Why is discovering peers for Android Wi-Fi Direct so unreliable?

怎甘沉沦 提交于 2019-12-18 11:14:05

问题


I am experimenting with Android's Wi-Fi Direct (or P2P if you prefer). I thought it was working very nicely between my two phones, but I realized I am encountering issues with the WifiP2pManager.discoverPeers() and/or WifiP2pManager.requestPeers(). I have observed these results:

  • No peers are discovered and no callbacks are fired for a good 1+ minute. I observe this through the Wi-Fi Direct portion of the Android Wi-Fi settings as well. This is odd because sometimes the discovery completes almost immediately.

  • I have a Roku device and phone B sitting next to phone A. While all are connected to my Wi-Fi, the Roku only appears ~10% of the time, while phones A and B appear to each other.

  • When I disconnected the two phones from all Wi-Fi and did another scan, the Roku showed up (!!!) but phone B did not until I had refreshed at least ten times.

My two phones are a Nexus 7 (running 4.4.4) and a Nexus 5 (running 5.0).


回答1:


I've been recently developing an application with a connection system based on WiFi Direct (with WiFi P2P Service Discovery) and the one thing I can most certainly say is that the whole thing is a huge pain in the ... . Mostly because of the lack of documentation but also because when developing a wifi-direct-based solution you need to pay attention to basically everything (especially to all callbacks from listeners) before making any method call.

Two most annoying things were I guess:

  • An undocumented UNKNOWN_ERROR (I think its int code was -3) that is being thrown in ActionListener onFailure method. It seems to be some sort of issue with the wifi daemon itself. The only thing that seems to work to prevent it from happening is resetting WiFi before you even start messing around with WiFi direct.

  • Something being in the wrong state for your method call - for example if WIFI_P2P_STATE_CHANGED_ACTION has not been received in your broadcast receiver with the WIFI_P2P_STATE_ENABLED or if 'your_device' has not received a proper status in the WIFI_P2P_THIS_DEVICE_CHANGED_ACTION. This usually results in onFailure call in one of your ActionListeners (with for example ERROR or BUSY failure reason).




回答2:


I was able to "solve" the problems of some phones not appearing by requesting peer discovery every 10 seconds. I think I was running into this because one phone was always the host and I didn't bother to have it discover peers (because it doesn't try to join them), and the Wifi Direct was going to sleep on the host phone. I don't do anything with the peer results, but it wakes up the Wifi Direct system. There's probably a better method to call but I'm not sure what it is. If I had to guess I'd say I'm wasting some battery life.




回答3:


From my experience it's reliable. After tons of trying, I got the robust workable flow like this:

...
wifiP2pManager.clearLocalServices(wifiP2pChannel, new WifiP2pManager.ActionListener() {
            @Override
            public void onSuccess() {
                HashMap<String, String> record = new HashMap<>();
                record.put("name", "Amos");
                WifiP2pDnsSdServiceInfo serviceInfo = WifiP2pDnsSdServiceInfo.newInstance(AppConfig.DNS_SD_SERVICE_NAME, AppConfig.DNS_SD_SERVICE_TYPE, record);
                wifiP2pManager.addLocalService(wifiP2pChannel, serviceInfo, new WifiP2pManager.ActionListener() {
                    @Override
                    public void onSuccess() {
                        wifiP2pManager.setDnsSdResponseListeners(wifiP2pChannel, WifiDirectFragment.this, WifiDirectFragment.this);
                        wifiP2pManager.clearServiceRequests(wifiP2pChannel, new WifiP2pManager.ActionListener() {
                            @Override
                            public void onSuccess() {
                                wifiP2pManager.addServiceRequest(wifiP2pChannel, WifiP2pDnsSdServiceRequest.newInstance(), new WifiP2pManager.ActionListener() {
                                    @Override
                                    public void onSuccess() {
                                        wifiP2pManager.discoverPeers(wifiP2pChannel, new WifiP2pManager.ActionListener() {
                                            @Override
                                            public void onSuccess() {
                                                wifiP2pManager.discoverServices(wifiP2pChannel, new WifiP2pManager.ActionListener() {
                                                    @Override
                                                    public void onSuccess() {
                                                        // this is my recursive discovery approach                                                            
                                                        handler.postDelayed(discoveryRunnable, AppConfig.DNS_SD_SERVICE_DISCOVERABLE_DURATION_S * 1000);
                                                    }

                                                    @Override
                                                    public void onFailure(int code) {
                                                    }
                                                });
                                            }

                                            @Override
                                            public void onFailure(int code) {
                                            }
                                        });
                                    }

                                    @Override
                                    public void onFailure(int code) {
                                    }
                                });
                            }

                            @Override
                            public void onFailure(int code) {
                            }
                        });
                    }

                    @Override
                    public void onFailure(int code) {
                    }
                });
            }

            @Override
            public void onFailure(int code) {
            }
        });



回答4:


I had a really big problem with establishing connection between devices:

  • first device turns on peer discovery
  • second device turns on peer discovery
  • one device tries to establish connection with the second one
  • sometimes it works, sometimes not (I would say 50/50)

I guess the issue was the group owner negotiation (I've tried change groupOwnerIntent param also to force who should be group owner, but it didn't helped).

So, what did I do?

I change flow to:

  • one device creates group (mManager.createGroup(...)), so this device is always a group owner
  • second devices connects with group owner
  • whooala, now is very rare to stuck on invited state.


来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/27476428/why-is-discovering-peers-for-android-wi-fi-direct-so-unreliable

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