Running into a issue where WLD is showing this as waking the phone up quite a bit!
It's a Greenify Process, I have the donation package, and have everything ticked off (included Xposed & Donation) EXCEPT "Deep Hibernation mode." Why is this constantly waking the device up? I thought Greenify does the opposite..
Greenify needs to wake-up the device to do the cleaning stuffs. If it wakes a lot, that means some apps are frequently woken. Check the state of apps in Greenify to find out. Try to avoid greenifying frequently used apps.
---------- Post added at 06:54 PM ---------- Previous post was at 06:50 PM ----------
I'll try to reduce the usage of wake-lock in the cleaner service of Greenify.
Related
Hello frnz
In my ace I m using advns tsk killr app to kill some runnig app
When I m kill running app at this time all app kill and show some free memory too,
But after few minute some app still showing running
Which app I never used at this time.
And my ace is running very slow and cansume lotsof battery & memory
Plz frendz help me to out from this
Try to download auto killer memory optimizer frim the market
---------- Post added at 10:33 PM ---------- Previous post was at 10:32 PM ----------
It will free all your memory and kill l all ur apps in one click
---------- Post added at 10:35 PM ---------- Previous post was at 10:33 PM ----------
If not that then go to settings>applications>running services. And stop all the services
---------- Post added at 10:36 PM ---------- Previous post was at 10:35 PM ----------
Plz tell mr if this info helped
Active app killers usually drain battery so it would be a lot smarter to use "autostart", you can prevent apps from starting instead of having to terminate them. Doesnt seem to stop facebook though.
Don't bother. Memory consumption doesn't relate to battery consumption.
If the app takes a lot of CPU time it's a bad app, uninstall. Taskkillers forces apps to close which are immediately run again, that uses CPU so you LOSE MORE BATTERY.
u tried to minimize system usage by assuming android is windows who task running in background do eat system resource, and u use taskkiller to achieve that which wasnt a good way aferall. in the end u waste system resource more than u save
well, my ace is rooted.
so I use Gemini App manager to configure autorun on each application.
of course, there are some system applications that you must not tinker with.
Hi, guys. I have a little problem and I hope you can help me. Sometimes (it's not usual, but sometimes it happens) my phone (Nexus one, CM7) runs quite slowly, and not fluent at all, just because of an app that is eating all the memory / processor. If I kill that app, problem solved. OK, this is not the real problem here.
When this happened the first time, I went to the running services section in settings, and I checked that the services listed are not ALL the running processes, so even if I kill all the services there, there are still running apps. Then, I tried to install several app killers, just to check if they kill all the running apps, but not only they don't list all the running apps, but also when killing all, there are still apps that keep running (like some games), and the only way I found to find them is checking one by one in the apps list, if they are running or not.
Is there any app to check at once ALL the running apps? I have looked for it, but all I have found are apps to do exercise ("running apps", D'oh!), and stuff like that.
Thank you.
Here's a little something...
Is your phone rooted? - If so, I highly recommend 'Autostarts' - (Search on play).
You can literally set apps not to run from the moment you start-up your phone, stopping them in their tracks until you say so. These include system apps and bloatware and it does a great job of pinpointing which apps are operational & when they are. Some apps open in the background at inappropriate times and you'll be shocked to see how many take up memory without you even noticing.
Give it a whirl.
---------- Post added at 03:57 PM ---------- Previous post was at 03:53 PM ----------
Sorry, if you aren't rooted, you could try 'Gemini App Manager' (Also on the Market).
It isn't as streamlined as Autostarts, but there are plenty of additional options built in. Great for any non-rooted phone.
Ok, here is the deal, i've done research, and seems like nobody has really been able to provide a solution, so im gonna share where im up to, so maybe some can help to solve this. (Havent got to a solution yet)
So, latitude, places and navigation are all part of google maps, and thats why noone can see them listed as apps.
