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android实现文件下载的几种方式

2016-08-02 23:29 627 查看
1404down
voteaccepted
There are many ways to download files. Following I will post most common ways; it is up to you to decide which method is better for your app.


1. Use
AsyncTask
and
show the download progress in a dialog

This method will allow you to execute some background processes and update the UI at the same time (in this case, we'll update a progress bar).

This is an example code:
// declare the dialog as a member field of your activity
ProgressDialog mProgressDialog;

// instantiate it within the onCreate method
mProgressDialog = new ProgressDialog(YourActivity.this);
mProgressDialog.setMessage("A message");
mProgressDialog.setIndeterminate(true);
mProgressDialog.setProgressStyle(ProgressDialog.STYLE_HORIZONTAL);
mProgressDialog.setCancelable(true);

// execute this when the downloader must be fired
final DownloadTask downloadTask = new DownloadTask(YourActivity.this);
downloadTask.execute("the url to the file you want to download");

mProgressDialog.setOnCancelListener(new DialogInterface.OnCancelListener() {
@Override
public void onCancel(DialogInterface dialog) {
downloadTask.cancel(true);
}
});


The
AsyncTask
will
look like this:
// usually, subclasses of AsyncTask are declared inside the activity class.
// that way, you can easily modify the UI thread from here
private class DownloadTask extends AsyncTask<String, Integer, String> {

private Context context;
private PowerManager.WakeLock mWakeLock;

public DownloadTask(Context context) {
this.context = context;
}

@Override
protected String doInBackground(String... sUrl) {
InputStream input = null;
OutputStream output = null;
HttpURLConnection connection = null;
try {
URL url = new URL(sUrl[0]);
connection = (HttpURLConnection) url.openConnection();
connection.connect();

// expect HTTP 200 OK, so we don't mistakenly save error report
// instead of the file
if (connection.getResponseCode() != HttpURLConnection.HTTP_OK) {
return "Server returned HTTP " + connection.getResponseCode()
+ " " + connection.getResponseMessage();
}

// this will be useful to display download percentage
// might be -1: server did not report the length
int fileLength = connection.getContentLength();

// download the file
input = connection.getInputStream();
output = new FileOutputStream("/sdcard/file_name.extension");

byte data[] = new byte[4096];
long total = 0;
int count;
while ((count = input.read(data)) != -1) {
// allow canceling with back button
if (isCancelled()) {
input.close();
return null;
}
total += count;
// publishing the progress....
if (fileLength > 0) // only if total length is known
publishProgress((int) (total * 100 / fileLength));
output.write(data, 0, count);
}
} catch (Exception e) {
return e.toString();
} finally {
try {
if (output != null)
output.close();
if (input != null)
input.close();
} catch (IOException ignored) {
}

if (connection != null)
connection.disconnect();
}
return null;
}


The method above (
doInBackground
)
runs always on a background thread. You shouldn't do any UI tasks there. On the other hand, the
onProgressUpdate
and
onPreExecute
run
on the UI thread, so there you can change the progress bar:
@Override
protected void onPreExecute() {
super.onPreExecute();
// take CPU lock to prevent CPU from going off if the user
// presses the power button during download
PowerManager pm = (PowerManager) context.getSystemService(Context.POWER_SERVICE);
mWakeLock = pm.newWakeLock(PowerManager.PARTIAL_WAKE_LOCK,
getClass().getName());
mWakeLock.acquire();
mProgressDialog.show();
}

@Override
protected void onProgressUpdate(Integer... progress) {
super.onProgressUpdate(progress);
// if we get here, length is known, now set indeterminate to false
mProgressDialog.setIndeterminate(false);
mProgressDialog.setMax(100);
mProgressDialog.setProgress(progress[0]);
}

@Override
protected void onPostExecute(String result) {
mWakeLock.release();
mProgressDialog.dismiss();
if (result != null)
Toast.makeText(context,"Download error: "+result, Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
else
Toast.makeText(context,"File downloaded", Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
}


For this to run, you need the WAKE_LOCK permission.
<uses-permission android:name="android.permission.WAKE_LOCK" />


2. Download from Service

The big question here is: how do I update my activity from a service?. In the next example we are going to use two classes you may not be aware of:
ResultReceiver
and
IntentService
.
ResultReceiver
is
the one that will allow us to update our thread from a service;
IntentService
is
a subclass of
Service
which
spawns a thread to do background work from there (you should know that a
Service
runs
actually in the same thread of your app; when you extends
Service
,
you must manually spawn new threads to run CPU blocking operations).

