Threading in un worker
Mantieni tutto organizzato con le raccolte
Salva e classifica i contenuti in base alle tue preferenze.
Quando utilizzi una Worker
, WorkManager
chiama automaticamente Worker.doWork()
in un thread in background. Il thread in background proviene da Executor
specificato in Configuration
di WorkManager.
Per impostazione predefinita, WorkManager configura un Executor
per te, ma puoi anche personalizzarlo
la tua. Ad esempio, puoi condividere un esecutore in background esistente
crea un Executor
a thread unico per assicurarti che tutto il lavoro in background
vengono eseguiti in sequenza o anche specificare un Executor
personalizzato. Per personalizzare
Executor
, assicurati di inizializzare WorkManager manualmente.
Quando configuri WorkManager manualmente, puoi specificare Executor
come
che segue:
Kotlin
WorkManager.initialize(
context,
Configuration.Builder()
// Uses a fixed thread pool of size 8 threads.
.setExecutor(Executors.newFixedThreadPool(8))
.build())
Java
WorkManager.initialize(
context,
new Configuration.Builder()
.setExecutor(Executors.newFixedThreadPool(8))
.build());
Ecco un esempio di Worker
semplice che scarica i contenuti di una pagina web
100 volte:
Kotlin
class DownloadWorker(context: Context, params: WorkerParameters) : Worker(context, params) {
override fun doWork(): ListenableWorker.Result {
repeat(100) {
try {
downloadSynchronously("https://www.google.com")
} catch (e: IOException) {
return ListenableWorker.Result.failure()
}
}
return ListenableWorker.Result.success()
}
}
Java
public class DownloadWorker extends Worker {
public DownloadWorker(Context context, WorkerParameters params) {
super(context, params);
}
@NonNull
@Override
public Result doWork() {
for (int i = 0; i < 100; i++) {
try {
downloadSynchronously("https://www.google.com");
} catch (IOException e) {
return Result.failure();
}
}
return Result.success();
}
}
Tieni presente che Worker.doWork()
è un
sincrona: devi svolgere interamente il lavoro in background
in modo da bloccarlo e terminarlo nel momento in cui il metodo viene chiuso. Se chiami
l'API asincrona in doWork()
e restituisce un valore Result
, il callback potrebbe non
funzionino correttamente. Se ti trovi in questa situazione, potresti utilizzare un ListenableWorker
(vedi Threading in ListenableWorker).
Quando un Worker
attualmente in esecuzione viene interrotto per qualsiasi motivo,
riceve una chiamata al numero Worker.onStopped()
. Esegui l'override di questo metodo o
chiama Worker.isStopped()
per controllare il codice e liberare risorse quando necessario. Quando Worker
nell'esempio precedente è arrestata, potrebbe trovarsi nel mezzo del suo loop di
scaricare elementi e continuerà a farlo anche se l'operazione è stata interrotta. A
per ottimizzare questo comportamento, puoi procedere in questo modo:
Kotlin
class DownloadWorker(context: Context, params: WorkerParameters) : Worker(context, params) {
override fun doWork(): ListenableWorker.Result {
repeat(100) {
if (isStopped) {
break
}
try {
downloadSynchronously("https://www.google.com")
} catch (e: IOException) {
return ListenableWorker.Result.failure()
}
}
return ListenableWorker.Result.success()
}
}
Java
public class DownloadWorker extends Worker {
public DownloadWorker(Context context, WorkerParameters params) {
super(context, params);
}
@NonNull
@Override
public Result doWork() {
for (int i = 0; i < 100; ++i) {
if (isStopped()) {
break;
}
try {
downloadSynchronously("https://www.google.com");
} catch (IOException e) {
return Result.failure();
}
}
return Result.success();
}
}
Una volta interrotto un Worker
, non importa da cosa torni
Worker.doWork()
; Result
verrà ignorato.
I campioni di contenuti e codice in questa pagina sono soggetti alle licenze descritte nella Licenza per i contenuti. Java e OpenJDK sono marchi o marchi registrati di Oracle e/o delle sue società consociate.
Ultimo aggiornamento 2025-07-27 UTC.
