13

I have a problem regarding the camera in the most recent Marshmallow build, more specifically the flashlight. On any pre-Marshmallow version all I need to do to turn the flash on/off was the following:

private void turnFlashOn(final Camera camera, int flashLightDurationMs) {
    if (!isFlashOn()) {
        final List<String> supportedFlashModes = camera.getParameters().getSupportedFlashModes();
        if (supportedFlashModes != null && supportedFlashModes.contains(Camera.Parameters.FLASH_MODE_TORCH)) {
            mParams.setFlashMode(Camera.Parameters.FLASH_MODE_TORCH);
            camera.setParameters(mParams);
        }
    }
}

and

private void turnFlashOff(Camera camera) {
    if (camera != null) {
        final List<String> supportedFlashModes = camera.getParameters().getSupportedFlashModes();
        if (supportedFlashModes != null && supportedFlashModes.contains(Camera.Parameters.FLASH_MODE_OFF)) {
            mParams.setFlashMode(Camera.Parameters.FLASH_MODE_OFF);
            camera.setParameters(mParams);
        }
    }
}

Unfortunately, Marshmallow devices began to crash in the wild. Somehow camera.getParameters() and camera.setParameters() began to fail with messages such as:

RuntimeException: getParameters failed (empty parameters)

RuntimeException: setParameters failed

I tried starting and stopping the preview before getting the parameters, which no longer throws errors. However the preview is not resumed when I call camera.startPreview().

I fear releasing the camera and reopening it is out of the question as this takes some seconds and would produce a bad experience.

Any suggestions on how to turn the flashlight on/off in Marshmallow reliably?

4 Answers 4

6

Google has introduced torchmode in OS 6 (Android M).
if your purpose is only to turn on/off the flash, below code can help you with that:

private static void handleActionTurnOnFlashLight(Context context){
    try{

        CameraManager manager = (CameraManager) context.getSystemService(Context.CAMERA_SERVICE);
        String[] list = manager.getCameraIdList();
        manager.setTorchMode(list[0], true);
    }
    catch (CameraAccessException cae){
        Log.e(TAG, cae.getMessage());
        cae.printStackTrace();
    }
}

private static void handleActionTurnOffFlashLight(Context context){
    try{
        CameraManager manager = (CameraManager) context.getSystemService(Context.CAMERA_SERVICE);
        manager.setTorchMode(manager.getCameraIdList()[0], false);
    }
    catch (CameraAccessException cae){
        Log.e(TAG, cae.getMessage());
        cae.printStackTrace();
    }
}

All you have to do is: Get cameraid's list out of which camera ID zero(0) is your primary camera for which you want to turn flash on/off. Simply pass the cameraID to setTochMode API with boolean value for turning it on or off.

Do note that this piece of code will work only with OS 6, so you need to check for device OS and based upon that you need to select which API's to call for pre-marshmallow devices.

Kindly mark this as solution if it solves your problem.

1

As Saurabh7474 has responded, to check the version of Android and use setTorchMode API it's very correct.

Although you can also use params.setFlashMode (...) in marshmallow using

mCamera.setPreviewTexture (new SurfaceTexture (100))

after Camera.open (...) and before calling mCamera.startPreview();

try {
                Log.i(TAG, "getCamera");
                int requestedCameraId = getIdForRequestedCamera(mFacing);
                if (requestedCameraId == -1) {
                    throw new RuntimeException("Could not find requested camera.");
                }
                mCamera = Camera.open(requestedCameraId);
                mCamera.setPreviewTexture(new SurfaceTexture(DUMMY_TEXTURE_NAME));
                params = mCamera.getParameters();
            } catch (RuntimeException e) {
                Log.e("Failed to Open. Error:", e.getMessage());
            } catch (IOException e) {
                Log.e("Failed to Open. can't setPreviewTexture:", e.getMessage());
            }

then when you want, you can use

        mParams.setFlashMode(Camera.Parameters.FLASH_MODE_TORCH);
        camera.setParameters(mParams);

My answer is based on CameraSource examples of Vision API that uses params.setFlashMode (...) and works in Api 23 and above. If you decide to inspect CameraSource, the key method that has solved the same problem is "start ()", in the line 312 ...

https://github.com/googlesamples/android-vision/blob/master/visionSamples/barcode-reader/app/src/main/java/com/google/android/gms/samples/vision/barcodereader/ui/camera/CameraSource.java

The reason you can find here https://stackoverflow.com/a/33333046/4114846

0

Update your app to check for permissions at runtime. You have to have android.permission.CAMERA granted. Including it in the manifest of your app is not going to grant it to you on Marshmallow. You'll need to detect whether or not it has been granted and request it.

4
  • I have the Camera permission already. I'm not targeting 23, so I don't need to check for the runtime permissions just yet, right?. Oct 22, 2015 at 14:55
  • Yes and no. If you are not targeting 23 then the permission should have already been granted. However, the user may go in an disable that permission after the install. In that case, you would need to check (if running on a API 23 device) whether you have the permission or not. If you do not because the user rejected it, then the Camera APIs may return empty or null data. This talk will provide more details on the permissions changes for Marshmallow: youtu.be/WGz-alwVh8A?list=PLnVy79PaFHMUqqvwbjyKJZv1N8rzHOCBi Oct 22, 2015 at 15:35
  • You're right, that is indeed the case. However the app crashes even with granted permissions, so it seems something related to the Camera API changed and behaves differently than it did in Lollipop or Kitkat. Oct 22, 2015 at 15:39
  • I would expect that to be a different root cause of the crash. Check the crash output in the case of granted permission vs. non-granted. Oct 22, 2015 at 15:40
0

Building off of Saurabh7474's answer, you can toggle Marshmallow's torchMode by registering a torchCallback:

 final CameraManager mCameraManager = (CameraManager) getSystemService(Context.CAMERA_SERVICE);
 CameraManager.TorchCallback torchCallback = new CameraManager.TorchCallback() {
     @Override
     public void onTorchModeUnavailable(String cameraId) {
         super.onTorchModeUnavailable(cameraId);
     }

     @Override
     public void onTorchModeChanged(String cameraId, boolean enabled) {
         super.onTorchModeChanged(cameraId, enabled);
         boolean currentTorchState = enabled;
         try {
             mCameraManager.setTorchMode(cameraId, !currentTorchState);
         } catch (CameraAccessException e){}



     }
 };

 mCameraManager.registerTorchCallback(torchCallback, null);//fires onTorchModeChanged upon register
 mCameraManager.unregisterTorchCallback(torchCallback);

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