How can I discover zeroconf (Bonjour) services on Android? I'm having trouble with jmDNS
I'm working with a Droid / Android 2.0.1 and encountering an issue apparently many people have: I'm unable to discover services using the one pure-Java zeroconf library I know of, jmDNS. (Apple's Bonjour, while it works on Linux and Windows Java, I believe would be harder to port to Android because of reliance on native code.)
I can create services, but not discover them. I'm trying to make sense of what's going on.
There is an ongoing issue report here; related to multicast and IPv6, but seems to be throwing users of jmDNS, too: http://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=2323
Any idea why this person might be having success? See comment 22 in the bug report. (I'm new to SO, so can't post more than one URL.)
I have tested their code, but without any luck.
Has anyone successfully accomplished zeroconf service discovery on Android, using jmDNS or another library?
Is it possible my discovery issue is related to the IPv6 multicast problem?
I'm new as well otherwise I would have just left a comment on smountcastle's answer which is mostly correct. I have just been dealing with the exact same issue on a Droid running Android 2.1. I found that I needed to set the MulticastLock to reference-counted otherwise it seemed to be released automatically.
AndroidManifest.xml:
<uses-permission android:name="android.permission.CHANGE_WIFI_MULTICAST_STATE" />
// Networking code:
WifiManager wifi = getSystemService( Context.WIFI_SERVICE );
MulticastLock lock = wifi.createMulticastLock("fliing_lock");
lock.setReferenceCounted(true);
lock.acquire();
Just make sure to call lock.release()
when you're done with it. This may only be necessary for Android 2.0+, The Droid is my only test device currently, so I can't say for sure.
I managed to cross-compile Bonjour for Android and get it running much the same way Apple intends it to run on embedded devices like printers. Here is the build script.
Here is a small convenience wrapper to get it working as you'd expect.
We are using the client_shim layer from the Bonjour distribution to wrap all access to the embedded mDNS implementation via the usual dns_sd.h API. You do not use the idiom with the filehandles and the select with the shim layer.
The client_shim layer is not exactly good supported by Apple - in fact I found typos in variable names, but it is working nevertheless. You will need to apply this patch to include the correct header files, fix the typos and get logging via the Android APIs.
One more thing: You need to acquire and hold the MultiCast Lock from within your Java code, otherwise you won't find anybody else. See the example here.
Other than that, I have it working on Android API Level 8 and we are maintaining a prebuilt library of Bonjour for Android, though I am not sure whether this is ok as per license.
Edited:
The version in the prebuilts is 330.10, newer ones with client_shim as static libraries fail to compile with MSVC2010 on windows, so we kept this one.
Good Luck!