I know how to check if I have internet access (using the code from this post),but is it possible to check if a phone has telephone network access? For example someone might have access to the internet via Wifi but not have phone network access to send SMS or make calls.
In my case, while using a real device (Samsung Galaxy S), I am able to turn of my 3G network (then the phone will detect I am not connected to the internet), but I am still able to make phone calls and send SMS. I guess I must be using some other network...
How do I test whether the phone network is connected? Do I need the TelephonyManager?
Thankyou for your time.
Mel
Sure would you not just use this:
getNetworkType()
boolean hasNetwork = android.telephony.TelephonyManager.getNetworkType() != android.telephony.TelephonyManager.NETWORK_TYPE_UNKNOWN;
// True if the phone is connected to some type of network i.e. has signal
The above answer did not work for one of my app users - he was connected to the Network but his NetworkType was unknown. Screenshot: http://dl.dropbox.com/u/5072192/SC20130317-161413.png
I am instead checking for the NetworkOperator field. (From the first answer here What is the correct way of checking for mobile network available (no data connection))
public static boolean isMobileAvailable(Context acontext) {
TelephonyManager tel = (TelephonyManager) context.getSystemService(Context.TELEPHONY_SERVICE);
return (tel.getNetworkOperator() != null && !tel.getNetworkOperator().equals(""));
}
Related
I would want my app to only use wifi connection. To achieve this I must either make my app use ONLY wifi (even if the mobile network is on and wifi has no internet connection) or disable mobile network upon starting the app.
I tried it like that:
TelephonyManager tm = (TelephonyManager)Android.App.Application.Context.GetSystemService(Context.TelephonyService);
var tdata = tm.DataEnabled;
if (tdata)
{
tdata = false;
tm.DataEnabled = tdata;
}
but I get the following exception:
Java.Lang.SecurityException: 'No Carrier Privilege.'
I have read on some posts that andorid no longer supports programaticly in app mobile network switching, but all the posts were a bit old and I couldn't find any up to date data. Is it possible to do this at all?
I wrote an app that is triggering a Sony qx smartphone attachable camera over wifi. However I need to transfer the images off the phone over another local network in real time. Since the wifi card is being used for qx connection I need to be able to use ethernet over usb for transferring images off the phone. Http requests will be used to trigger the camera and send the images off the phone.
Is it possible in one android app on a phone with two network interfaces setup to specify for certain http requests to use one network interface and for others to use another network interface ? Does this need to be done through routing tables, not java?
The phone I'm using is a rooted nexus 6p.
Update:
Currently, I was able to get an Ethernet adapter working with the device (Nexus 6P). The device is connected to a local network over Ethernet. When the Wi-Fi interface is off, I can ping all devices on the local network the device is connected to over Ethernet. However, I am unable to access the web servers (Not using DNS) of any of the devices on that network (which I know they are running), i.e. Http via a browser app. The nexus 6p is connected to the network over Ethernet via a Ubiquiti Station. This seems to be a routing issue.
I can tether(usb interface) and use Wi-Fi in one app, so that leads me to believe it is possible to use Ethernet and Wi-Fi.
Update2:
After more testing, it seems to be that it is a permissions issue. Since when I ping the network the device is connected to over Ethernet without first running su in the terminal the network doesn't exist. However, when I run su then ping, I can ping the network. Thus it seems my app needs to get superuser permission before accessing Ethernet. I've granted it superuser access, but nothing has changed. I read that simply running su isn't enough from one of the comments in this post. This is because su just spawns a root shell that dies. This also explains why I couldn't access any of the web servers on this network via a browser app. Is it possible to grant my app access to the Ethernet interface when making HTTP calls like give HttpURLConnection root access, if that makes any sense (running su doesn't work)? There seems to definitely be a solution since HttpURLConnection can make calls over the USB tethering interface (Nexus 6P calls it rndis0) fine.
