Detects if device is locked. Useful for determining whether app entered background due to locking screen or leaving app.
Import library and call the following method.
Note that this only works on physical device for iOS.
bool? result = await isLockScreen();
You will probably observe the AppLifecycleState with a WidgetsBindingObserver and call this when app is in background:
@override
void didChangeAppLifecycleState(AppLifecycleState state) async {
super.didChangeAppLifecycleState(state);
if (state == AppLifecycleState.inactive) {
print('app inactive, is lock screen: ${await isLockScreen()}');
} else if (state == AppLifecycleState.resumed) {
print('app resumed');
}
}
See example app code for details
An alternative to this plugin is hardware_buttons, which uses non-public API (com.apple.springboard.lockcomplete
) on iOS to detect lock button usage and violates App Store requirements.
To circumvent this issue, this plugin detects whether iOS device is in lock screen by checking if screen brightness is 0.0 (the user-adjustable minimum is >0.01).
On android, this plugin uses KeyguardManager
and PowerManager
API to check if device is secured or display is off as suggested in this gist. A similar flow was tested on iOS with LocalAuthentication
and UIApplication.shared.isProtectedDataAvailable
but failed due to long grace period of the system lock down. The flag always return true the moment screen is locked.