How do people deal with a scheduled NSTimer when an app is in the background?
Let's say I update something in my app every hour.
updateTimer = [NSTimer scheduledTimerWithTimeInterval:60.0*60.0
target:self
selector:@selector(updateStuff)
userInfo:nil
repeats:YES];
When in the background, this timer obviously doesn't fire(?). What should happen when the user comes back to the app..? Is the timer still running, with the same times?
And what would would happen if the user comes back in over an hour. Will it trigger for all the times that it missed, or will it wait till the next update time?
What I would like it to do is update immediately after the app comes into the foreground, if the date it should have fired is in the past. Is that possible?
You need to add timer in Run loop (Reference - Apple developer page for Run loop understanding).
You need to add permission (Required background modes) of Background working in infoPlist.
You shouldn't solve this problem by setting a timer, because you're not allowed to execute any code in the background. Imagine what will happen if the user restarts his iPhone in the meantime or with some other edge cases.
Use the
applicationDidEnterBackground:
andapplicationWillEnterForeground:
methods of your AppDelegate to get the behavior you want. It's way more robust, because it will also work when your App is completely killed because of a reboot or memory pressure.You can save the time the timer will fire next when your App is going to the background and check if you should take action when the App comes back to the foreground. Also stop and start the timer in this methods. While your App is running you could use a timer to trigger the update at the right moment.
You can have a timer fire while in background execution mode. There are a couple of tricks:
beginBackgroundTaskWithExpirationHandler
.[[NSRunLoop mainRunLoop] addTimer:timer forMode:NSDefaultRunLoopMode]
If you are on the main thread:
Notes
On iOS 8 you can get your NSTimer working when the app is in background (even if iphone is locked) up to ~3mins in a simple way:
just implement
scheduledTimerWithTimeInterval:target:selector:userInfo:repeats:
method as usual, where you need. Inside AppDelegate create a property:then in your appDelegate methods:
after 3 mins the timer will not fire more, when the app will comeback in foreground it will start to fire again
In case you or someone else is looking for how to run the NSTimer in the background in Swift, add the following to your App Delegate:
Cheers!