override at least one method (doInBackground
), and most often will override a second one (onPostExecute
.)
Here is an example of subclassing:
private class DownloadFilesTask extends AsyncTask<URL, Integer, Long> { protected Long doInBackground(URL... urls) { int count = urls.length; long totalSize = 0; for (int i = 0; i < count; i++) { totalSize += Downloader.downloadFile(urls[i]); publishProgress((int) ((i / (float) count) * 100)); // Escape early if cancel() is called if (isCancelled()) break; } return totalSize; } protected void onProgressUpdate(Integer... progress) { setProgressPercent(progress[0]); } protected void onPostExecute(Long result) { showDialog("Downloaded " + result + " bytes"); } }
Once created, a task is executed very simply:
new DownloadFilesTask().execute(url1, url2, url3);
AsyncTask's generic types
The three types used by an asynchronous task are the following:
Params
, the type of the parameters sent to the task upon execution.Progress
, the type of the progress units published during the background computation.Result
, the type of the result of the background computation.
Not all types are always used by an asynchronous task. To mark a type as unused, simply use the type Void
:
private class MyTask extends AsyncTask<Void, Void, Void> { ... }
The 4 steps
When an asynchronous task is executed, the task goes through 4 steps:
onPreExecute()
, invoked on the UI thread before the task is executed. This step is normally used to setup the task, for instance by showing a progress bar in the user interface.doInBackground
, invoked on the background thread immediately afteronPreExecute()
finishes executing. This step is used to perform background computation that can take a long time. The parameters of the asynchronous task are passed to this step. The result of the computation must be returned by this step and will be passed back to the last step. This step can also usepublishProgress
to publish one or more units of progress. These values are published on the UI thread, in theonProgressUpdate
step.onProgressUpdate
, invoked on the UI thread after a call topublishProgress
. The timing of the execution is undefined. This method is used to display any form of progress in the user interface while the background computation is still executing. For instance, it can be used to animate a progress bar or show logs in a text field.onPostExecute
, invoked on the UI thread after the background computation finishes. The result of the background computation is passed to this step as a parameter.
Cancelling a task
A task can be cancelled at any time by invoking cancel(boolean)
. Invoking this method will cause subsequent calls to isCancelled()
to return true. After invoking this method, onCancelled(java.lang.Object)
, instead of onPostExecute(java.lang.Object)
will be invoked after doInBackground(java.lang.Object[])
returns. To ensure that a task is cancelled as quickly as possible, you should always check the return value of isCancelled()
periodically from doInBackground(java.lang.Object[])
, if possible (inside a loop for instance.)
Threading rules
There are a few threading rules that must be followed for this class to work properly:
- The AsyncTask class must be loaded on the UI thread. This is done automatically as of
android.os.Build.VERSION_CODES#JELLY_BEAN
. - The task instance must be created on the UI thread.
- execute must be invoked on the UI thread.
- Do not call
onPreExecute()
,onPostExecute
,doInBackground
,onProgressUpdate
manually. - The task can be executed only once (an exception will be thrown if a second execution is attempted.)
Memory observability
AsyncTask guarantees that all callback calls are synchronized to ensure the following without explicit synchronizations.
- The memory effects of
onPreExecute
, and anything else executed before the call to #execute, including the construction of the AsyncTask object, are visible todoInBackground
. - The memory effects of
doInBackground
are visible toonPostExecute
. - Any memory effects of
doInBackground
preceding a call topublishProgress
are visible to the correspondingonProgressUpdate
call. (ButdoInBackground
continues to run, and care needs to be taken that later updates indoInBackground
do not interfere with an in-progressonProgressUpdate
call.) - Any memory effects preceding a call to
cancel
are visible after a call toisCancelled
that returns true as a result, or during and after a resulting call to #onCancelled.
