I noticed that, after Google pushed out their update to include additional Account syncing options (App Data, People details, etc.) that the auto-sync is much more aggressive. Where I used to be able to get through an entire day, I now find myself at 20% battery after just 10 hours.
At first I thought this may be an issue with my Viper 3.2.7 + ElementalX 6.5 setup, so I did a clean flash and ran the stock kernel for a day, with no change. I flashed CleanROM 6.5 today and it's still exhibiting the same behavior.
To be more specific, "Google Services" shows up as >50% of the battery usage when I look in Settings>Power>Usage.
Anyone else been seeing this?
i've had way worse battery life after updated to a cm10.1 build from a week or two ago
and my google services is much higher up in my battery stats than normal, so you may be onto something
me too
Yes, it started for me yesterday. Android OS taking >50% battery, typical, but Google Services now taking >35% battery. Full battery drain in 12 hrs, normally can last 36 or more. I too noticed the new sync options, and disabled App Data and People details. Hopefully that will help, but I doubt it.
Running CM 9 on an ATT Samsung Galaxy S2 (US version, not skyrocket).
I disabled all new syncing options as well, with only Gmail, Calendar, and Contacts synced. With this configuration, my battery only lasts 12 hours on Clean Rom 6.5, whereas it used to last >20
There isn't really anything we can do from the user end. I guess we'll have to wait for some ROM that uses a less aggressive sync strategy?
Related
I've been playing with random ROMs recently and have noticed my 'roids acting up.
Upon install of a new kernel/ROM, I bypass the Android/Google services setup pages that show up on initial boot. That gives me the baseline battery drain. It's only when I start to use Google services (like the Market) that it requires me to activate via a Google acct. After the activation, I see the increased battery drain.
Specifically, my battery discharge increases ~2.7x (idle) after I provide my Google account information to access the Market. After I provide the account creds, the GMail app starts working and I receive notifications of new emails.
I've got a theory that the GMail app or another Google app is polling/pulling instead of using the GMail/Google service to push the data and that this is using additional CPU.
Is this theory correct? Has anyone else seen this behavior?
P.S. My service provider, Verizon, uses a NAT (IP 10.xxx). I can't see how any external service can push anything through a NAT unless it has special access through the NAT. Can Google?
P.S.S. I know I can disable background data and auto-sync via Settings--> Accounts & Sync. It seems to fix the problem but I can't pin it down specifically to an app/service.
- Samsung Droid Charge
- Verizon Wireless 4G
- kernel 2.6.32.9 imnuts at virtualbox 1
- Humble 1.51 EE4 Android Froyo (currently)
Any help?
Anyone? I've received no responses and this seems like a question that could affect a large number of Android users.
Hi!
2 things I've done recently seem to have "removed" Google services from my battery usage when idle.
1.Using Titanium Backup/Menu/Market Tools/Market Auto Updates/Deselect all and Save auto Updates configuration.
2.Go Maps/More/Location History and then press the back button and go Menu/Settings /Location reporting/Location Reporting-Do not update your location+disable Location history+sign out of Latitude.The first 2 I've always done but signing out of Latitude seemed to make the difference.(Disable both Check ins).
There are obviously the other usual battery saving settings but these 2 got rid of Google Services.
HTH.
Galaxy S
Darky JW1 Base
Semaphore 2.2.0 Kernel
Modem ZSJPG
If you have no other regular apps working the background, google services as gmail or gtalk or contacts sync or calendar will surely increase battery usage, but it should be in the dimension of 2.7 times.
Battery life
Battery now down to 26% from full with 2d 1h 48m on battery.Google services has gone from 80%+ to 2%.Couple of screenshots attached.This Google services thing is not the only answer to battery life problems but there's always something running in the background doing the damage.HTH.
I've noticed that when I've got my EVO active on WiFi there's some significant network traffic between it and Google even when the device seems idle. I also have a cell phone repeater in my basement that shows activity when I so much as hit the power button to unlock the phone. Feels like there's stuff going on with some of those apps that maybe excessive and, yeah, that could impact battery drain. It certainly can't be good for it.
it is indeed.
Launcher?
Changed from TW Launcher to Go at about the same time as fiddling with Google Services above.Could it be that this has also made a difference.It has been a big improvement whatever it is.
Phone:Galaxy S I9000
Modem:XXJVQ
Romarky JW1 Base
Kernel:Semaphore 2.4.0
Launcher:Go
Theme:Honeycomb
I have several questions regarding battery life and syncing. I am concerned about this because one time Gmail used 91% of the battery life and I had to tinker with the settings to fix that (I don't remember what I did but I was sure to turn off autosync. Maybe I had to autosync less data)?
