best way to send GPS coordinates to server? - iphone

Right first time use, be gentle.
Part of a year long college project, looking for help in the right direction.
Sending/receiving GPS coordinates in realtime(as near as possible) with iPhone 4's
Whats the best approach, was looking at GameKit Q&A here for communicating between phones but am i right in saying it works only on bt and wifi? No good to me iPhones will be out and about.
From what i know, Java RMI would fit this problem lovely but thats Java :-( Send the coordinates and then have a Server Callback to multiple phones.
A server would be nice in the middle
What is the best approach when dealing with iOS?
Cheers
extra edit:
each of the 20 devices have to know the location of all others. thats the start of my project, the sharing of all their gps locations but in real time, as near as. this problem is like having no wheels on my car its stopping me befor i get started.
but how to communicate between all devices is my problem for now

Not entirely certain what your trying to do, but the simplest way of storing something on a server would be a basic web request. (If you need more complexity, you can also use web services)
(You could possible dumb it down further with a html request, ie a get request: http://mydomain.com/page/default.aspx?gpsdata=blah&OtherData=blah)
Then to communicate from the server to the other iPhones, look into the Apple Push Notification services.
But depending on your project, maybe communicating with the server via web services may be an option also (that is, if communications occur with other phones only when the app is running).
Note, if you are not using a web server, then these suggestions will not be very useful or applicable, in that case, please explain a bit futher what technologies you want to use.

Related

How to create a Mac/PC server app that interacts with iPhone/iPad App?

Can someone please point me in the right direction to create a Mac/PC server app that runs in the background and connects to an iPad app over the local WiFi network?
No matter how I phrase a search on Google it just brings up various apps like Remote Mouse and whatnot and no tutorials or even a hint of where to start.
I just need to send simple commands from iPad to computer over local wifi. A point in the right direction and I can likely fill in the blanks.
Thank you.
Thomas
EDIT: I am using web languages for the iPad version that I will build as a native app using open source tools.
OK, then. It actually depends on what you really need. I made the assumption you need real-time and perhaps binary data transfer.
Your best bet is to write your server application using standard C or C++ so it compiles on both as simply as possible.
If you want to avoid all the burden of writing a protocol for service discovery or asking users to enter the ip address of your server you will use a mDNS implementation for your server and your iPhone app.
If I were you I would try bonjour: http://www.apple.com/support/bonjour/
on iPhone You could start here: http://developer.apple.com/library/mac/#documentation/Networking/Conceptual/NSNetServiceProgGuide/Articles/PublishingServices.html
Once you have your sockets you will have to implement a networking protocol between your server application and your iPhone app.
You will have to be careful about byte ordering and little subtle problems with latency, disconnections and other problems inherent to networking and WiFi.
In windows you will want to register your application as a service and in Mac OS X/UNIX you'll probably want to deamonize it.
Good luck!

iPhone best method to achieve device-to-device communication

What would be the best method to achieve realtime device to device communication within an application? I've been experimenting with the Apple Push Notification Service but find it spotty at best for realtime messaging. Is there a way to utilize sockets for this or am I just stuck into using the APNS?
If you are a beginner, use GameKit.
When you get sick of that, use AsyncSocket.
GameKit is so simple a child can use it; AsyncSocket is probably the most beautiful library in all of networking on any platforms - incredibly easy to use.
In both cases, you will first use Bonjour (two lines of code) to "find" the other device.
Here is the full explanation...
Tablet(iPad/Android)-Server Communication Protocol
Critical secret knowledge about GK you will need...
Client/Server GKSessions
Another quick summary ...
Most effective way to do networking on Mac/iPhone?
For the record, APNS has absolutely nothing whatsoever to do with what you are trying to achieve! Utterly forget about APNS.
WHAT IS THE RADIUS? -----------------------***
Please note that BLUETOOTH ONLY WORKS over about twenty feet. (Ten meters.)
Please note that for a local WiFi connection, you must both be connected to the same local WiFi hub. WiFi hubs have a range of perhaps 20 meters only, say one house and the next house only (depending on how thick the walls are).
Please note that: IT IS NOT PHYSICALLY POSSIBLE TO CONNECT TWO COMPUTERS (OF ANY TYPE) OVER A COUPLE OF MILES.
There is no such networking device. (You could perhaps build one using say "ham radio" but to be clear it would be a completely novel, new research project that would take a large company years to complete.)
There is absolutely nothing that works like that - I'm sorry to tell you the bad news.
The ONLY two possibilties are Bluetooth and WiFi, and they work only over about 20 and 30 feet respectively.
So how do you connect two remote computers like that? The answer is, via the internet.
The only way to do it is with an internet connection. There is no 'direct' connection possible with any existing technology.
If you need to know more about how to connect two computers (say two iPhones) using the internet, you will probably have to ask a new question! You will be pleased to know it is very easy and will cause you little trouble.
Note that both iPhones MUST have a good solid internet connection. If they are more than say 30 feet away from each other, the ONLY way to connect to iPhones is via the internet. THey must each have a good internet connection, or there is no possibility.
I hope this helps clarify things!
You can use GameKit's peer to peer services (bluetooth)
Gamekit how to do p2p wifi connection in iphone
Check out Apples GameKit framework GameKit Or a sockets based networking look at AsyncSocket which also includes an iPhone demo.

