I have the Galaxy tab GT-P1000 7 inch with firmware version:2.3.3 and Phones running Android 2.2 . In both versions when ever I am trying to get the Time From Gps, Its showing 1 day advance from 1st jan 2012. Same code is working fine on samsung,LG and Motorola Phones.

The Sample code for the App is,

package com.vxceed.dateTime;


import java.util.Calendar;

import android.app.Activity;
import android.content.Context;
import android.location.Location;
import android.location.LocationListener;
import android.location.LocationManager;
import android.os.Bundle;
import android.view.View;
import android.widget.TextView;
import android.widget.Toast;

public class SampleDateTimeActivity extends Activity {

    private LocationManager locationManager;
    private  TextView tv;
    String varTime="";

    /**
     * Location Listener 
     */
    LocationListener locationListener = new LocationListener() {

        @Override
        public void onStatusChanged(String provider, int status, Bundle extras) {

        }

        @Override
        public void onProviderEnabled(String provider) {
            locationManager.requestLocationUpdates(LocationManager.GPS_PROVIDER, 0, 0, locationListener);
        }

        @Override
        public void onProviderDisabled(String provider) {
            Toast.makeText(SampleDateTimeActivity.this,"GPS off", Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
        }

        @Override
        public void onLocationChanged(Location location) {
            setCurrentLocation(location);

        }
    };



    private void setCurrentLocation(Location location) {

          varTime=String.valueOf(location.getTime());

    }


    /** Called when the activity is first created. */
    @Override
    public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
        super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
        setContentView(R.layout.main);
        locationManager=(LocationManager) this.getSystemService(Context.LOCATION_SERVICE);
        locationManager.requestLocationUpdates(LocationManager.GPS_PROVIDER, 0,0, locationListener);

         tv=(TextView)findViewById(R.id.textView1);

    }


     public void refreshTime(View v)
     {
        String currentGPSTime="";
        currentGPSTime=varTime;
        if(currentGPSTime.compareTo("")==0)
        {
            tv.setText("Time Not Available");
        }
        else
        {
            Calendar cal=Calendar.getInstance();
            cal.setTimeInMillis(new Long(currentGPSTime));

            long currentDeviceTime=Calendar.getInstance().getTimeInMillis();

            Calendar cal2=Calendar.getInstance();
            cal2.set(cal.get(Calendar.YEAR), cal.get(Calendar.MONTH), cal.get(Calendar.DATE)-1,cal.get(Calendar.HOUR_OF_DAY),cal.get(Calendar.MINUTE));
            long currentGPSTime_less_one_Day=cal2.getTimeInMillis();

            tv.setText( "GPSTIME:"+cal.getTime().toString() +" \n GPS_TIME_in_Millis:"+varTime+"\nDevice_Time_in_millis:"+String.valueOf(currentDeviceTime) +"\nGPS Time -1 day:"+String.valueOf(currentGPSTime_less_one_Day));
        }
     }


    @Override
    protected void onDestroy() {
        // TODO Auto-generated method stub
        super.onDestroy();
        if (locationManager != null && locationListener != null){
            locationManager.removeUpdates(locationListener);
            locationManager = null;
        }
    }


}

I have searched the Google and then referring the NMEA official document I figure out How to Use the NMEA data Here is the Working Code for the NMEA listener

NmeaListener nmeaListener = new NmeaListener() {

    @Override
    public void onNmeaReceived(long timestamp, String nmea) {

        parse(nmea);
    }
};


private boolean parse(String strNMEA) {

    // Discard the sentence if its checksum does not match our calculated
    // checksum
    boolean bStatus = false;
    try {
        if (!IsValid(strNMEA)) {

            return false;
        }
        String[] sArrNMEA = strNMEA.split(",");
        String strNMEAType = sArrNMEA[0];
        if (strNMEAType.equals("$GPRMC")) {

            bStatus = ParseGPRMC(sArrNMEA);
        } else {

            bStatus = false;
        }

        sArrNMEA = null;
    } catch (Exception e) {

    }
    return bStatus;

}

private boolean ParseGPRMC(String[] sArrNMEA) {

    boolean result = false;
    try {
        if (sArrNMEA.length > 9) {
            int Hr = 0;
            int Mins = 0;
            int Secs = 0;

            if (!sArrNMEA[1].equals("")) {

                Hr = Integer.parseInt(sArrNMEA[1].substring(0, 2));
                Mins = Integer.parseInt(sArrNMEA[1].substring(2, 4));

                if (sArrNMEA[1].length() > 6) {

                    Secs = Integer.parseInt(sArrNMEA[1].substring(4, 6));
                } else {
                    Secs = Integer.parseInt(sArrNMEA[1].substring(4));
                }

