Migrating from Firebase JobDispatcher to WorkManager

WorkManager is a library for scheduling and executing deferrable background work in Android. It is the recommended replacement for Firebase JobDispatcher. The following guide will walk you through the process of migrating your Firebase JobDispatcher implementation to WorkManager.

Gradle setup

To import the WorkManager library into your Android project, add the dependencies listed in Getting started with WorkManager.

From JobService to workers

FirebaseJobDispatcher uses a subclass of JobService as an entry point for defining the work which needs to be done. You might be using JobService directly, or using SimpleJobService.

A JobService will look something like this:

Kotlin

import com.firebase.jobdispatcher.JobParameters
import com.firebase.jobdispatcher.JobService

class MyJobService : JobService() {
    override fun onStartJob(job: JobParameters): Boolean {
        // Do some work here
        return false // Answers the question: "Is there still work going on?"
    }
    override fun onStopJob(job: JobParameters): Boolean {
        return false // Answers the question: "Should this job be retried?"
    }
}

Java

import com.firebase.jobdispatcher.JobParameters;
import com.firebase.jobdispatcher.JobService;

public class MyJobService extends JobService {
    @Override
    public boolean onStartJob(JobParameters job) {
        // Do some work here

        return false; // Answers the question: "Is there still work going on?"
    }

    @Override
    public boolean onStopJob(JobParameters job) {
        return false; // Answers the question: "Should this job be retried?"
    }
}

If you are using SimpleJobService you will have overridden onRunJob(), which returns a @JobResult int type.

The key difference is when you are using JobService directly, onStartJob() is called on the main thread, and it is the app’s responsibility to offload the work to a background thread. On the other hand, if you are using SimpleJobService, that service is responsible for executing your work on a background thread.

WorkManager has similar concepts. The fundamental unit of work in WorkManager is a ListenableWorker. There are also other useful subtypes of workers like Worker, RxWorker, and CoroutineWorker (when using Kotlin coroutines).

JobService maps to a ListenableWorker

If you are using JobService directly, then the worker it maps to is a ListenableWorker. If you are using SimpleJobService then you should use Worker instead.

Let’s use the above example (MyJobService) and look at how we can convert it to a ListenableWorker.

Kotlin

import android.content.Context
import androidx.work.ListenableWorker
import androidx.work.ListenableWorker.Result
import androidx.work.WorkerParameters
import com.google.common.util.concurrent.ListenableFuture

class MyWorker(appContext: Context, params: WorkerParameters) :
    ListenableWorker(appContext, params) {

    override fun startWork(): ListenableFuture<ListenableWorker.Result> {
        // Do your work here.
        TODO("Return a ListenableFuture<Result>")
    }

    override fun onStopped() {
        // Cleanup because you are being stopped.
    }
}

Java

import android.content.Context;
import androidx.work.ListenableWorker;
import androidx.work.ListenableWorker.Result;
import androidx.work.WorkerParameters;
import com.google.common.util.concurrent.ListenableFuture;

class MyWorker extends ListenableWorker {

  public MyWorker(@NonNull Context appContext, @NonNull WorkerParameters params) {
    super(appContext, params);
  }

  @Override
  public ListenableFuture<ListenableWorker.Result> startWork() {
    // Do your work here.
    Data input = getInputData();

    // Return a ListenableFuture<>
  }

  @Override
  public void onStopped() {
    // Cleanup because you are being stopped.
  }
}

The basic unit of work in WorkManager is a ListenableWorker. Just like JobService.onStartJob(), startWork() is called on the main thread. Here MyWorker implements ListenableWorker and returns an instance of ListenableFuture, which is used to signal work completion asynchronously. You should choose your own threading strategy here.

The ListenableFuture here eventually returns a ListenableWorker.Result type which can be one of Result.success(), Result.success(Data outputData), Result.retry(), Result.failure(), or Result.failure(Data outputData). For more information, see the reference page for ListenableWorker.Result.

onStopped() is called to signal that the ListenableWorker needs to stop, either because the constraints are no longer being met (for example, because the network is no longer available), or because a WorkManager.cancel…() method was called. onStopped() may also be called if the OS decides to shut down your work for some reason.

SimpleJobService maps to a Worker

When using SimpleJobService the above worker will look like:

Kotlin

import android.content.Context;
import androidx.work.Data;
import androidx.work.ListenableWorker.Result;
import androidx.work.Worker;
import androidx.work.WorkerParameters;


class MyWorker(context: Context, params: WorkerParameters) : Worker(context, params) {
    override fun doWork(): Result {
        TODO("Return a Result")
    }

    override fun onStopped() {
        super.onStopped()
        TODO("Cleanup, because you are being stopped")
    }
}

Java

import android.content.Context;
import androidx.work.Data;
import androidx.work.ListenableWorker.Result;
import androidx.work.Worker;
import androidx.work.WorkerParameters;

class MyWorker extends Worker {

  public MyWorker(@NonNull Context appContext, @NonNull WorkerParameters params) {
    super(appContext, params);
  }

  @Override
  public Result doWork() {
    // Do your work here.
    Data input = getInputData();

    // Return a ListenableWorker.Result
    Data outputData = new Data.Builder()
        .putString(“Key”, “value”)
        .build();
    return Result.success(outputData);
  }

  @Override
  public void onStopped() {
    // Cleanup because you are being stopped.
  }
}

Here doWork() returns an instance of ListenableWorker.Result to signal work completion synchronously. This is similar to SimpleJobService, which schedules jobs on a background thread.