iphone app communication without using webservices

I want to send some Text plus a image from one iphone application to other iphone app but restriction is I should not use a web server in between communication,Is there any way to fulfill it ?
Details: There are two independent devices and could be far enough say out of network. My requirement one app adds some text with a image and sends it to another iphone which can be at any long distance , and the app installed in another iphone will read that info and image into itself.
Actually there is a solution that meets your needs — and that fits to bbums answer:
Create a HTTP-Server on the iPhone, using cocoahttpserver. than you will ask some webservice like whatismyip.com for your public ip. with this your iPhone can be connected worldwide.
But very likely ur wifi-network is not forwarding your port to the iPhone. Ash.
And even if: Now it gets difficult. How to publish your ip from one phone to the other? hmmm... — I got it: I will exchange the information in a centralized space! In the web!
... wait — that would be a Webserver.
You see: Without any kind of server in the Web the users would need to exchange ip manually and have full admin power and knowledge about the local network.
So IMHO bbums answer is the only way to go.
PS: I am working with http server running on iPhones. In local network that works great, especially with bonjour. And you can use them over distance network — but only with reconfiguration of your router — something you shouldn't force your user to do
There is far from enough information to provide a specific answer.
two apps on two different devices?
are the two devices on the same network?
are the two devices both on WiFi?
do you need the user to receive a notification or something if the app isn't running?
If on same device, you can define a custom URL handler in the destination app and then openURL: in the source app to pass the data over. Encode your image and text into the URL, but be careful of size limitations.
If on different devices, there are many possible solutions, but answering the above questions will be critical to actually knowing what solution is appropriate.
Given your comment -- two apps, different devices, arbitrary networks -- then you are going to have to have some kind of server in between. Note that the recently added Game Center does have the ability to rendezvous two users, but it has a very particular user experience that may not be appropriate to your needs.
I would suggest that you investigate using push notifications to notify the receiving user of the availability of content. As for moving the content between, no direct connection is possible and you will have to have some kind of store-and-forward server in between. And, yes, a web server is going to be the easiest possible solution simply because HTTP is ubiquitous these days.
If there's no network of any kind available, but both parties have amateur radio licenses, then hooking the two devices up to HF packet radios might work.
THIS is super EASY.
I would code up some software that can turn data into modem signal, like the good old dial up modem. The device would actually make those annoying buzzing sounds.
You get the phone number for your friends nearest landline and call him.
He places his iPhone near the phones receiver in listen mode and you connect to his phone using your audible modem.
Bingo, via the power of sounds you have sent data which is decoded on his device and all for the very cheap price of a phone call, there are pretty cheap these days especially if you use Skype.
Easy Way (relatively speaking)
A way two apps on different networks can communicate without setting up a web server of some sort is as follows.
Use an existing third party storage system like DropBox.
Each app would need the login and password for your DropBox. Then both apps can read and write files that the other app can see.
An existing app that does this is a shopping list app called ShopShop.
The app on my phone and my wife's phone both link to the same DropBox account and the app keeps the shopping list synced up when one of us adds something to the list.

Sending data between OSX and iPhones/iPads

I am wondering how I can send data between a machine and a mobile device. I know about the game kit an have read a bit about bonjour (but don't know to much about it), but would like to know some expert thoughts on what the best way is.
What I basically want to build is a one way traffic application that sends data from OSX to the mobile device (iPhone, iPod touch or iPad). The data send is either pictures, text (of a certain size and position ect) or video. The mobile device just has to receive this data and display it... nothing more.
My guess is that a WiFi solution would be best.
How could I best do this? Are there any tutorials that might help me putting this together?
Thanks in advance!
Best regards,
Paul Peelen
As no reply yet . . .
Bonjour is more focused on LAN networks, so would restrict you to WiFi.
It's also more of a service discovery standard - your Mac app would advertise the service on the LAN, and clients could see it - but your actual app communications will run on a different TCP socket, using whatever protocol is appropriate.
This linked answer may be helpful (although you will want CFNetwork in reverse - pushing from Mac to phone)
[iPhone]: How send output stream via wireless network?
For video you are probably better off looking for higher level frameworks (i.e. the AV ones).
Without knowing the full details of what you want to do, I wonder if rather than pushing data to the iPhone, the best thing would be to send a lightweight notification to the iPhone (AMQP, XMPP, or similar protocol) passing a URL back to the resource on the Mac - that way you could use standard HTTP GET for images, video, etc, on the iPhone side, throw the URL at a webkit view to display - and on your Mac side you could then use an off-the-shelf web server (Apache, or an embedded HTTP server within your code).

How to write an iphone application to control a device that exposes a telnet api

I have to write an iphone application that controls a device. This device exposes a telnet based interface. The application should ideally have user access control and customizability for each user.
I was thinking of writing C++ classes that would communicate with the device using sockets. This functionality can then be exposed through web-services that can be called by the iphone application.
However as i looked into it deeper, the api allows you to register for events using telnet and then you can receive notification when those events occur. That kinda put a spanner in the works for me. I for one dont know a "push" scenario can work with webservices.
First off i have never programmed for the iphone so far. So i am not really sure what can be done. So i was thinking if instead of having a webserver to go through, why not have the application independently running on the iphone, directly communicating with the device using sockets. The question though is, is that possible and second i am thinking it would raise a security aspect. First we could control security as everything was going through our central server. Is there a way to handle security (in the sense who has access to the device) without having a central server.
I am sorry that this seems like an unorganized post, but iam trying to brainstorm here.
Looking forward to hear your opinions.
Look up the NSPort and NSStream classes.
I'm looking to do this same thing. Have a program running on one computer and want to send/receive telnet commands from iOS. Built one for Android using the Commons library- which has a telnet client API, but don't know the best way to do it in Objective-C (without writing a telnet client library).
As a start, however, I found the OFC library on Google Code. Looks like something of a Commons-like feel, and there seems to be a telnet client. You might take a look at that.