Question

How do you check if you can connect to the internet via java? One way would be:

final URL url = new URL("http://www.google.com");
final URLConnection conn = url.openConnection();
... if we got here, we should have net ...

But is there something more appropriate to perform that task, especially if you need to do consecutive checks very often and a loss of internet connection is highly probable?

Was it helpful?

Solution

You should connect to the place that your actual application needs. Otherwise you're testing whether you have a connection to somewhere irrelevant (Google in this case).

In particular, if you're trying to talk to a web service, and if you're in control of the web service, it would be a good idea to have some sort of cheap "get the status" web method. That way you have a much better idea of whether your "real" call is likely to work.

In other cases, just opening a connection to a port that should be open may be enough - or sending a ping. InetAddress.isReachable may well be an appropriate API for your needs here.

OTHER TIPS

The code you basically provided, plus a call to connect should be sufficient. So yeah, it could be that just Google's not available but some other site you need to contact is on but how likely is that? Also, this code should only execute when you actually fail to access your external resource (in a catch block to try and figure out what the cause of the failure was) so I'd say that if both your external resource of interest and Google are not available chances are you have a net connectivity problem.

private static boolean netIsAvailable() {
    try {
        final URL url = new URL("http://www.google.com");
        final URLConnection conn = url.openConnection();
        conn.connect();
        conn.getInputStream().close();
        return true;
    } catch (MalformedURLException e) {
        throw new RuntimeException(e);
    } catch (IOException e) {
        return false;
    }
}

People have suggested using INetAddress.isReachable. The problem is that some sites configure their firewalls to block ICMP Ping messages. So a "ping" might fail even though the web service is accessible.

And of course, the reverse is true as well. A host may respond to a ping even though the webserver is down.

And of course, a machine may be unable to connect directly to certain (or all) web servers due to local firewall restrictions.

The fundamental problem is that "can connect to the internet" is an ill-defined question, and this kind of thing is difficult to test without:

  1. information on the user's machine and "local" networking environment, and
  2. information on what the app needs to access.

So generally, the simplest solution is for an app to just try to access whatever it needs to access, and fall back on human intelligence to do the diagnosis.

If you're on java 6 can use NetworkInterface to check for available network interfaces. I.e. something like this:

Enumeration<NetworkInterface> interfaces = NetworkInterface.getNetworkInterfaces();
while (interfaces.hasMoreElements()) {
  NetworkInterface interf = interfaces.nextElement();
  if (interf.isUp() && !interf.isLoopback())
    return true;
}

Haven't tried it myself, yet.

This code:

"127.0.0.1".equals(InetAddress.getLocalHost().getHostAddress().toString());

Returns - to me - true if offline, and false, otherwise. (well, I don't know if this true to all computers).

This works much faster than the other approaches, up here.


EDIT: I found this only working, if the "flip switch" (on a laptop), or some other system-defined option, for the internet connection, is off. That's, the system itself knows not to look for any IP addresses.

This code should do the job reliably.

Note that when using the try-with-resources statement we don't need to close the resources.

import java.io.IOException;
import java.net.InetSocketAddress;
import java.net.Socket;
import java.net.UnknownHostException;

public class InternetAvailabilityChecker
{
    public static boolean isInternetAvailable() throws IOException
    {
        return isHostAvailable("google.com") || isHostAvailable("amazon.com")
                || isHostAvailable("facebook.com")|| isHostAvailable("apple.com");
    }

    private static boolean isHostAvailable(String hostName) throws IOException
    {
        try(Socket socket = new Socket())
        {
            int port = 80;
            InetSocketAddress socketAddress = new InetSocketAddress(hostName, port);
            socket.connect(socketAddress, 3000);

            return true;
        }
        catch(UnknownHostException unknownHost)
        {
            return false;
        }
    }
}

I usually break it down into three steps.

  1. I first see if I can resolve the domain name to an IP address.
  2. I then try to connect via TCP (port 80 and/or 443) and close gracefully.
  3. Finally, I'll issue an HTTP request and check for a 200 response back.