Order of execution
When first introduced, AsyncTasks were executed serially on a single background thread. Starting with android.os.Build.VERSION_CODES#DONUT
, this was changed to a pool of threads allowing multiple tasks to operate in parallel. Starting with android.os.Build.VERSION_CODES#HONEYCOMB
, tasks are executed on a single thread to avoid common application errors caused by parallel execution.
If you truly want parallel execution, you can invoke executeOnExecutor(java.util.concurrent.Executor,java.lang.Object[])
with THREAD_POOL_EXECUTOR
.
Summary
Nested classes | |
---|---|
Indicates the current status of the task. |
Public constructors | |
---|---|
Creates a new asynchronous task. |
Public methods | |
---|---|
Boolean |
Attempts to cancel execution of this task. |
AsyncTask<Params, Progress, Result>! |
execute(vararg params: Params) Executes the task with the specified parameters. |
open static Unit |
Convenience version of |
AsyncTask<Params, Progress, Result>! |
executeOnExecutor(exec: Executor!, vararg params: Params) Executes the task with the specified parameters. |
Result |
get() Waits if necessary for the computation to complete, and then retrieves its result. |
Result |
Waits if necessary for at most the given time for the computation to complete, and then retrieves its result. |
AsyncTask.Status! |
Returns the current status of this task. |
Boolean |
Returns true if this task was cancelled before it completed normally. |
Protected methods | |
---|---|
abstract Result |
doInBackground(vararg params: Params) Override this method to perform a computation on a background thread. |
open Unit |
Applications should preferably override |
open Unit |
onCancelled(result: Result) Runs on the UI thread after |
open Unit |
onPostExecute(result: Result) Runs on the UI thread after |
open Unit |
Runs on the UI thread before |
open Unit |
onProgressUpdate(vararg values: Progress) Runs on the UI thread after |
Unit |
publishProgress(vararg values: Progress) This method can be invoked from |
Properties | |
---|---|
static Executor! |
An |
static Executor! |
An |
Public constructors
AsyncTask
AsyncTask()
Creates a new asynchronous task. This constructor must be invoked on the UI thread.
Public methods
cancel
funcancel(mayInterruptIfRunning: Boolean): Boolean
Deprecated: Deprecated in Java.
Attempts to cancel execution of this task. This attempt will fail if the task has already completed, already been cancelled, or could not be cancelled for some other reason. If successful, and this task has not started when cancel is called, this task should never run. If the task has already started, then the mayInterruptIfRunning parameter determines whether the thread executing this task should be interrupted in an attempt to stop the task.
Calling this method will result in onCancelled(java.lang.Object)
being invoked on the UI thread after doInBackground(java.lang.Object[])
returns. Calling this method guarantees that onPostExecute(Object) is never subsequently invoked, even if cancel returns false, but onPostExecute
has not yet run. To finish the task as early as possible, check isCancelled()
periodically from doInBackground(java.lang.Object[])
.
This only requests cancellation. It never waits for a running background task to terminate, even if mayInterruptIfRunning is true.
Parameters | |
---|---|
mayInterruptIfRunning |
Boolean: true if the thread executing this task should be interrupted; otherwise, in-progress tasks are allowed to complete. |
Return | |
---|---|
Boolean |
false if the task could not be cancelled, typically because it has already completed normally; true otherwise |
See Also
execute
funexecute(vararg params: Params): AsyncTask<Params, Progress, Result>!
Deprecated: Deprecated in Java.
Executes the task with the specified parameters. The task returns itself (this) so that the caller can keep a reference to it.
Note: this function schedules the task on a queue for a single background thread or pool of threads depending on the platform version. When first introduced, AsyncTasks were executed serially on a single background thread. Starting with android.os.Build.VERSION_CODES#DONUT
, this was changed to a pool of threads allowing multiple tasks to operate in parallel. Starting android.os.Build.VERSION_CODES#HONEYCOMB
, tasks are back to being executed on a single thread to avoid common application errors caused by parallel execution. If you truly want parallel execution, you can use the executeOnExecutor
version of this method with THREAD_POOL_EXECUTOR
; however, see commentary there for warnings on its use.
