Can two or more Android Activities open an sqlite3 database for write?
I have two Activities that need to insert data into the same sqlite database. When the second Activity calls SQLiteOpenHelper.getWriteableDatabase()
an IllegalStateException is thrown with the message "SQLiteDatabase created and never closed".
I've been able to avoid the Exception by making my database object a singleton but I'm thinking there must be a better way.
Thanks,
John
There's never really more than one Activity running at a time. The easy way to fix this would be to have the first Activity close it's connection before starting the second Activity. You can do this in the onPause() then reopen it in the onResume(). Something like this (very psuedo-code):
This way you're never trying to have more than one connection at a time and the connection is always available.
What I would do is define the database in a superclass which is AppCompatActivity if all the activities extend this class, or define it in Activity class which is inherited for all activities.
I also have multiple Activities and each Activity opens its own database connection. I keep the main Activity alive while I start other activities, and I call finish() on the child activities when I no longer need them.
What I am seeing is that a child Activity can successfully open a connection and query data while the main Actitity is still holding on to its DBAdapter. When the child Activity ends, the main Activity requeries any cursors that are open. This seems to happen automatically.
However, after clicking around on the user interface for a while, which causes my app to start and finish Activities, I will eventually get the exception:
The exception is not from the Activity that is currently in the foreground, but from one that was finished a while ago. So, what happens is that the garbage collector is cleaning up and finding the open database connection. This does not affect the app - it continues to work fine and all queries from the foreground Activity return data.
The solution is simply to close the connection in the child Activity. The onDestroy() event is the right place to do that:
Since I put this in all my child Activities, I no longer get the exception.