iOS - Run background process while app is in suspended state - ios

I have an application which takes characters from a web page and compares them to a UILabel in the application. What I want to do is enable the app to continue to do this even when the user has placed the app in a suspended state. All I have found online and in the documentation is the way to schedule a UILocalNotification while still in the active state. In the documentation, it states that you can declare certain permissions in the info.plist. I looked at the categories, but my application cannot really fit any of those.
Is there a way for me to continue comparing the two strings and scheduling a notification while in the background?
Thanks.

iOS doesn't really support multi-tasking in the manner you require. (i.e.: You can't simply carry on processing data in the background unless you're a very specific kind of app such as a VOIP service, etc.) otherwise you're likely to end up being terminated.
However, one possible solution would be to carry our this monitoring on a separate system (e.g.: a web server that your app interacts with) rather than within the app itself. You'd therefore:
Communicate the required string/web page to your web service
Carry out the processing on the web server.
Send a push notification to your app if the string was found on the page in question.

Related

Does iOS have something like Android's AlarmManager?

What is iOS' alternative to Android AlarmManager class?
So far the closest thing that I found is NSTimer. But that works only when your application is up, once it goes to the background it won't work, and I need to run some function in the background and from my business logic to decide if I want to do something or not. For example if some condition is satisfied to display local notification.
The only workaround I found is to use remote pushing notifications (silent notifications) just to wake up app, and from there you can implement your business logic.
IMPORTANT NOTE
From what I have found on few places is that people are complaining about using silent notifications to do this because your application might be rejected on app store.
There is none.
As already stated in the comments, the documenation is quite clear on that:
Always try to avoid doing any background work unless doing so improves the overall user experience. An app might move to the background because the user launched a different app or because the user locked the device and is not using it right now. In both situations, the user is signaling that your app does not need to be doing any meaningful work right now.
with the following exceptions:
For tasks that require more execution time to implement, you must request specific permissions to run them in the background without their being suspended. In iOS, only specific app types are allowed to run in the background:
Apps that play audible content to the user while in the background, such as a music player app
Apps that record audio content while in the background
Apps that keep users informed of their location at all times, such as a navigation app
Apps that support Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP)
Apps that need to download and process new content regularly
Apps that receive regular updates from external accessories
There is no exact equivalent. Please read this: https://developer.apple.com/library/ios/documentation/iPhone/Conceptual/iPhoneOSProgrammingGuide/BackgroundExecution/BackgroundExecution.html
The relevant part:
For tasks that require more execution time to implement, you must request specific permissions to run them in the background without their being suspended. In iOS, only specific app types are allowed to run in the background:
Apps that play audible content to the user while in the background, such as a music player app
Apps that record audio content while in the background
Apps that keep users informed of their location at all times, such as a navigation app
Apps that support Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP)
Apps that need to download and process new content regularly
Apps that receive regular updates from external accessories
Apps that implement these services must declare the services they support and use system frameworks to implement the relevant aspects of those services. Declaring the services lets the system know which services you use, but in some cases it is the system frameworks that actually prevent your application from being suspended.
If the function you are trying to call does one of the above, the documentation explains how to use background tasks or other methods to accomplish that.

iOS app to run continuously in background

I want my iOS apps to run continuously in background 24/7
I tried many options like background location updated with background task expiration handler, but later after some times it seems that the application gets suspended in background and user is brought back to the root view controller.
Any help will be appreciated.
For tasks that require more execution time to implement, you must request specific permissions to run them in the background without their being suspended. In iOS, only specific app types are allowed to run in the background:
Apps that play audible content to the user while in the background, such as a music player app
Apps that record audio content while in the background
Ap ps that keep users informed of their location at all times, such as a navigation app
Apps that support Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP)
Apps that need to download and process new content regularly
Apps that receive regular updates from external accessories
Apps that implement these services must declare the services they support and use system frameworks to implement the relevant aspects of those services.
Declaring the services lets the system know which services you use, but in some cases it is the system frameworks that actually prevent your application from being suspended.
You should read this page of Apple Programming Guide : Background Execution
It is not allowed to run background tasks 24/7. But you can use many different ways.
You simply can't. Apple don't give any mean for an app to ensure background execution. iOS will give you processing time whenever it feel like it, and you cannot control that.

How do iOS chat apps keep running in the background?

