I've tried using these methods in an attempt to detect that the Ring/Silent switch is active or not:

How to programmatically sense the iPhone mute switch?

AVAudioSession category not working as documentation dictates

But on my iPhone 4, the "state" value is always "Speaker" (and the length value returned by CFStringGetLength(state) is always 7). Has anyone used this method successfully? If so, on what kind of device and SDK version?

I'm calling it like so:


- (BOOL)deviceIsSilenced {
    CFStringRef state;
    UInt32 propertySize = sizeof(CFStringRef);
    OSStatus audioStatus = AudioSessionGetProperty(kAudioSessionProperty_AudioRoute, &propertySize, &state);
    if (audioStatus == kAudioSessionNoError) {
        NSLog(@"audio route: %@", state) // "Speaker" regardless of silent switch setting, but "Headphone" when my headphones are plugged in
        return (CFStringGetLength(state) <= 0);
    }
    return NO;
}

-(BOOL)application:(UIApplication *)application didFinishLaunchingWithOptions:(NSDictionary *)launchOptions {

    AVAudioSession *audioSession = [AVAudioSession sharedInstance];
    audioSession.delegate = self;
    [audioSession setCategory:AVAudioSessionCategoryAmbient error:nil];
    [audioSession setActive:YES error:nil];
    NSLog(@"muted? %i", [self deviceIsSilenced]);
    ...
}

I was thinking maybe some other (more accurate) kAudioSessionProperty event is fired when the physical switch on the phone is ... switched. Anyone have any ideas?

By the way, I'm using the AVAudioSessionCategoryAmbient category with my [AVAudioSession sharedInstance].

Update: I've also tried using different audio categories, and a handful of other audio session properties, none seem to fire when muting/unmuting the switch. :(

Thanks in advance!

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yarrr maties! no one else is seeing this? :( – taber Aug 2 '11 at 4:30
What is in [self deviceIsSilenced]? – Jane Sales Aug 2 '11 at 8:53
I've updated the post with deviceIsSilenced, thanks for asking, Jane! :) – taber Aug 2 '11 at 13:13
FWIW, it's not working for me either... – Reuven Aug 7 '11 at 13:16
I was just about to post an EXACT duplicate (iPhone 4 .. etc.) – Mazyod Oct 16 '11 at 14:11
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7 Answers

up vote 6 down vote accepted

Well I found the answer thanks to someone from the Developer Forums, and you guys aren't gonna like it!

I've had a response from Apple on this.

They've said they don't and never have provided a method for detecting hardware mute switch and don't intend to do so.

:(

IMO there is definitely value in detecting the silent switch and notifying the user in case they've forgotten it was on... I've had people complain that they don't have any sound and the silent switch was the reason! Oh well.

PS: If you would like Apple to add this feature (and of course you do!) please file a new "Enhancement" bug report for "iPhone SDK" at http://bugreport.apple.com/

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"However, if someone could show us how to use this AudioSessionProperty_AudioRouteDescription, the bounty is rightfully his."

Well, just NSLog() the result and you get

routes: {
    "RouteDetailedDescription_Inputs" =     (
    );
    "RouteDetailedDescription_Outputs" =     (
                {
            "RouteDetailedDescription_PortType" = Speaker;
        }
    );
}

Unfortunately, I get that identical result on an iPad2/OS 5.0 both muted and unmuted. So it appears to be functionally equivalent to kAudioSessionProperty_AudioRoute, no joy there.

Looking on the developer boards finds that this is a frequently encountered problem, summed up best with

"I reported this issue with rdar://9781189 back in July and the issue is still present in the GM."

So yeah ... sure looks like you're SOL with this in 5.0.

ADDENDUM:

"But how about that CFDictionary that you are logging. How can I access the "RouteDetailedDescription_PortType" key?"

Toll free bridging is your friend.

  CFDictionaryRef asCFType = nil;
  UInt32 dataSize = sizeof(asCFType);
  AudioSessionGetProperty(kAudioSessionProperty_AudioRouteDescription, &dataSize, &asCFType);
  NSDictionary *easyPeasy = (NSDictionary *)asCFType;
  NSDictionary *firstOutput = (NSDictionary *)[[easyPeasy valueForKey:@"RouteDetailedDescription_Outputs"] objectAtIndex:0];
  NSString *portType = (NSString *)[firstOutput valueForKey:@"RouteDetailedDescription_PortType"];
  NSLog(@"first output port type is: %@!", portType);

produces

first output port type is: Speaker!

