Reputation: 525
i am working on an android application where i need to play find the connection's bandwidth at run time. i found out a solution on stack overflow itself saying that i can download a file from server and then by calculating size vs time , i can get the speed of connection.
Check the bandwidth rate in Android
Is this the best way (only way) to get accurate results ? Thanks for sharing knowledge.
Upvotes: 2
Views: 3635
Reputation: 2839
Facebook released a library for this: You can try this
https://github.com/facebook/network-connection-class
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 7214
You can't just query for this information. Your Internet speed is determined and controlled by your ISP
, not by your network interface or router.
So the only way you can get your (current) connection speed is by downloading a file from a close enough location and timing how long it takes to retrieve the file. For example:
static final String FILE_URL = "http://www.example.com/speedtest/file.bin";
static final long FILE_SIZE = 5 * 1024 * 8; // 5MB in Kilobits
long mStart, mEnd;
Context mContext;
URL mUrl = new URL(FILE_URL);
HttpURLConnection mCon = (HttpURLConnection)mUrl.openConnection();
mCon.setChunkedStreamingMode(0);
if(mCon.getResponseCode() == HttpURLConnection.HTTP_OK) {
mStart = new Date().getTime();
InputStream input = mCon.getInputStream();
File f = new File(mContext.getDir("temp", Context.MODE_PRIVATE), "file.bin");
FileOutputStream fo = new FileOutputStream(f);
int read_len = 0;
while((read_len = input.read(buffer)) > 0) {
fo.write(buffer, 0, read_len);
}
fo.close();
mEnd = new Date().getTime();
mCon.disconnect();
return FILE_SIZE / ((mEnd - mStart) / 1000);
}
This code, when sightly modified (you need mContext
to be a valid context) and executed from inside an AsyncTask
or a worker thread, will download a remote file and return the speed in which the file was downloaded in Kbps.
Upvotes: 4