464 lines
20 KiB
Java
464 lines
20 KiB
Java
/*
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* Copyright (C) 2006 The Android Open Source Project
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*
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* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
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* you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
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* You may obtain a copy of the License at
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*
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* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
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*
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* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
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* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
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* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
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* See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
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* limitations under the License.
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*/
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package android.content;
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import android.app.ActivityManagerNative;
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import android.app.IActivityManager;
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import android.os.Bundle;
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import android.os.IBinder;
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import android.os.RemoteException;
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import android.util.Log;
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/**
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* Base class for code that will receive intents sent by sendBroadcast().
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* You can either dynamically register an instance of this class with
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* {@link Context#registerReceiver Context.registerReceiver()}
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* or statically publish an implementation through the
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* {@link android.R.styleable#AndroidManifestReceiver <receiver>}
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* tag in your <code>AndroidManifest.xml</code>. <em><strong>Note:</strong></em>
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* If registering a receiver in your
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* {@link android.app.Activity#onResume() Activity.onResume()}
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* implementation, you should unregister it in
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* {@link android.app.Activity#onPause() Activity.onPause()}.
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* (You won't receive intents when paused,
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* and this will cut down on unnecessary system overhead). Do not unregister in
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* {@link android.app.Activity#onSaveInstanceState(android.os.Bundle) Activity.onSaveInstanceState()},
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* because this won't be called if the user moves back in the history
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* stack.
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*
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* <p>There are two major classes of broadcasts that can be received:</p>
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* <ul>
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* <li> <b>Normal broadcasts</b> (sent with {@link Context#sendBroadcast(Intent)
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* Context.sendBroadcast}) are completely asynchronous. All receivers of the
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* broadcast are run in an undefined order, often at the same time. This is
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* more efficient, but means that receivers cannot use the result or abort
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* APIs included here.
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* <li> <b>Ordered broadcasts</b> (sent with {@link Context#sendOrderedBroadcast(Intent, String)
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* Context.sendOrderedBroadcast}) are delivered to one receiver at a time.
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* As each receiver executes in turn, it can propagate a result to the next
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* receiver, or it can completely abort the broadcast so that it won't be passed
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* to other receivers. The order receivers run in can be controlled with the
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* {@link android.R.styleable#AndroidManifestIntentFilter_priority
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* android:priority} attribute of the matching intent-filter; receivers with
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* the same priority will be run in an arbitrary order.
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* </ul>
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*
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* <p>Even in the case of normal broadcasts, the system may in some
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* situations revert to delivering the broadcast one receiver at a time. In
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* particular, for receivers that may require the creation of a process, only
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* one will be run at a time to avoid overloading the system with new processes.
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* In this situation, however, the non-ordered semantics hold: these receivers still
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* cannot return results or abort their broadcast.</p>
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*
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* <p>Note that, although the Intent class is used for sending and receiving
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* these broadcasts, the Intent broadcast mechanism here is completely separate
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* from Intents that are used to start Activities with
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* {@link Context#startActivity Context.startActivity()}.
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* There is no way for a BroadcastReceiver
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* to see or capture Intents used with startActivity(); likewise, when
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* you broadcast an Intent, you will never find or start an Activity.
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* These two operations are semantically very different: starting an
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* Activity with an Intent is a foreground operation that modifies what the
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* user is currently interacting with; broadcasting an Intent is a background
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* operation that the user is not normally aware of.
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*
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* <p>The BroadcastReceiver class (when launched as a component through
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* a manifest's {@link android.R.styleable#AndroidManifestReceiver <receiver>}
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* tag) is an important part of an
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* <a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/fundamentals.html#lcycles">application's overall lifecycle</a>.</p>
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*
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* <p>Topics covered here:
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* <ol>
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* <li><a href="#ReceiverLifecycle">Receiver Lifecycle</a>
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* <li><a href="#Permissions">Permissions</a>
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* <li><a href="#ProcessLifecycle">Process Lifecycle</a>
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* </ol>
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*
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* <a name="ReceiverLifecycle"></a>
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* <h3>Receiver Lifecycle</h3>
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*
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* <p>A BroadcastReceiver object is only valid for the duration of the call
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* to {@link #onReceive}. Once your code returns from this function,
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* the system considers the object to be finished and no longer active.
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*
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* <p>This has important repercussions to what you can do in an
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* {@link #onReceive} implementation: anything that requires asynchronous
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* operation is not available, because you will need to return from the
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* function to handle the asynchronous operation, but at that point the
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* BroadcastReceiver is no longer active and thus the system is free to kill
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* its process before the asynchronous operation completes.