I used rom toolbox, and its advances freeze feature, to get "inside" the app, and see the individual services, recievers and others...
Using this feature, i also froze all services and things that seemed related to latitude, places, and navigation (long list, but basically everything that had a reference to them somewhere on the name or functionality (mini description under each of the modules name)
My results with doing these were the following:
Maps still worked, could get a hold of my location, and directions worked.
Latitude, places, and navigation app icons were gone from my app drawer.
So, all locked solved, but then, using android assistant to check running programs, guess what, latitude was still there!!!
So, what im asking is if someone knows which things exactly to freeze to make them stop working...i just want maps to work, but dont need all the other bloat.
Any opinions, solutions, suggestions are welcome
PS: if this helped u in some way, please hit the thanks button
I did the following (it works either from an ordinary adb shell--no su required--or from a script or terminal emulator with su):
Code:
pm disable com.google.android.apps.maps/com.google.googlenav.networkinitiated.NetworkInitiatedService
pm disable com.google.android.apps.maps/com.google.googlenav.networkinitiated.NetworkInitiatedReceiver
pm disable com.google.android.apps.maps/com.google.googlenav.friend.android.ServiceReceiver
pm disable com.google.android.apps.maps/com.google.googlenav.friend.android.LocationFriendService
pm disable com.google.android.apps.maps/com.google.googlenav.friend.reporting.LocationReceiverService
pm disable com.google.android.apps.maps/com.google.googlenav.friend.reporting.LocationReportingService
pm disable com.google.android.apps.maps/com.google.googlenav.friend.checkins.CheckinNotificationService
pm disable com.google.android.apps.maps/com.google.googlenav.friend.reporting.LocationReportingIntentReceiver
pm disable com.google.android.apps.maps/com.google.googlenav.appwidget.friends.FriendsAppWidgetUpdateService
pm disable com.google.android.apps.maps/com.google.googlenav.friend.history.LocationHistoryIntentReceiver
pm disable com.google.android.apps.maps/com.google.googlenav.friend.reporting.LocationPrivacyService
pm disable com.google.android.apps.maps/com.google.googlenav.friend.OptInIntentService
pm disable com.google.android.apps.maps/com.google.googlenav.appwidget.friends.FriendsAppWidgetProvider
pm disable com.google.android.apps.maps/com.google.android.maps.LatitudeActivity
The results killed all the Latitude-related stuff. I also feel that the first two lines may have decreased the length of time that NetworkLocationPassiveCollector showed up with a partial wakelock, but they didn't kill it completely. I think that adding
Code:
pm disable com.google.android.apps.maps/com.google.android.location.internal.server.NetworkLocationService
would kill it completely, and thus save battery, but this would have the unhappy side-effect of disabling WiFi-based location. If you are happy with just GPS-based location, you can do it.
Hi guys,
I was wondering what do you all think is the best battery saving app on the lg g4? I think the 4 main apps around now are greenify, powernap, doze, and amplify so out of those which have worked the best for you? Or are there better options as well?
Florad77 said:
Hi guys,
I was wondering what do you all think is the best battery saving app on the lg g4? I think the 4 main apps around now are greenify, powernap, doze, and amplify so out of those which have worked the best for you? Or are there better options as well?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well my experience with the 4 apps you mention and other "Battery Saving Apps" is that no one greatly improves battery life. I do use Greenify at the moment just to prevent memory eating apps to run constantly in the background but I don't really get that much of a better battery life. The only thing that got better with using Greenify is my stand-by time if I don't use my phone for longer periods. I don't have a great experience with PowerNap, somehow a couple of my apps started to misbehave when I used that Xposed Module so I stopped using PowerNap. ForceDoze can be great if you want to improve your stand-by time, the Module allows your device to enter doze mode instantly even when you are moving when having your phone in your pocket. Haven't tested Amplify so I can't tell you anything about that app. The combination of Greenify and ForceDoze gives me a good stanby-time boost, that are the 2 apps that I use and would advice for the one's who would like to improve their stand-by time. None of those apps will give you much more SOT. My experience is that those "Battery Saving Apps" will never result in improved SOT.