This method must be invoked on the UI thread.
This method must be called from the main thread of your app.
Parameters | |
---|---|
params |
Params: The parameters of the task. |
Return | |
---|---|
AsyncTask<Params, Progress, Result>! |
This instance of AsyncTask. |
Exceptions | |
---|---|
java.lang.IllegalStateException |
If getStatus() returns either AsyncTask.Status.RUNNING or AsyncTask.Status.FINISHED . |
execute
open static funexecute(runnable: Runnable!): Unit
Deprecated: Deprecated in Java.
Convenience version of execute(java.lang.Object...)
for use with a simple Runnable object. See execute(java.lang.Object[])
for more information on the order of execution.
This method must be called from the main thread of your app.
executeOnExecutor
funexecuteOnExecutor(
exec: Executor!,
vararg params: Params
): AsyncTask<Params, Progress, Result>!
Deprecated: Deprecated in Java.
Executes the task with the specified parameters. The task returns itself (this) so that the caller can keep a reference to it.
This method is typically used with THREAD_POOL_EXECUTOR
to allow multiple tasks to run in parallel on a pool of threads managed by AsyncTask, however you can also use your own Executor
for custom behavior.
Warning: Allowing multiple tasks to run in parallel from a thread pool is generally not what one wants, because the order of their operation is not defined. For example, if these tasks are used to modify any state in common (such as writing a file due to a button click), there are no guarantees on the order of the modifications. Without careful work it is possible in rare cases for the newer version of the data to be over-written by an older one, leading to obscure data loss and stability issues. Such changes are best executed in serial; to guarantee such work is serialized regardless of platform version you can use this function with SERIAL_EXECUTOR
.
This method must be invoked on the UI thread.
This method must be called from the main thread of your app.
Parameters | |
---|---|
exec |
Executor!: The executor to use. THREAD_POOL_EXECUTOR is available as a convenient process-wide thread pool for tasks that are loosely coupled. |
params |
Params: The parameters of the task. |
Return | |
---|---|
AsyncTask<Params, Progress, Result>! |
This instance of AsyncTask. |
Exceptions | |
---|---|
java.lang.IllegalStateException |
If getStatus() returns either AsyncTask.Status.RUNNING or AsyncTask.Status.FINISHED . |
See Also
get
funget(): Result
Deprecated: Deprecated in Java.
Waits if necessary for the computation to complete, and then retrieves its result.
Return | |
---|---|
Result |
The computed result. |
Exceptions | |
---|---|
java.util.concurrent.CancellationException |
If the computation was cancelled. |
java.util.concurrent.ExecutionException |
If the computation threw an exception. |
java.lang.InterruptedException |
If the current thread was interrupted while waiting. |
get
funget(
timeout: Long,
unit: TimeUnit!
): Result
Deprecated: Deprecated in Java.
Waits if necessary for at most the given time for the computation to complete, and then retrieves its result.
Parameters | |
---|---|
timeout |
Long: Time to wait before cancelling the operation. |
unit |
TimeUnit!: The time unit for the timeout. |
Return | |
---|---|
Result |
The computed result. |
Exceptions | |
---|---|
java.util.concurrent.CancellationException |
If the computation was cancelled. |
java.util.concurrent.ExecutionException |
If the computation threw an exception. |
java.lang.InterruptedException |
If the current thread was interrupted while waiting. |
java.util.concurrent.TimeoutException |
If the wait timed out. |
getStatus
fungetStatus(): AsyncTask.Status!
Deprecated: Deprecated in Java.
Returns the current status of this task.
Return | |
---|---|
AsyncTask.Status! |
The current status. |
isCancelled
funisCancelled(): Boolean
Deprecated: Deprecated in Java.
Returns true if this task was cancelled before it completed normally. If you are calling cancel(boolean)
on the task, the value returned by this method should be checked periodically from doInBackground(java.lang.Object[])
to end the task as soon as possible.