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*
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* <p>In particular, you may <i>not</i> show a dialog or bind to a service from
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* within a BroadcastReceiver. For the former, you should instead use the
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* {@link android.app.NotificationManager} API. For the latter, you can
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* use {@link android.content.Context#startService Context.startService()} to
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* send a command to the service.
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*
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* <a name="Permissions"></a>
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* <h3>Permissions</h3>
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*
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* <p>Access permissions can be enforced by either the sender or receiver
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* of an Intent.
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*
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* <p>To enforce a permission when sending, you supply a non-null
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* <var>permission</var> argument to
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* {@link Context#sendBroadcast(Intent, String)} or
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* {@link Context#sendOrderedBroadcast(Intent, String, BroadcastReceiver, android.os.Handler, int, String, Bundle)}.
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* Only receivers who have been granted this permission
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* (by requesting it with the
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* {@link android.R.styleable#AndroidManifestUsesPermission <uses-permission>}
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* tag in their <code>AndroidManifest.xml</code>) will be able to receive
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* the broadcast.
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*
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* <p>To enforce a permission when receiving, you supply a non-null
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* <var>permission</var> when registering your receiver -- either when calling
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* {@link Context#registerReceiver(BroadcastReceiver, IntentFilter, String, android.os.Handler)}
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* or in the static
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* {@link android.R.styleable#AndroidManifestReceiver <receiver>}
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* tag in your <code>AndroidManifest.xml</code>. Only broadcasters who have
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* been granted this permission (by requesting it with the
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* {@link android.R.styleable#AndroidManifestUsesPermission <uses-permission>}
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* tag in their <code>AndroidManifest.xml</code>) will be able to send an
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* Intent to the receiver.
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*
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* <p>See the <a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/security/security.html">Security and Permissions</a>
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* document for more information on permissions and security in general.
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*
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* <a name="ProcessLifecycle"></a>
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* <h3>Process Lifecycle</h3>
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*
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* <p>A process that is currently executing a BroadcastReceiver (that is,
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* currently running the code in its {@link #onReceive} method) is
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* considered to be a foreground process and will be kept running by the
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* system except under cases of extreme memory pressure.
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*
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* <p>Once you return from onReceive(), the BroadcastReceiver is no longer
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* active, and its hosting process is only as important as any other application
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* components that are running in it. This is especially important because if
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* that process was only hosting the BroadcastReceiver (a common case for
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* applications that the user has never or not recently interacted with), then
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* upon returning from onReceive() the system will consider its process
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* to be empty and aggressively kill it so that resources are available for other
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* more important processes.
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*
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* <p>This means that for longer-running operations you will often use
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* a {@link android.app.Service} in conjunction with a BroadcastReceiver to keep
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* the containing process active for the entire time of your operation.
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*/
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public abstract class BroadcastReceiver {
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public BroadcastReceiver() {
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}
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/**
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* This method is called when the BroadcastReceiver is receiving an Intent
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* broadcast. During this time you can use the other methods on
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* BroadcastReceiver to view/modify the current result values. The function
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* is normally called within the main thread of its process, so you should
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* never perform long-running operations in it (there is a timeout of
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* 10 seconds that the system allows before considering the receiver to
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* be blocked and a candidate to be killed). You cannot launch a popup dialog
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* in your implementation of onReceive().
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*
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* <p><b>If this BroadcastReceiver was launched through a <receiver> tag,
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* then the object is no longer alive after returning from this
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* function.</b> This means you should not perform any operations that
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* return a result to you asynchronously -- in particular, for interacting
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* with services, you should use
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* {@link Context#startService(Intent)} instead of
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* {@link Context#bindService(Intent, ServiceConnection, int)}. If you wish
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* to interact with a service that is already running, you can use
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* {@link #peekService}.
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*
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* <p>The Intent filters used in {@link android.content.Context#registerReceiver}
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* and in application manifests are <em>not</em> guaranteed to be exclusive. They
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* are hints to the operating system about how to find suitable recipients. It is
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* possible for senders to force delivery to specific recipients, bypassing filter
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* resolution. For this reason, {@link #onReceive(Context, Intent) onReceive()}
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* implementations should respond only to known actions, ignoring any unexpected
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* Intents that they may receive.
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*
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* @param context The Context in which the receiver is running.
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* @param intent The Intent being received.
