I am trying to test this bluetooth communication example between a PC and an Android phone. My SPP client is exactly the one from there and it works fine. I am new to Android and I didn't want to make it run in a separate thread because I don't know how, so I just did everything in the onCreate()
method. If this is not the best way, feel free to point me to a better way, but this is not my main problem.
The problem is I wanted to display the text received via bluetooth on a textView
and I don't know how to read from InputStream
. When the code is left like that, it displays something like java.io.DataInputStream@41b0cb68
I tried it like here it didn't display anything, also I don't know what encoding is being used.
here's my android app's code:
import android.app.Activity;
import android.os.Bundle;
import android.view.Menu;
import android.view.MenuItem;
import java.io.DataInputStream;
import java.io.DataOutputStream;
import java.io.InputStream;
import java.io.OutputStream;
import java.util.UUID;
import android.app.Activity;
import android.bluetooth.*;
import android.util.Log;
import android.widget.RelativeLayout;
import android.widget.TextView;
public class MainActivity extends Activity {
//based on java.util.UUID
private static UUID MY_UUID = UUID.fromString("446118f0-8b1e-11e2-9e96-0800200c9a66");
// The local server socket
private BluetoothServerSocket mmServerSocket;
// based on android.bluetooth.BluetoothAdapter
private BluetoothAdapter mAdapter;
private BluetoothDevice remoteDevice;
TextView text;
@Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.activity_main);
text = (TextView) findViewById(R.id.textView_Text);
BluetoothSocket socket = null;
mAdapter = BluetoothAdapter.getDefaultAdapter();
// Listen to the server socket if we're not connected
// while (true) {
try {
// Create a new listening server socket
Log.d((String) this.getTitle(), ".....Initializing RFCOMM SERVER....");
// MY_UUID is the UUID you want to use for communication
mmServerSocket = mAdapter.listenUsingRfcommWithServiceRecord("MyService", MY_UUID);
//mmServerSocket = mAdapter.listenUsingInsecureRfcommWithServiceRecord(NAME, MY_UUID); // you can also try using In Secure connection...
// This is a blocking call and will only return on a
// successful connection or an exception
socket = mmServerSocket.accept();
} catch (Exception e) {
}
try {
Log.d((String) this.getTitle(), "Closing Server Socket.....");
mmServerSocket.close();
InputStream tmpIn = null;
OutputStream tmpOut = null;
// Get the BluetoothSocket input and output streams
tmpIn = socket.getInputStream();
tmpOut = socket.getOutputStream();
DataInputStream mmInStream = new DataInputStream(tmpIn);
DataOutputStream mmOutStream = new DataOutputStream(tmpOut);
// here you can use the Input Stream to take the string from the client whoever is connecting
//similarly use the output stream to send the data to the client
text.setText(mmInStream.toString());
} catch (Exception e) {
//catch your exception here
}
// }
}
}
I commented out the while(true)
loop because I think it was making my app crash when onPause()
was being called. I know this is not the best implementation but I really want to read from the bluetooth I feel like I am very close :), other aspects will be dealt with afterwards (like working with threads and so on).