3

I'm using Bonjour with an NSNetService to publish a server from my iPhone. It all works as expected, I can browse the pages I'm serving etc. However, on the iPhone I want to display the host name (i.e. the URL, like "myDevice.local."), so that one can also enter the address manually in a browser (useful for clients missing a bonjour discovery service). My understanding is that calling the method [myNetService hostName] should give me that address. However, this call always returns nil. I read on some forum that I first should resolve the service, however both [myNetService resolve] and [myNetService resolveWithTimeout:10] call the delegate method

- (void)netService:(NSNetService *)sender didNotResolve:(NSDictionary *)errorDict;

with the error

{
    NSNetServicesErrorCode = -72003;
    NSNetServicesErrorDomain = 10;
}

which apparently means that it is already resolved. Again, all this is happening while i can use the service. Also I can get the port, the domain, and the type of the service. The only other strange thing is that the call [myNetService addresses] returns an empty array.

I'm using SDK 3.1.3. Does anybody have an idea what I could be doing wrong?

1
  • Click "Jump to definition" in Xcode on "CFNetServicesError" to see the error reason. Dec 3, 2021 at 2:45

3 Answers 3

5

The [[NSProcessInfo processInfo] hostName] method was not useful for me for two reasons:

  • If celular data is active, it returns some weird hostname at my provider's domain
  • If there's only WiFi, the host name is ok, but all lower case

The following code from http://iphoneappcode.blogspot.com/2012/05/how-to-get-device-ipaddess-in-iphone.html worked best for me, always returning the local host name with sensitive case:

+ (NSString *) hostname
{
    char baseHostName[256]; 
    int success = gethostname(baseHostName, 255);
    if (success != 0) return nil;
    baseHostName[255] = '\0';

#if !TARGET_IPHONE_SIMULATOR
    return [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%s.local", baseHostName];
#else
     return [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%s", baseHostName];
#endif
}
3

You can get the hostname via [[NSProcessInfo processInfo] hostName] without resolving the netservice you just published.

2
  • Thank you very much, this solved my problem! I don't know how I could miss that method. I'm still wondering though why the other method fails.
    – mkeiser
    Nov 4, 2011 at 19:55
  • AcDcP has the better answer - not only for the reasons indicated below, but also because (as I found the hard way) the NSProcessInfo hostname call and block for a very long time. This can cause the app to either lockup or (if looking up a hostname early during the launch) cause it to get killed by iOS due to launch timeout.
    – sckor
    Nov 24, 2013 at 14:11
0

Check this link out:

This says your error it was still trying to resolve the service:

https://developer.apple.com/library/IOs/documentation/Cocoa/Reference/Foundation/Classes/NSNetService_Class/index.html#//apple_ref/c/tdef/NSNetServicesError

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