Hope this info will help you somehow. :good:
I was using Servicely with Amplify, both in same time and it seemed to be good. But Servicely is killing apps, not hibernating them. So it's not best if you want back to e.g. browser with loaded website, because it's reloading. And right now I am using Hibernation Manager and ForceDoze and it seems to be better than two others. There is no best solution, you'll need to find it by yourself and, as Mr.FREE_Bird said, SoT will be same with or without battery saving apps.
Naptime works brilliantly (marshamallow only)...
amplify and purify.. force doze.
NONE of these.
I recommend use a custom kernel,delete all system apps/services you never use and DONT use Xposed.
Install HEBF optimizer from the playstore...its one of the best power/performance apps
---------- Post added at 09:35 AM ---------- Previous post was at 09:34 AM ----------
naptime,greenify etc are battery killers
Predatorhaze said:
NONE of these.
I recommend use a custom kernel,delete all system apps/services you never use and DONT use Xposed.
Install HEBF optimizer from the playstore...its one of the best power/performance apps
---------- Post added at 09:35 AM ---------- Previous post was at 09:34 AM ----------
naptime,greenify etc are battery killers
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Do you have any sources proving that Greenify is a battery killer?
I think its pretty funny that you claim the opposite of the what Greenify does on my device.
It really did improve my stand-by time and no thats not a placebo effect. I think it depends on what kind of apps you use on your device, sure Greenify constantly hibernates apps in the background that needs battery juice, but if I wouldn't hibernate those apps I would lose much more battery juice consumed by those apps. If you would hibernate every small app on your device then Greenify would possibly won't give a positive effect on your battery life but the claim that these kind of apps are ''Battery Killers'' is not true in my opinion if you use those apps the right way.
Greenify+Amplify+Powernap+HEBF worked great on my rooted G4 (Xposed and Viper4android installed)
I don't know if this is an LG thing or a new android thing (I've been on 5 for too long) but I can't seem to close an individual app.
When I view background apps (button to left of home) I only have the option to clear all but can't close / clear an individual app.
Is this the new normal? Or is there a setting to enable this?
If you swipe up on a background app, that will close it.
---------- Post added at 01:52 AM ---------- Previous post was at 01:46 AM ----------
The Android OS will take care of removing apps from memory as needed, so usually it's not necessary for the user to remove or close background apps.
divineBliss said:
If you swipe up on a background app, that will close it.
---------- Post added at 01:52 AM ---------- Previous post was at 01:46 AM ----------
The Android OS will take care of removing apps from memory as needed, so usually it's not necessary for the user to remove or close background apps.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yeah I discovered that recently. However I don't think it's actually stopping the app. It just removes it from the recently used task list.
From what I've seen the state is preserved after the fact. Opening it again gets me back to a state that I would expect to be transient and lost when I removed it.
It seems that only after explicitly killing the app it clears the memory. idk maybe this is all because the phone has 4GB RAM so one can take liberties with it.
Although I kinda prefer to actually kill the process when I exit.
splitthepositive said:
Yeah I discovered that recently. However I don't think it's actually stopping the app. It just removes it from the recently used task list.
From what I've seen the state is preserved after the fact. Opening it again gets me back to a state that I would expect to be transient and lost when I removed it.
It seems that only after explicitly killing the app it clears the memory. idk maybe this is all because the phone has 4GB RAM so one can take liberties with it.
Although I kinda prefer to actually kill the process when I exit.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You can see the actual background apps running by going to Settings -> system -> developer options (must be enabled first) -> running services. Check that swiping an app will remove it from the list. It could be that if you had a slow phone in the past, the speed of the new phone might make it look like it is loading apps from the background. By the way, it is 6gigs of RAM, not 4