Hello our application works perfect but when our users move the app to background, after a while coming back to app its been crashing.
For example i open the app then change three pages then move the app to background. after open from background 30 minutes its crash because its try to load activity when i resumed
Another applications do this from mainactivity, for example: instagram,twitter vs vs.
another applications not to try load resume activity, they are trying to main activity
how can i start my app from mainactivity when user come back to app from background ?
well, the better way would be to identify the null objects and reassign or repopulate them in the onResume() method so that the user can actually return to what they were doing.
if you can't or it's not an option, then try this code in every activity that you do not want to return to.
override fun onTrimMemory(level: Int) {
this.finishAffinity()
}
this code closes the active activity as soon as the app goes into background so when returned, the app is forced to start from the launcher activity.
Although I am not convinced that this is the best approach. there might be something better.
The app I'm working on shows some sensitive information that must not be shown on the "Recent Tasks" screen when stopping the app by pressing the home button.
I'd like to blur the sensitive data in the screenshot or show the app logo instead.
I am aware of the following approaches but they don't fit my requirements:
Setting the actvitie's android:excludeFromRecents to true in the manifiest prevents the app from being shown at all in the recent tasks. This would disrupt the user experience.
Using FLAG_SECURE results in a blank card on the recents tasks screen. (How do I prevent Android taking a screenshot when my app goes to the background?) I don't like the blank screen. However, I'll stick to this solution if there is no workaround.
Overriding onCreateThumbnail seems like the ideal solution but, unfortunately, doesn't work as it's currently not invoked by the OS :( (https://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=29370)
And then there are some workarounds that I tried out but that didn't work as hoped:
Start a new activity that shows the app logo in onPause so that it's screenshot is shown instead of the actual activitie's one. But the new activity takes too long to open and it disrupts the user experience.
Set the activitie's content view to an image of the app logo in onPause. That seemed like a great solution to me. Unfortunately, the screenshot for the recent tasks screen is taken at an unspecified time. During testing the app logo quickly appears before the app is closed when pressing 'Home' but the resulting screenshot shows the activity a short time before that.
Removing the sensitive data from the widgets (e.g. textView.setText("")) has the same problem of screenshot timing just mentioned.
Any alternative ideas or solutions to the listed workarounds?
I looked into this a couple of months ago for the same purpose as you.
Unfortunately, I had to conclude that it is simply not possible. I dug through the android source code and confirmed it.
There is no callbacks or methods from android that allows you to customize it (that works anyway). Besides FLAG_SECURE, this part of the code does not accept any input or change.
OnPause and similar lifecycle methods are called too late (the screenshot is taken already). All lifecycle methods that would hint that you're about to go into the background runs too late.
The image you see in the recent tasks is an actual screenshot - and thus isn't affected by changes you do (too late) to your view. That means you can't modify your view just-in-time (like making it invisible, replacing with something else, adding SECURE_FLAG, or any other obstruction of the view). As an aside, these images can be found on an emulator at /data/system_ce/0/recent_images.
The only exception is using FLAG_SECURE, which will prevent the screenshot from being taken of your application. I experimented with setting this FLAG in onPause and removing it in onResume, however as mentioned already these lifecycle methods runs after the screenshot is taken already, and thus had absolutely no effect.
As discussed in How to change the snapshot shown by recent apps list? there used to be a callback that you could use to customize the thumbnail: onCreateThumbnail. However, this does not work and it is never called. To be clear, the callback is still there, it is simply never called by the OS. The fact that it stopped working is poorly documented, but apparently was silently deprecated/removed in 4.0.3
As for the thumbnail itself, it is a screenshot taken serverside. It is taken before onPause is called (or in fact before any callbacks indicating that your activity is about to go into the background is called).
When your app does go into the background, your actual view is animated (to get that zoom-out transition). That animation can be affected through changes you do in onPause (if you're fast enough that is) (I experimented with setting opacity to 0 on the window among other things). This will however only affect the animation. When the animation is finished, the view is replaced by the screenshot taken earlier.
Also see these questions that discuss this:
When does Android take its recent apps switcher screenshot?
Show custom application image in task manager on ICS or JB
Android never call method onCreateThumbnail
Currently (28/10/2020) is impossibile customizing app thumbnail in recent apps screen.
As explained by #Dellkan in the previous answer, the onCreateThumbnail method is not called anymore by the OS.
Unfortunately, also the suggestion to create a kind of launcher/splash screen without the FLAG_SECURE flag to let the app take a screenshot of that activity is not working, because the screenshot is taken on the activity you see and not at the launch of the app.
You cannot even customize the color of window background when using FLAG_SECURE as reported here.