1. What is the difference between push, pull, and auto sync?
2. Does one of them constantly check if there is new mail, thus constantly draining unnecessary battery life? Does one of them only sync when an email arrives, thus efficiently uses battery life?
3. Is schedule sync battery efficient?
Basically, I looking to preserve battery life but also want an update on emails. I read somewhere that your phone is always sending a signal, regardless of whether autosync is on or not, and that it uses battery in that regard. Therefore, turning off autosync doesn't really save battery life (I'm pretty sure this is wrong). For syncing, I use Google Drive, FileSync, Gmail, Pocket, Google Keep, Twitter, Facebook, and Reddit.
I've looked around a bunch and it seems like a lot of people are having a problem with terrible battery drain after the last two android updates. I'm on Verizon, unrooted, stock GS3. Ever since the update to 4.4 I've been hit with Google Services or Google Play Services running non-stop. My phone battery will discharge from 100% to critical in less the 4 hours without any use. The usual tricks of killing the process, restarting the phone and factory resetting have not worked. This has gotten ridiculous. Has anyone come up with any way to fix the sticking processes? Any kind of update at all? I'm extremely frustrated. I've had this phone for 2 years with no battery drain problems. Then I took the first 4.4 update and I started getting problems. Now with the newest update its much worse. Nothing will stop Google Services from running constantly. I can't wait to get an upgrade at this point.
bbuck002 said:
I've looked around a bunch and it seems like a lot of people are having a problem with terrible battery drain after the last two android updates. I'm on Verizon, unrooted, stock GS3. Ever since the update to 4.4 I've been hit with Google Services or Google Play Services running non-stop. My phone battery will discharge from 100% to critical in less the 4 hours without any use. The usual tricks of killing the process, restarting the phone and factory resetting have not worked. This has gotten ridiculous. Has anyone come up with any way to fix the sticking processes? Any kind of update at all? I'm extremely frustrated. I've had this phone for 2 years with no battery drain problems. Then I took the first 4.4 update and I started getting problems. Now with the newest update its much worse. Nothing will stop Google Services from running constantly. I can't wait to get an upgrade at this point.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
From what I've read on not just here, but for other phones...the usual culprit is location services via google now. The best way to test this is to turn off google now (which will just give you the standard pre jb google search) and see if that calms things down. If you want google now...try turning off location reporting in google''s location settings. Additionally, turn off syncing to things under the google account that you don't necessary need to sync constantly.
dvschnk said:
From what I've read on not just here, but for other phones...the usual culprit is location services via google now. The best way to test this is to turn off google now (which will just give you the standard pre jb google search) and see if that calms things down. If you want google now...try turning off location reporting in google''s location settings. Additionally, turn off syncing to things under the google account that you don't necessary need to sync constantly.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I kept reading more forum posts yesterday, and I am fairly confident that I found the correct answer for my phone. I've never had a problem before with the location services draining my battery. The culprit is the "OK Google" voice detection constantly listening. Ever since I turned that off, my battery usage has returned to normal. Immediately I noticed a difference in the phone's performance and the battery percentage didn't drain while I was watching it. This makes sense too with the timing of the update and my battery drain. KitKat brought this feature to the GS3 and that is precisely when my battery started to be sucked dry. Whereas before, Google services was listed as 40-60% of my battery usage, it's now down to 15%. The good thing with turning this off is I never used the feature, unlike location services that are baked into everything and actually useful to me. Thanks for the help.
Hi everybody. I have had this problem since Android 4.4.2, always with stock Roms and kernels. Now I have 5.1 Lollipop, and the problems is exactly the same. I am sure it hasn´t anything to do with the signal quality or things like that.
I disabled location, news and weather, Fit, Docs, Chrome synchronization, calendar, google print, kiosco, music, movies, Exchange services, slides and background wifi scanning. That is, everything I don´t use.
I use Gmail, Whatsapp and Hangouts, no other kind of messenger nor Facebook neither nothing that could be prompting notifications all the time, hogging resoruces.
Before disabling all of these, battery lasted between 15 and 20 hours, after, it lasts between 20 and 30. My average day use is calling, some navigation, and whatsapp.
It is not a bad figure, but I discovered just now that if I am all day with with wifi instead of mobile data, battery lasts at least twice, almost 45 hours.
The reason? That using wifi all day instead of mobile data, Android OS goes from using 3 hours of active mobile radio per day to less than a minute per day. So it goes from the first place in battery consumption, by far, to the tenth place.
I have investigated a lot on the web, but nobody has the answer. What is Android OS doing during all the time that he needs 3 hours a day of active mobile radio? And why it doesn´t happen when using wifi?
I am convinced that if this could be solved, many people who are having big troubles with battery life in Nexus 5 could see a huge improvement.
I will appreciate any ideas you can give, thanks in advance.
