I'm developing an Android application which periodically reports back to a data server via a REST API call. Whenever the app tries to send one of these reports, but no network channel (wifi or mobile data) is available, the app will create a wrapper for that task and put it in a queue that is attached to a BroadcastReceiver
. The receiver listens for either android.net.wifi.STATE_CHANGE
or android.net.conn.CONNECTIVITY_CHANGE
and then tries to execute the enqueued task on the new connection. All of the authentication logic is handled here as well. The actual request POSTs are going out via the Retrofit library.
My problem is that, whenever network access "comes back", and the receiver tries to kick off all the tasks that are waiting, I always get back a java.net.UnknownHostException
, stating that the host name of the data server has no associated address. It seems that, while the Android device knows that it's connected to a network, it still hasn't figured out where to get DNS from, and any requests that go out while it's in this state will fail.
D/Retrofit﹕ java.net.UnknownHostException: Unable to resolve host "[REDACTED]": No address associated with hostname
at java.net.InetAddress.lookupHostByName(InetAddress.java:424)
at java.net.InetAddress.getAllByNameImpl(InetAddress.java:236)
at java.net.InetAddress.getAllByName(InetAddress.java:214)
at com.squareup.okhttp.internal.Network$1.resolveInetAddresses(Network.java:29)
at com.squareup.okhttp.internal.http.RouteSelector.resetNextInetSocketAddress(RouteSelector.java:266)
at com.squareup.okhttp.internal.http.RouteSelector.nextProxy(RouteSelector.java:240)
at com.squareup.okhttp.internal.http.RouteSelector.nextUnconnected(RouteSelector.java:156)
at com.squareup.okhttp.internal.http.RouteSelector.next(RouteSelector.java:130)
at com.squareup.okhttp.internal.http.HttpEngine.connect(HttpEngine.java:312)
at com.squareup.okhttp.internal.http.HttpEngine.sendRequest(HttpEngine.java:235)
at com.squareup.okhttp.Call.getResponse(Call.java:262)
at com.squareup.okhttp.Call$ApplicationInterceptorChain.proceed(Call.java:219)
at com.squareup.okhttp.Call.getResponseWithInterceptorChain(Call.java:192)
at com.squareup.okhttp.Call.execute(Call.java:79)
at retrofit.client.OkClient.execute(OkClient.java:53)
at retrofit.RestAdapter$RestHandler.invokeRequest(RestAdapter.java:326)
at retrofit.RestAdapter$RestHandler.invoke(RestAdapter.java:240)
at [REDACTED](Native Method)
at [REDACTED]
[etc]
Caused by: libcore.io.GaiException: getaddrinfo failed: EAI_NODATA (No address associated with hostname)
Caused by: libcore.io.ErrnoException: getaddrinfo failed: ENETUNREACH (Network is unreachable)
The root-cause exception (libcore.io.ErrnoException
) claims that the network is unreachable, but I don't even try this execution until after I've received an intent from the Android OS specifically because the network is now, in fact, reachable.
My code for verifying wifi availability:
protected static boolean isWifiAvailable( WifiManager wifi )
{
WifiInfo info = wifi.getConnectionInfo() ;
if( info == null ) return false ;
if( info.getNetworkId() == -1 ) return false ;
if( info.getSupplicantState() != SupplicantState.COMPLETED )
return false ;
return true ;
}
My code for verifying mobile data availability:
protected static boolean isMobileDataAvailable( TelephonyManager tmgr )
{
return( tmgr.getDataState() == TelephonyManager.DATA_CONNECTED ) ;
}
Question: Is there a more reliable signal — something I'm not checking in WifiInfo
and TelephonyManager
— that would indicate that the network channel is really, really ready? Or is this a race condition with no clear resolution?