Location time zone detection

Location time zone detection, available on Android 12 or higher, is an optional automatic time zone detection feature that allows devices to use their location and time zone map data to determine the time zone.

Location time zone detection is an alternative mechanism to telephony time zone detection. Because this feature doesn't require telephony, this feature can be supported on devices of various form factors in addition to mobile telephony devices.

The location time zone detection feature consists of the following components in the AOSP platform:

  • Time zone detection logic in the system server.
  • A user-accessible option in Settings, introduced in Android 12, to enable users to select between the telephony and location time zone detection mechanisms.

  • A plug-in system for components that perform the location detection and time zone mapping. A plug-in is called a Location Time Zone Provider (LTZP) and there can be up to two of them on a device. The platform provides system APIs that must be used to implement an LTZP.

  • A reference LTZP implementation.

  • Host tooling to generate a reference data set from OpenStreetMap data that can be used with the reference implementation.

User privacy

Location time zone detection includes the following user privacy features:

  • When there is a toggle to select the location algorithm, users can turn off the location algorithm at any time.

  • Location-derived time zone suggestions aren't shared between users on a device.

  • Users can control the detection of location for time zone detection explicitly through the Date and Time Settings screen. Users don't have to explicitly grant permission through a permission dialog.

  • Device location information isn't passed to the Android platform services. The following happens instead:

    • The time zone detector services are sent time zone IDs only by the LTZP, not the device's location. This is the minimal API needed to support location time zone detection.
    • The operation of individual LTZPs is left to system integrators to decide. LTZP implementations can use time zone map data held entirely on the Android device, leverage servers, or use a hybrid approach.

Feature behavior

The time_zone_detector service determines when to change the device's current time zone based on suggestions it receives from detection algorithms.

The location_time_zone_manager service is responsible for generating suggestions for the location algorithm of time_zone_detector. The location_time_zone_manager service runs in the system server process.

The location_time_zone_manager service doesn't contain any time zone detection logic. It's responsible for managing the lifecycle of one or two plug-ins called Location Time Zone Providers (LTZP).

When location time zone detection isn't needed, the LTZPs aren't started. This means that the location time zone detection system doesn't ask LTZPs to track the device's location unless they are explicitly required to. Some of the reasons for this behavior include the following:

  • Unlike telephony signals that are received passively as part of normal telephony operations, location can be actively requested from Android location providers and could consume additional power.
  • Location settings are user scoped and Android must respect the current user's settings.
  • Obtaining the device's location is privacy sensitive.

Also, the location_time_zone_manager service makes an uncertain suggestion (if one is needed) when the current user changes to avoid sharing location information between users.

As a result of these choices, it usually takes a few seconds after switching the current algorithm to location, or after switching the current user, before the time zone can be detected. This also depends on the implementations of the LTZPs being used.

The AOSP location time zone detection implementation allows up to two LTZPs, a primary and a secondary LTZP as defined here:

Primary LTZP
Runs at all times when the user has allowed the location time zone detection feature to run.
Secondary LTZP
Runs if the primary LTZP reports that the time zone is uncertain, reports a permanent failure, or times out during initialization. Stops if the primary LTZP submits a certain suggestion.

As shown in Figure 1, the time_zone_detector services receives time zone suggestions from the telephony or location algorithm. The location algorithm receives suggestions from the primary or secondary LTZP.

Location time zone detection information flow

Figure 1. Location time zone detection information flow.

Device configuration requirements

To support the location time zone feature, devices must be configured with LTZPs that the device can use. Devices require at least one LTZP to be enabled and configured for location time zone detection to be functional and visible to users in Settings.

Device configuration

This section describes how device manufacturers can configure devices to support location time zone detection.

The base AOSP configuration is at frameworks/base/core/res/res/values/config.xml:

Configuration key AOSP value Description
config_enableGeolocationTimeZoneDetection true This is the main control for the location time zone detection feature.

The feature is supported by default in AOSP. At least one LTZP must be enabled or configured for the feature to be available to users.

Setting the value to false disables the feature entirely for a small memory saving.
config_enablePrimaryLocationTimeZoneProvider false This enables the primary LTZP.
config_primaryLocationTimeZoneProviderPackageName Set this to the package name of the app where the primary provider service can be found.
config_enableSecondaryLocationTimeZoneProvider false This enables the secondary LTZP.
config_secondaryLocationTimeZoneProviderPackageName Set this to the package name of the app where the secondary provider service can be found.

By default, the AOSP configuration has the config_enableGeolocationTimeZoneDetection key set to true, enabling support for the location time zone detection feature. The feature isn't visible to users initially because AOSP doesn't include an LTZP configuration by default. However, using this default configuration, device manufacturers can enable and simulate LTZPs from the command line for testing. (For more information, see Debugging and testing.)

 LTZP status APIs

In Android 14, the LTZP APIs support the LTZP reporting status information. This enables the LTZP to report issues that the platform might not be able to detect for itself, as the platform time zone detection components aren't directly involved in location or time zone detection in the location algorithm.

The ability to report that the LTZP's behavior has been degraded by the device's environment is useful when telephony fallback mode is supported. For example, if a third party LTZP that relies on custom settings oor permissions for its location detection to work is running in a degraded mode or disabled by the current device settings, it can report this status information to internal platform components such as the Settings app through the reportSuggestion method. The Settings app can then notify users through customizable strings or customizations that there are settings that must change for the location algorithm to work well or at all.

For more information on the statuses that the LTZP can report, see TimeZoneProviderStatus.

Location Time Zone Provider configuration and deployment

When configuring a LTZP, read the instructions in the source code for frameworks/base/core/java/android/service/timezone/TimeZoneProviderService.java. The Javadoc comments provide details on the service, permissions needed and other configuration.

To configure a Location Time Zone Provider, device manufacturers must choose an app process to host the LTZP's service. Having a dedicated process for an LTZP is a high overhead; ideally, the app process chosen is one that is running at all times such as the system server.

On devices with modular system components (modules), consider the interaction between the geo data used by the LTZP and the time zone rules (tzdb) carried in the Time Zone Data module (com.android.tzdata). Updates to one without updates to the other are likely to cause version skew issues. For more information, see Feature adoption considerations.

AOSP reference LTZP

AOSP contains a reference LTZP implementation under packages/modules/GeoTZ. This reference implementation uses AOSP APIs to determine the device's location and uses an on-device data file to map the location to a set of time zone IDs.

A reference data set derived from other open source projects is included with the source code. For more details, see README.md and the various LICENSE files.

Debug and test

The following section describes shell commands for debugging and testing the location time zone detection feature.

Interact with the location_time_zone_manager service

When the location algorithm is supported on a device running Android 12 or higher, Android instantiates the location_time_zone_manager service at boot time.

To dump the current state of the location_time_zone_manager, use:

adb shell cmd location_time_zone_manager dump

To see an extensive set of command line options to assist with testing, use:

adb shell cmd location_time_zone_manager help

The help output also describes the device_config service properties that can be used to affect the behavior of the time_zone_detector for testing or in production. For more information, see Configuring a device using the device_config service.

LTZP implementations can also provide their own debugging or testing support. For example, you can use the following command to debug the AOSP reference LTZP when it's registered in the system server process.

adb shell dumpsys activity service android/com.android.timezone.location.provider.OfflineLocationTimeZoneProviderService