Download service can look like this:
public class DownloadService extends IntentService {
public static final int UPDATE_PROGRESS = 8344;
public DownloadService() {
super("DownloadService");
}
@Override
protected void onHandleIntent(Intent intent) {
String urlToDownload = intent.getStringExtra("url");
ResultReceiver receiver = (ResultReceiver) intent.getParcelableExtra("receiver");
try {
URL url = new URL(urlToDownload);
URLConnection connection = url.openConnection();
connection.connect();
// this will be useful so that you can show a typical 0-100% progress bar
int fileLength = connection.getContentLength();

// download the file
InputStream input = new BufferedInputStream(connection.getInputStream());
OutputStream output = new FileOutputStream("/sdcard/BarcodeScanner-debug.apk");

byte data[] = new byte[1024];
long total = 0;
int count;
while ((count = input.read(data)) != -1) {
total += count;
// publishing the progress....
Bundle resultData = new Bundle();
resultData.putInt("progress" ,(int) (total * 100 / fileLength));
receiver.send(UPDATE_PROGRESS, resultData);
output.write(data, 0, count);
}

output.flush();
output.close();
input.close();
} catch (IOException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}

Bundle resultData = new Bundle();
resultData.putInt("progress" ,100);
receiver.send(UPDATE_PROGRESS, resultData);
}
}


Add the service to your manifest:
<service android:name=".DownloadService"/>


And the activity will look like this:
// initialize the progress dialog like in the first example

// this is how you fire the downloader
mProgressDialog.show();
Intent intent = new Intent(this, DownloadService.class);
intent.putExtra("url", "url of the file to download");
intent.putExtra("receiver", new DownloadReceiver(new Handler()));
startService(intent);


Here is were
ResultReceiver
comes
to play:
private class DownloadReceiver extends ResultReceiver{
public DownloadReceiver(Handler handler) {
super(handler);
}

@Override
protected void onReceiveResult(int resultCode, Bundle resultData) {
super.onReceiveResult(resultCode, resultData);
if (resultCode == DownloadService.UPDATE_PROGRESS) {
int progress = resultData.getInt("progress");
mProgressDialog.setProgress(progress);
if (progress == 100) {
mProgressDialog.dismiss();
}
}
}
}


2.1 Use Groundy library

Groundy is a library that basically helps you
run pieces of code in a background service, and it is based on the
ResultReceiver
concept
shown above. This library is deprecated at the moment. This is how the whole code would look like:

The activity where you are showing the dialog...
public class MainActivity extends Activity {

private ProgressDialog mProgressDialog;

@Override
public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.main);

findViewById(R.id.btn_download).setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
public void onClick(View view) {
String url = ((EditText) findViewById(R.id.edit_url)).getText().toString().trim();
Bundle extras = new Bundler().add(DownloadTask.PARAM_URL, url).build();
Groundy.create(DownloadExample.this, DownloadTask.class)
.receiver(mReceiver)
.params(extras)
.queue();

mProgressDialog = new ProgressDialog(MainActivity.this);
mProgressDialog.setProgressStyle(ProgressDialog.STYLE_HORIZONTAL);
mProgressDialog.setCancelable(false);
mProgressDialog.show();
}
});
}

private ResultReceiver mReceiver = new ResultReceiver(new Handler()) {
@Override
protected void onReceiveResult(int resultCode, Bundle resultData) {
super.onReceiveResult(resultCode, resultData);
switch (resultCode) {
case Groundy.STATUS_PROGRESS:
mProgressDialog.setProgress(resultData.getInt(Groundy.KEY_PROGRESS));
break;
case Groundy.STATUS_FINISHED:
Toast.makeText(DownloadExample.this, R.string.file_downloaded, Toast.LENGTH_LONG);
mProgressDialog.dismiss();
break;
case Groundy.STATUS_ERROR:
Toast.makeText(DownloadExample.this, resultData.getString(Groundy.KEY_ERROR), Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
mProgressDialog.dismiss();
break;
}
}
};
}


A
GroundyTask
implementation
used by Groundy to download the file and show the progress:
public class DownloadTask extends GroundyTask {
public static final String PARAM_URL = "com.groundy.sample.param.url";

