This is for the Verizon LTE version of the Samsung Galaxy Nexus.
I am tasked with writing a tiny app that will effectively disable/enable 4G capability. This can be done manually via settings > mobile network > network mode
and choosing either LTE/CDMA
(4g enabled) or CDMA
(3g only).
I have not tried anything yet because Android development isn't my strong suit. I am looking for guidance... examples, code samples etc. I am assuming this should almost be a one-liner, but it has been my experience that with Android development nothing is as simple as it appears.
Any help will be greatly appreciated.
There is a preference in the Settings.Secure class that is hidden from the SDK:
/**
* The preferred network mode 7 = Global
* 6 = EvDo only
* 5 = CDMA w/o EvDo
* 4 = CDMA / EvDo auto
* 3 = GSM / WCDMA auto
* 2 = WCDMA only
* 1 = GSM only
* 0 = GSM / WCDMA preferred
* @hide
*/
public static final String PREFERRED_NETWORK_MODE =
"preferred_network_mode";
You could use Reflection on this or just localize the constant to your project. The problem with this is that you cannot change the value of this setting (as with all secure settings), you can only read it. The aforementioned values are not the only possible ones, there are actually a few more located in com.android.internal.telephony.RILConstants, which is again hidden from the SDK and would require Reflection to access.
There is another hidden method in TelephonyManager, but again it is read only there is no other method for setting this constant. This would tell you exactly what you want to know, whether the device is set to "LTE/ CDMA" (LTE_ON_CDMA_TRUE) or "CDMA only" (LTE_ON_CDMA_FALSE):
/**
* Return if the current radio is LTE on CDMA. This
* is a tri-state return value as for a period of time
* the mode may be unknown.
*
* @return {@link Phone#LTE_ON_CDMA_UNKNOWN}, {@link Phone#LTE_ON_CDMA_FALSE}
* or {@link Phone#LTE_ON_CDMA_TRUE}
*
* @hide
*/
public int getLteOnCdmaMode() {
try {
return getITelephony().getLteOnCdmaMode();
} catch (RemoteException ex) {
// Assume no ICC card if remote exception which shouldn't happen
return Phone.LTE_ON_CDMA_UNKNOWN;
} catch (NullPointerException ex) {
// This could happen before phone restarts due to crashing
return Phone.LTE_ON_CDMA_UNKNOWN;
}
}
From my research you could not make such an application without root access and using something like setprop
from the command line, but even then you may need to restart the entire Telephony process in order for this setting to take effect.
Finally, if you are still interested see com.android.phone.Settings to see how the system handles this toggle. It is rather elaborate, and as I mentioned would require permissions that a normal Android application would not be granted.