Update 3:
I found online here , that I can make my app a System app (thought this might grant the app eth0 access). I just moved my app to /system/app and then rebooted. However, this didn't seem to give the app anymore privileges (thus not solving the problem) , or there is something else required to make the app system than just copying it to /system/app.
Update 4:
So I was able to get Ethernet working on every app without root permissions! It seemed to be that it only works over DHCP and does not like static connections, which I was using. It works with Wi-Fi enabled, however, I cannot contact any of the devices on the Wi-Fi network when Ethernet is enabled. Is there a way around this? Does it have to do with setting two default gateways?
Since you were programming in Nexus 6P, you can try to use the new API added in ConnectivityManager to select the ethernet as your preferred network connection for your process.
Since I can't build the similar environment like yours, I am not sure if it works. It's just a suggested solution, totally not tested and verified.
ConnectivityManager connectivityManager = (ConnectivityManager) getSystemService(CONNECTIVITY_SERVICE);
Network etherNetwork = null;
for (Network network : connectivityManager.getAllNetworks()) {
NetworkInfo networkInfo = connectivityManager.getNetworkInfo(network);
if (networkInfo.getType() == ConnectivityManager.TYPE_ETHERNET) {
etherNetwork = network;
}
}
Network boundNetwork = connectivityManager.getBoundNetworkForProcess();
if (boundNetwork != null) {
NetworkInfo boundNetworkInfo = connectivityManager.getNetworkInfo(boundNetwork);
if (boundNetworkInfo.getType() != ConnectivityManager.TYPE_ETHERNET) {
if (etherNetwork != null) {
connectivityManager.bindProcessToNetwork(etherNetwork);
}
}
}
Just to give a little more explanation on how this finally got solved.
Utilizing #alijandro's answer I was able to switch back and forth between Ethernet and Wi-Fi in one app. For some reason for the Ethernet to work it required the network gateway to supply DHCP address, not static. Then since the bindProcessToNetwork, used in #alijandro's answer is per-process, I decided to split communications with the QX camera into a Service that runs in a separate Process. The main Application (another process) would post images over Ethernet to a local network. I was successfully able to contact the devices on the local network via HTTP over Ethernet while simultaneously triggering the QX over Wi-Fi. Currently, I used Messenger to communicate using IPC to tell the QX triggering Service what methods to call.
Most of android tv boxes can use wifi and ethernet together. In my device, i can enable ethernet from this path ---
Settings -> More ... > Ethernet ---
But your device wont have a menu like that as i understand. So you should make an app to do that. This application needs to access some system specific resources so your device needs to be rooted or application needs to signed with system signature.
Also this topic can help you link
There is an easy way to do this that will answer the OP's original question about how to do this with a single application (not two separate app processes) using ConnectivityManager.requestNetwork().
The docs for ConnectivityManager.requestNetwork() allude to this:
... For example, an application could use this method to obtain a
connected cellular network even if the device currently has a data
connection over Ethernet. This may cause the cellular radio to consume
additional power. Or, an application could inform the system that it
wants a network supporting sending MMSes and have the system let it
know about the currently best MMS-supporting network through the
provided NetworkCallback. ...
For OP's scenario of using Wi-Fi for some traffic and ethernet for other traffic one only needs to call ConnectivityManager.requestNetwork() twice with two separate requests. One for TRANSPORT_WIFI and one for TRANSPORT_ETHERNET. The operative item here is we need a way to uniquely identify these networks. For OP's scenario, we can use transport type.
final NetworkRequest requestForWifi =
new NetworkRequest.Builder()
.addTransportType(NetworkCapabilities.TRANSPORT_WIFI)
.build();
final NetworkRequest requestForEthernet =
new NetworkRequest.Builder()
.addTransportType(NetworkCapabilities.TRANSPORT_ETHERNET)
.build();
final ConnectivityManager connectivityManager = (ConnectivityManager)
context.getSystemService(Context.CONNECTIVITY_SERVICE);
final NetworkCallback networkCallbackWifi = new NetworkCallback() {
#Override
void onAvailable(Network network) {
// Triggers when this network is available so you can bind to it.