[null,null,["Ultimo aggiornamento 2025-07-27 UTC."],[],[],null,["# Threading in Worker\n\nWhen you use a [`Worker`](/reference/androidx/work/Worker), WorkManager\nautomatically calls [`Worker.doWork()`](/reference/androidx/work/Worker#doWork())\non a background thread. The background thread comes from the `Executor`\nspecified in WorkManager's [`Configuration`](/reference/androidx/work/Configuration).\nBy default, WorkManager sets up an `Executor` for you---but you can also customize\nyour own. For example, you can share an existing background Executor in your\napp, create a single-threaded `Executor` to make sure all your background work\nexecutes sequentially, or even specify a custom `Executor`. To customize the\n`Executor`, make sure you initialize WorkManager manually.\n\nWhen configuring WorkManager manually, you can specify your `Executor` as\nfollows: \n\n### Kotlin\n\n```kotlin\nWorkManager.initialize(\n context,\n Configuration.Builder()\n // Uses a fixed thread pool of size 8 threads.\n .setExecutor(Executors.newFixedThreadPool(8))\n .build())\n```\n\n### Java\n\n```java\nWorkManager.initialize(\n context,\n new Configuration.Builder()\n .setExecutor(Executors.newFixedThreadPool(8))\n .build());\n```\n\nHere is an example of a simple `Worker` that downloads the contents of a webpage\n100 times: \n\n### Kotlin\n\n```kotlin\nclass DownloadWorker(context: Context, params: WorkerParameters) : Worker(context, params) {\n\n override fun doWork(): ListenableWorker.Result {\n repeat(100) {\n try {\n downloadSynchronously(\"https://www.google.com\")\n } catch (e: IOException) {\n return ListenableWorker.Result.failure()\n }\n }\n\n return ListenableWorker.Result.success()\n }\n}\n```\n\n### Java\n\n```java\npublic class DownloadWorker extends Worker {\n\n public DownloadWorker(Context context, WorkerParameters params) {\n super(context, params);\n }\n\n @NonNull\n @Override\n public Result doWork() {\n for (int i = 0; i \u003c 100; i++) {\n try {\n downloadSynchronously(\"https://www.google.com\");\n } catch (IOException e) {\n return Result.failure();\n }\n }\n\n return Result.success();\n }\n\n}\n```\n\nNote that [`Worker.doWork()`](/reference/androidx/work/Worker#doWork()) is a\nsynchronous call---you are expected to do the entirety of your background work in\na blocking fashion and finish it by the time the method exits. If you call an\nasynchronous API in `doWork()` and return a [`Result`](/reference/androidx/work/ListenableWorker.Result), your callback may not\noperate properly. If you find yourself in this situation, consider using a [`ListenableWorker`](/reference/androidx/work/ListenableWorker) (see [Threading in ListenableWorker](/topic/libraries/architecture/workmanager/advanced/listenableworker)).\n\nWhen a currently running `Worker` is [stopped for any reason](/topic/libraries/architecture/workmanager/how-to/managing-work#cancelling), it\nreceives a call to [`Worker.onStopped()`](/reference/androidx/work/ListenableWorker#onStopped()). Override this method or\ncall [`Worker.isStopped()`](/reference/androidx/work/ListenableWorker#isStopped())\nto checkpoint your code and free up resources when necessary. When the `Worker`\nin the example above is stopped, it may be in the middle of its loop of\ndownloading items and will continue doing so even though it has been stopped. To\noptimize this behavior, you can do something like this: \n\n### Kotlin\n\n```kotlin\nclass DownloadWorker(context: Context, params: WorkerParameters) : Worker(context, params) {\n\n override fun doWork(): ListenableWorker.Result {\n repeat(100) {\n if (isStopped) {\n break\n }\n\n try {\n downloadSynchronously(\"https://www.google.com\")\n } catch (e: IOException) {\n return ListenableWorker.Result.failure()\n }\n\n }\n\n return ListenableWorker.Result.success()\n }\n}\n```\n\n### Java\n\n```java\npublic class DownloadWorker extends Worker {\n\n public DownloadWorker(Context context, WorkerParameters params) {\n super(context, params);\n }\n\n @NonNull\n @Override\n public Result doWork() {\n for (int i = 0; i \u003c 100; ++i) {\n if (isStopped()) {\n break;\n }\n\n try {\n downloadSynchronously(\"https://www.google.com\");\n } catch (IOException e) {\n return Result.failure();\n }\n }\n\n return Result.success();\n }\n}\n```\n\nOnce a `Worker` has been stopped, it doesn't matter what you return from\n`Worker.doWork()`; the `Result` will be ignored."]]