> The overiding problem for me is that the behaviours I described above
> are causing different scenarios with my service. When I press 'back',
> and then return to the activity, a new connection to the service is
> created. Which results later in the service not being destoyed when I
> tell it to, because there is the old connection still hanging around.
> (Then, depending on user actions, I can get a leak error).
>
> Why am I using bindService()? Well I thought I had to, I'm using an
> aidl file with methods implemented to get stuff from the service...

If this is a local service (i.e., the activity and the service are in the
same project), you do not need AIDL. Use the local binder pattern, found
in the APIDemos, or another variant here:

http://github.com/commonsguy/cw-android/tree/master/Service/WeatherPlus/

You probably want to bind in onStart() and unbind in onStop(). Remember
that the service will run *either* if you are bound to it *or* if somebody
called startService() without a corresponding stopService()/stopSelf(). If
you bind in onStart() and unbind in onStop(), then your HOME button press
will unbind from the service...which will either shut down (if the user
didn't press Play or whatever is triggering startService()) or not (if
startService() indeed was called).

-- 
Mark Murphy (a Commons Guy)
http://commonsware.com
Android App Developer Books: http://commonsware.com/books.html


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