}
#Override
void onLost(Network network) {
// Triggers when this network is lost.
}
};
final NetworkCallback networkCallbackEthernet = new NetworkCallback() {
#Override
void onAvailable(Network network) {
// Triggers when this network is available so you can bind to it.
}
#Override
void onLost(Network network) {
// Triggers when this network is lost.
}
};
connectivityManager.requestNetwork(requestForWifi, networkCallbackWifi);
connectivityManager.requestNetwork(requestForEthernet, networkCallbackEthernet);
Then, once the callbacks trigger, you can then in the pertinent code (e.g. OP's code for transferring images), listen for onAvailable(Network network) and use the provided Network with Network.OpenConnection() to connect to an HTTP server using that network.
This would allow you to connect to two separate Networks from the same application.
As of Android 4.1, your device can detect if it's connected to a mobile hotspot (given that the mobile hotspot is also running Android 4.1 or higher). Also, you have the option to flag networks as mobile hotspots (under Settings / Data Usage / Overflow menu / Mobile Hotspots).
But how do I detect this as a -user- I meant developer? It's not stored in the WifiConfiguration, so where is it?
Some context: I want to build a simple tool for Android that checks if you are connected to a network that you or Android has flagged as a mobile hotspot. If so, it will check if no other (non-hotspot) networks are available. If so, it should connect to these other networks since those should be much faster and have no data cap. Why? Because my phones and tablets connect to (mobile) hotspots quite often, even when a better network is available.
Here is some pseudo code of what I'm looking for:
// Check if android has detected mobile hotspot
WifiManager wifiMgr = getSystemService(Context.WIFI_SERVICE);
WifiInfo wifiInfo = wifiMgr .getConnectionInfo();
boolean isMobileHotspot = wifiInfo.isMobileHotspot;
UPDATE Jul 3rd 2014
Okay so Matiash' answer is good but ConnectivityManager.isActiveNetworkMetered() will only return the value for the current network. I do need that, so it helped me along, but it bring me to the next part in my tool/app:
IF the device is connected to a mobile hotspot (or a 'metered network' as Android calls it) I want to check if any of the nearby access points is a better option. So I need to know whether any of the known AP's (WifiManager.getConfiguredNetworks()) is also flagged as such before I connect to it...
I have a List<ScanResult> and a List<WifiConfiguration>, looks like neither of them has this information.
Which bring me back to my initial question: Is there a way to retrieve the Mobile Hotspots (as configured by Android and/or user) under Data Usage? And this time I mean ALL of them.
UPDATE Jul 7th 2014
I've posted a feature request in the AOSP Issue Tracker for access (readonly) to the NetworkPolicyManager. Plz vote on it here: https://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=73206&thanks=73206&ts=1404719243
You can access this information by calling ConnectivityManager.isActiveNetworkMetered().
This will return whether the active connection is a hotspot (as defined in Data Usage -> Mobile Hotspots).
About the second part, I'm sorry but I don't think that's possible. The flag is not public, and even if you get the object that could be used to retrieve it (android.net.NetworkPolicyManager) by reflection:
Object npm = Class.forName("android.net.NetworkPolicyManager").getDeclaredMethod("from", Context.class).invoke(null, this);
Object policies = npm.getClass().getDeclaredMethod("getNetworkPolicies").invoke(npm);
calling getNetworkPolicies() requires the MANAGE_NETWORK_POLICY permission, which cannot be obtained by non-system apps, because it has a "signature" protection level.
I hope to be proved incorrect though. :) Maybe looking at the source code of the Android activity that manages this information (https://github.com/android/platform_packages_apps_settings/blob/master/src/com/android/settings/net/DataUsageMeteredSettings.java), in particular the buildWifiPref() method, will provide some clue.
I do not know if what you want is possible but you can check whether your device is connected to a network by checking the ip.