I have always coded for Android, and now I'm looking to expand my knowledge to iOS development; so I'm really new at this, please be patient.
I understand that only a small group of apps are allowed to run indefinitely in the background. Those are VoIP, Music players and location tracking apps.
I want to write a chat app using the XMPP framework. Everything is fine until the user puts the app in the background, in which case, the app will stay connected for about ten minutes to then be killed by the system and therefore the user won't be able to receive new messages.
I am aware of hacks to keep the app alive. Hacks such as defining it as a music playing app in the info.plist file and then just play some empty sound indefinitely. But I'm also aware that Apple will reject the app when it's time to publish to the App Store.
So, normally, how do other apps do it? How can other chat apps stay alive in the background to receive new messages from the servers? Apps like Google Hangouts, IM+ and such?
Ideally, they aren't really running in the background, but use push notifications, as others have mentioned.
But some chat clients seem to do something else: I've verified (by sniffing the traffic of an idle iOS device) that at least Google Hangouts, Facebook and Skype all keep a persistent socket opened in the background, and regularly send traffic to keep it alive.
I'm suspecting that they are using the VoIP exceptions to Apple's otherwise strict background execution policies. iOS allows "VoIP apps" to run in the background and keep one socket open to be notified about incoming calls and messages.
Maybe they are also using the new "background fetch" feature of iOS 7, but as far as I know, that doesn't allow persistent socket connections.
The iOS operating system allows for the existence of something called a PUSH NOTIFICATION
There exists hundreds of tutorials online which teach you how to implement the notification code and how to respond accordingly when you receive such a message!
http://www.raywenderlich.com/32960/apple-push-notification-services-in-ios-6-tutorial-part-1
Check this link out for an in-depth tutorial on push notifications!
http://maniacdev.com/2011/05/tutorial-ios-push-notification-services-for-beginners
I think most of these apps use push notifications and just load the last messages from the server as soon as the app is being opened.
While there are some hacks, and your app can ask for more time when it goes in background (up to a point, and with no guarantees), this is a perfect application for push notifications.
The server tells the phone there's a message, and iOS wakes your app up to process it.
https://developer.apple.com/library/ios/documentation/NetworkingInternet/Conceptual/RemoteNotificationsPG/Introduction.html
As of iOS 7 there is a new background-execution mode - 'fetch' for apps that need to periodically fetch new data. It sounds like your case would meet that definition.
You can find the information in the iOS App Programming Guide -
Fetching Small Amounts of Content Regularly
In iOS 7 and later, an app that retrieves content regularly from the
network can ask the system for background execution time to check for
new content. You enable support for background fetches from the
Background modes section of the Capabilities tab in your Xcode
project. (You can also enable this support by including the
UIBackgroundModes key with the fetch value in your app’s Info.plist
file.) At appropriate times, the system gives background execution
time to the apps that support this background mode, launching the app
directly into the background if needed. The app object calls the
application:performFetchWithCompletionHandler: method of its app
delegate to let you know when execution time is available.
You can also use push notifications, but that requires some server infrastructure
An app running in the background has limited capability. Read App States and Multitasking thoroughly to decide how best to design your app. Chat is not listed as one of the specific exceptions that can operate with a more relaxed policy. You will never be able to "keep [your] app live in background forever." You might be able to leverage an iOS 7 feature also described in this guide, Fetching Small Amounts of Content Regularly.
iOS App Programming Guide: App States and Multitasking
https://developer.apple.com/library/ios/documentation/iPhone/Conceptual/iPhoneOS ProgrammingGuide/ManagingYourApplicationsFlow/ManagingYourApplicationsFlow.html

guaranteed delivery for uploads after network reconnect, even if my app is not running

