public
class
AlarmManager
extends Object
java.lang.Object | |
↳ | android.app.AlarmManager |
This class provides access to the system alarm services. These allow you
to schedule your application to be run at some point in the future. When
an alarm goes off, the Intent
that had been registered for it
is broadcast by the system, automatically starting the target application
if it is not already running. Registered alarms are retained while the
device is asleep (and can optionally wake the device up if they go off
during that time), but will be cleared if it is turned off and rebooted.
The Alarm Manager holds a CPU wake lock as long as the alarm receiver's
onReceive() method is executing. This guarantees that the phone will not sleep
until you have finished handling the broadcast. Once onReceive() returns, the
Alarm Manager releases this wake lock. This means that the phone will in some
cases sleep as soon as your onReceive() method completes. If your alarm receiver
called Context.startService()
, it
is possible that the phone will sleep before the requested service is launched.
To prevent this, your BroadcastReceiver and Service will need to implement a
separate wake lock policy to ensure that the phone continues running until the
service becomes available.
Note: The Alarm Manager is intended for cases where you want to have
your application code run at a specific time, even if your application is
not currently running. For normal timing operations (ticks, timeouts,
etc) it is easier and much more efficient to use
Handler
.
Note: Beginning with API 19
(KITKAT
) alarm delivery is inexact:
the OS will shift alarms in order to minimize wakeups and battery use. There are
new APIs to support applications which need strict delivery guarantees; see
setWindow(int, long, long, PendingIntent)
and
setExact(int, long, PendingIntent)
. Applications whose targetSdkVersion
is earlier than API 19 will continue to see the previous behavior in which all
alarms are delivered exactly when requested.
You do not
instantiate this class directly; instead, retrieve it through
Context.getSystemService(Context.ALARM_SERVICE)
.
Nested classes | |
---|---|
class |
AlarmManager.AlarmClockInfo
An immutable description of a scheduled "alarm clock" event. |
interface |
AlarmManager.OnAlarmListener
Direct-notification alarms: the requester must be running continuously from the time the alarm is set to the time it is delivered, or delivery will fail. |
Constants | |
---|---|
String |
ACTION_NEXT_ALARM_CLOCK_CHANGED
Broadcast Action: Sent after the value returned by
|
int |
ELAPSED_REALTIME
Alarm time in |
int |
ELAPSED_REALTIME_WAKEUP
Alarm time in |
long |
INTERVAL_DAY
Available inexact recurrence interval recognized by
|
long |
INTERVAL_FIFTEEN_MINUTES
Available inexact recurrence interval recognized by
|
long |
INTERVAL_HALF_DAY
Available inexact recurrence interval recognized by
|
long |
INTERVAL_HALF_HOUR
Available inexact recurrence interval recognized by
|
long |
INTERVAL_HOUR
Available inexact recurrence interval recognized by
|
int |
RTC
Alarm time in |
int |
RTC_WAKEUP
Alarm time in |
Public methods | |
---|---|
void
|
cancel(PendingIntent operation)
Remove any alarms with a matching |
void
|
cancel(AlarmManager.OnAlarmListener listener)
Remove any alarm scheduled to be delivered to the given |
AlarmManager.AlarmClockInfo
|
getNextAlarmClock()
Gets information about the next alarm clock currently scheduled. |
void
|
set(int type, long triggerAtMillis, PendingIntent operation)
Schedule an alarm. |
void
|
set(int type, long triggerAtMillis, String tag, AlarmManager.OnAlarmListener listener, Handler targetHandler)
Direct callback version of |
void
|
setAlarmClock(AlarmManager.AlarmClockInfo info, PendingIntent operation)
Schedule an alarm that represents an alarm clock. |
void
|
setAndAllowWhileIdle(int type, long triggerAtMillis, PendingIntent operation)
Like |
void
|
setExact(int type, long triggerAtMillis, PendingIntent operation)
Schedule an alarm to be delivered precisely at the stated time. |
void
|
setExact(int type, long triggerAtMillis, String tag, AlarmManager.OnAlarmListener listener, Handler targetHandler)
Direct callback version of |
void
|
setExactAndAllowWhileIdle(int type, long triggerAtMillis, PendingIntent operation)
Like |
void
|
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. |
void
|
setRepeating(int type, long triggerAtMillis, long intervalMillis, PendingIntent operation)
Schedule a repeating alarm. |
void
|
setTime(long millis)
Set the system wall clock time. |
void
|
setTimeZone(String timeZone)
Sets the system's persistent default time zone. |
void
|
setWindow(int type, long windowStartMillis, long windowLengthMillis, PendingIntent operation)
Schedule an alarm to be delivered within a given window of time. |
void
|
setWindow(int type, long windowStartMillis, long windowLengthMillis, String tag, AlarmManager.OnAlarmListener listener, Handler targetHandler)
Direct callback version of |
Inherited methods | |
---|---|
From
class
java.lang.Object
|
String ACTION_NEXT_ALARM_CLOCK_CHANGED
Broadcast Action: Sent after the value returned by
getNextAlarmClock()
has changed.