@Override
protected boolean doInBackground() {
try {
String url = getParameters().getString(PARAM_URL);
File dest = new File(getContext().getFilesDir(), new File(url).getName());
DownloadUtils.downloadFile(getContext(), url, dest, DownloadUtils.getDownloadListenerForTask(this));
return true;
} catch (Exception pokemon) {
return false;
}
}
}


And just add this to the manifest:
<service android:name="com.codeslap.groundy.GroundyService"/>


It couldn't be easier I think. Just grab the latest jar from Github and you are ready to go.
Keep in mind that Groundy's main purpose is to make calls to external REST apis in a background service and post results to the UI with easily. If you are doing something like that in your app, it could
be really useful.


2.2 Use https://github.com/koush/ion


3. Use
DownloadManager
class
(
GingerBread
and
newer only)

GingerBread brought a new feature,
DownloadManager
,
which allows you to download files easily and delegate the hard work of handling threads, streams, etc. to the system.

First, let's see a utility method:
/**
* @param context used to check the device version and DownloadManager information
* @return true if the download manager is available
*/
public static boolean isDownloadManagerAvailable(Context context) {

if (Build.VERSION.SDK_INT >= Build.VERSION_CODES.GINGERBREAD) {
return true;
}
return false;
}


Method's name explains it all. Once you are sure
DownloadManager
is
available, you can do something like this:
String url = "url you want to download";
DownloadManager.Request request = new DownloadManager.Request(Uri.parse(url));
request.setDescription("Some descrition");
request.setTitle("Some title");
// in order for this if to run, you must use the android 3.2 to compile your app
if (Build.VERSION.SDK_INT >= Build.VERSION_CODES.HONEYCOMB) {
request.allowScanningByMediaScanner();
request.setNotificationVisibility(DownloadManager.Request.VISIBILITY_VISIBLE_NOTIFY_COMPLETED);
}
request.setDestinationInExternalPublicDir(Environment.DIRECTORY_DOWNLOADS, "name-of-the-file.ext");

// get download service and enqueue file
DownloadManager manager = (DownloadManager) getSystemService(Context.DOWNLOAD_SERVICE);
manager.enqueue(request);


Download progress will be showing in the notification bar.

1404down
voteaccepted
There are many ways to download files. Following I will post most common ways; it is up to you to decide which method is better for your app.


1. Use
AsyncTask
and
show the download progress in a dialog

This method will allow you to execute some background processes and update the UI at the same time (in this case, we'll update a progress bar).

This is an example code:
// declare the dialog as a member field of your activity
ProgressDialog mProgressDialog;

// instantiate it within the onCreate method
mProgressDialog = new ProgressDialog(YourActivity.this);
mProgressDialog.setMessage("A message");
mProgressDialog.setIndeterminate(true);
mProgressDialog.setProgressStyle(ProgressDialog.STYLE_HORIZONTAL);
mProgressDialog.setCancelable(true);

// execute this when the downloader must be fired
final DownloadTask downloadTask = new DownloadTask(YourActivity.this);
downloadTask.execute("the url to the file you want to download");

mProgressDialog.setOnCancelListener(new DialogInterface.OnCancelListener() {
@Override
public void onCancel(DialogInterface dialog) {
downloadTask.cancel(true);
}
});


The
AsyncTask
will
look like this:
// usually, subclasses of AsyncTask are declared inside the activity class.
// that way, you can easily modify the UI thread from here
private class DownloadTask extends AsyncTask<String, Integer, String> {

private Context context;
private PowerManager.WakeLock mWakeLock;

public DownloadTask(Context context) {
this.context = context;
}

@Override
protected String doInBackground(String... sUrl) {
InputStream input = null;
OutputStream output = null;
HttpURLConnection connection = null;
try {
URL url = new URL(sUrl[0]);
connection = (HttpURLConnection) url.openConnection();
connection.connect();

// expect HTTP 200 OK, so we don't mistakenly save error report
// instead of the file
if (connection.getResponseCode() != HttpURLConnection.HTTP_OK) {
return "Server returned HTTP " + connection.getResponseCode()
+ " " + connection.getResponseMessage();
}

// this will be useful to display download percentage
// might be -1: server did not report the length
int fileLength = connection.getContentLength();

