How to get the status of bluetooth (ON/OFF) in iphone programmatically

Nilikh picture Nilikh · Feb 10, 2011 · Viewed 53.6k times · Source

I trying to get the Status of iPhone/iPod Bluetooth that whether it is ON or OFF programmatically. Is it possible using some Apple API or third party API.

Answer

BadPirate picture BadPirate · Mar 21, 2013

A little bit of research into Sam's answer that I thought I'd share You can do so without utilizing private API, but with a few caveats:

  • It will only work on iOS 5.0+
  • It will only work on devices that support the bluetooth LE spec (iPhone 4S+, 5th Generation iPod+, iPad 3rd Generation+)
  • Simply allocating the class will cause your application to ask permission to use the bluetooth stack from the user (may not be desired), and if they refuse, the only thing you'll see is CBCentralManagerStateUnauthorized iOS7+ Revision: Aforementioned strike-through can now be prevented, see comments below which point to this answer which explains you can set CoreBluetooth's CBCentralManagerOptionShowPowerAlertKey option to NO to prevent permissions prompt.
  • Retrieval of bluetooth state is async, and continuous. You will need to setup a delegate to get state changes, as checking the state of a freshly allocated bluetooth manager will return CBCentralManagerStateUnknown

That being said, this method does seem to provide real time updates of bluetooth stack state.

After including the CoreBluetooth framework,

#import <CoreBluetooth/CoreBluetooth.h>

These tests were easy to perform using:

- (void)detectBluetooth
{
    if(!self.bluetoothManager)
    {
        // Put on main queue so we can call UIAlertView from delegate callbacks.
        self.bluetoothManager = [[CBCentralManager alloc] initWithDelegate:self queue:dispatch_get_main_queue()];
    }
    [self centralManagerDidUpdateState:self.bluetoothManager]; // Show initial state
}

- (void)centralManagerDidUpdateState:(CBCentralManager *)central
{
    NSString *stateString = nil;
    switch(self.bluetoothManager.state)
    {
        case CBCentralManagerStateResetting: stateString = @"The connection with the system service was momentarily lost, update imminent."; break;
        case CBCentralManagerStateUnsupported: stateString = @"The platform doesn't support Bluetooth Low Energy."; break;
        case CBCentralManagerStateUnauthorized: stateString = @"The app is not authorized to use Bluetooth Low Energy."; break;
        case CBCentralManagerStatePoweredOff: stateString = @"Bluetooth is currently powered off."; break;
        case CBCentralManagerStatePoweredOn: stateString = @"Bluetooth is currently powered on and available to use."; break;
        default: stateString = @"State unknown, update imminent."; break;
    }
    UIAlertView *alert = [[UIAlertView alloc] initWithTitle:@"Bluetooth state"
                                                     message:stateString
                                                    delegate:nil
                                          cancelButtonTitle:@"ok" otherButtonTitles: nil];
    [alert show];
}