JobBuilder maps to WorkRequest

FirebaseJobBuilder uses Job.Builder to represent Job metadata. WorkManager uses WorkRequest to fill this role.

WorkManager has two types of WorkRequests: OneTimeWorkRequest and PeriodicWorkRequest.

If you are currently using Job.Builder.setRecurring(true), then you should create a new PeriodicWorkRequest. Otherwise, you should use a OneTimeWorkRequest.

Let’s look at what scheduling a complex Job with FirebaseJobDispatcher might look like:

Kotlin

val input: Bundle = Bundle().apply {
    putString("some_key", "some_value")
}

val job = dispatcher.newJobBuilder()
    // the JobService that will be called
    .setService(MyService::class.java)
    // uniquely identifies the job
    .setTag("my-unique-tag")
    // one-off job
    .setRecurring(false)
    // don't persist past a device reboot
    .setLifetime(Lifetime.UNTIL_NEXT_BOOT)
    // start between 0 and 60 seconds from now
    .setTrigger(Trigger.executionWindow(0, 60))
    // don't overwrite an existing job with the same tag
    .setReplaceCurrent(false)
    // retry with exponential backoff
    .setRetryStrategy(RetryStrategy.DEFAULT_EXPONENTIAL)

    .setConstraints(
        // only run on an unmetered network
        Constraint.ON_UNMETERED_NETWORK,
        // // only run when the device is charging
        Constraint.DEVICE_CHARGING
    )
    .setExtras(input)
    .build()

dispatcher.mustSchedule(job)

Java

Bundle input = new Bundle();
input.putString("some_key", "some_value");

Job myJob = dispatcher.newJobBuilder()
    // the JobService that will be called
    .setService(MyJobService.class)
    // uniquely identifies the job
    .setTag("my-unique-tag")
    // one-off job
    .setRecurring(false)
    // don't persist past a device reboot
    .setLifetime(Lifetime.UNTIL_NEXT_BOOT)
    // start between 0 and 60 seconds from now
    .setTrigger(Trigger.executionWindow(0, 60))
    // don't overwrite an existing job with the same tag
    .setReplaceCurrent(false)
    // retry with exponential backoff
    .setRetryStrategy(RetryStrategy.DEFAULT_EXPONENTIAL)
    // constraints that need to be satisfied for the job to run
    .setConstraints(
        // only run on an unmetered network
        Constraint.ON_UNMETERED_NETWORK,
        // only run when the device is charging
        Constraint.DEVICE_CHARGING
    )
    .setExtras(input)
    .build();

dispatcher.mustSchedule(myJob);

To achieve the same with WorkManager you will need to:

  • Build input data which can be used as input for the Worker.
  • Build a WorkRequest with the input data and constraints similar to the ones defined above for FirebaseJobDispatcher.
  • Enqueue the WorkRequest.

Setting up inputs for the Worker

FirebaseJobDispatcher uses a Bundle to send input data to the JobService. WorkManager uses Data instead. So that becomes:

Kotlin

import androidx.work.workDataOf
val data = workDataOf("some_key" to "some_val")

Java

import androidx.work.Data;
Data input = new Data.Builder()
    .putString("some_key", "some_value")
    .build();

Setting up Constraints for the Worker

FirebaseJobDispatcher uses Job.Builder.setConstaints(...) to set up constraints on jobs. WorkManager uses Constraints instead.

Kotlin

import androidx.work.*

val constraints: Constraints = Constraints.Builder().apply {
    setRequiredNetworkType(NetworkType.CONNECTED)
    setRequiresCharging(true)
}.build()

Java

import androidx.work.Constraints;
import androidx.work.Constraints.Builder;
import androidx.work.NetworkType;

Constraints constraints = new Constraints.Builder()
    // The Worker needs Network connectivity
    .setRequiredNetworkType(NetworkType.CONNECTED)
    // Needs the device to be charging
    .setRequiresCharging(true)
    .build();

Creating the WorkRequest (OneTime or Periodic)

To create OneTimeWorkRequests and PeriodicWorkRequests you should use OneTimeWorkRequest.Builder and PeriodicWorkRequest.Builder.

