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Synchronization between Parse.com and local Android database made easy

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Synchronization between Parse.com and local Android database made easy.

The library provides annotations and utility classes to help you convert your Parse objects to OrmLite entities.

Add to your project

If you are using gradle, add the following line to the dependecies section of your build.gradle:

compile 'com.cardiomood.android:android-data-sync:0.3'

In maven add the following dependecy to pom.xml:

<dependency>
  <groupId>com.cardiomood.android</groupId>
  <artifactId>android-data-sync</artifactId>
  <version>0.3</version>
  <type>aar</type>
</dependency>

The library already contains Parse-1.8.2.jar (latest at the moment).

Configuration

Assuming your app is already configured to work with Android Parse.

All you need to do is to extend com.cardiomood.android.sync.ormlite.SyncEntity for each entity class you would like to enable synchronization. Here is an example of an entity class:

import com.cardiomood.android.sync.annotations.ParseClass;
import com.cardiomood.android.sync.annotations.ParseField;
import com.cardiomood.android.sync.ormlite.SyncEntity;

import com.j256.ormlite.field.DataType;
import com.j256.ormlite.field.DatabaseField;
import com.j256.ormlite.table.DatabaseTable;

// This class will be mapped to a Parse class named "Example"
@ParseClass(name = "Example")
@DatabaseTable(tableName = "examples", daoClass = ExampleDAO.class)
public class ExampleEntity extends SyncEntity implements Serializable {

    /** Local ID field of this entity */
    @DatabaseField(columnName = "_id", generatedId = true)
    private Long id;

    // mapped to the "name" field of ParseObject
    @ParseField(name = "name")
    @DatabaseField(columnName = "name")
    private String exampleName;

    // mapped to the "typeId" field of ParseObject
    @DatabaseField(columnName = "type_id")
    @ParseField
    private Long typeId;

    // mapped to the "lastViewDate" field of ParseObject
    @DatabaseField(columnName = "last_view_date", dataType = DataType.DATE_LONG)
    @ParseField(name = "lastViewDate")
    private Date lastViewed;
    
    public ExampleEntity() {
      // public constructor with no arguments required
    }
    
    // getters and setters here
    
}

In addition to your OrmLite annotations, you should add corresponding annotations on each entity-class and its fields.

How to use

Initialize SyncHelper object somewhere in your onCreate() method:

// obtain our DatabaseHelper object
SyncDatabaseHelper dbHelper = OpenHelperManager.getHelper(context, DatabaseHelper.class);

// create and initialize SyncHelper object
SyncHelper syncHelper = new SyncHelper(dbHelper); 
syncHelper.setUserId(ParseUser.getCurrentUser().getObjectId());
syncHelper.setLastSyncDate(new Date(lastSyncDate));

Synchronization is performed only between objects that have been modified since the latest successful synchronization. At the moment, it's completely up to you to keep track of synchronization date. If you don't specify lastSyncDate, the library will attempt to synchronize all objects.

You must also update syncDate of your local objects, as this field represents last modification date.

In your background code:

// save date point
Date syncDate = new Date();

// perform synchronization
syncHelper.synObjects(ExampleEntity.class, false, new SyncHelper.SyncCallback<ExampleEntity>() {
  
  @Override
  public void onSaveLocally(ExampleEntity localObject, ParseObject remoteObject) {
    // invoked before localObject is persisted locally
  }
  
  @Override
  public void onSaveRemotely(ExampleEntity localObject, ParseObject remoteObject) {
    // invoked before remoteObject is saved remotely
  }

  @Override
  public void beforeSync(List<Pair<E, ParseObject>> toSaveLocally, List<Pair<E, ParseObject>> toSaveRemotely) {
    // invoked before synchronization to let you know which objects will be synchronized
    // here you can modify them
  }

  @Override
  public void afterSync() {
    // invoked after synchronization (successfully!) is completed
  }

});

// if there were no exceptions, persist syncDate to Android preferences (or to local DB)
...

In the example above, class Example is a custom subclass of ParseObject.

Deleting of objects

You shouldn't delete local or remote objects. Instead, mark them as deleted and update syncDate field.

// Obtain data-access object to manipulate the entity
ExampleDAO dao = dbHelper.getDao(ExampleEntity.class);

// obtain entity
ExampleEntity entity = ...

// mark as deleted
entity.setDeleted(true);
entity.setSyncDate(new Date());

// persist this entity
dao.update(entity);

The same refers to the remote objects on Parse server. Just set deleted flag to mark the object deleted.

If you want data to be physically deleted, you can implement a background job in Android and/or Parse, and also remove objects in the onSave() method of the Parse CloudCode.

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