Is it possible in the Android API to communicate directly to another android phone within close proximity? If so, which version of the API is it in? For example, if both phones had the same app, can they exchange messages in the background within close proximity?
The short answer is yes. Some apps, i.e. Bump, already do that. Usually android phones have both WiFi and Bluetooth capabilities. Given that you are talking about close proximity Bluetooth should be enough for you. Alternatively once one of them is configured as a WiFi hotspot, you can connect them via WiFi.
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When I researched about this problem I came across this. So I know this is possible in Wifip2p api, but I want to achieve the same thing with Bluetooth api. Is it possible?
In Wifip2p api the app broadcasts some text (let's say the app unique code) that other devices (running the same app) are listening and respond, so I can show the device list running my app. But is it possible to broadcast something to all nearby devices using the bluetooth api?
Of course it's possible. Bluetooth applications follow a typical client/server architecture. See the official Android documentation for more info.
So I am developing an APP and I need to connect multiple android and multiple Iphone to send text data without any internet connection or service provider data network.
So one of the phone will have to act as a server to relay information between them. But the app will have to decide which phone will be the server and if a phone that is the server leaves the conversation then another phone will pickup as the server this will all be done with some smart programming but before I get there.
I know Android WiFi direct can do a one to many connection setup which makes it easy to connect android phone and accomplish the task between android phone only. But the problems comes when I need to connect Iphone with the android phones. Since the Iphone must be able to act as a server as well.
I would like to know a few things:
Can I connect Android and Iphone via WiFi Direct?
Can I connect Android and Iphone using Multipeer connectivity feature on Iphone?
Is there anyway to create a soft access point using Iphone? I know android can do this via WiFi direct feature.
If non of these can work can you suggest something.
From the discussion here it doesn't look possible
I wonder though if both OS allow enough control over the WiFi transceiver if you couldn't just write an app that could what you are asking and just bypassing the built in software architecture all together. I would think Bluetooth would be too weak except in extremely dense device saturation environments, but just for proof of concept that could be another route to take. My guess though is that you just wouldn't get that level of control over any of the radios inside a phone through the current OS.
I have an android app, it does the following:
Connects with a server to read and update a database at the same time as others.
I want to convert this to an app that does not need an internet connection. Therefore i would like to know if its possible to have an android device acting as the server with the database, whilst multiple phones connect to it via bluetooth getting and updating the information in the database?
Thanks
Yes. It possible.
However all of your devices will have to be located nearby, so they can connect to each other through bluetooth.
You can take a look at Android Bluetooth API.
However, my recommendation would be to use Wifi instead of Bluetooth. YOu will need additional WiFi router. However, you won't need to deal with Bluetooth API in such case.
You will only need to write a server on one of Android device and the rest of devices will work the same (as now)
There are a few options to doing so, that don't involve a server. Both of them require a slightly different approach than both devices connecting to a server.
Wi-fi Direct- Only available with Android 4.0+.
Bluetooth
Personally, I have been using the Bluetooth option, and not found it terribly difficult. Essentially, you have to do the following to make it work.
Have one of the devices listen for a connection. If it is unpaired, you will have to make the device discoverable.
The second device needs to initiate a connection. It can do this by looking at the known devices and trying to connect to one, or listening for a new device
After the two devices connect, they must initiate some kind of a communication protocol. The communication is essential a serial connection.
Blue-tooth requires that the devices be within about 10 m of each other. Wi-fi direct will allow somewhat further, but as mentioned, is less supported. It is possible to allow for both communication methods, but is somewhat challenging.
What is the best way for an Android app installed on two devices to communicate with each other? Can the devices connect directly without using text messaging?
You have several options, depending on your requirements and setup:
If your devices are very close to one another (up to about 10 meters), you can communicate using Bluetooth, as Derek suggested.
If your devices are somewhat further away, but within WiFi range of each other (up to about 100 meters), then they can communicate with each other using the Peer-to-Peer WiFi API, documented here (part of the Android Wireless API). This does not require a WiFi router to be present, and the devices will find each other and communicate directly. This does however require Android 4.1 or higher.