This is a protected intent that can only be sent by the system. It is only sent to registered receivers.
Constant Value: "android.app.action.NEXT_ALARM_CLOCK_CHANGED"
int ELAPSED_REALTIME
Alarm time in SystemClock.elapsedRealtime()
(time since boot, including sleep).
This alarm does not wake the device up; if it goes off while the device
is asleep, it will not be delivered until the next time the device
wakes up.
Constant Value: 3 (0x00000003)
int ELAPSED_REALTIME_WAKEUP
Alarm time in SystemClock.elapsedRealtime()
(time since boot, including sleep),
which will wake up the device when it goes off.
Constant Value: 2 (0x00000002)
long INTERVAL_DAY
Available inexact recurrence interval recognized by
setInexactRepeating(int, long, long, PendingIntent)
when running on Android prior to API 19.
Constant Value: 86400000 (0x0000000005265c00)
long INTERVAL_FIFTEEN_MINUTES
Available inexact recurrence interval recognized by
setInexactRepeating(int, long, long, PendingIntent)
when running on Android prior to API 19.
Constant Value: 900000 (0x00000000000dbba0)
long INTERVAL_HALF_DAY
Available inexact recurrence interval recognized by
setInexactRepeating(int, long, long, PendingIntent)
when running on Android prior to API 19.
Constant Value: 43200000 (0x0000000002932e00)
long INTERVAL_HALF_HOUR
Available inexact recurrence interval recognized by
setInexactRepeating(int, long, long, PendingIntent)
when running on Android prior to API 19.
Constant Value: 1800000 (0x00000000001b7740)
long INTERVAL_HOUR
Available inexact recurrence interval recognized by
setInexactRepeating(int, long, long, PendingIntent)
when running on Android prior to API 19.
Constant Value: 3600000 (0x000000000036ee80)
int RTC
Alarm time in System.currentTimeMillis()
(wall clock time in UTC). This alarm does not wake the
device up; if it goes off while the device is asleep, it will not be
delivered until the next time the device wakes up.
Constant Value: 1 (0x00000001)
int RTC_WAKEUP
Alarm time in System.currentTimeMillis()
(wall clock time in UTC), which will wake up the device when
it goes off.
Constant Value: 0 (0x00000000)
void cancel (PendingIntent operation)
Remove any alarms with a matching Intent
.
Any alarm, of any type, whose Intent matches this one (as defined by
filterEquals(Intent)
), will be canceled.
Parameters | |
---|---|
operation |
PendingIntent :
IntentSender which matches a previously added
IntentSender. This parameter must not be null . |
See also:
void cancel (AlarmManager.OnAlarmListener listener)
Remove any alarm scheduled to be delivered to the given AlarmManager.OnAlarmListener
.
Parameters | |
---|---|
listener |
AlarmManager.OnAlarmListener :
OnAlarmListener instance that is the target of a currently-set alarm.
|
AlarmManager.AlarmClockInfo getNextAlarmClock ()
Gets information about the next alarm clock currently scheduled.
The alarm clocks considered are those scheduled by any application
using the setAlarmClock(AlarmManager.AlarmClockInfo, PendingIntent)
method.
Returns | |
---|---|
AlarmManager.AlarmClockInfo |
An AlarmManager.AlarmClockInfo object describing the next upcoming alarm
clock event that will occur. If there are no alarm clock events currently
scheduled, this method will return null . |
void set (int type, long triggerAtMillis, PendingIntent operation)
Schedule an alarm. Note: for timing operations (ticks, timeouts,
etc) it is easier and much more efficient to use Handler
.