Just this week i flashed the latest Euphoria and had the same problem. Restored my SimpleAOSP backup and problem gone. The latter is the only ROM i've tried that hasn't had insane battery drain from one problem or other. It's very frustrating.
Hi folks,
I scoured through all the battery related discussions and wasn't able to find an issue similar to mine, so I hope it's okay to post a new thread on this topic. I have an AT&T (Snapdragon) Galaxy S7 with stock software and about a month and a half ago I started experiencing horrible battery life. I have been desperately trying to figure out what the issue is. At first I thought it was AT&T WiFi calling because it was forcing my WiFi and data connections to toggle back and forth and disabling that did help. However my battery life was still poor and I could never get more than about 10.5 hours of moderate use (see pictures below). Also the phone gets hot randomly (Above 95 Fahrenheit) even when doing minor tasks like browsing through Chrome. Since then I have made the following changes with no noticeable improvement:
Disabled advanced LTE services
Disabled Always on Display
Disabled WiFi and Bluetooth location scanning
Disabled nearby device scanning
Wiped cache multiple times
Temporarily disabled Bluetooth and WiFi to monitor the difference
Used Greenify Aggressive Dose
Disabled all diagnostic reporting
Uninstalled Oculus when that battery issue came up
Side note: I disabled a bunch of bloatware right when I got the phone, not through Package Disabler but through the standard Android disable method
I kept digging and found that my phone doesn't enter dose unless I use Greenify, and even then I don't notice a difference. I then decided to do a hard reset but no luck. Afterwards I used Safe Mode to see if any 3rd party apps were misbehaving, but again the drain was consistent both while idle and while using the phone. Today I installed Wakelock Detector Lite and found that PowerManagerService is keeping my phone from dosing, but from what I've read online it seems that info doesn't really point to a specific app, and it's hard to identify unless I root the phone which I don't want to do.
I am going crazy trying to figure out if this is a software/settings issue or if I should just replace the phone through AT&T and risk getting a defective refurb. Any help would be much appreciated.
Battery stats:
View attachment 3901345
View attachment 3901344
Wakelock Stats (taken on a different day):
View attachment 3901349
Many people have similar problems. One reason was the buggy oculus app (you might wanna disable that when it came pre installed, depending on your CSC).
However the main reason behind the high "android-system" usage is still unclear. Some people experience it, some dont. Some people have better battery results with the firmware from March.
Personally, I believe that it is firmware related. I tried the N7 rom port and did not have a problem at all.
You might wanna wait for the October update that will hit soon and see if this fixes anything.
I notice you have 'media server' showing in your battery stats. My wife had that showing too and also had terrible battery life. Her fix was disabling the auto streaming in her Facebook app which plays videos while you scroll through posts. Now she has great battery life!
I have the Facebook app disabled on my phone altogether. I've also used safe mode where 3rd party apps are disabled but the battery still drains at around 5% an hour while idle.
WiFi calling was draining one members battery, disabled that and everything returned to normal
*Detection* said:
WiFi calling was draining one members battery, disabled that and everything returned to normal
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
How?
iamnotkurtcobain said:
How?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
https://www.verizonwireless.com/support/knowledge-base-203686/
I had that issue too but have since disabled WiFi calling
most likely a software issue. my version is G930FXXU1APEQ and i'm been getting 11 hour on batty with around 6- 7 hour of screen on.
Try disabling Google backup. It's a huge battery drainer
Sent from my SM-G930FD using Taptalk
Try manually updating Google play services for the lastest ver sion.
Hi,
Have the same Problem with my Galaxy S7.....Last Week, become an Little Update */- 20,8 MB
Now I have strong Accu consumption. ( Sorry Speake German
Test with Galaxy Note Edge, and Galaxy S7 .....both Smartphones have an 3000 m/Ah Accu. On Galaxy Edge have 178 own apps installed,
The Galaxy S7 - 3 Times Reset with Wipe Factory Reset and Wipe Cache, and from the Phone Settings.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/d7pvlnccr6y5dgc/Screenshot_2016-10-06-10-48-32%20NOTE%20EDGE.png?dl=0
https://www.dropbox.com/s/lile2f0uuitr3ol/Screenshot_2016-10-06-11-16-44%20NOTE%20EDGE.png?dl=0
https://www.dropbox.com/s/175imcgv3n9bugi/Screenshot_20161006-094012%20GALAXY%20S7.png?dl=0
https://www.dropbox.com/s/5rvkgubj95orhrn/Screenshot_20161006-094037%20GALAXY%20S7.png?dl=0
Nothing has helped so far so I decided to uninstall my apps in batches until battery life improves. I'll then slowly reinstall them one by one until I find the culprit. I'll report back with my findings. Thanks for all the suggestions.