// download the file
input = connection.getInputStream();
output = new FileOutputStream("/sdcard/file_name.extension");

byte data[] = new byte[4096];
long total = 0;
int count;
while ((count = input.read(data)) != -1) {
// allow canceling with back button
if (isCancelled()) {
input.close();
return null;
}
total += count;
// publishing the progress....
if (fileLength > 0) // only if total length is known
publishProgress((int) (total * 100 / fileLength));
output.write(data, 0, count);
}
} catch (Exception e) {
return e.toString();
} finally {
try {
if (output != null)
output.close();
if (input != null)
input.close();
} catch (IOException ignored) {
}

if (connection != null)
connection.disconnect();
}
return null;
}


The method above (
doInBackground
)
runs always on a background thread. You shouldn't do any UI tasks there. On the other hand, the
onProgressUpdate
and
onPreExecute
run
on the UI thread, so there you can change the progress bar:
@Override
protected void onPreExecute() {
super.onPreExecute();
// take CPU lock to prevent CPU from going off if the user
// presses the power button during download
PowerManager pm = (PowerManager) context.getSystemService(Context.POWER_SERVICE);
mWakeLock = pm.newWakeLock(PowerManager.PARTIAL_WAKE_LOCK,
getClass().getName());
mWakeLock.acquire();
mProgressDialog.show();
}

@Override
protected void onProgressUpdate(Integer... progress) {
super.onProgressUpdate(progress);
// if we get here, length is known, now set indeterminate to false
mProgressDialog.setIndeterminate(false);
mProgressDialog.setMax(100);
mProgressDialog.setProgress(progress[0]);
}

@Override
protected void onPostExecute(String result) {
mWakeLock.release();
mProgressDialog.dismiss();
if (result != null)
Toast.makeText(context,"Download error: "+result, Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
else
Toast.makeText(context,"File downloaded", Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
}


For this to run, you need the WAKE_LOCK permission.
<uses-permission android:name="android.permission.WAKE_LOCK" />


2. Download from Service

The big question here is: how do I update my activity from a service?. In the next example we are going to use two classes you may not be aware of:
ResultReceiver
and
IntentService
.
ResultReceiver
is
the one that will allow us to update our thread from a service;
IntentService
is
a subclass of
Service
which
spawns a thread to do background work from there (you should know that a
Service
runs
actually in the same thread of your app; when you extends
Service
,
you must manually spawn new threads to run CPU blocking operations).

Download service can look like this:
public class DownloadService extends IntentService {
public static final int UPDATE_PROGRESS = 8344;
public DownloadService() {
super("DownloadService");
}
@Override
protected void onHandleIntent(Intent intent) {
String urlToDownload = intent.getStringExtra("url");
ResultReceiver receiver = (ResultReceiver) intent.getParcelableExtra("receiver");
try {
URL url = new URL(urlToDownload);
URLConnection connection = url.openConnection();
connection.connect();
// this will be useful so that you can show a typical 0-100% progress bar
int fileLength = connection.getContentLength();

// download the file
InputStream input = new BufferedInputStream(connection.getInputStream());
OutputStream output = new FileOutputStream("/sdcard/BarcodeScanner-debug.apk");

byte data[] = new byte[1024];
long total = 0;
int count;
while ((count = input.read(data)) != -1) {
total += count;
// publishing the progress....
Bundle resultData = new Bundle();
resultData.putInt("progress" ,(int) (total * 100 / fileLength));
receiver.send(UPDATE_PROGRESS, resultData);
output.write(data, 0, count);
}

output.flush();
output.close();
input.close();
} catch (IOException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}

Bundle resultData = new Bundle();
resultData.putInt("progress" ,100);
receiver.send(UPDATE_PROGRESS, resultData);
}
}


Add the service to your manifest:
<service android:name=".DownloadService"/>


And the activity will look like this:
// initialize the progress dialog like in the first example

// this is how you fire the downloader
mProgressDialog.show();
Intent intent = new Intent(this, DownloadService.class);
intent.putExtra("url", "url of the file to download");
intent.putExtra("receiver", new DownloadReceiver(new Handler()));
startService(intent);


Here is were
ResultReceiver
comes
to play:
private class DownloadReceiver extends ResultReceiver{
public DownloadReceiver(Handler handler) {
super(handler);
}