If there is already an alarm scheduled for the same IntentSender, that previous
alarm will first be canceled.
If the stated trigger time is in the past, the alarm will be triggered
immediately. If there is already an alarm for this Intent
scheduled (with the equality of two intents being defined by
filterEquals(Intent)
), then it will be removed and replaced by
this one.
The alarm is an Intent broadcast that goes to a broadcast receiver that
you registered with registerReceiver(BroadcastReceiver, IntentFilter)
or through the <receiver> tag in an AndroidManifest.xml file.
Alarm intents are delivered with a data extra of type int called
Intent.EXTRA_ALARM_COUNT
that indicates
how many past alarm events have been accumulated into this intent
broadcast. Recurring alarms that have gone undelivered because the
phone was asleep may have a count greater than one when delivered.
Note: Beginning in API 19, the trigger time passed to this method is treated as inexact: the alarm will not be delivered before this time, but may be deferred and delivered some time later. The OS will use this policy in order to "batch" alarms together across the entire system, minimizing the number of times the device needs to "wake up" and minimizing battery use. In general, alarms scheduled in the near future will not be deferred as long as alarms scheduled far in the future.
With the new batching policy, delivery ordering guarantees are not as
strong as they were previously. If the application sets multiple alarms,
it is possible that these alarms' actual delivery ordering may not match
the order of their requested delivery times. If your application has
strong ordering requirements there are other APIs that you can use to get
the necessary behavior; see setWindow(int, long, long, PendingIntent)
and setExact(int, long, PendingIntent)
.
Applications whose targetSdkVersion
is before API 19 will
continue to get the previous alarm behavior: all of their scheduled alarms
will be treated as exact.
Parameters | |
---|---|
type |
int :
One of ELAPSED_REALTIME , ELAPSED_REALTIME_WAKEUP ,
RTC , or RTC_WAKEUP . |
triggerAtMillis |
long :
time in milliseconds that the alarm should go
off, using the appropriate clock (depending on the alarm type). |
operation |
PendingIntent :
Action to perform when the alarm goes off;
typically comes from IntentSender.getBroadcast() . |
See also:
Handler
setExact(int, long, PendingIntent)
setRepeating(int, long, long, PendingIntent)
setWindow(int, long, long, PendingIntent)
cancel(AlarmManager.OnAlarmListener)
sendBroadcast(Intent)
registerReceiver(BroadcastReceiver, IntentFilter)
filterEquals(Intent)
ELAPSED_REALTIME
ELAPSED_REALTIME_WAKEUP
RTC
RTC_WAKEUP
void set (int type, long triggerAtMillis, String tag, AlarmManager.OnAlarmListener listener, Handler targetHandler)
Direct callback version of set(int, long, PendingIntent)
. Rather than
supplying a PendingIntent to be sent when the alarm time is reached, this variant
supplies an AlarmManager.OnAlarmListener
instance that will be invoked at that time.
The OnAlarmListener's onAlarm()
method will be
invoked via the specified target Handler, or on the application's main looper
if null
is passed as the targetHandler
parameter.
Parameters | |
---|---|
type |
int :
One of ELAPSED_REALTIME , ELAPSED_REALTIME_WAKEUP ,
RTC , or RTC_WAKEUP . |
triggerAtMillis |
long :
time in milliseconds that the alarm should go
off, using the appropriate clock (depending on the alarm type). |
tag |
String :
string describing the alarm, used for logging and battery-use
attribution |
listener |
AlarmManager.OnAlarmListener :
AlarmManager.OnAlarmListener instance whose
onAlarm() method will be
called when the alarm time is reached. A given OnAlarmListener instance can
only be the target of a single pending alarm, just as a given PendingIntent
can only be used with one alarm at a time. |
targetHandler |
Handler :
Handler on which to execute the listener's onAlarm()
callback, or null to run that callback on the main looper.
|
void setAlarmClock (AlarmManager.AlarmClockInfo info, PendingIntent operation)
Schedule an alarm that represents an alarm clock. The system may choose to display information about this alarm to the user.