I'm spec-ing an iOS app (which will be built outside of our company) which will upload a user's data entry to a server. If the device is not connected to the Internet, we'd like to save data on the device and upload it when the network is re-connected. (The app will primarily run on iPod Touch devices that will be disconnected most of the time).
If the user unlocks the device and re-opens our app after the network is reconnected, then uploading to the server should be easy because the app is running.
But what if the app is not running, where "not running" can mean one or more of:
device was power cycled
user has locked the device and it's sitting in his pocket
app crashed
user exited the app
user started using other apps so our app isn't running in the foreground anymore
are there other cases?
In the cases above, is there a way (ideally a battery-efficient way) to ensure that local data is uploaded soon after Internet connectivity is restored? Is the answer different depending on which of the cases above caused the app not to be running?
And is there a minimum iOS version the device will need in order to enable some (or all) of the above not-running cases to still upload when the app is not running?
My apologies if these are obvious newbie questions-- I'm not an iOS expert.
There is an interesting technique that is used by among others Instapaper and News.me(the pioneers of this technique) where you use region monitoring to initiate background downloads or uploads. Marco (Instapaper) blogged and talked (in episode 80 of the Build and Analyze podcast) about his communication with Apple so it should be a allowed in the App Store.
In brief the technique is that you set up certain regions (geofences) like "home" or "work" and respond to the locationManager:didEnterRegion: (and similar) callback(s). Your app will wake up from the background once you enter the pre-specified region and you can check to see if there is any data to upload.
This technique won't guarantee that the data is uploaded when the network reconnects but it will allow your app to automatically upload the information when the iPod Touch users gets home to their WiFi network.
That should most likely be at least once a day which may or may not be frequent enough for you. You could add a timestamp to when the initial upload was attempted and send that along the upload once it succeeds to get the correct order of events (data entries) on your server.
There is no way to ensure this. If your application is "not running" (by the definition described in your question), it will not be capable of responding to a change in the device's network status. It should be setup to resume upload operations the next time the application runs again.
EDIT:
Some of the cases you've described may indeed provide different opportunities for your application. Specifically, if the user "exits" the app by pressing the home button or launches another app in the foreground, your application may continue to run the in the background and could potentially respond to a change in network reachability.
The nature of what may be done in the background and for how-long is well documented, and supported by any version of iOS that supports multi-tasking. I recommend you review the documentation pertaining to App States and Background Services.
device was power cycled --> really NO WAY of resuming, unless you open the App!!!
user has locked the device and it's sitting in his pocket --> apps applicationStatus is UIApplicationStateInactive but it is running in the background. You still are able to react to notifications and i.e. accelerometer events. Try the Reachability Class and Log the changes!
app crashed --> NO WAY, unless opening the App
user exited the app --> App is sitting in the background. There you have a maximum of 10 Minutes Restriction of fully using your App (like the App "Pastebot" does)
user started using other apps so our app isn't running in the
foreground anymore --> Same as user exited the app
On multitasking Apple says the following:
Real multitasking only for certain kinds of usage, as there is Audio Background playing, VOIP (like Skype), navigation applications
All the other apps can request a specific amount of time after the app is closed/in the background, to finish certain tasks (as sending an email, sms or uploading/downloading important data)
Important Quote from dev docs:
Your app delegate’s applicationDidEnterBackground: method has approximately 5 seconds to finish any tasks and return. In practice, this method should return as quickly as possible. If the method does not return before time runs out, your app is killed and purged from memory. If you still need more time to perform tasks, call the beginBackgroundTaskWithExpirationHandler: method to request background execution time and then start any long-running tasks in a secondary thread. Regardless of whether you start any background tasks, the applicationDidEnterBackground: method must still exit within 5 seconds.
If you're building a restful API then I would recommend using RestKit, it has a request queue that checks the network status on the device and starts uploading once network access has been assured. You can read more about this here: http://mobile.tutsplus.com/tutorials/iphone/advanced-restkit-development_iphone-sdk/. Read the sections about Request Queue and background download/upload. It should be noted that RestKit is a big library which has it's advantages and disadvantages. I'm not completely sure how this que works with the app lifecycle, if it saves the request que even if the app is terminated. You would have to investigate that. RestKit does support background uploading/downloading, but as already noted, I think it's impossible to do any uploading if the app is terminated and not in background state.
I wouldn't recommend using RestKit if the API isn't Rest though.
You can download and experiment with RestKit here: https://github.com/RestKit/RestKit.

iOS processes while in background

Is it possible to interface with a webservice (or, for what matter, do any scheduled local or remote activity) while the app is in background?
I know that you can receive remote pushes or schedule local alerts, but I wonder if I can periodically send my GPS position to a webservice even if the app is not in foreground.
I have been thinking about this myself in an attempt to impress my boss with an iPhone/iPad App that accesses our Web Service.
If the Web Service takes a non-trivial amount of time to process a request then there is absolutely no guarantee that the App won't be interrupted and stopped, therefore making it useless for any business-level tool. The only Apps that are allowed to run for extended periods in the background are a select set that use certain frameworks (music players, etc.).
I concluded that the only way of doing it is to introduce a middle tier that performs and waits for the response from the actual Web Service and provides an interface that the iOS App can poll or be pushed to in order to allow it to sleep/die whenever iOS thinks it should.
You can make sporadic network calls while you are running in the background if you are a location-based app with proper permissions. You need to make sure you are running a background task properly. FYI, there are a number of applications in the app store that do this.

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