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I'm working on an application that will run on a phone where the phone will be a station on a private Wi-Fi network. The phone will be a station, not an access point, and the private Wi-Fi network does not route to the Internet. My application needs to communicate with servers on the Internet as well as devices on the local Wi-Fi network, so it needs to have connections on both networks at the same time. I've been trying to figure out how to do this.

I've been trying the technique described in the discussion on the Goggle Android developers group titled "Can Android 2.X connect to 3G and Wifi data networks simultaneously?", but it is not working well. What I find is that when I enable the cellular network by calling ConnectivityManager.setNetworkPreference(ConnectivityManager.TYPE_MOBILE), any sockets I have open on the Wi-Fi network are closed. I haven't tried it, but I suspect the same thing will happen to sockets on the cellular network when I switch back to Wi-Fi. Another problem is that these calls operate on a global level, changing the network settings for the entire phone, not just the application. Switching the network set up globally like this will interfere with any other app that happens to be running on the phone. Even after my application exits, the phone continues to run with the last network configuration it set.

I'm looking for a way to have connections open on both the cellular data and Wi-Fi networks at the same time, and without interfering with other applications running on the phone. Does anyone know how to do this? Does anyone know if this is possible?

Thanks for your help.

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4 Answers

If you can't make it using API calls and if you are willing to get your hands dirty with the lower level, some linux knowledge may help. Basically what you have to do is to bring up both interfaces and have the default route set on the 3g interface. You will have to use system commands with root privileges for this kind of task. The reason for the close sockets is probably the interface that goes down and up again because of the API call.

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Without root access the app cannot influence much.

With Android API what you can do at most is just turn on WiFi in hope that the device will switch to it and turn WiFi off to make the device switch to 3G (if it's there, the APN is correct etc.).

Anything else is not guaranteed to work. E.g. setting preferred connectivity type doesn't guarantee that the device will switch to that type.

The usual behavior is that as soon as WiFi becomes available, the device will have both 3G and WiFi on for a short while (3-5 secs) and then turn off 3G. As soon as WiFi is turned off by the user or your app, and the device attempts to connect to the Internet, it will turn on 3G after a short while.

Starting with Android 2.3 you can't event disable/enable 3G anymore. One used to spoil/restore APN settings to enable/disable 3G, but starting with 4.0 you can't change APN settings programmatically.

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I think only one service is possible at a time. Either you can use WiFi or you can use use Cellular 3G Data. Both can't work simultaneously at a time.

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This thread Android: Force data to be sent over radio vs WiFi mentions two possible approaches to the problem.

  1. Set the network preference whenever you want your app to use a specific connection:

    ConnectivityManager cm = (ConnectivityManager)getSystemService(Context.CONNECTIVITY_SERVICE);
    cm.setNetworkPreference(ConnectivityManager.TYPE_MOBILE);
    
  2. Enable high priority mobile data connection:

    connectivityManager.startUsingNetworkFeature(ConnectivityManager.TYPE_MOBILE, "enableHIPRI");
    

For the second approach it is specifically stated it works with Android 2.2, no idea if this works in actual versions as well. However as far as I found out, enableHIPRI is more or less a hidden network setting, so I would prefer the first method if possible.

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