This method is like setExact(int, long, PendingIntent)
, but implies
RTC_WAKEUP
.
Parameters | |
---|---|
operation |
PendingIntent :
Action to perform when the alarm goes off;
typically comes from IntentSender.getBroadcast() . |
See also:
void setAndAllowWhileIdle (int type, long triggerAtMillis, PendingIntent operation)
Like set(int, long, PendingIntent)
, but this alarm will be allowed to execute
even when the system is in low-power idle modes. This type of alarm must only
be used for situations where it is actually required that the alarm go off while in
idle -- a reasonable example would be for a calendar notification that should make a
sound so the user is aware of it. When the alarm is dispatched, the app will also be
added to the system's temporary whitelist for approximately 10 seconds to allow that
application to acquire further wake locks in which to complete its work.
These alarms can significantly impact the power use of the device when idle (and thus cause significant battery blame to the app scheduling them), so they should be used with care. To reduce abuse, there are restrictions on how frequently these alarms will go off for a particular application. Under normal system operation, it will not dispatch these alarms more than about every minute (at which point every such pending alarm is dispatched); when in low-power idle modes this duration may be significantly longer, such as 15 minutes.
Unlike other alarms, the system is free to reschedule this type of alarm to happen out of order with any other alarms, even those from the same app. This will clearly happen when the device is idle (since this alarm can go off while idle, when any other alarms from the app will be held until later), but may also happen even when not idle.
Regardless of the app's target SDK version, this call always allows batching of the alarm.
Parameters | |
---|---|
type |
int :
One of ELAPSED_REALTIME , ELAPSED_REALTIME_WAKEUP ,
RTC , or RTC_WAKEUP . |
triggerAtMillis |
long :
time in milliseconds that the alarm should go
off, using the appropriate clock (depending on the alarm type). |
operation |
PendingIntent :
Action to perform when the alarm goes off;
typically comes from IntentSender.getBroadcast() . |
void setExact (int type, long triggerAtMillis, PendingIntent operation)
Schedule an alarm to be delivered precisely at the stated time.
This method is like set(int, long, PendingIntent)
, but does not permit
the OS to adjust the delivery time. The alarm will be delivered as nearly as
possible to the requested trigger time.
Note: only alarms for which there is a strong demand for exact-time delivery (such as an alarm clock ringing at the requested time) should be scheduled as exact. Applications are strongly discouraged from using exact alarms unnecessarily as they reduce the OS's ability to minimize battery use.
Parameters | |
---|---|
type |
int :
One of ELAPSED_REALTIME , ELAPSED_REALTIME_WAKEUP ,
RTC , or RTC_WAKEUP . |
triggerAtMillis |
long :
time in milliseconds that the alarm should go
off, using the appropriate clock (depending on the alarm type). |
operation |
PendingIntent :
Action to perform when the alarm goes off;
typically comes from IntentSender.getBroadcast() . |
See also:
void setExact (int type, long triggerAtMillis, String tag, AlarmManager.OnAlarmListener listener, Handler targetHandler)
Direct callback version of setExact(int, long, PendingIntent)
. Rather
than supplying a PendingIntent to be sent when the alarm time is reached, this variant
supplies an AlarmManager.OnAlarmListener
instance that will be invoked at that time.
The OnAlarmListener's onAlarm()
method will be
invoked via the specified target Handler, or on the application's main looper
if null
is passed as the targetHandler
parameter.
Parameters | |
---|---|
type |
int
|
triggerAtMillis |
long
|
tag |
String
|
listener |
AlarmManager.OnAlarmListener
|
targetHandler |
Handler
|
void setExactAndAllowWhileIdle (int type, long triggerAtMillis, PendingIntent operation)
Like setExact(int, long, PendingIntent)
, but this alarm will be allowed to execute
even when the system is in low-power idle modes. If you don't need exact scheduling of
the alarm but still need to execute while idle, consider using
setAndAllowWhileIdle(int, long, PendingIntent)
. This type of alarm must only
be used for situations where it is actually required that the alarm go off while in
idle -- a reasonable example would be for a calendar notification that should make a
sound so the user is aware of it. When the alarm is dispatched, the app will also be
added to the system's temporary whitelist for approximately 10 seconds to allow that
application to acquire further wake locks in which to complete its work.
