By Transistor Software, creators of Capacitor Background Geolocation
Background Fetch is a very simple plugin which attempts to awaken an app in the background about every 15 minutes, providing a short period of background running-time. This plugin will execute your provided callbackFn
whenever a background-fetch event occurs.
There is no way to increase the rate which a fetch-event occurs and this plugin sets the rate to the most frequent possible — you will never receive an event faster than 15 minutes. The operating-system will automatically throttle the rate the background-fetch events occur based upon usage patterns. Eg: if user hasn't turned on their phone for a long period of time, fetch events will occur less frequently or if an iOS user disables background refresh they may not happen at all.
🆕 Background Fetch now provides a scheduleTask
method for scheduling arbitrary "one-shot" or periodic tasks.
- There is no way to increase the rate which a fetch-event occurs and this plugin sets the rate to the most frequent possible — you will never receive an event faster than 15 minutes. The operating-system will automatically throttle the rate the background-fetch events occur based upon usage patterns. Eg: if user hasn't turned on their phone for a long period of time, fetch events will occur less frequently.
scheduleTask
seems only to fire when the device is plugged into power.⚠️ When your app is terminated, iOS no longer fires events — There is no such thing asstopOnTerminate: false
for iOS.- iOS can take days before Apple's machine-learning algorithm settles in and begins regularly firing events. Do not sit staring at your logs waiting for an event to fire. If your simulated events work, that's all you need to know that everything is correctly configured.
- If the user doesn't open your iOS app for long periods of time, iOS will stop firing events.
- The Android plugin provides a Headless mechanism allowing you to continue handling events even after app-termination (see Receiving Events After App Termination)
$ yarn add @transistorsoft/capacitor-background-fetch
$ npx cap sync
$ npm install --save @transistorsoft/capacitor-background-fetch
$ npx cap sync
- Proceed to Required Setup Guides
ℹ️ This repo contains its own Example App. See /example
- See API Docs
BackgroundFetch.configure
import { Component } from '@angular/core';
import {BackgroundFetch} from '@transistorsoft/capacitor-background-fetch';
@Component({
selector: 'app-home',
templateUrl: 'home.page.html',
styleUrls: ['home.page.scss'],
})
export class HomePage {
constructor() {}
// Initialize in ngAfterContentInit
// [WARNING] DO NOT use ionViewWillEnter, as that method won't run when app is launched in background.
ngAfterContentInit() {
this.initBackgroundFetch();
}
async initBackgroundFetch() {
const status = await BackgroundFetch.configure({
minimumFetchInterval: 15
}, async (taskId) => {
console.log('[BackgroundFetch] EVENT:', taskId);
// Perform your work in an awaited Promise
const result = await this.performYourWorkHere();
console.log('[BackgroundFetch] work complete:', result);
// [REQUIRED] Signal to the OS that your work is complete.
BackgroundFetch.finish(taskId);
}, async (taskId) => {
// The OS has signalled that your remaining background-time has expired.
// You must immediately complete your work and signal #finish.
console.log('[BackgroundFetch] TIMEOUT:', taskId);
// [REQUIRED] Signal to the OS that your work is complete.
BackgroundFetch.finish(taskId);
});
// Checking BackgroundFetch status:
if (status !== BackgroundFetch.STATUS_AVAILABLE) {
// Uh-oh: we have a problem:
if (status === BackgroundFetch.STATUS_DENIED) {
alert('The user explicitly disabled background behavior for this app or for the whole system.');
} else if (status === BackgroundFetch.STATUS_RESTRICTED) {
alert('Background updates are unavailable and the user cannot enable them again.')
}
}
}
async performYourWorkHere() {
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
setTimeout(() => {
resolve(true);
}, 5000);
});
}
}
- Only Android is able to continue receiving events after app termination. See API Docs
enableHeadless
. - For iOS, there is NO SUCH THING as
stopOnTerminate: false
. When an iOS app is terminated, the OS will no longer fire events.
In addition to the default background-fetch task defined by BackgroundFetch.configure
, you may also execute your own arbitrary "oneshot" or periodic tasks (iOS requires additional Setup Instructions). See API Docs BackgroundFetch.scheduleTask
. However, all events will be fired into the Callback provided to BackgroundFetch.configure
.
