I'm trying to make an app that detects when a user takes a photo. I set up a broadcast receiver class and registered it in the manifest file by:

<receiver android:name="photoReceiver" >
  <intent-filter>
    <action android:name="com.android.camera.NEW_PICTURE"/>
      <data android:mimeType="image/*"/>
 </intent-filter>
</receiver>

No matter what I try to do the program won't receive the broadcast. Here is my receiver class:

public class photoReceiver extends BroadcastReceiver {
  private static final String TAG = "photoReceiver";

@Override
public void onReceive(Context context, Intent intent) {
    CharSequence text = "caught it";
    int duration = Toast.LENGTH_LONG;
    Log.d(TAG, "Received new photo");

    Toast toast = Toast.makeText(context, text, duration);
    toast.show();
 }
}

If I remove the mimeType line in the manifest and in my activity I send my own broadcast using

Intent intent = new Intent("com.android.camera.NEW_PICTURE");
sendBroadcast(intent);

then I successfully receive the broadcast and can see the log and toast window. Am I approaching this the right way? Is there any thing that I need to add? Thanks in advance for the help!

link|improve this question
1  
Where did you get com.android.camera.NEW_PICTURE from? From what I can tell after a quick look round the sdk, that action doesn't exist. – techiServices Dec 31 '10 at 19:35
@sugarynugs I found it on some other threads. Here is one of them, apparently its from the source of the camera. stackoverflow.com/questions/3015448/…, when a picture is taken it calls sendBroadcast(new Intent("com.android.camera.NEW_PICTURE", mLastContentUri)); – John Jan 1 '11 at 8:18
what version of android are you testing this on? – techiServices Jan 1 '11 at 17:34
@sugarynugs I'm testing it right on my HTC Evo with Froyo(2.2). I also tested it on the emulator on 2.2 with no luck. I've been trying a lot of different things like registering the receiver programmatically and still no luck. Is there a different way that you know of that I can track when a picture was taken in the background? I want my app to stay in the background and listen for the event. The only other thing I can think of would be setting up a mediastore receiver and listening for images being saved from the camera, but that would be much more of a hastle! Thanks for the help so far! – John Jan 1 '11 at 21:21
@sugarynugs Also, I am wondering if HTC's Sense could somehow change the way the camera would broadcast, but even if this was the case it should be working on the emulator. Just a thought. – John Jan 1 '11 at 21:22
show 1 more comment
feedback

2 Answers

I solved this but by using a different method. Instead of using a broadcast receiver I set up a fileobserver on separate folders that the camera saved to. It's not as practical as the other way, but it still works fine. Here's how I set it up:

FileObserver observer = new FileObserver(android.os.Environment.getExternalStorageDirectory().toString() + "/DCIM/100MEDIA") { // set up a file observer to watch this directory on sd card
            @Override
        public void onEvent(int event, String file) {
            if(event == FileObserver.CREATE && !file.equals(".probe")){ // check if its a "create" and not equal to .probe because thats created every time camera is launched
                Log.d(TAG, "File created [" + android.os.Environment.getExternalStorageDirectory().toString() + "/DCIM/100MEDIA/" + file + "]");
                fileSaved = "New photo Saved: " + file;
            }
        }
    };
    observer.startWatching(); // start the observer
link|improve this answer
nice! good to see someone who can think for themselves ;D. I was looking at the camera source and a method storeImage in the ImageCapture class is responsible for firing of that intent. That method only fires the intent if !mIsImageCaptureIntent. I didn't look further but I would have thought that means, do the following if the image capture did not occur due to an intent. Not sure how you are taking a picture and whether the camera app uses an intent to take a picture but food for thought. – techiServices Jan 4 '11 at 16:03
feedback

you should check out here: http://www.java2s.com/Open-Source/Android/Camera/picasaphotouploader/com/android/picasaphotouploader/ImageTableObserver.java.htm and here http://code.google.com/p/picasaphotouploader/source/browse/trunk/src/com/android/picasaphotouploader/PicasaPhotoUploader.java?r=4 how they do it.

Basically, they have an observer for Media.EXTERNAL_CONTENT_URI that will notify of whatever happens on the SD card, then in the Observer, they check if the data returned is a photo.

camera = new ImageTableObserver(new Handler(), this, queue);
getContentResolver().registerContentObserver(Media.EXTERNAL_CONTENT_URI, true, camera);

At least this way you don't have to hardcode the directory.

link|improve this answer
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

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