Add the Bluetooth permission to your AndroidManifest,
<uses-permission android:name="android.permission.BLUETOOTH" />
Then use intent filters to listen to the ACTION_ACL_CONNECTED
, ACTION_ACL_DISCONNECT_REQUESTED
, and ACTION_ACL_DISCONNECTED
broadcasts:
public void onCreate() {
...
IntentFilter filter = new IntentFilter();
filter.addAction(BluetoothDevice.ACTION_ACL_CONNECTED);
filter.addAction(BluetoothDevice.ACTION_ACL_DISCONNECT_REQUESTED);
filter.addAction(BluetoothDevice.ACTION_ACL_DISCONNECTED);
this.registerReceiver(mReceiver, filter);
}
//The BroadcastReceiver that listens for bluetooth broadcasts
private final BroadcastReceiver mReceiver = new BroadcastReceiver() {
@Override
public void onReceive(Context context, Intent intent) {
String action = intent.getAction();
BluetoothDevice device = intent.getParcelableExtra(BluetoothDevice.EXTRA_DEVICE);
if (BluetoothDevice.ACTION_FOUND.equals(action)) {
... //Device found
}
else if (BluetoothDevice.ACTION_ACL_CONNECTED.equals(action)) {
... //Device is now connected
}
else if (BluetoothAdapter.ACTION_DISCOVERY_FINISHED.equals(action)) {
... //Done searching
}
else if (BluetoothDevice.ACTION_ACL_DISCONNECT_REQUESTED.equals(action)) {
... //Device is about to disconnect
}
else if (BluetoothDevice.ACTION_ACL_DISCONNECTED.equals(action)) {
... //Device has disconnected
}
}
};
A few notes:
- There is no way to retrieve a list of connected devices at application startup. The Bluetooth API does not allow you to query, instead it allows you to listen to changes.
- A hoaky workaround to the above problem would be to retrieve the list of all known/paired devices... then trying to connect to each one (to determine if you're connected).
- Alternatively, you could have a background service watch the Bluetooth API and write the device states to disk for your application to use at a later date.
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