BackgroundFetch.scheduleTask
on iOS seems only to run when the device is plugged into power.BackgroundFetch.scheduleTask
on iOS are designed for low-priority tasks, such as purging cache files — they tend to be unreliable for mission-critical tasks.BackgroundFetch.scheduleTask
will never run as frequently as you want.- The default
fetch
event is much more reliable and fires far more often. BackgroundFetch.scheduleTask
on iOS stop when the user terminates the app. There is no such thing asstopOnTerminate: false
for iOS.
// Step 1: Configure BackgroundFetch as usual.
let status = await BackgroundFetch.configure({
minimumFetchInterval: 15
}, async (taskId) => { // <-- Event callback
// This is the fetch-event callback.
console.log("[BackgroundFetch] taskId: ", taskId);
// Use a switch statement to route task-handling.
switch (taskId) {
case 'com.foo.customtask':
print("Received custom task");
break;
default:
print("Default fetch task");
}
// Finish, providing received taskId.
BackgroundFetch.finish(taskId);
}, async (taskId) => { // <-- Task timeout callback
// This task has exceeded its allowed running-time.
// You must stop what you're doing and immediately .finish(taskId)
BackgroundFetch.finish(taskId);
});
// Step 2: Schedule a custom "oneshot" task "com.foo.customtask" to execute 5000ms from now.
BackgroundFetch.scheduleTask({
taskId: "com.foo.customtask",
forceAlarmManager: true,
delay: 5000 // <-- milliseconds
});
⚠️ At the time of writing, the new task simulator does not yet work in Simulator; Only real devices. Use Old BackgroundFetch API so simulate events in Simulator.- See Apple docs Starting and Terminating Tasks During Development
- After running your app in XCode, Click the
[||]
button to initiate a Breakpoint. - In the console
(lldb)
, paste the following command (Note: use cursor up/down keys to cycle through previously run commands):
e -l objc -- (void)[[BGTaskScheduler sharedScheduler] _simulateLaunchForTaskWithIdentifier:@"com.transistorsoft.fetch"]
- Click the
[ > ]
button to continue. The task will execute and the Callback function provided toBackgroundFetch.configure
will receive the event.
- Only the new
BGTaskScheduler
api supports simulated task-timeout events. To simulate a task-timeout, yourfetchCallback
must not callBackgroundFetch.finish(taskId)
:
const status = await BackgroundFetch.configure({
minimumFetchInterval: 15
}, async (taskId) => { // <-- Event callback.
// This is the task callback.
console.log("[BackgroundFetch] taskId", taskId);
//BackgroundFetch.finish(taskId); // <-- Disable .finish(taskId) when simulating an iOS task timeout
}, async (taskId) => { // <-- Event timeout callback
// This task has exceeded its allowed running-time.
// You must stop what you're doing and immediately .finish(taskId)
console.log("[BackgroundFetch] TIMEOUT taskId:", taskId);
BackgroundFetch.finish(taskId);
});
- Now simulate an iOS task timeout as follows, in the same manner as simulating an event above:
e -l objc -- (void)[[BGTaskScheduler sharedScheduler] _simulateExpirationForTaskWithIdentifier:@"com.transistorsoft.fetch"]
- Simulate background fetch events in XCode using
Debug->Simulate Background Fetch
- iOS can take some hours or even days to start a consistently scheduling background-fetch events since iOS schedules fetch events based upon the user's patterns of activity. If Simulate Background Fetch works, your can be sure that everything is working fine. You just need to wait.
- Observe plugin logs in
$ adb logcat
:
$ adb logcat *:S TSBackgroundFetch:V Capacitor/Console:V Capacitor/Plugin:V
- Simulate a background-fetch event on a device (insert <your.application.id>) (only works for sdk
21+
:
$ adb shell cmd jobscheduler run -f <your.application.id> 999
- For devices with sdk
<21
, simulate a "Headless JS" event with (insert <your.application.id>)
$ adb shell am broadcast -a <your.application.id>.event.BACKGROUND_FETCH
The MIT License
Copyright (c) 2013 Chris Scott, Transistor Software [email protected] http://transistorsoft.com
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.