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1page.title=Connecting to the Network
2parent.title=Performing Network Operations
3parent.link=index.html
4
5trainingnavtop=true
6next.title=Managing Network Usage
7next.link=managing.html
8
9@jd:body
10
11<div id="tb-wrapper">
12<div id="tb">
13
14
15
16<h2>This lesson teaches you to</h2>
17<ol>
18  <li><a href="#http-client">Choose an HTTP Client</a></li>
19  <li><a href="#connection">Check the Network Connection</a></li>
20  <li><a href="#AsyncTask">Perform Network Operations on a Separate Thread</a></li>
21  <li><a href="#download">Connect and Download Data</a></li>
22  <li><a href="#stream">Convert the InputStream to a String</a></li>
23
24</ol>
25
26<h2>You should also read</h2>
27<ul>
28  <li><a href="{@docRoot}training/volley/index.html">Transmitting Network Data Using Volley</a></li>
29  <li><a href="{@docRoot}training/monitoring-device-state/index.html">Optimizing Battery Life</a></li>
30  <li><a href="{@docRoot}training/efficient-downloads/index.html">Transferring Data Without Draining the Battery</a></li>
31  <li><a href="{@docRoot}guide/webapps/index.html">Web Apps Overview</a></li>
32  <li><a href="{@docRoot}guide/components/fundamentals.html">Application Fundamentals</a></li>
33</ul>
34
35</div>
36</div>
37
38<p>This lesson shows you how to implement a simple application that connects to
39the network. It explains some of the best practices you should follow in
40creating even the simplest network-connected app.</p>
41
42<p>Note that to perform the network operations described in this lesson, your
43application manifest must include the following permissions:</p>
44
45<pre>&lt;uses-permission android:name=&quot;android.permission.INTERNET&quot; /&gt;
46&lt;uses-permission android:name=&quot;android.permission.ACCESS_NETWORK_STATE&quot; /&gt;</pre>
47
48
49
50<h2 id="http-client">Choose an HTTP Client</h2>
51
52<p>Most network-connected Android apps use HTTP to send and receive data. The
53Android platform includes the {@link java.net.HttpURLConnection} client, which
54supports HTTPS, streaming uploads and downloads, configurable timeouts,
55IPv6, and connection pooling.</p>
56
57<h2 id="connection">Check the Network Connection</h2>
58
59<p>Before your app attempts to connect to the network, it should check to see whether a
60network connection is available using
61{@link android.net.ConnectivityManager#getActiveNetworkInfo getActiveNetworkInfo()}
62and {@link android.net.NetworkInfo#isConnected isConnected()}.
63Remember, the device may be out of range of a
64network, or the user may have disabled both Wi-Fi and mobile data access.
65For more discussion of this topic, see the lesson <a
66href="{@docRoot}training/basics/network-ops/managing.html">Managing Network
67Usage</a>.</p>
68
69<pre>
70public void myClickHandler(View view) {
71    ...
72    ConnectivityManager connMgr = (ConnectivityManager)
73        getSystemService(Context.CONNECTIVITY_SERVICE);
74    NetworkInfo networkInfo = connMgr.getActiveNetworkInfo();
75    if (networkInfo != null &amp;&amp; networkInfo.isConnected()) {
76        // fetch data
77    } else {
78        // display error
79    }
80    ...
81}</pre>
82
83<h2 id="AsyncTask">Perform Network Operations on a Separate Thread</h2>
84
85<p>Network operations can involve unpredictable delays. To prevent this from
86causing a poor user experience, always perform network operations on a separate
87thread from the UI. The {@link android.os.AsyncTask} class provides one of the
88simplest ways to fire off a new task from the UI thread. For more discussion of
89this topic, see the blog post <a
90href="http://android-developers.blogspot.com/2010/07/multithreading-for-
91performance.html">Multithreading For Performance</a>.</p>
92
93
94<p>In the following snippet, the <code>myClickHandler()</code> method invokes <code>new
95DownloadWebpageTask().execute(stringUrl)</code>. The
96<code>DownloadWebpageTask</code> class is a subclass of {@link
97android.os.AsyncTask}. <code>DownloadWebpageTask</code> implements the following
98{@link android.os.AsyncTask} methods:</p>
99
100    <ul>
101
102      <li>{@link android.os.AsyncTask#doInBackground doInBackground()} executes
103the method <code>downloadUrl()</code>. It passes the  web page URL as a
104parameter. The method <code>downloadUrl()</code> fetches and processes the web
105page content. When it finishes, it passes back a result string.</li>
106
107      <li>{@link android.os.AsyncTask#onPostExecute onPostExecute()} takes the
108returned string and displays it in the UI.</li>
109
110
111    </ul>
112
113<pre>
114public class HttpExampleActivity extends Activity {
115    private static final String DEBUG_TAG = "HttpExample";
116    private EditText urlText;
117    private TextView textView;
118
119    &#64;Override
120    public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
121        super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
122        setContentView(R.layout.main);
123        urlText = (EditText) findViewById(R.id.myUrl);
124        textView = (TextView) findViewById(R.id.myText);
125    }
126
127    // When user clicks button, calls AsyncTask.
128    // Before attempting to fetch the URL, makes sure that there is a network connection.
129    public void myClickHandler(View view) {
130        // Gets the URL from the UI's text field.