These alarms can significantly impact the power use of the device when idle (and thus cause significant battery blame to the app scheduling them), so they should be used with care. To reduce abuse, there are restrictions on how frequently these alarms will go off for a particular application. Under normal system operation, it will not dispatch these alarms more than about every minute (at which point every such pending alarm is dispatched); when in low-power idle modes this duration may be significantly longer, such as 15 minutes.
Unlike other alarms, the system is free to reschedule this type of alarm to happen out of order with any other alarms, even those from the same app. This will clearly happen when the device is idle (since this alarm can go off while idle, when any other alarms from the app will be held until later), but may also happen even when not idle. Note that the OS will allow itself more flexibility for scheduling these alarms than regular exact alarms, since the application has opted into this behavior. When the device is idle it may take even more liberties with scheduling in order to optimize for battery life.
Parameters | |
---|---|
type |
int :
One of ELAPSED_REALTIME , ELAPSED_REALTIME_WAKEUP ,
RTC , or RTC_WAKEUP . |
triggerAtMillis |
long :
time in milliseconds that the alarm should go
off, using the appropriate clock (depending on the alarm type). |
operation |
PendingIntent :
Action to perform when the alarm goes off;
typically comes from IntentSender.getBroadcast() . |
See also:
void 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. These alarms are more power-efficient than
the strict recurrences traditionally supplied by setRepeating(int, long, long, PendingIntent)
, since the
system can adjust alarms' delivery times to cause them to fire simultaneously,
avoiding waking the device from sleep more than necessary.
Your alarm's first trigger will not be before the requested time,
but it might not occur for almost a full interval after that time. In
addition, while the overall period of the repeating alarm will be as
requested, the time between any two successive firings of the alarm
may vary. If your application demands very low jitter, use
one-shot alarms with an appropriate window instead; see setWindow(int, long, long, PendingIntent)
and
setExact(int, long, PendingIntent)
.
As of API 19, all repeating alarms are inexact. Because this method has been available since API 3, your application can safely call it and be assured that it will get similar behavior on both current and older versions of Android.
Parameters | |
---|---|
type |
int :
One of ELAPSED_REALTIME , ELAPSED_REALTIME_WAKEUP ,
RTC , or RTC_WAKEUP . |
triggerAtMillis |
long :
time in milliseconds that the alarm should first
go off, using the appropriate clock (depending on the alarm type). This
is inexact: the alarm will not fire before this time, but there may be a
delay of almost an entire alarm interval before the first invocation of
the alarm. |
intervalMillis |
long :
interval in milliseconds between subsequent repeats
of the alarm. Prior to API 19, if this is one of INTERVAL_FIFTEEN_MINUTES,
INTERVAL_HALF_HOUR, INTERVAL_HOUR, INTERVAL_HALF_DAY, or INTERVAL_DAY
then the alarm will be phase-aligned with other alarms to reduce the
number of wakeups. Otherwise, the alarm will be set as though the
application had called setRepeating(int, long, long, PendingIntent) . As of API 19, all repeating
alarms will be inexact and subject to batching with other alarms regardless
of their stated repeat interval. |
operation |
PendingIntent :
Action to perform when the alarm goes off;
typically comes from IntentSender.getBroadcast() . |
See also:
void setRepeating (int type, long triggerAtMillis, long intervalMillis, PendingIntent operation)
Schedule a repeating alarm. Note: for timing operations (ticks,
timeouts, etc) it is easier and much more efficient to use
Handler
. If there is already an alarm scheduled
for the same IntentSender, it will first be canceled.
Like set(int, long, PendingIntent)
, except you can also supply a period at which
the alarm will automatically repeat. This alarm continues
repeating until explicitly removed with cancel(AlarmManager.OnAlarmListener)
. If the stated
trigger time is in the past, the alarm will be triggered immediately, with an
alarm count depending on how far in the past the trigger time is relative
to the repeat interval.
If an alarm is delayed (by system sleep, for example, for non _WAKEUP alarm types), a skipped repeat will be delivered as soon as possible. After that, future alarms will be delivered according to the original schedule; they do not drift over time. For example, if you have set a recurring alarm for the top of every hour but the phone was asleep from 7:45 until 8:45, an alarm will be sent as soon as the phone awakens, then the next alarm will be sent at 9:00.