@Override
protected void onReceiveResult(int resultCode, Bundle resultData) {
super.onReceiveResult(resultCode, resultData);
if (resultCode == DownloadService.UPDATE_PROGRESS) {
int progress = resultData.getInt("progress");
mProgressDialog.setProgress(progress);
if (progress == 100) {
mProgressDialog.dismiss();
}
}
}
}


2.1 Use Groundy library

Groundy is a library that basically helps
you run pieces of code in a background service, and it is based on the
ResultReceiver
concept
shown above. This library is deprecated at the moment. This is how the whole code would look like:

The activity where you are showing the dialog...
public class MainActivity extends Activity {

private ProgressDialog mProgressDialog;

@Override
public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.main);

findViewById(R.id.btn_download).setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
public void onClick(View view) {
String url = ((EditText) findViewById(R.id.edit_url)).getText().toString().trim();
Bundle extras = new Bundler().add(DownloadTask.PARAM_URL, url).build();
Groundy.create(DownloadExample.this, DownloadTask.class)
.receiver(mReceiver)
.params(extras)
.queue();

mProgressDialog = new ProgressDialog(MainActivity.this);
mProgressDialog.setProgressStyle(ProgressDialog.STYLE_HORIZONTAL);
mProgressDialog.setCancelable(false);
mProgressDialog.show();
}
});
}

private ResultReceiver mReceiver = new ResultReceiver(new Handler()) {
@Override
protected void onReceiveResult(int resultCode, Bundle resultData) {
super.onReceiveResult(resultCode, resultData);
switch (resultCode) {
case Groundy.STATUS_PROGRESS:
mProgressDialog.setProgress(resultData.getInt(Groundy.KEY_PROGRESS));
break;
case Groundy.STATUS_FINISHED:
Toast.makeText(DownloadExample.this, R.string.file_downloaded, Toast.LENGTH_LONG);
mProgressDialog.dismiss();
break;
case Groundy.STATUS_ERROR:
Toast.makeText(DownloadExample.this, resultData.getString(Groundy.KEY_ERROR), Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
mProgressDialog.dismiss();
break;
}
}
};
}


A
GroundyTask
implementation
used by Groundy to download the file and show the progress:
public class DownloadTask extends GroundyTask {
public static final String PARAM_URL = "com.groundy.sample.param.url";

@Override
protected boolean doInBackground() {
try {
String url = getParameters().getString(PARAM_URL);
File dest = new File(getContext().getFilesDir(), new File(url).getName());
DownloadUtils.downloadFile(getContext(), url, dest, DownloadUtils.getDownloadListenerForTask(this));
return true;
} catch (Exception pokemon) {
return false;
}
}
}


And just add this to the manifest:
<service android:name="com.codeslap.groundy.GroundyService"/>


It couldn't be easier I think. Just grab the latest jar from Github and you are ready to go.
Keep in mind that Groundy's main purpose is to make calls to external REST apis in a background service and post results to the UI with easily. If you are doing something like that in your app, it
could be really useful.


2.2 Use https://github.com/koush/ion


3. Use
DownloadManager
class
(
GingerBread
and
newer only)

GingerBread brought a new feature,
DownloadManager
,
which allows you to download files easily and delegate the hard work of handling threads, streams, etc. to the system.

First, let's see a utility method:
/**
* @param context used to check the device version and DownloadManager information
* @return true if the download manager is available
*/
public static boolean isDownloadManagerAvailable(Context context) {

if (Build.VERSION.SDK_INT >= Build.VERSION_CODES.GINGERBREAD) {
return true;
}
return false;
}


Method's name explains it all. Once you are sure
DownloadManager
is
available, you can do something like this:
String url = "url you want to download";
DownloadManager.Request request = new DownloadManager.Request(Uri.parse(url));
request.setDescription("Some descrition");
request.setTitle("Some title");
// in order for this if to run, you must use the android 3.2 to compile your app
if (Build.VERSION.SDK_INT >= Build.VERSION_CODES.HONEYCOMB) {
request.allowScanningByMediaScanner();
request.setNotificationVisibility(DownloadManager.Request.VISIBILITY_VISIBLE_NOTIFY_COMPLETED);
}
request.setDestinationInExternalPublicDir(Environment.DIRECTORY_DOWNLOADS, "name-of-the-file.ext");

// get download service and enqueue file
DownloadManager manager = (DownloadManager) getSystemService(Context.DOWNLOAD_SERVICE);
manager.enqueue(request);


Download progress will be showing in the notification bar.

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