You can use the tool below to see if you has ip, and shalt know if he is connected to a network or not.
public static Boolean check_connection(final Context _context)
{
boolean connected;
ConnectivityManager conectivtyManager = (ConnectivityManager) _context
.getSystemService(Context.CONNECTIVITY_SERVICE);
if (conectivtyManager.getActiveNetworkInfo() != null
&& conectivtyManager.getActiveNetworkInfo().isAvailable()
&& conectivtyManager.getActiveNetworkInfo().isConnected())
{
connected = true;
} else
{
connected = false;
}
return connected;
}
//Check if hotspot tethering is enabled
try {
ConnectivityManager connectivityManager = (ConnectivityManager)getSystemService(Context.CONNECTIVITY_SERVICE);
boolean isMobileData = connectivityManager.isActiveNetworkMetered();
if(isMobileData) {
List<NetworkInterface> interfaces = Collections.list(NetworkInterface.getNetworkInterfaces());
for (NetworkInterface networkInterface : interfaces) {
if (networkInterface.getName().equals("ap0")) {
//Tethering is enabled
SendHotspotEnabledHandler sendHotspotEnabledHandler = new SendHotspotEnabledHandler(new WeakReference<Context>(SendInstalledAppsService.this));
sendHotspotEnabledHandler.execute();
break;
}
}
}
} catch (SocketException e) {
}
I have an android app that tried to connect to a website in an AsyncTask and perform some tasks. My application always seems to crash when there is a change in the network connection i.e The app is connected to a wifi network initially, but loses connection and switches to mobile network. When this happens my Android Application crashes. My code is surrounded within a try catch block, so I'm not sure why the application would crash ? How do I fix my problem ?
Thanks!
WifiInfo info = WifiManager.getConnectionInfo();
if (info.getSSID() != null) {
String ssid = info.getSSID();
...
}
I don't know if it would be overkill to write:
if (info != null && info.getSSID() != null)
Also, the BroadcastReceiver that I need to monitor when a connection is made is WifiManager.SUPPLICANT_CONNECTION_CHANGE_ACTION. It turns out that I had a copy and paste error in my onResume(), and I wasn't really registering WifiManager.SUPPLICANT_CONNECTION_CHANGE_ACTION.
or u can use following link
Android: How to Enable/Disable Wifi or Internet Connection Programmatically
You have to make sure you wait for a network connectivity to be available before continuing your websites connections.
Plus, be aware that if you try to enable a mobile connection without disabling WiFi beforehand, the Android system will automatically shutdown the newly enabled mobile connection (it gives priority to WiFi to sum up). So you need to make sure you do it in the right order :
(WiFi enabled)
(WiFi ready)
Websites connections STARTED
Websites connections STOPPPED
(WiFi disabled)
(WiFi unavailable)
(Mobile enabled)
(Mobile ready)
Websites connections RESUMED
I want to create an application for Android smartphones that checks if the phone is in Airplane Mode. If it is, the application gets the phone off the Airplane mode and checks if there is any network connectivity to send a SMS. When I say network connectivity, I mean mobile phone network coverage to send the SMS, I don't want to check for internet connectivity. If there is network connectivity the application will try to send a SMS.
I have managed to do the Airplane Mode check and toggle, but I don't find a way to see if the phone is connected to the cellular network and if there is coverage. I found many examples that check for internet network connectivity, but is not what I need.
Is there any way to check if the phone is connected to the cellular network and if there is coverage to send SMS?
Thanks in advance for your help.
Use this to check the signal strength:
TelephonyManager telephonyManager = (TelephonyManager) getSystemService(Context.TELEPHONY_SERVICE);
PhoneStateListener signalListener = new PhoneStateListener() {
public void onSignalStrengthChanged(int asu) {
//asu is the signal strength
}
};
telephonyManager.listen(signalListener, PhoneStateListener.LISTEN_SIGNAL_STRENGTH);