If your application wants to allow the delivery times to drift in order to guarantee that at least a certain time interval always elapses between alarms, then the approach to take is to use one-time alarms, scheduling the next one yourself when handling each alarm delivery.
Note: as of API 19, all repeating alarms are inexact. If your
application needs precise delivery times then it must use one-time
exact alarms, rescheduling each time as described above. Legacy applications
whose targetSdkVersion
is earlier than API 19 will continue to have all
of their alarms, including repeating alarms, treated as exact.
Parameters | |
---|---|
type |
int :
One of ELAPSED_REALTIME , ELAPSED_REALTIME_WAKEUP ,
RTC , or RTC_WAKEUP . |
triggerAtMillis |
long :
time in milliseconds that the alarm should first
go off, using the appropriate clock (depending on the alarm type). |
intervalMillis |
long :
interval in milliseconds between subsequent repeats
of the alarm. |
operation |
PendingIntent :
Action to perform when the alarm goes off;
typically comes from IntentSender.getBroadcast() . |
void setTime (long millis)
Set the system wall clock time. Requires the permission android.permission.SET_TIME.
Parameters | |
---|---|
millis |
long :
time in milliseconds since the Epoch
|
void setTimeZone (String timeZone)
Sets the system's persistent default time zone. This is the time zone for all apps, even
after a reboot. Use setDefault(TimeZone)
if you just want to change the
time zone within your app, and even then prefer to pass an explicit
TimeZone
to APIs that require it rather than changing the time zone for
all threads.
On android M and above, it is an error to pass in a non-Olson timezone to this
function. Note that this is a bad idea on all Android releases because POSIX and
the TimeZone
class have opposite interpretations of '+'
and '-'
in the same non-Olson ID.
Parameters | |
---|---|
timeZone |
String :
one of the Olson ids from the list returned by
getAvailableIDs()
|
void setWindow (int type, long windowStartMillis, long windowLengthMillis, PendingIntent operation)
Schedule an alarm to be delivered within a given window of time. This method
is similar to set(int, long, PendingIntent)
, but allows the
application to precisely control the degree to which its delivery might be
adjusted by the OS. This method allows an application to take advantage of the
battery optimizations that arise from delivery batching even when it has
modest timeliness requirements for its alarms.
This method can also be used to achieve strict ordering guarantees among multiple alarms by ensuring that the windows requested for each alarm do not intersect.
When precise delivery is not required, applications should use the standard
set(int, long, PendingIntent)
method. This will give the OS the most
flexibility to minimize wakeups and battery use. For alarms that must be delivered
at precisely-specified times with no acceptable variation, applications can use
setExact(int, long, PendingIntent)
.
Parameters | |
---|---|
type |
int :
One of ELAPSED_REALTIME , ELAPSED_REALTIME_WAKEUP ,
RTC , or RTC_WAKEUP . |
windowStartMillis |
long :
The earliest time, in milliseconds, that the alarm should
be delivered, expressed in the appropriate clock's units (depending on the alarm
type). |
windowLengthMillis |
long :
The length of the requested delivery window,
in milliseconds. The alarm will be delivered no later than this many
milliseconds after windowStartMillis . Note that this parameter
is a duration, not the timestamp of the end of the window. |
operation |
PendingIntent :
Action to perform when the alarm goes off;
typically comes from IntentSender.getBroadcast() . |
void setWindow (int type, long windowStartMillis, long windowLengthMillis, String tag, AlarmManager.OnAlarmListener listener, Handler targetHandler)
Direct callback version of setWindow(int, long, long, PendingIntent)
. Rather
than supplying a PendingIntent to be sent when the alarm time is reached, this variant
supplies an AlarmManager.OnAlarmListener
instance that will be invoked at that time.
The OnAlarmListener onAlarm()
method will be
invoked via the specified target Handler, or on the application's main looper
if null
is passed as the targetHandler
parameter.
Parameters | |
---|---|
type |
int
|
windowStartMillis |
long
|
windowLengthMillis |
long
|
tag |
String
|
listener |
AlarmManager.OnAlarmListener
|
targetHandler |
Handler
|