In the docs on Google Cloud Messaging, it states:
The Android application should store this ID for later use (for instance, to check on onCreate() if it is already registered). Note that Google may periodically refresh the registration ID, so you should design your Android application with the understanding that the com.google.android.c2dm.intent.REGISTRATION intent may be called multiple times. Your Android application needs to be able to respond accordingly.
I register my device using the following code:
GoogleCloudMessaging gcm = GoogleCloudMessaging.getInstance(context);
String regID = gcm.register(senderID);
The GoogleCloudMessaging class encapsulates the registration process. So how am I suppose to handle com.google.android.c2dm.intent.REGISTRATION since handling that is done internally by the GoogleCloudMessaging class?
That's an interesting question.
Google encourage you to switch to the new registration process :
The note that says
Google may periodically refresh the registration ID
only appears on the page that still shows the old registration process, so it's possible that this note is no longer relevant.If you want to be safe, you can still use the old registration process. Or you can use the new process, but have in addition the code that handles the
com.google.android.c2dm.intent.REGISTRATION
intent, in order to make sure you are covered if Google do decide to refresh the registration ID.That said, I never experienced such a refresh, and even when I did experience a change in the registration ID (usually as a result of sending a notification after un-installing the app and then re-installing it), the old registration ID still worked (resulting in a canonical registration ID sent in the response from Google), so no harm was done.
EDIT (06.06.2013) :
Google changed their Demo App to use the new interface. They refresh the registration ID by setting an expiration date on the value persisted locally by the app. When the app starts, they load their locally stored registration id. If it is "expired" (which in the demo means it was received from GCM over 7 days ago), they call
gcm.register(senderID)
again.This doesn't handle the hypothetical scenario in which a registration ID is refreshed by Google for an app that hasn't been launched for a long time. In that case, the app won't be aware of the change, and neither will the 3rd party server.
EDIT (08.14.2013) :
Google changed their Demo App again (two days ago). This time they removed the logic that considers the Registration ID to be expired after 7 days. Now they only refresh the Registration ID when a new version of the app it installed.
EDIT (04.24.2014) :
For the sake of completeness, here are the words of Costin Manolache (taken from here), a Google developer involved in the development of GCM, on the matter :
This explains the current implementation of the official GCM Demo application.
com.google.android.c2dm.intent.REGISTRATION
should never be handled when using theGoogleCloudMessaging
class to register.After scrubbing through tonnes of misleading answers across the net, including SO, the only place I found a complete answer was as remarked by Eran's answer and here:
While automatic registration refresh might or might never have happened, google describes a simiple algorithm to handle the canocical_ids by parsing successful response:
From aforementioned link.
Reading the new InstanceID API, I found more info on when the token might change:
More details:
Sources:
https://developers.google.com/instance-id/
https://developers.google.com/instance-id/guides/android-implementation