39

I worked through the description and samples for USB host at developer.android.com to detect attached and detached USB-devices.

If I use an intent-filter in the manifest file to start my application when a device is attached, it works perfectly fine: Plug in, device is detected, android asks for permission to start the application, device information is displayed in a table.

The application I'm developing shouldn't be started/finished only if a device is attached/detached (e.g. data management purposes). Also I do not want the open-dialog to pop up if the app is already running. So I decided not to start the activity directly if a device is attached, but to register a BroadcastReceiver, which is (later) supposed to notify the activity if a device is at-/detached. This receiver recognizes the detach-action just fine, but not the attach-action.

Am I missing a permission or data attribute or something like that? The tutorial and samples don't say anything about additional necessary attributes.

Here is the manifest file:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<manifest 
  xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
  package="de.visira.smartfdr"
  android:versionCode="1"
  android:versionName="1.0">

<uses-sdk android:minSdkVersion="12" />
<uses-feature android:name="android.hardware.usb.host" />

<application android:icon="@drawable/icon" android:label="@string/app_name">


    <receiver android:name=".usb.Detector">
        <intent-filter>
            <action android:name="android.hardware.usb.action.USB_DEVICE_ATTACHED" />
            <action android:name="android.hardware.usb.action.USB_DEVICE_DETACHED" />
        </intent-filter>

        <meta-data android:name="android.hardware.usb.action.USB_DEVICE_ATTACHED"
            android:resource="@xml/device_filter" />
        <meta-data android:name="android.hardware.usb.action.USB_DEVICE_DETACHED"
            android:resource="@xml/device_filter" />
    </receiver>
</application>

And the receiver:

public class FDRDetector extends BroadcastReceiver{

@Override
public void onReceive(Context context, Intent intent) {
    String action = intent.getAction();

    Toast.makeText(context, "Action: " + action, 3).show();
            // pops up only if action == DETACHED
}

I don't understand why the same intent-filter works, if I use them on an activity, but not if they are applied to a receiver? Even if I set up the receiver and filter in code, attaches are not recognized.

My work environment: IDE: Eclipse 3.7 with Android Plugin

Device: Acer Iconia Tab A500

Android: 3.1

Thanks in advance

3 Answers 3

46

Aha! I figured it out. I was having the exact same problem.

The gist of it is - if you have your application launch automatically when a device is plugged in (using the manifest file), then it appears the Android system gets the ACTION_USB_DEVICE_ATTACHED intent, and then since it knows your application wants to run in that situation, it actually sends your application the android.intent.action.MAIN intent. It never sends the ACTION_USB_DEVICE_ATTACHED action to your application because it thinks it already knows what your application wants to do in that situation.

I've just now identified the problem, and I think I have a solution, but I can tell you what I've found:

Even if your app is running and in the foreground, when you plug in the USB device and the Android system gets the ACTION_USB_DEVICE_ATTACHED intent, it will call onResume() in your activity.

Unfortunately, you cannot just do this:

@Override
public void onResume() {
    super.onResume();

    Intent intent = getIntent();
    Log.d(TAG, "intent: " + intent);
    String action = intent.getAction();

    if (UsbManager.ACTION_USB_DEVICE_ATTACHED.equals(action)) {
        //do something
    } 
}

Because the intent will come back as android.intent.action.MAIN, NOT ACTION_USB_DEVICE_ATTACHED.

An annoyingly, you also get android.intent.action.MAIN if you just leave the app, but don't unplug USB. I imagine putting the device to sleep and waking it back up will do the same thing.

So from what I have found, you can't get the intent directly, but it does appear that you can rely on onResume() being called when a USB device is plugged in, so the solution is to just check to see if USB is connected every time you get an onResume. You can also set a flag when USB is disconnected, because of course the USB disconnect intent fires just fine.

So in total, your broadcast receiver might look like this:

// BroadcastReceiver when remove the device USB plug from a USB port  
BroadcastReceiver mUsbReceiver = new BroadcastReceiver() {
    public void onReceive(Context context, Intent intent) {
        String action = intent.getAction();
         if (UsbManager.ACTION_USB_DEVICE_DETACHED.equals(action)) {                
        usbConnected=false;             
        }
    }
};

You'd have this inside of onCreate:

  // listen for new devices
 IntentFilter filter = new IntentFilter();
 filter.addAction(UsbManager.ACTION_USB_DEVICE_DETACHED);
 registerReceiver(mUsbReceiver, filter);

This goes inside of the activity tag in your manifest:

        <intent-filter>
            <action android:name="android.hardware.usb.action.USB_DEVICE_ATTACHED" />
        </intent-filter>

        <meta-data android:name="android.hardware.usb.action.USB_DEVICE_ATTACHED"
            android:resource="@xml/device_filter" />

You'll have a device_filter.xml file in your /res/xml/ folder that looks like this:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>

<resources>
    <usb-device vendor-id="1027" product-id="24577" />  
    <usb-device vendor-id="1118" product-id="688" /> 
</resources>

(of course with whatever vendor IDs and product IDs you need)

And then your onCreate looks something like this:

@Override
public void onResume() {
    super.onResume();

    Intent intent = getIntent();
    Log.d(TAG, "intent: " + intent);
    String action = intent.getAction();


    if (usbConnected==false ) {
        //check to see if USB is now connected
    } 
}

I don't have specific code for checking to see if USB is connected as I actually haven't delved into that yet. I'm using a library that will just connect if it can, so for my application I can just start that loop and I'm good.