131        String stringUrl = urlText.getText().toString();
132        ConnectivityManager connMgr = (ConnectivityManager)
133            getSystemService(Context.CONNECTIVITY_SERVICE);
134        NetworkInfo networkInfo = connMgr.getActiveNetworkInfo();
135        if (networkInfo != null &amp;&amp; networkInfo.isConnected()) {
136            new DownloadWebpageTask().execute(stringUrl);
137        } else {
138            textView.setText("No network connection available.");
139        }
140    }
141
142     // Uses AsyncTask to create a task away from the main UI thread. This task takes a
143     // URL string and uses it to create an HttpUrlConnection. Once the connection
144     // has been established, the AsyncTask downloads the contents of the webpage as
145     // an InputStream. Finally, the InputStream is converted into a string, which is
146     // displayed in the UI by the AsyncTask's onPostExecute method.
147     private class DownloadWebpageTask extends AsyncTask&lt;String, Void, String&gt; {
148        &#64;Override
149        protected String doInBackground(String... urls) {
150
151            // params comes from the execute() call: params[0] is the url.
152            try {
153                return downloadUrl(urls[0]);
154            } catch (IOException e) {
155                return "Unable to retrieve web page. URL may be invalid.";
156            }
157        }
158        // onPostExecute displays the results of the AsyncTask.
159        &#64;Override
160        protected void onPostExecute(String result) {
161            textView.setText(result);
162       }
163    }
164    ...
165}</pre>
166
167<p>The sequence of events in this snippet is as follows:</p>
168<ol>
169
170  <li>When users click the button that invokes {@code myClickHandler()},
171  the app passes
172the specified URL to the {@link android.os.AsyncTask} subclass
173<code>DownloadWebpageTask</code>.</li>
174
175 <li>The {@link android.os.AsyncTask} method {@link
176android.os.AsyncTask#doInBackground doInBackground()} calls the
177<code>downloadUrl()</code> method. </li>
178
179  <li>The <code>downloadUrl()</code> method takes a URL string as a parameter
180and uses it to create a {@link java.net.URL} object.</li>
181
182  <li>The {@link java.net.URL} object is used to establish an {@link
183java.net.HttpURLConnection}.</li>
184
185  <li>Once the connection has been established, the {@link
186java.net.HttpURLConnection} object fetches the web page content as an {@link
187java.io.InputStream}.</li>
188
189  <li>The {@link java.io.InputStream} is passed to the <code>readIt()</code>
190method, which converts the stream to a string.</li>
191
192  <li>Finally, the {@link android.os.AsyncTask}'s {@link
193android.os.AsyncTask#onPostExecute onPostExecute()} method displays the string
194in the main activity's UI.</li>
195
196</ol>
197
198 <h2 id="download">Connect and Download Data</h2>
199
200 <p>In your thread that performs your network transactions, you can use
201 {@link java.net.HttpURLConnection} to perform a {@code GET} and download your data.
202 After you call {@code connect()}, you can get an {@link java.io.InputStream} of the data
203 by calling {@code getInputStream()}.
204
205 <p>In the following snippet, the {@link android.os.AsyncTask#doInBackground
206doInBackground()} method calls the method <code>downloadUrl()</code>. The
207<code>downloadUrl()</code> method takes the given URL and uses it to connect to
208the network via {@link java.net.HttpURLConnection}. Once a connection has been
209established, the app uses the method <code>getInputStream()</code> to retrieve
210the data as an {@link java.io.InputStream}.</p>
211
212<pre>
213// Given a URL, establishes an HttpUrlConnection and retrieves
214// the web page content as a InputStream, which it returns as
215// a string.
216private String downloadUrl(String myurl) throws IOException {
217    InputStream is = null;
218    // Only display the first 500 characters of the retrieved
219    // web page content.
220    int len = 500;
221
222    try {
223        URL url = new URL(myurl);
224        HttpURLConnection conn = (HttpURLConnection) url.openConnection();
225        conn.setReadTimeout(10000 /* milliseconds */);
226        conn.setConnectTimeout(15000 /* milliseconds */);
227        conn.setRequestMethod("GET");
228        conn.setDoInput(true);
229        // Starts the query
230        conn.connect();
231        int response = conn.getResponseCode();
232        Log.d(DEBUG_TAG, "The response is: " + response);
233        is = conn.getInputStream();
234
235        // Convert the InputStream into a string
236        String contentAsString = readIt(is, len);
237        return contentAsString;
238
239    // Makes sure that the InputStream is closed after the app is
240    // finished using it.
241    } finally {
242        if (is != null) {
243            is.close();
244        }
245    }
246}</pre>
247
248<p>Note that the method <code>getResponseCode()</code> returns the connection's
249<a href="http://www.w3.org/Protocols/HTTP/HTRESP.html">status code</a>. This is
250a useful way of getting additional information about the connection. A status
251code of 200 indicates success.</p>
252
253<h2 id="stream">Convert the InputStream to a String</h2>
254
255<p>An {@link java.io.InputStream} is a readable source of bytes. Once you get an {@link java.io.InputStream},
256it's common to decode or convert it into a
257target data type. For example, if you were downloading image data, you might
258decode and display it like this:</p>
259
260<pre>InputStream is = null;
261...
262Bitmap bitmap = BitmapFactory.decodeStream(is);
263ImageView imageView = (ImageView) findViewById(R.id.image_view);
264imageView.setImageBitmap(bitmap);
265</pre>
266
267<p>In the example shown above, the {@link java.io.InputStream} represents the text of a
268web page. This is how the example converts the {@link java.io.InputStream} to
269a string so that the activity can display it in the UI:</p>
270
271<pre>// Reads an InputStream and converts it to a String.
272public String readIt(InputStream stream, int len) throws IOException, UnsupportedEncodingException {
273    Reader reader = null;
274    reader = new InputStreamReader(stream, "UTF-8");
275    char[] buffer = new char[len];
276    reader.read(buffer);
277    return new String(buffer);
278}</pre>
279
280
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