Return | |
---|---|
Boolean |
true if task was cancelled before it completed |
See Also
Protected methods
doInBackground
protected abstract fundoInBackground(vararg params: Params): Result
Deprecated: Deprecated in Java.
Override this method to perform a computation on a background thread. The specified parameters are the parameters passed to #execute by the caller of this task. This will normally run on a background thread. But to better support testing frameworks, it is recommended that this also tolerates direct execution on the foreground thread, as part of the #execute call. This method can call publishProgress
to publish updates on the UI thread.
This method may take several seconds to complete, so it should only be called from a worker thread.
Parameters | |
---|---|
params |
Params: The parameters of the task. |
Return | |
---|---|
Result |
A result, defined by the subclass of this task. |
onCancelled
protected open funonCancelled(): Unit
Deprecated: Deprecated in Java.
Applications should preferably override onCancelled(java.lang.Object)
. This method is invoked by the default implementation of onCancelled(java.lang.Object)
. The default version does nothing.
Runs on the UI thread after cancel(boolean)
is invoked and doInBackground(java.lang.Object[])
has finished.
This method must be called from the main thread of your app.
onCancelled
protected open funonCancelled(result: Result): Unit
Deprecated: Deprecated in Java.
Runs on the UI thread after cancel(boolean)
is invoked and doInBackground(java.lang.Object[])
has finished.
The default implementation simply invokes onCancelled()
and ignores the result. If you write your own implementation, do not call super.onCancelled(result)
.
This method must be called from the main thread of your app.
Parameters | |
---|---|
result |
Result: The result, if any, computed in doInBackground(java.lang.Object[]) , can be null |
See Also
onPostExecute
protected open funonPostExecute(result: Result): Unit
Deprecated: Deprecated in Java.
Runs on the UI thread after doInBackground
. The specified result is the value returned by doInBackground
. To better support testing frameworks, it is recommended that this be written to tolerate direct execution as part of the execute() call. The default version does nothing.
This method won't be invoked if the task was cancelled.
This method must be called from the main thread of your app.
Parameters | |
---|---|
result |
Result: The result of the operation computed by doInBackground . |
onPreExecute
protected open funonPreExecute(): Unit
Deprecated: Deprecated in Java.
Runs on the UI thread before doInBackground
. Invoked directly by #execute or executeOnExecutor
. The default version does nothing.
This method must be called from the main thread of your app.
See Also
onProgressUpdate
protected open funonProgressUpdate(vararg values: Progress): Unit
Deprecated: Deprecated in Java.
Runs on the UI thread after publishProgress
is invoked. The specified values are the values passed to publishProgress
. The default version does nothing.
This method must be called from the main thread of your app.
Parameters | |
---|---|
values |
Progress: The values indicating progress. |
See Also
publishProgress
protected funpublishProgress(vararg values: Progress): Unit
Deprecated: Deprecated in Java.
This method can be invoked from doInBackground
to publish updates on the UI thread while the background computation is still running. Each call to this method will trigger the execution of onProgressUpdate
on the UI thread. onProgressUpdate
will not be called if the task has been canceled.
This method may take several seconds to complete, so it should only be called from a worker thread.
Parameters | |
---|---|
values |
Progress: The progress values to update the UI with. |
See Also
Properties
SERIAL_EXECUTOR
static valSERIAL_EXECUTOR: Executor!
Deprecated: Globally serializing tasks results in excessive queuing for unrelated operations.
An Executor
that executes tasks one at a time in serial order. This serialization is global to a particular process.
THREAD_POOL_EXECUTOR
static valTHREAD_POOL_EXECUTOR: Executor!
Deprecated: Using a single thread pool for a general purpose results in suboptimal behavior for different tasks. Small, CPU-bound tasks benefit from a bounded pool and queueing, and long-running blocking tasks, such as network operations, benefit from many threads. Use or create an Executor
configured for your use case.
An Executor
that can be used to execute tasks in parallel.