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*/
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public abstract void onReceive(Context context, Intent intent);
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/**
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* Provide a binder to an already-running service. This method is synchronous
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* and will not start the target service if it is not present, so it is safe
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* to call from {@link #onReceive}.
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*
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* @param myContext The Context that had been passed to {@link #onReceive(Context, Intent)}
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* @param service The Intent indicating the service you wish to use. See {@link
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* Context#startService(Intent)} for more information.
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*/
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public IBinder peekService(Context myContext, Intent service) {
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IActivityManager am = ActivityManagerNative.getDefault();
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IBinder binder = null;
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try {
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binder = am.peekService(service, service.resolveTypeIfNeeded(
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myContext.getContentResolver()));
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} catch (RemoteException e) {
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}
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return binder;
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}
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/**
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* Change the current result code of this broadcast; only works with
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* broadcasts sent through
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* {@link Context#sendOrderedBroadcast(Intent, String)
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* Context.sendOrderedBroadcast}. Often uses the
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* Activity {@link android.app.Activity#RESULT_CANCELED} and
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* {@link android.app.Activity#RESULT_OK} constants, though the
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* actual meaning of this value is ultimately up to the broadcaster.
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*
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* <p><strong>This method does not work with non-ordered broadcasts such
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* as those sent with {@link Context#sendBroadcast(Intent)
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* Context.sendBroadcast}</strong></p>
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*
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* @param code The new result code.
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*
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* @see #setResult(int, String, Bundle)
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*/
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public final void setResultCode(int code) {
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checkSynchronousHint();
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mResultCode = code;
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}
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/**
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* Retrieve the current result code, as set by the previous receiver.
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*
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* @return int The current result code.
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*/
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public final int getResultCode() {
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return mResultCode;
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}
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/**
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* Change the current result data of this broadcast; only works with
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* broadcasts sent through
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* {@link Context#sendOrderedBroadcast(Intent, String)
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* Context.sendOrderedBroadcast}. This is an arbitrary
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* string whose interpretation is up to the broadcaster.
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*
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* <p><strong>This method does not work with non-ordered broadcasts such
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* as those sent with {@link Context#sendBroadcast(Intent)
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* Context.sendBroadcast}</strong></p>
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*
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* @param data The new result data; may be null.
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*
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* @see #setResult(int, String, Bundle)
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*/
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public final void setResultData(String data) {
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checkSynchronousHint();
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mResultData = data;
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}
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/**
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* Retrieve the current result data, as set by the previous receiver.
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* Often this is null.
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*
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* @return String The current result data; may be null.
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*/
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public final String getResultData() {
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return mResultData;
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}
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/**
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* Change the current result extras of this broadcast; only works with
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* broadcasts sent through
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* {@link Context#sendOrderedBroadcast(Intent, String)
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* Context.sendOrderedBroadcast}. This is a Bundle
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* holding arbitrary data, whose interpretation is up to the
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* broadcaster. Can be set to null. Calling this method completely
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* replaces the current map (if any).
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*
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* <p><strong>This method does not work with non-ordered broadcasts such
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* as those sent with {@link Context#sendBroadcast(Intent)
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* Context.sendBroadcast}</strong></p>
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*
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* @param extras The new extra data map; may be null.
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*
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* @see #setResult(int, String, Bundle)
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*/
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public final void setResultExtras(Bundle extras) {
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checkSynchronousHint();
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mResultExtras = extras;
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}
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/**
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* Retrieve the current result extra data, as set by the previous receiver.
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* Any changes you make to the returned Map will be propagated to the next
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* receiver.
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*
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* @param makeMap If true then a new empty Map will be made for you if the
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* current Map is null; if false you should be prepared to
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* receive a null Map.
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*
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* @return Map The current extras map.
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*/
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public final Bundle getResultExtras(boolean makeMap) {
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Bundle e = mResultExtras;
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if (!makeMap) return e;
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if (e == null) mResultExtras = e = new Bundle();
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return e;
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}
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/**
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* Change all of the result data returned from this broadcasts; only works
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* with broadcasts sent through
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* {@link Context#sendOrderedBroadcast(Intent, String)
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* Context.sendOrderedBroadcast}. All current result data is replaced
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* by the value given to this method.
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*
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* <p><strong>This method does not work with non-ordered broadcasts such
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* as those sent with {@link Context#sendBroadcast(Intent)
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* Context.sendBroadcast}</strong></p>
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*
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* @param code The new result code. Often uses the
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* Activity {@link android.app.Activity#RESULT_CANCELED} and
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* {@link android.app.Activity#RESULT_OK} constants, though the
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* actual meaning of this value is ultimately up to the broadcaster.
