Is it possible to detect if the iPod Touch/iPhone has any headphones or other accessories connected to it?
I\'m building an app that requires a microphone, and need
In IOS 6 inputIsAvailable
is deprecated. In the future we need to use inputAvailable
:
BOOL audioHWAvailable = audioSession.inputAvailable;
To determine if the device has a built in microphone you can just go by [UIDevice currentDevice].model
to see if it's an iPhone or a 2nd generation iPod Touch. As far as a third-party microphone plugged into the dock connector, this is not possible in the current 2.2.1 SDK, but it may be in a later version :)
Here is the solution, you may like it or it is helpful to you.
Before using below method please write this two line also
UInt32 audioRouteOverride = kAudioSessionOverrideAudioRoute_None;
AudioSessionSetProperty (kAudioSessionProperty_OverrideAudioRoute,sizeof (audioRouteOverride),&audioRouteOverride);
- (void)isHeadsetPluggedIn {
UInt32 routeSize = sizeof (CFStringRef);
CFStringRef route;
AudioSessionGetProperty (kAudioSessionProperty_AudioRoute,
&routeSize,
&route);
//NSLog(@"Error >>>>>>>>>> :%@", error);
/* Known values of route:
* "Headset"
* "Headphone"
* "Speaker"
* "SpeakerAndMicrophone"
* "HeadphonesAndMicrophone"
* "HeadsetInOut"
* "ReceiverAndMicrophone"
* "Lineout"
*/
NSString* routeStr = (NSString*)route;
NSRange headsetRange = [routeStr rangeOfString : @"Headset"];
NSRange receiverRange = [routeStr rangeOfString : @"Receiver"];
if(headsetRange.location != NSNotFound) {
// Don't change the route if the headset is plugged in.
NSLog(@"headphone is plugged in ");
}
else if (receiverRange.location != NSNotFound) {
// Change to play on the speaker
NSLog(@"play on the speaker");
}
else {
NSLog(@"Unknown audio route.");
}
}
Finally found it - After initializing the Audio Session object, - AudioSessionInitialize() - you can make a call to AudioSessionGetProperty, and get the value of kAudioSessionProperty_AudioInputAvailable.
AudioSessionInitialize(NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL);
UInt32 propertySize, micConnected;
AudioSessionGetProperty(kAudioSessionProperty_AudioInputAvailable, &propertySize, &micConnected);
[self updateMicStatus:micConnected]; // user-created method
According to the docs for Audio Session Services, this should be used rather than using the device model (iPhone vs. iPod Touch) to determine if an audio input is available to use. You can also set up a callback function to monitor changes to this property via AudioSessionAddPropertyListener().
Not sure yet if this property also applies to devices connected via the Dock connector, but it appears to work for the headphone jack.
Or you could use:
if (![[AVAudioSession sharedInstance] inputIsAvailable]) {
// your code here for no audio input available
}