Its also probably important to set the launchmode of your activity in the manifest to "singleTask" to prevent it from running again when its already running, or else plugging in a USB device will just launch a second instance of your application!

So my whole activity tag in my manifest looks like this:

    <activity
        android:label="@string/app_name"
        android:name="com.awitness.common.TorqueTablet"
        android:theme="@android:style/Theme.Holo.NoActionBar.Fullscreen"
        android:screenOrientation="landscape"
        android:configChanges="orientation|keyboardHidden" 
        android:launchMode="singleTask"
        >
        <intent-filter >
            <action android:name="android.intent.action.MAIN" />
            <category android:name="android.intent.category.HOME"/>
        <category android:name="android.intent.category.DEFAULT" />
        <category android:name="android.intent.category.LAUNCHER" />
        </intent-filter> 

        <intent-filter>
            <action android:name="android.hardware.usb.action.USB_DEVICE_ATTACHED" />
        </intent-filter>

        <meta-data android:name="android.hardware.usb.action.USB_DEVICE_ATTACHED"
            android:resource="@xml/device_filter" />

    </activity>

Anyway, I hope this helps someone! I was surprised that I was unable to find a solution for this already!

7
  • 4
    Try overriding onNewIntent() - it is invoked when you use android:launchMode="singleTop" and probably solves your situation quite nicely. onResume() is always called afterwards.
    – Gusdor
    Jun 28, 2012 at 7:51
  • Can you explain your first paragraph "The gist of it is"? It looks very confused to me.
    – m-ric
    Oct 26, 2012 at 22:18
  • Thanks, I've been wondering the same thing. Good to know it's something that just doesn't work. Smells like an Android bug to me.
    – Brian
    Mar 7, 2013 at 1:08
  • 2
    In your activity's onCreate and onResume, if you register for the USB_DEVICE_ATTACHED intent, you can check the intent to see if it has the device as a parecelable extra: UsbDevice device = (UsbDevice) intent.getParcelableExtra(UsbManager.EXTRA_DEVICE); if (device != null) { Log.d(TAG, "USB Attached: " + device); //do something }
    – ihm
    Dec 3, 2013 at 0:02
  • 2
    well what if i dont use an activty for my application and simple have just a service and a broadcast reciever? how can the broadcast receiever get the USB.DEVICE_ATTACHED intent?
    – Jono
    Nov 19, 2014 at 12:26
8

Just to follow on from @Gusdor's insightful comment (+1): I implemented a check in onNewIntent() that, as @Gusdor points out, is called when your activity launchMode is set as singleTask or singleTop. Then, rather than checking for boolean flags as the accepted answer suggests, simply pass on the intent to your USB broadcast receiver using a LocalBroadcastManager. For example,

@Override
protected void onNewIntent(Intent intent) {
    super.onNewIntent(intent);
    if (UsbManager.ACTION_USB_ACCESSORY_ATTACHED.equals(intent.getAction())) {
        LocalBroadcastManager.getInstance(this).sendBroadcast(intent);
    }
}

Then, wherever you're registering your existing (system) USB broadcast receiver, just register the same receiver with a local broadcast manager instance, i.e.,

@Override
protected void onResume() {
    super.onResume();
    myContext.registerReceiver(myUsbBroadcastReceiver, myIntent); // system receiver
    LocalBroadcastManager.getInstance(myContext).registerReceiver(myUsbBroadcastReceiver, intent); // local receiver
}

@Override
protected void onPause() {
    super.onResume();
    myContext.unregisterReceiver(myUsbBroadcastReceiver); // system receiver
    LocalBroadcastManager.getInstance(myContext).unregisterReceiver(myUsbBroadcastReceiver); // local receiver
}

You could send another system broadcast rather than a local broadcast, but I don't think you'll be able to use the action UsbManager.ACTION_USB_ACCESSORY_ATTACHED (system would see that as potential security risk), so you'd have to define your own action. No big deal, but why bother, especially as there's no IPC overhead with local broadcasts.

5

Creating the broadcast receiver within the application, and not the manifest, allows your application to only handle detached events while it is running. This way, detached events are only sent to the application that is currently running and not broadcast to all applications.

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