tauri-plugin-background-service 0.4.0

Background service lifecycle plugin for Tauri v2 — run long-lived tasks on Android, iOS, and desktop
Documentation

tauri-plugin-background-service

crates.io docs.rs npm License

A Tauri v2 plugin that manages long-lived background service lifecycle across all platforms (Android, iOS, Windows, macOS, Linux).

You implement a single BackgroundService trait on your own struct. The plugin spawns it in a Tokio task, keeps the OS from killing it on mobile, and provides helpers for notifications and event emission. No business logic lives in the plugin — only lifecycle management.

Platform Support

Capability Android iOS Desktop (Win/macOS/Linux)
Service runs in background Foreground Service BGAppRefreshTask + BGProcessingTask Standard Tokio task
OS service mode systemd / launchd (desktop-service feature)
Service survives app close START_STICKY No In-process: No; OS service: Yes
Local notifications Yes Yes Yes

Installation

Rust

Add the plugin to your app's Cargo.toml:

[dependencies]
tauri = { version = "2" }
tauri-plugin-notification = "2"
tauri-plugin-background-service = "0.2"

npm (TypeScript API)

npm install tauri-plugin-background-service

Rust Usage

1. Implement the BackgroundService trait

Create a struct and implement BackgroundService<R> with init() and run() methods:

use async_trait::async_trait;
use tauri::Runtime;
use tauri_plugin_background_service::{BackgroundService, ServiceContext, ServiceError};

pub struct MyService {
    tick_count: u64,
}

impl MyService {
    pub fn new() -> Self {
        Self { tick_count: 0 }
    }
}

#[async_trait]
impl<R: Runtime> BackgroundService<R> for MyService {
    async fn init(&mut self, _ctx: &ServiceContext<R>) -> Result<(), ServiceError> {
        // One-time setup: load config, open handles, seed state
        Ok(())
    }

    async fn run(&mut self, ctx: &ServiceContext<R>) -> Result<(), ServiceError> {
        let mut interval = tokio::time::interval(std::time::Duration::from_secs(10));

        loop {
            tokio::select! {
                _ = ctx.shutdown.cancelled() => break,
                _ = interval.tick() => {
                    self.tick_count += 1;
                    // Emit events to JS
                    let _ = ctx.app.emit("my-service://tick", self.tick_count);
                    // Show local notifications
                    ctx.notifier.show("Tick", "Service is alive");
                }
            }
        }

        Ok(())
    }
}

2. Register the plugin

In your main.rs, register tauri-plugin-notification before the background-service plugin:

fn main() {
    tauri::Builder::default()
        .plugin(tauri_plugin_notification::init())
        .plugin(tauri_plugin_background_service::init_with_service(
            || MyService::new(),
        ))
        .run(tauri::generate_context!())
        .expect("error while running application");
}

ServiceContext

The ServiceContext<R> passed to init() and run() provides:

  • notifier — Fire local notifications via ctx.notifier.show("Title", "Body")
  • app — Emit events to JS via ctx.app.emit("my-event", &payload)
  • shutdown — A CancellationToken that resolves when stopService() is called. Always include it in tokio::select!

TypeScript Usage

import {
  startService,
  stopService,
  isServiceRunning,
  onPluginEvent,
} from 'tauri-plugin-background-service';

// Start the service (optionally configure the Android notification label)
await startService({ serviceLabel: 'Syncing data' });

// Check status
const running = await isServiceRunning();

// Listen to lifecycle events
const unlisten = await onPluginEvent((event) => {
  switch (event.type) {
    case 'started':
      console.log('Service started');
      break;
    case 'stopped':
      console.log('Service stopped:', event.reason);
      break;
    case 'error':
      console.error('Service error:', event.message);
      break;
  }
});

// Stop the service
await stopService();

// Clean up listener
unlisten();

Permissions

Add these to your app's capability configuration:

{
  "permissions": [
    "background-service:allow-start",
    "background-service:allow-stop",
    "background-service:allow-is-running"
  ]
}

Platform Notes

Android

The plugin uses a Foreground Service with a persistent notification to keep the process alive. Required additions to your app's AndroidManifest.xml (the plugin's manifest already declares these):

  • FOREGROUND_SERVICE and FOREGROUND_SERVICE_DATA_SYNC permissions
  • POST_NOTIFICATIONS runtime permission (requested automatically on Android 13+)
  • foregroundServiceType="dataSync" on the service declaration
  • stopWithTask="false" ensures the service survives when the user swipes the app away
  • START_STICKY causes the OS to restart the service if killed under memory pressure

When the service is restarted by the OS, the Rust process is new. Persist any state you need to restore in run() and reload it in init().

iOS

iOS background execution is best-effort. The plugin uses BGTaskScheduler to request periodic execution windows (~30 seconds every 15+ minutes). Required Info.plist additions:

<key>BGTaskSchedulerPermittedIdentifiers</key>
<array>
    <string>$(PRODUCT_BUNDLE_IDENTIFIER).bg-refresh</string>
</array>
<key>UIBackgroundModes</key>
<array>
    <string>fetch</string>
    <string>processing</string>
</array>

While the app is foregrounded, your run() loop executes continuously. When backgrounded, Tokio freezes after ~30 seconds. Design your service to handle intermittent execution windows gracefully.

Desktop (Windows, macOS, Linux)

No special OS integration is needed. The service runs as a standard Tokio task and continues as long as the app process is alive.

Links

Documentation (relative paths — works on GitHub and crates.io):

Community (absolute URLs — required for crates.io compatibility):

License

SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT OR Apache-2.0