Detecting the iPhone's Ring / Silent / Mute switch using AVAudioPlayer not working?

taber picture taber · Aug 1, 2011 · Viewed 31.9k times · Source

I've tried using these methods in an attempt to detect that the Ring/Silent switch is active or not:

How to programmatically sense the iPhone mute switch?

AVAudioSession category not working as documentation dictates

But on my iPhone 4, the "state" value is always "Speaker" (and the length value returned by CFStringGetLength(state) is always 7). Has anyone used this method successfully? If so, on what kind of device and SDK version?

I'm calling it like so:


- (BOOL)deviceIsSilenced {
    CFStringRef state;
    UInt32 propertySize = sizeof(CFStringRef);
    OSStatus audioStatus = AudioSessionGetProperty(kAudioSessionProperty_AudioRoute, &propertySize;, &state;);
    if (audioStatus == kAudioSessionNoError) {
        NSLog(@"audio route: %@", state) // "Speaker" regardless of silent switch setting, but "Headphone" when my headphones are plugged in
        return (CFStringGetLength(state) <= 0);
    }
    return NO;
}

-(BOOL)application:(UIApplication *)application didFinishLaunchingWithOptions:(NSDictionary *)launchOptions {

    AVAudioSession *audioSession = [AVAudioSession sharedInstance];
    audioSession.delegate = self;
    [audioSession setCategory:AVAudioSessionCategoryAmbient error:nil];
    [audioSession setActive:YES error:nil];
    NSLog(@"muted? %i", [self deviceIsSilenced]);
    ...
}

I was thinking maybe some other (more accurate) kAudioSessionProperty event is fired when the physical switch on the phone is ... switched. Anyone have any ideas?

By the way, I'm using the AVAudioSessionCategoryAmbient category with my [AVAudioSession sharedInstance].

Update: I've also tried using different audio categories, and a handful of other audio session properties, none seem to fire when muting/unmuting the switch. :(

Jan. 1, 2014 Update: It's a bit of a hack, and I encountered a crash while multitasking w/ it on my iPhone 5S, but the SoundSwitch library linked in the new accepted answer is the way to go if you want to detect the silent switch. It even works in iOS 7.

Answer

taber picture taber · Nov 4, 2011

Well I found the answer thanks to someone from the Developer Forums, and you guys aren't gonna like it!

I've had a response from Apple on this.

They've said they don't and never have provided a method for detecting hardware mute switch and don't intend to do so.

:(

IMO there is definitely value in detecting the silent switch and notifying the user in case they've forgotten it was on... I've had people complain that they don't have any sound and the silent switch was the reason! Oh well.

PS: If you would like Apple to add this feature (and of course you do!) please file a new "Enhancement" bug report for "iPhone SDK" at http://bugreport.apple.com/

Update: While there is still no official way to check the status of the mute switch, there's a workaround/library called "SoundSwitch" that seems to do the trick. Check out the new accepted answer for the link.