To create a OneTimeWorkRequest which is similar to the above Job you should do the following:

Kotlin

import androidx.work.*
import java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit

val constraints: Constraints = TODO("Define constraints as above")
val request: OneTimeWorkRequest =
     // Tell which work to execute
     OneTimeWorkRequestBuilder<MyWorker>()
         // Sets the input data for the ListenableWorker
        .setInputData(input)
        // If you want to delay the start of work by 60 seconds
        .setInitialDelay(60, TimeUnit.SECONDS)
        // Set a backoff criteria to be used when retry-ing
        .setBackoffCriteria(BackoffPolicy.EXPONENTIAL, 30000, TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS)
        // Set additional constraints
        .setConstraints(constraints)
        .build()

Java

import androidx.work.BackoffCriteria;
import androidx.work.Constraints;
import androidx.work.Constraints.Builder;
import androidx.work.NetworkType;
import androidx.work.OneTimeWorkRequest;
import androidx.work.OneTimeWorkRequest.Builder;
import androidx.work.Data;

// Define constraints (as above)
Constraints constraints = ...
OneTimeWorkRequest request =
    // Tell which work to execute
    new OneTimeWorkRequest.Builder(MyWorker.class)
        // Sets the input data for the ListenableWorker
        .setInputData(inputData)
        // If you want to delay the start of work by 60 seconds
        .setInitialDelay(60, TimeUnit.SECONDS)
        // Set a backoff criteria to be used when retry-ing
        .setBackoffCriteria(BackoffCriteria.EXPONENTIAL, 30000, TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS)
        // Set additional constraints
        .setConstraints(constraints)
        .build();

The key difference here is that WorkManager’s jobs are always persisted across device reboot automatically.

If you want to create a PeriodicWorkRequest then you would do something like:

Kotlin

val constraints: Constraints = TODO("Define constraints as above")
val request: PeriodicWorkRequest =
PeriodicWorkRequestBuilder<MyWorker>(15, TimeUnit.MINUTES)
    // Sets the input data for the ListenableWorker
    .setInputData(input)
    // Other setters
    .build()

Java

import androidx.work.BackoffCriteria;
import androidx.work.Constraints;
import androidx.work.Constraints.Builder;
import androidx.work.NetworkType;
import androidx.work.PeriodicWorkRequest;
import androidx.work.PeriodicWorkRequest.Builder;
import androidx.work.Data;

// Define constraints (as above)
Constraints constraints = ...

PeriodicWorkRequest request =
    // Executes MyWorker every 15 minutes
    new PeriodicWorkRequest.Builder(MyWorker.class, 15, TimeUnit.MINUTES)
        // Sets the input data for the ListenableWorker
        .setInputData(input)
        . // other setters (as above)
        .build();

Scheduling work

Now that you have defined a Worker and a WorkRequest, you are ready to schedule work.

Every Job defined with FirebaseJobDispatcher had a tag which was used to uniquely identify a Job. It also provided a way for the application to tell the scheduler if this instance of a Job was to replace an existing copy of the Job by calling setReplaceCurrent.

Kotlin

val job = dispatcher.newJobBuilder()
    // the JobService that will be called
    .setService(MyService::class.java)
    // uniquely identifies the job
    .setTag("my-unique-tag")
    // don't overwrite an existing job with the same tag
    .setRecurring(false)
    // Other setters...
    .build()

Java

Job myJob = dispatcher.newJobBuilder()
    // the JobService that will be called
    .setService(MyJobService.class)
    // uniquely identifies the job
    .setTag("my-unique-tag")
    // don't overwrite an existing job with the same tag
    .setReplaceCurrent(false)
    // other setters
    // ...

dispatcher.mustSchedule(myJob);

When using WorkManager, you can achieve the same result by using enqueueUniqueWork() and enqueueUniquePeriodicWork() APIs (when using a OneTimeWorkRequest and a PeriodicWorkRequest, respectively). For more information, see the reference pages for WorkManager.enqueueUniqueWork() and WorkManager.enqueueUniquePeriodicWork().

This will look something like:

Kotlin

import androidx.work.*

val request: OneTimeWorkRequest = TODO("A WorkRequest")
WorkManager.getInstance(myContext)
    .enqueueUniqueWork("my-unique-name", ExistingWorkPolicy.KEEP, request)

Java

import androidx.work.ExistingWorkPolicy;
import androidx.work.OneTimeWorkRequest;
import androidx.work.WorkManager;

OneTimeWorkRequest workRequest = // a WorkRequest;
WorkManager.getInstance(myContext)
    // Use ExistingWorkPolicy.REPLACE to cancel and delete any existing pending
    // (uncompleted) work with the same unique name. Then, insert the newly-specified
    // work.
    .enqueueUniqueWork("my-unique-name", ExistingWorkPolicy.KEEP, workRequest);

Cancelling work

With FirebaseJobDispatcher you could cancel work using:

Kotlin

dispatcher.cancel("my-unique-tag")

Java

dispatcher.cancel("my-unique-tag");

When using WorkManager you can use:

Kotlin

import androidx.work.WorkManager
WorkManager.getInstance(myContext).cancelUniqueWork("my-unique-name")

Java

import androidx.work.WorkManager;
WorkManager.getInstance(myContext).cancelUniqueWork("my-unique-name");

Initializing WorkManager

WorkManager typically initializes itself by using a ContentProvider. If you require more control over how WorkManager organizes and schedules work, you can customize the WorkManager configuration and initialization.