Will performFetchWithCompletionHandler be called i

2019-06-17 18:14发布

问题:

It's surprisingly difficult to find a definitive answer to this; couldn't find it mentioned in the Apple documentation and couldn't find a definite yes/no after searching past questions.

The question is simple - if the app requests a background fetch to be performed after N time, then the user terminates the app. Will the OS still launch the app into the background to perform the background fetch?

回答1:

Okay, once again background modes cause confusion. No offense to the other people trying to help, but this is more complicated than it seems.

First of all: This is out of date, as Sausage guessed in the comments. I know this for a fact, because the section about VoIP apps is still explaining the "old way" to do this, with a handler that gets called periodically. I investigated this a bit for this answer, so I suggest you go and read that. The important lesson for this case here is that iOS makes a distinction between an app being terminated by the user or by the system, plus it also plays a role whether the phone was rebooted or not.

So to sum this (and your question) up you basically want to know whether this part of the above, outdated documentation is still correct word for word:

In most cases, the system does not relaunch apps after they are force quit by the user. One exception is location apps, which in iOS 8 and later are relaunched after being force quit by the user. In other cases, though, the user must launch the app explicitly or reboot the device before the app can be launched automatically into the background by the system. When password protection is enabled on the device, the system does not launch an app in the background before the user first unlocks the device.

Apple: Understanding When Your App Gets Launched into the Background

I thoroughly investigated the rest of the docs, but did not find any definite answer, so it unfortunately boils down to what dan already suggested: Test it. My gut feeling is that the documentation is still correct in that regard, though (as said what's not is the VoIP stuff). I say that because the UI in the Settings app calls the feature "Background App Refresh", so users are probably supposed to understand that an app having this permission won't refresh when they "push" them out of background (i.e. home button -> swipe it out). For regular users, apps are either quit (not in the task manager at all), in the foreground (using them) or in background (they're in the task manager and another app is in foreground and/or the phone is locked).


To really test this you'd have to write an app and actually carry it around a bit (I assume at least two days) in each condition. First while it is in background (the OS should periodically let it fetch, as you probably know this can also be triggered in Xcode) and then while it is force-quit. The problem is to verify that it fetched stuff. I'd go with a logfile that can be shared via iTunes. I have typed up some code for this:

-(void)application:(UIApplication *)application performFetchWithCompletionHandler:(void (^)(UIBackgroundFetchResult))completionHandler
{
    NSLog(@"We're awake! Booyah!");

    NSURLSessionConfiguration *config = [NSURLSessionConfiguration defaultSessionConfiguration];
    NSURLSession *session = [NSURLSession sessionWithConfiguration:config
                                                          delegate:nil
                                                     delegateQueue:[NSOperationQueue mainQueue]];
    NSMutableURLRequest *request = [NSMutableURLRequest new];
    request.HTTPMethod = @"GET";
    request.URL = [NSURL URLWithString:@"https://www.google.com"];
    NSURLSessionDataTask *task = [session dataTaskWithRequest:request
                                            completionHandler:^(NSData * _Nullable data,
                                                                NSURLResponse * _Nullable response,
                                                                NSError * _Nullable error) {
                                                NSDate *now = [NSDate date];
                                                NSString *toLog = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%@ - fetched\n",
                                                                   [now description]];
                                                [self updateTestDocumentWithString:toLog];
                                                NSLog(@"Yay, done!");
                                                completionHandler(UIBackgroundFetchResultNewData);
                                            }];
    [task resume];
}

- (void)updateTestDocumentWithString:(NSString *)toAppend {
    NSString *docDir = [NSSearchPathForDirectoriesInDomains(NSDocumentDirectory, NSUserDomainMask, YES) firstObject];
    NSString *filePath = [[docDir stringByAppendingPathComponent:@"logfile.txt"] copy];
    if (![[NSFileManager defaultManager] fileExistsAtPath:filePath]) {
        if (![[NSFileManager defaultManager] createFileAtPath:filePath contents:nil attributes:nil]) {
            NSLog(@"We're effed...");
            return;
        }
    }
    NSFileHandle *file = [NSFileHandle fileHandleForUpdatingAtPath:filePath];
    if (!file) {
        NSLog(@"We're effed again...");
        return;
    }
    [file seekToEndOfFile];
    // ensure this is never nil
    [file writeData:[toAppend dataUsingEncoding:NSUTF8StringEncoding]];
    [file closeFile];
}

This would go into the app delegate, and don't forget to add the Application supports iTunes file sharing boolean setting in your app's plist. I will leave this running on my development device for a bit and check the logfile, eventually reporting back here. Feel free to test it yourself, too.



回答2:

EDIT:

https://devforums.apple.com/message/873265#873265 (login required)

Also keep in mind that if you kill your app from the app switcher (i.e. swiping up to kill the app) then the OS will never relaunch the app regardless of push notification or background fetch. In this case the user has to manually relaunch the app once and then from that point forward the background activities will be invoked. -pmarcos

That post was by an Apple employee so I think i can trust that this information is correct.


OLD answer:

According to this answer wrote by a top user: iOS background fetch: your app won't be woken up again.

Make sure you're not killing the app (i.e. by double tapping on the home button and swiping up on your app for force the app to terminate). If the app is killed, it will prevent background fetch from working correctly.

It really doesn't make sense for it to be woken up...it kinda invalidates the user killing the app.

Having that said there are different ways a terminated/force quit app can be launched again:

  • Tapping on a notification.
  • Tapping on the app icon.
  • Using openUrl to open your app from another app.
  • If you use PushKit...then your app would be launched. Imagine if had a VOIP app e.g. Skype, WhatsApp and a friend was calling you but you had have force-quit the app, you wouldn't receive calls. For more see here.
  • Location updates either through use of region monitoring or the significant-change location service. See this answer and make sure to read this entire page from Apple docs.

  • Rebooting the device would also undo anything blocked through force-quit



回答3:

Reading the Apple documentation here I found this text snippet which should explain your question:

The techniques offered by iOS fall into three categories:

    Apps that start a short task in the foreground can ask for time to finish that task when the app moves to the background.

    **Apps that initiate downloads in the foreground can hand off management of those downloads to the system, thereby allowing the app to be suspended or terminated while the download continues.**

    Apps that need to run in the background to support specific types of tasks can declare their support for one or more background execution modes.

The second option is exactly about downloading the data, which can be delegated to the system even if the can be terminated.