问题
I'm using the iOS 7 Multipeer framework in my app but I'm experiencing a problem with devices disconnecting. If I open the app in two devices: device A and device B the two devices connect to each other automatically. However, after several seconds device A disconnects from device B. i.e. At first the connection is like this:
A ---> B
A <--- B
After several seconds:
A ---> B
A B
Device A maintains it's connection but device B get's a MCSessionStateNotConnected.
This means that A can send data to B but B can't reply. I tried to get around this by checking if the device is connected and if it's not, re-initiating the connection using:
[browser invitePeer:peerID toSession:_session withContext:Nil timeout:10];
But the didChangeState callback just get's called with MCSessionStateNotConnected.
Strangely if I send app A to the background, then re-open it, B reconnects to it and the connection is maintained.
The Multipeer API (and documentation) seems a bit sparse so I was assuming that it would just work. In this situation how should I re-connect the device?
回答1:
I was having the same problem, and it seems to have been related to my app browsing and advertising at the same time, and two invitations being sent/accepted. When I stopped doing this and let one peer defer to the other for invitations the devices stayed connected.
In my browser delegate I'm checking the hash value of the discovered peer's displayName
and only sending an invitation if my peer has a higher hash value:
Edit
As pointed out by @Masa the hash
value of an NSString
will be different on 32 and 64 bit devices, so it's safer to use the compare:
method on displayName
.
- (void)browser:(MCNearbyServiceBrowser *)browser foundPeer:(MCPeerID *)peerID withDiscoveryInfo:(NSDictionary *)info {
NSLog(@"Browser found peer ID %@",peerID.displayName);
//displayName is created with [[NSUUID UUID] UUIDString]
BOOL shouldInvite = ([_myPeerID.displayName compare:peerID.displayName]==NSOrderedDescending);
if (shouldInvite){
[browser invitePeer:peerID toSession:_session withContext:nil timeout:1.0];
}
else {
NSLog(@"Not inviting");
}
}
As you say, the documentation is sparse so who knows what Apple really wants us to do, but I've experimented with both sending and accepting invitations using a single session, and also creating a new session for each invitation accepted/sent, but this particular way of doing things has given me the most success.
回答2:
For anyone interested, I created MCSessionP2P, a demo app that illustrates the ad-hoc networking features of MCSession
. The app both advertises itself on the local network and programmatically connects to available peers, establishing a peer-to-peer network. Hat tip to @ChrisH for his technique of comparing hash values for inviting peers.
回答3:
I liked ChrisH's solution, which reveals the key insight that only one peer should connect to the other peer, not both. Mutual connection attempts results in mutual disconnection (though not that a single-sided connection actually is, counter-intuitively, a mutual connection in terms of status and communication, so that works fine).
However, I think a better approach than one peer inviting is for both peers to invite but only one peer to accept. I use this method now and it works great, because both peers have an opportunity to pass rich information to the other via the context
parameter of the invitation, as opposed to having to rely on scant information available in the foundPeer
delegate method.
Therefore, I recommend a solution like so:
- (void)browser:(MCNearbyServiceBrowser *)browser foundPeer:(MCPeerID *)peerID withDiscoveryInfo:(NSDictionary *)info
{
[self invitePeer:peerID];
}
- (void)advertiser:(MCNearbyServiceAdvertiser *)advertiser didReceiveInvitationFromPeer:(MCPeerID *)peerID withContext:(NSData *)context invitationHandler:(void (^)(BOOL accept, MCSession *session))invitationHandler
{
NSDictionary *hugePackageOfInformation = [NSKeyedUnarchiver unarchiveObjectWithData:context];
BOOL shouldAccept = ([hugePackageOfInformation.UUID.UUIDString compare:self.user.UUID.UUIDString] == NSOrderedDescending);
invitationHandler(shouldAccept && ![self isPeerConnected:peerID], [self openSession]);
}
回答4:
I have the same issue when devices trying to connect to each other at the same time and I don't know how to find a reason because we don't have any errors with MCSessionStateNotConnected.
We can use some crafty way to solve this issue: Put into txt records ( discovery info ) a time [[NSDate date] timeIntervalSince1970] when app started. Who started first - send invitation to others.
But I think it's not a right way ( if apps start at the same time, unlikely... :) ). We need to figure out the reason.
回答5:
This is the result of a bug, which I've reported to Apple. I've explained how to fix it in my response to another question: Why does my MCSession peer disconnect randomly?
I have not flagged these questions for merging, because while the underlying bug and solution are the same, the two questions describe different problems.
回答6:
Save the hash of the peer B. Using a timer check the state of the connection continuously if is not connected try to reconnect with each given period of time.
回答7:
According to apple document Choosing an inviter when using Multipeer Connectivity “In iOS 7, sending simultaneous invites can cause both invites to fail, leaving both peers unable to communicate with each other.”
But iOS 8 has fixed it.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/19469984/reconnecting-to-disconnected-peers