Many common CFTypes are bridged to more convenient types.

http://developer.apple.com/library/ios/#documentation/CoreFoundation/Conceptual/CFDesignConcepts/Articles/tollFreeBridgedTypes.html

Now, it takes a little bit of practice to guess correctly what magic incantation casts will get something useful out of a dictionary as above. A class dump helper along these lines will help you get up to speed with that:

  - (void)whatsInThis:(CFDictionaryRef)thingy
  {
     NSDictionary *dict = (NSDictionary *)thingy;
     for (NSString *key in dict.allKeys)
     {
        id value = [dict valueForKey:key];
        NSLog(@"key: %@ value type %@", key, [value class]);
        if ([value isKindOfClass:[NSArray class]])
        {
           NSArray *array = (NSArray *)value;
           for (id item in array)
           {
              NSLog(@" -- object type %@", [item class]);
              if ([item isKindOfClass:[NSDictionary class]])
                 [self whatsInThis:item];
           }
        }
     }
  }

which for our dictionary at hand produces (adding indentation for clarity)

key: RouteDetailedDescription_Inputs value type __NSCFArray
key: RouteDetailedDescription_Outputs value type __NSCFArray
  -- object type __NSCFDictionary
    key: RouteDetailedDescription_PortType value type __NSCFString

which lets you know for sure what you could have deduced from the original log, knowing that NSLog displays arrays within ( ) and dictionaries within { } so the correct casts were eminently guessable. But some CFType structures are rather harder to parse than that.

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Awesome!! you solved one more step of this problem. Using AudioRoute returns a CFString, which is easy to deal with. But how about that CFDictionary that you are logging. How can I access the "RouteDetailedDescription_PortType" key? – Mazyod Oct 20 '11 at 20:33
I.E. There should be something like: CFString s = ExtractObjectWithKey(theCFDictionary, @"RouteDetailedDescription_PortType"); ... See what I mean? – Mazyod Oct 20 '11 at 20:35
1  
hmmm ... can't paste code in a comment? OK, I'll add another answer. – alexcurylo Oct 21 '11 at 7:50
lool, you're great :D. Thanks! – Mazyod Oct 21 '11 at 13:46
This is a very helpful answer. More documentation can be read in AudioToolbox/AudioServices.h but it's a little confusing and jumps around a lot. I personally think its a somewhat overkill to have a NSDictionary of type NSArray of type NSDictionary of type NSString. – eternalmatt May 6 at 14:20
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Ok, After following kAudioSessionProperty_AudioRoute using CMD + click, I found this :(

/*!
 @enum           AudioSession audio categories states
 @abstract       Deprecated AudioSession properties
 @constant       kAudioSessionProperty_AudioRoute 
 Deprecated in iOS 5.0; Use kAudioSessionProperty_AudioRouteDescription 
 */
enum {
    kAudioSessionProperty_AudioRoute                            = 'rout',   // CFStringRef      (get only)        
};

turns out we have to use kAudioSessionProperty_AudioRouteDescription, but this guy returns a CFDictionaryRef or something, and I have absolutely no idea how to deal with it....

I made this an answer in case no one shows us how to use kAudioSessionProperty_AudioRouteDescription, where I will try to accept my answer...

However, if someone could show us how to use this kAudioSessionProperty_AudioRouteDescription, the bounty is rightfully his.

edit:

Clearly, this is an iOS 5 problem. I didn't state this earlier because it looked too obvious, but then I thought it might not be as obvious to search engines .. if you get what I mean.

So, iOS 5 is not working with the silent/mute switch on the iPhone because of the referred deprecated value.

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You may have trouble getting answers because AFAIK iOS5 SDK is still under NDA. In fact, the answer you posted is iffy in that regard. My advice is to look up the header documentation of the constant you're referring to (right-click & Jump To Definition). You will find your answer there. – Tatiana Racheva Oct 19 '11 at 23:20
But the answer may be 'negative' – Tatiana Racheva Oct 19 '11 at 23:41
Well, I just want to know how to use CFDictionary in this context .. An CFDictionary expert will answer this question easily.. And I am regretting posting precious bounty for nothing :( – Mazyod Oct 20 '11 at 12:24
btw, iOS 5 SDK has been released to the public weeks ago. It's no longer under NDA :) – Mazyod Oct 20 '11 at 12:28
Like I said, in the header they explain the layout of the structures. It's quite arcane, and in this case you don't get any different of an answer than the one you get out of the deprecated API. Sigh. – Tatiana Racheva Nov 15 '11 at 21:13
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I think you could try next behavior for detecting silent switch state if you really need this: AudioServicesAddSystemSoundCompletion callback not getting called in silent mode

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Try inserting this line above your call to AudioSessionGetProperty inside deviceIsSilenced

AudioSessionInitialize(NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL);

Should then start returning empty string when switch is down (although will show Headphone and some other states if BT headset or accessory connected for example).

FWIW I don't believe there is anything in public API that will fire when actual switch is moved.

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Thanks, I just gave that a shot, but no luck unfortunately. Maybe it's something with using that combined with AVAudioPlayer, hmm. – taber Aug 2 '11 at 21:33
I'm using that combined with AVAudioPlayer and it works for me. Actually, I don't check for kAudioSessionNoError - have you stepped through and checked you're not getting one? – Jane Sales Aug 5 '11 at 8:12
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I think you've got the wrong impression. A route is where it's going. You want to know the volume level. Use kAudioSessionProperty_CurrentHardwareOutputVolume

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2  
Sorry, that's totally irrelevant. I am not trying to find the volume level, I am trying to find out if the mute switch is on/off. The code posted in the question works on iOS 4.0. In iOS 5, it got deprecated as I posted. – Mazyod Oct 20 '11 at 15:02
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Found this library http://www.verietassoftware.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=27&Itemid=115

Would Apple allow that stuff? It is a 500Kb library doing some black magic with audio & phone settings

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