The proxy must ensure that enable/disable calls are not reordered when
proxied; this change adds synchronization to prevent such reordering
that could happen following an onServiceConnected() callback, and to
ensure cross-thread visibility of writes.
Also, when the package is updated, the old service instance must be
unbound and the new one bound. This changes uses a separate
Connection object per service instance (package version) to avoid
confusing the binder objects.
Change-Id: I0907f7eed211b97ccfffa395754f1eb8ea8d8fec
This fixes a problem where applications could ask the location
manager to do very heavy-weight things (like... say... update
location every minute), which would get accounted against the
system instead of the application because ultimately it is the
system making the heavy calls (wake locks, etc).
To solve this, we introduce a new class WorkSource representing
the source of some work. Wake locks and Wifi locks allow you
to set the source to use (but only if you are system code and thus
can get the permission to do so), which is what will be reported
to the battery stats until the actual caller.
For the initial implementation, the location manager keeps track
of all clients requesting periodic updates, and tells its providers
about them as a WorkSource param when setting their min update time.
The network location provider uses this to set the source on the
wake and wifi locks it acquires, when doing work because of the
update period.
This should also be used elsewhere, such as in the GPS provider,
but this is a good start.
Change-Id: I2b6ffafad9e90ecf15d7c502e2db675fd52ae3cf
Use MS-Assisted mode for single shot GPS fixes if it is supported.
Add finer grained control over accuracy to the android.location.Criteria class
and location criteria logic from LocationManager to LocationManagerService
Change-Id: I156b1f6c6a45d255c87ff917cf3e9726a6d7a75b
Signed-off-by: Mike Lockwood <lockwood@android.com>