How about implementing a layout overlay on top of your entire activity?
Make it transparent, it's click-through by default, so no negative impact on UX while in use.
In onPause() set a half-transparent, blurred image as the background of that layout, the data will be scrambled behind it. In onResume() change the background to fully transparent again. Voila.
It might be faster than other types of overlays. The positive side effect is, if you do the unblurring as a short animation effect when the user goes back (with a proper library that uses C++ instead of Java), it might even look cool and the users wouldnt even mind seeing it.
I haven't tried this myself, but it's something you haven't tried yet.
Since onPause is called to late, I use WindowFocusChangeListener to observe when the Fragment loses focus. At this moment we can hide all view which show sensitive data:
#Override
public void onViewCreated(#NonNull View view, #Nullable Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onViewCreated(view, savedInstanceState);
view.getViewTreeObserver().addOnWindowFocusChangeListener(new ViewTreeObserver.OnWindowFocusChangeListener() {
#Override
public void onWindowFocusChanged(boolean hasFocus) {
// hide sensitive data when window moves to background (before system screenshot is captured)
myViewWithSensitiveData.setVisibility(hasFocus ? View.VISIBLE : View.INVISIBLE);
}
});
There is a way to customize it. You need your Activities with sensitive data to FLAG_SECURE in onCreate before you setContentView. Then you need an empty Activity, which renders whatever you want to have as the customized thumbnail. This usually is some sort of splash screen. This new Activity needs to be the launcher and is the only Activity not FLAG_SECURE. This Activity is launched and in onResume starts your actual Activity with the sensitive data.
Android OS will take a screenshot of that new Activity at the beginning of your App. Unfortunately the users will also see this Activity for a short moment. Since every other Activity is FLAG_SECURE, Android OS will use the only available screenshot it made at the beginning.
Was looking for a solution and found some dirty things in case you don't want to use 'FLAG_SECURE'. It doesn't give a nice picture but protects data and doesn't prevent making screenshots for the user while they are in the app.
protected void onPause () {
this.getWindow().getDecorView().getRootView().setScaleX((float)200);
this.getWindow().getDecorView().getRootView().setScaleY((float)200);
super.onPause();
}
protected void onResume () {
this.getWindow().getDecorView().getRootView().setScaleX((float)1);
this.getWindow().getDecorView().getRootView().setScaleY((float)1);
super.onResume();
}
I think this can only achieve through BroadCastReceiver but there is no receiver present. So therefore you first disable default screenshot functionality in android and then implementing your own functionality to take screenshot and before taking screenshot you should blur your secure information.
I am working on an Android app with multiple activities. When moving from one activity to another in certain cases I want to refresh the display but not in others.
One case is where I background the application and foreground it again. When I foreground it, I want to refresh everything on the screen depending on which activity
I backgrounded to begin with. How can I do this? I am unfortunately a bit new to Android so some appropriate basics where applicable would also be helpful.
http://developer.android.com/guide/components/activities.html#SavingActivityState
You can use onSaveInstanceState() to save information before onPause() is called. In onResume() you can use the saved info as a case in a switch statement or some conditional to refresh what you want.
I am developing an android emergency app and I want to add a feature that can call a certain method from my activity class when the screen is locked. Is there anyway for my app to detect any kind gestures like shake, screen tap pattern or any kind of movement when the screen is locked?
Not sure if it will work, but I think you can put a listener in a service and put the servicee in the foreground. I have no clue what exactly youwant to achieve but this is what I can think of right now. BTW -- pass information from a service the foreground activity
I'm relatively new to Android but have made quite a few apps over the past year so forgive me.
I know that when you are running an app on a device and change the screen orientation by turning the device the activity that is showing is completely recreated. I go to the youtube app (I am using Nexus 7 w/ Android 4.2.2) and play some video and then flip the screen to change orientation. The video keeps playing and everything is re-sized accordingly... How is this possible if the activity is completely recreated?
Thank you.
In your AndroidManifest.xml add, android:configChanges and this would avoid the activity being re-created on orientation change. I hope your landscape and portrait mode has the same layout.
<activity android:label="Your Activity Name"
android:configChanges="keyboardHidden|orientation|screenSize"
android:name="com.yourpackage">
To add more to this, i would suggest you to look at the onPause() and onResume() methods and if you are playing with Fragments then have a watch on onSaveInstanceState and onRetainInstanceState rather than applying the xml changes as "Activity is destroyed by design."
http://developer.android.com/training/basics/activity-lifecycle/index.html
If you are worried about losing the value of local variables within your activity... You could use Singleton Pattern for some of those variables. This not a beautiful solution, but could work.