I'm making a benchmark App for test purposes ONLY. I am not intending this to go to the App Store.
What I need is my NSTimer to continue running on the background using a UIBackgroundTaskIdentifier, save data to a Core Data db and finally push the data to a server (I'm using Parse), after a certain time interval, of course.
So basically, I haven´t found any questions which apply to my specific case. I set my NSTimer like so:
UIBackgroundTaskIdentifier bgTask;
UIApplication *app = [UIApplication sharedApplication];
bgTask = [app beginBackgroundTaskWithExpirationHandler:^{
[app endBackgroundTask:bgTask];
}];
self.timer = [NSTimer scheduledTimerWithTimeInterval:self.localInterval target:self selector:@selector(updateCoreData:) userInfo:nil repeats:YES];
the method updateCoreData simply calls the Core Data class and makes the necessary insertions.
I've read about VoIP and the Music playing part, but don't know exactly which one would apply best for my case, nor how to implement them.
I figured it out by myself, for anyone else with a similar problem, what I did was to first turn on the location update flag on your Info.plist file. To do this, you must add the Key called "Required Background Modes" on Xcode 4, then as a value, select "App registers for location updates"
I have a timer declared like so in my .h file:
Then on the .m file, I declared it like so:
Finally, on the selector method, I made the following:
This will create a timer that starts and immediately stops location services after 5 minutes. This will be enough for the app to stay alive indefinately, unless you kill the process.
XCode 6.3.1, for iOS 8.3
There are big diffrences that I've encountered between the apps. behavior while plugged in to your Mac running XCode using debugger and the same apps. behavior while unplugged.
At current iOS version, 8.3, at most your app is allotted is 180 seconds to run in the background for finite long running task with an expiration handler.
No matter what you try, with your phone unplugged your app will be killed by the system in 180 seconds or earlier. I've done a significant amounts of tests and tricks to confirm this. See my post...
My NSTimer Post
Here is a neat way to tell how much time is left for your app to run before termination, keep in mind that you are not guaranteed this time.
Hope this helps your investigation. Cheers!