For testing purposes I need to easily reproduce a situation when Android system decides to save a state of and kill a background application, in the same manner as it normally does for memory optimization purposes. In fact, I need also to test the restoration process of such a removed process when a user switches back to it.
The straighforward approach would be to open the application and then open more other tasks trying to allocate as much resources as possible. That's too complicated and unreliable.
I've found this question on SO, but the answer implies simply killing the process, which seems not an equivalent, because there seems no means for further automatic restoring of the killed process with a saved state, when a user decides to switch back to the application. If I understand correctly, after such explicit killing the application, if started, will run from very beginning, not from a saved state. Please, correct me, if I'm wrong.
According to Android documentation, what I need is performed by ActivityManager.killBackgroundProcesses(packageName)
, but this is the programmatic way of doing the thing. Is there an utility which already provides the same option from UI?