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* @param data The new result data. This is an arbitrary
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* string whose interpretation is up to the broadcaster; may be null.
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* @param extras The new extra data map. This is a Bundle
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* holding arbitrary data, whose interpretation is up to the
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* broadcaster. Can be set to null. This completely
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* replaces the current map (if any).
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*/
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public final void setResult(int code, String data, Bundle extras) {
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checkSynchronousHint();
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mResultCode = code;
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mResultData = data;
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mResultExtras = extras;
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}
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/**
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* Returns the flag indicating whether or not this receiver should
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* abort the current broadcast.
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*
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* @return True if the broadcast should be aborted.
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*/
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public final boolean getAbortBroadcast() {
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return mAbortBroadcast;
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}
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/**
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* Sets the flag indicating that this receiver should abort the
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* current broadcast; only works with broadcasts sent through
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* {@link Context#sendOrderedBroadcast(Intent, String)
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* Context.sendOrderedBroadcast}. This will prevent
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* any other broadcast receivers from receiving the broadcast. It will still
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* call {@link #onReceive} of the BroadcastReceiver that the caller of
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* {@link Context#sendOrderedBroadcast(Intent, String)
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* Context.sendOrderedBroadcast} passed in.
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*
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* <p><strong>This method does not work with non-ordered broadcasts such
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* as those sent with {@link Context#sendBroadcast(Intent)
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* Context.sendBroadcast}</strong></p>
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*/
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public final void abortBroadcast() {
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checkSynchronousHint();
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mAbortBroadcast = true;
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}
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/**
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* Clears the flag indicating that this receiver should abort the current
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* broadcast.
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*/
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public final void clearAbortBroadcast() {
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mAbortBroadcast = false;
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}
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/**
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* Returns true if the receiver is currently processing an ordered
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* broadcast.
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*/
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public final boolean isOrderedBroadcast() {
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return mOrderedHint;
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}
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/**
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* Returns true if the receiver is currently processing the initial
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* value of a sticky broadcast -- that is, the value that was last
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* broadcast and is currently held in the sticky cache, so this is
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* not directly the result of a broadcast right now.
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*/
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public final boolean isInitialStickyBroadcast() {
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return mInitialStickyHint;
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}
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/**
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* For internal use, sets the hint about whether this BroadcastReceiver is
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* running in ordered mode.
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*/
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public final void setOrderedHint(boolean isOrdered) {
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mOrderedHint = isOrdered;
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}
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/**
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* For internal use, sets the hint about whether this BroadcastReceiver is
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* receiving the initial sticky broadcast value. @hide
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*/
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public final void setInitialStickyHint(boolean isInitialSticky) {
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mInitialStickyHint = isInitialSticky;
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}
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/**
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* Control inclusion of debugging help for mismatched
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* calls to {@ Context#registerReceiver(BroadcastReceiver, IntentFilter)
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* Context.registerReceiver()}.
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* If called with true, before given to registerReceiver(), then the
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* callstack of the following {@link Context#unregisterReceiver(BroadcastReceiver)
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* Context.unregisterReceiver()} call is retained, to be printed if a later
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* incorrect unregister call is made. Note that doing this requires retaining
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* information about the BroadcastReceiver for the lifetime of the app,
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* resulting in a leak -- this should only be used for debugging.
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*/
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public final void setDebugUnregister(boolean debug) {
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mDebugUnregister = debug;
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}
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/**
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* Return the last value given to {@link #setDebugUnregister}.
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*/
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public final boolean getDebugUnregister() {
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return mDebugUnregister;
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}
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void checkSynchronousHint() {
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// Note that we don't assert when receiving the initial sticky value,
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// since that may have come from an ordered broadcast. We'll catch
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// them later when the real broadcast happens again.
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if (mOrderedHint || mInitialStickyHint) {
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return;
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}
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RuntimeException e = new RuntimeException(
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"BroadcastReceiver trying to return result during a non-ordered broadcast");
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e.fillInStackTrace();
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Log.e("BroadcastReceiver", e.getMessage(), e);
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}
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private int mResultCode;
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private String mResultData;
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private Bundle mResultExtras;
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private boolean mAbortBroadcast;
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private boolean mDebugUnregister;
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private boolean mOrderedHint;
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private boolean mInitialStickyHint;
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}
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