            }
            if (!sArrNMEA[9].equals("")) {
                int Day = Integer.parseInt(sArrNMEA[9].substring(0, 2));
                int Month = Integer.parseInt(sArrNMEA[9].substring(2, 4));
                if (Month > 0) {
                    Month = Month - 1;
                }
                int Year = Integer.parseInt(sArrNMEA[9].substring(4));
                Year = 2000 + Year;

                if (!sArrNMEA[1].equals("")) {

                    Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance(TimeZone
                            .getTimeZone("UTC"));
                    cal.set(Year, Month, Day, Hr, Mins, Secs);

                    nmeaTime = String.valueOf(cal.getTimeInMillis());

                }

            }



            result = true;
        }
    } catch (Exception e) {

    }

    return result;

}

    private boolean IsValid(String strNMEA) {
    // Compare the characters after the asterisk to the calculation
    strNMEA = strNMEA.replace("\r", "");
    strNMEA = strNMEA.replace("\n", "");
    return strNMEA.substring(0, strNMEA.length())
            .substring(strNMEA.indexOf("*") + 1)
            .equalsIgnoreCase(GetChecksum(strNMEA));
}
link|improve this question
I have solved the Above issue, Use NMEA location listener in Android. It will give the Correct GPS time. – Shashi kant Singh Jan 5 at 10:54
On the three devices that I tested the NMEA location listener, the date given by the listener was always tomorrow's date. – MiG62 Jan 8 at 1:07
You can use the Following Code for NMEA Listener – Shashi kant Singh Jan 11 at 10:03
feedback

6 Answers

I've tried to use the NMEA location listener (on a Samsung Galaxy Tab 8.9 with Honeycomb 3.1), but the date I retrieve from it is always 1 day in advance. Could you please post the code which solves the issue by means of the NMEA location listener?

link|improve this answer
USe the Above code It will work – Shashi kant Singh Jan 11 at 10:17
OK, thanks. Indeed, the nmeaTime calculated parsing the NMEA string (with the ParseGPRMC method posted by Shashi kant Singh) is correct. But I can't figure out how to use the NMEA location listener in combination with the LocationListener (e.g. is it possible to receive onNmeaReceived at regular time intervals? I don't want the onNmeaReceived to be fired more than once in a second). Moreover, in the code of Shashi kant Singh the GetChecksum method is not defined: is there a well-known algorithm for this or can you post the code for that also? – Luke Jan 13 at 13:46
feedback

This seems to be affecting all stock Samsung firmwares, i am logging a concern with Samsung about this. It seems to be isolated to Samsung devices. So if you can test on another device, or install custom firmware. both of those have worked for me. and your code looks good, nothing wrong there, this is a firmware issue

EDIT: I have contacted the Korean Engineers - they have said they weren't aware of the problem but have patched and it should be fixed in the latest update for the SGS and other affected products. (unless of course that device hasn't had an update for a while - so not sure about the SGT) They have said the problem lies with the devices using Broadcomm chips...so yeah

Use the above code. it seems to work for me will have to check it on a few other devices but yeah

link|improve this answer
I manage 92 devices of various models of Samsung and HTC. Among these devices, the problem is restricted to those with a Hummingbird processor. I note that some versions of the Samsung Galaxy Tab use a Hummingbird processor. Not sure whether yours is among them. – MiG62 Jan 6 at 11:53
That's very interesting. I wonder why the firmware is doing this on only devices with that processor. Custom firmware does fix this issue, but Samsung needs to put out a fix. – SeanSWatkins Jan 9 at 12:13
feedback

they have said they weren't aware of the problem but have patched and it should be fixed in the latest update for the SGS and other affected products.

Sorry to disappoint, but...

I own a Samsung Galaxy S GT-I9000 microcode level 2.3.5 Baseband version I9000BVJV3 Kernel 2.6.35.7-I9000BVJVC-CL679241 Version GINGERBREAD.BVJVC

I have tried an update yesterday, Jan 29th, 2012 through Kies, it claims my phone is up to date, and reports PDA:JVC/PHONE:JV3/ CSC:JV7 (FTM).

Yet I still have the problem of the date offset.

Unless I am missing something, and did not apply the right updates through the right tools?

link|improve this answer
feedback

For clarity, from the settings screen the date and time appear correct, but from the Android SDK version 10, the location listener is showing one day in advance. I gave permission for the Galaxy tab to install an update yesterday thinking it might solve the problem but it had no effect.

link|improve this answer
feedback

I suspect that Samsung were hoping that it was a leap year issue which would just go away after March 1st, 2012.

Sorry to disappoint - but it hasn't! We have been seeing this problem with the app PhoneTrack installed on Samsung phones since January 1st and it is still there today.

Hopefully, Samsung will now act responsibly and issue updates for all devices affected by this GPS driver bug.

link|improve this answer
feedback

I hit this bug on my Nexus S running Android 4.0.3 (annoyingly causing a whole bunch of data to be incorrectly timestamped).

I was upgraded to 4.0.4 yesterday and this seems to have fixed the issue. Not sure if there is a plan to issue fixes to previous Android versions.

A real howler of a bug though...

link|improve this answer
feedback

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