If it fails at any point, I provide the appropriate error message to the user.

URL url=new URL("http://[any domain]");
URLConnection con=url.openConnection();

/*now errors WILL arise here, i hav tried myself and it always shows "connected" so we'll open an InputStream on the connection, this way we know for sure that we're connected to d internet */

/* Get input stream */
con.getInputStream();

Put the above statements in try catch blocks and if an exception in caught means that there's no internet connection established. :-)

The code using NetworkInterface to wait for the network worked for me until I switched from fixed network address to DHCP. A slight enhancement makes it work also with DHCP:

Enumeration<NetworkInterface> interfaces = NetworkInterface.getNetworkInterfaces();
while (interfaces.hasMoreElements()) {
    NetworkInterface interf = interfaces.nextElement();
    if (interf.isUp() && !interf.isLoopback()) {
    List<InterfaceAddress> adrs = interf.getInterfaceAddresses();
    for (Iterator<InterfaceAddress> iter = adrs.iterator(); iter.hasNext();) {
        InterfaceAddress adr = iter.next();
        InetAddress inadr = adr.getAddress();
        if (inadr instanceof Inet4Address) return true;
            }
    }
}

This works for Java 7 in openSuse 13.1 for IPv4 network. The problem with the original code is that although the interface was up after resuming from suspend, an IPv4 network address was not yet assigned. After waiting for this assignment, the program can connect to servers. But I have no idea what to do in case of IPv6.

InetAddress.isReachable sometime return false if internet connection exist.

An alternative method to check internet availability in java is : This function make a real ICMP ECHO ping.

public static boolean isReachableByPing(String host) {
     try{
                String cmd = "";
                if(System.getProperty("os.name").startsWith("Windows")) {   
                        // For Windows
                        cmd = "ping -n 1 " + host;
                } else {
                        // For Linux and OSX
                        cmd = "ping -c 1 " + host;
                }

                Process myProcess = Runtime.getRuntime().exec(cmd);
                myProcess.waitFor();

                if(myProcess.exitValue() == 0) {

                        return true;
                } else {

                        return false;
                }

        } catch( Exception e ) {

                e.printStackTrace();
                return false;
        }
}

1) Figure out where your application needs to be connecting to.

2) Set up a worker process to check InetAddress.isReachable to monitor the connection to that address.

This code is contained within a jUnit test class I use to test if a connection is available. I always receive a connection, but if you check the content length it should be -1 if not known :

  try {
    URL url = new URL("http://www.google.com");
    URLConnection connection = url.openConnection();

    if(connection.getContentLength() == -1){
          fail("Failed to verify connection");
    }
  } 
  catch (IOException e) {
      fail("Failed to open a connection");
      e.printStackTrace();
  }
public boolean checkInternetConnection()
{
     boolean status = false;
     Socket sock = new Socket();
     InetSocketAddress address = new InetSocketAddress("www.google.com", 80);

     try
     {
        sock.connect(address, 3000);
        if(sock.isConnected()) status = true;
     }
     catch(Exception e)
     {
         status = false;       
     }
     finally
     {
        try
         {
            sock.close();
         }
         catch(Exception e){}
     }

     return status;
}

There is also a gradle option --offline which maybe results in the behavior you want.

The following piece of code allows us to get the status of the network on our Android device

public class MainActivity extends AppCompatActivity {
        @Override
        protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
            super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
            setContentView(R.layout.activity_main);
            TextView mtv=findViewById(R.id.textv);
            ConnectivityManager connectivityManager=
                  (ConnectivityManager) this.getSystemService(Context.CONNECTIVITY_SERVICE);
            if (Build.VERSION.SDK_INT >= Build.VERSION_CODES.M) {
                if(((Network)connectivityManager.getActiveNetwork())!=null)
                    mtv.setText("true");
                else
                    mtv.setText("fasle");
            }
        }
    }
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