I don't know if this is still an issue or not, but I found that using the connect
method in the reflection call works. Working off of the code that pmont used from the link in Lorelorelore's answer:
BluetoothAdapter mBluetoothAdapter = BluetoothAdapter.getDefaultAdapter();
Class<?> classBluetoothPan = null;
Constructor<?> BTPanCtor = null;
Object BTSrvInstance = null;
Method mBTPanConnect;
try {
classBluetoothPan = Class.forName("android.bluetooth.BluetoothPan");
mBTPanConnect = classBluetoothPan.getDeclaredMethod("connect", BluetoothDevice.class);
BTPanCtor = classBluetoothPan.getDeclaredConstructor(Context.class, BluetoothProfile.ServiceListener.class);
BTPanCtor.setAccessible(true);
BTSrvInstance = BTPanCtor.newInstance(myContext, new BTPanServiceListener(myContext));
} catch (ClassNotFoundException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
} catch (Exception e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
Set<BluetoothDevice> pairedDevices = mBluetoothAdapter.getBondedDevices();
// If there are paired devices
if (pairedDevices.size() > 0) {
// Loop through paired devices
for (BluetoothDevice device : pairedDevices) {
try{
mBTPanConnect.invoke(BTSrvInstance, device);
}
catch (Exception e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
Of course, this assumes that the bluetooth is enabled, and you only have one paired device. But enabling bluetooth is pretty straightforward using standard (not reflection) calls, and you can just check for the paired device that you want to connect to in the for
loop. Also, don't forget the BTPanServiceListener
class from the other answer as well.
Hope this helps.