13

In the iPhone SDK I don't see the same SCDynamicStore used on Mac OS X to get the SSID name that your wireless network is currently connected to isn't available.

Is there a way to get the SSID name that the iPhone is currently connected to?

I see some apps do it (Easy Wi-Fi for AT&T for one) but I can't find how it's done in the iPhone SDK docs. A private or unpublish method would be acceptable just as a proof of concept (although I know that likely wouldn't make it to the AppStore).

3 Answers 3

18

This is now possible (iOS 4.1+) via the Captive Network API.

See an example of how to use it on this similar question.

This is not a private API.

6

After digging around I found the anser to this. There are unpublished APIs in the Preferences framework. For examples of this one can look at the Stumbler code hosted on Google Code.

I filed a radar with Apple (#6407431/OpenRadar version) that was marked as a duplicate of #5814810). If you want this officially supported then please also file a radar at bugreport.apple.com.

Update: The above Stumbler code is for 1.x revision iPhone OS SDK. For iPhone OS 2.0 and beyond developers will have to look in PrivateFrameworks/Apple80211.Framework and all that implies.

4

Try this code,

#import <SystemConfiguration/CaptiveNetwork.h>

CFArrayRef myArray = CNCopySupportedInterfaces();
CFDictionaryRef myDict = CNCopyCurrentNetworkInfo(CFArrayGetValueAtIndex(myArray, 0));
NSDictionary *ssidList = (__bridge NSDictionary*)myDict;
NSString *SSID = [ssidList valueForKey:@"SSID"];
1
  • Noting that you'll need a null check on myArray
    – funroll
    Jan 13, 2015 at 22:18

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.