This stuff drives me so mad. I recently have noticed higher than usual over-night drain on my phone and decided to investigate a bit. So I connected my phone to my machine, closed out all the apps waited a few seconds and ran adb shell top with a few parameters to see what is actually running.

And would you look at that, despite the phone telling me that nothing is running at all, the microsoft copilot, ebay kleinanzeigen (a german craigslist), google photos and google search either have not been closed or somehow started themselves. Also I have not received any notifications for these Apps in the last few seconds.

First of all, how are these Apps even doing it? With the two Google Apps I kinda get it, since they are System Apps, but in the case of ebay Kleinanzeigen and microsoft copilot it makes 0 sense since they are regular 3rd party Apps. How can they bypass seemingly all optimizations and start themselves (I haven’t used the Microsoft copilot app in months). Also is there any way to prevent this from happening or at the very least get some kind of summary how often these Apps ran in the background. Sadly the Android battery information page is totally useless. With many of these Apps I don’t care about notifications or anything and I never want them to run after I close them in the task manager.

    • Avid Amoeba
      link
      fedilink
      English
      7
      edit-2
      3 months ago

      In addition, apps schedule background work through WorkManager or JobScheduler or AlarmManager. Those can wake the app up at specific times designated to do this work. E.g. every X minutes when the screen is off.

      Android has never had the same application execution model as traditional OSes. Both for foreground and background work. This allows it to scale multitasking with the available resources, mostly RAM, without losing app/user data. In other words Android can work on a 512MB RAM device or 8GB device and the only obvious difference would be how many apps are kept in memory. No data will be lost in either case due to apps getting evicted out of RAM. I typically give a 3-hour lecture to my interns on this because they need to know the details but that’s what it boils down to. 😂

    • @aluminium@lemmy.worldOP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      43 months ago

      Thanks a lot for the detailed explanation. If I understand it correctly, there is no way to really prevent these Apps from “running” in the background, although “running” just means they sit idle in memory 99.9% of time and don’t do anything unless a broadcast event they are subscribed to gets fired and then they are permitted to do small task.

      So I guess the most likely issue is that either something else on the phone is causing this drain or that some App constantly gets restarted (which is expensive) for some reason instead of just staying idle in memory.

      • kali
        link
        fedilink
        23 months ago

        You don’t use the Mull browser do you? That caused this issue for me, and I fixed it by uninstalling and switching to another firefox based browser (it was a Mull issue not a firefox issue)

  • @BearOfaTime@lemm.ee
    link
    fedilink
    English
    12
    edit-2
    3 months ago

    And people wonder why I root?

    Its the only realistic way to control broadcast receivers.

    Some apps register for shit like “screen on” or “battery status”, both happen constantly.

    Only other way on a non-rooted phone is to install those apps into the work profile (using an app like Island), and deactivate the work profile when not using those apps.

    • @aluminium@lemmy.worldOP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      33 months ago

      thanks, I will give the work profile route a try since I’m not aware of any ways to root my phone (LG G8X)

    • LiveLM
      link
      fedilink
      English
      23 months ago

      And people wonder why I root?

      It’s really maddening having to root just to get a say on what is happening on your device, isn’t it?

      Anyway, what app do you use to control the broadcast receivers?

      • @BearOfaTime@lemm.ee
        link
        fedilink
        English
        23 months ago

        Ugg, right?

        There are lots of them.

        3C Toolbox is probably the easiest to get, but I have a few old ones like Autostarts which may no longer be on Play.

  • Cyborganism
    link
    fedilink
    English
    83 months ago

    Uninstall them maybe? Especially if you don’t use them.

    • @aluminium@lemmy.worldOP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      13 months ago

      I have done that but there are certain Services like my Bank or Phone provide that require me to installiert their App. Also with others - Kleinanzeigen, the mobile website is horrible and thus kinda force me to use the App.

  • @MangoPenguin@lemmy.blahaj.zone
    link
    fedilink
    English
    33 months ago

    My samsung S21 has the option to restrict an app and prevent it from ever running in the background, maybe that would do it if your phone has a similar option?

  • tb_
    link
    fedilink
    English
    13 months ago

    On Samsung I have “deep sleeping apps”, which basically kills any app put on that list when I turn off my phone.

    It will also prevent notifications and such, but it is useful for anything I don’t care running in the background.

  • @algorithmae
    link
    English
    13 months ago

    I’m in the same boat as you and it drives me up a wall. I’ve found a solution and love getting 2-day battery life out of my 5 year old phone.

    I swear by Greenify and use it religiously. It programmatically force-closes all of your apps that you don’t use, so that they don’t send broadcasts to each other like the other comments mentioned. There are only system apps running on my phone at all times, unless I specifically open other ones.

    With “sensors off” toggled on, no GPS or auto-rotate, the only thing that triggers apps to open is changing networks or receiving a notification.