The Android Wireless API will also work if your devices are on the same local network (i.e., use the same WiFi router), even if they are not themselves within range of each other.
If none of these options are viable/guaranteed, then I agree with Derek that the easiest way would be to use ServerSocket and Socket to create a server/client interface through the Internet. Here is a sample application doing that. The main problem you might encounter is that if the server is sitting behind a NAT (such as a home internet router), you will have to configure the NAT to forward the incoming packets to your Android server.
You can connect them via bluetooth using BluetoothSockets. Android developer website has pretty good documentation on this.
http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/wireless/bluetooth.html
Or if you'd rather (and have internet on both devices), you can use regular Socket's.
http://developer.android.com/reference/java/net/ServerSocket.html for server side
http://developer.android.com/reference/java/net/Socket.html for client side
If you have a large amount of data to transfer, internet sockets have a greater data capacity and will be faster. The other advantage is that there is no such thing as "out of range". You can connect the two devices wherever internet is available, whereas with bluetooth they have to be within bluetooth range of each other
you can use PubNub. it handles all networking and you should only care about messages.
it has great API to work.
(Thanks to #Ian Jennings : Can we send data from an android device to another android device directly (p2p) without server in the middle?)
Depends on what you are doing. If you have a server, you may be able to send some message to it and have it pulled by the other device (assuming both clients have the app installed). I think this would be the most intuitive way (but it really depends on what you are communicating).
Text messaging and email might work, but you (or the user) needs to know the numbers/emails associated with a device to do that.
you should have a look at WifiDirect
Wi-Fi peer-to-peer (P2P) allows Android 4.0 (API level 14) or later
devices with the appropriate hardware to connect directly to each
other via Wi-Fi without an intermediate access point.
As was already suggested, sockets are the easiest way to accomplish this if your devices are all connected to a network.
There are things to accomplish here:
Use Network Service Discovery to find devices running your app
Connect to other instances of your app using a socket
For a complete tutorial you can check this out
ShortAnswer: Yes
Data can be sent directly.
In order of range:
1 Bluetooth
2 wifidirect
3 maybe.. GSM hardware direct?
After that, options again in range order:
4 tether or network
5 Internet
The android NSD API is meant to do the exact same thing you are trying to achieve! The example bundled with SDK is self explanatory!
please check:
Android NSD API example
I am currently working on the creation of an application for mobile devices with Android which should be capable of sending and receiving messages through local means like wifi and bluetooth. After making a research about it I found out that Android doesn't have a native wifi ad hoc functionality and that the only way to achieve that is through rooting your device and patching the wpa_suplicant and some other similiar methods which are not generic for every device.
Synopsis of what I am trying to achieve:
An application for Android that scans for devices nearby and tries to connect to them automatically. If the other device also got this application isntalled then it automatically accepts any connection request it receives and when the connection is established it sends back a message which ensures that it has this app installed so that both can start exchanging messages automatically and the users don't have to allow/deny any of the sending/receiving in real time.
My questions are:
Is there any way of sending messages through wifi between 2 android
devices without the use of internet?
Since Ad Hoc is not supported, is there any alternative?
In case the answer to 2 is no , then is it possible to make one of
the devices to be an access point so the other can connect to it and
vice versa.
As for bluetooth, is it possible to skip or automate the allow/deny
pop up of an incoming connection and the pairing procedure?
I'll be glad if you could give me an answer to those and/or any suggestions.
You'll be able to communicate between two devices over wifi without a router/access point using Wifi Direct (P2P) in Android 4.0.
Otherwise, I don't believe you can achieve this over Wifi (bluetooth would be the next best alternative). Since 2.2 you can set your phone up to be a Wifi Access Point (for tethering your device's network connection), but during this time, the Wifi hardware is unavailable for normal use. If you had 3 devices it could work (1 AP, 2 connecting to it).
Is this for a constant connection, or a one-off small delivery? You could use NFC if you want to transmit a URL for example (Android Beam integrates this type of sharing in Android 4.0, but could implement it in 2.3).