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@exodus/netinfo
Advanced tools
@react-native-community/netinfoReact Native Network Info API for Android & iOS. It allows you to get information on:
Install the library using either Yarn:
yarn add @react-native-community/netinfo
or npm:
npm install --save @react-native-community/netinfo
You then need to link the native parts of the library for the platforms you are using. The easiest way to link the library is using the CLI tool by running this command from the root of your project:
react-native link @react-native-community/netinfo
If you can't or don't want to use the CLI tool, you can also manually link the library using the instructions below (click on the arrow to show them):
Either follow the instructions in the React Native documentation to manually link the framework or link using Cocoapods by adding this to your Podfile:
pod 'react-native-netinfo', :path => '../node_modules/@react-native-community/netinfo'
Make the following changes:
android/settings.gradleinclude ':react-native-community-netinfo'
project(':react-native-community-netinfo').projectDir = new File(rootProject.projectDir, '../node_modules/@react-native-community/netinfo/android')
android/app/build.gradledependencies {
...
implementation project(':react-native-community-netinfo')
}
android/app/src/main/.../MainApplication.javaOn top, where imports are:
import com.reactnativecommunity.netinfo.NetInfoPackage;
Add the RNLocationPackage class to your list of exported packages.
@Override
protected List<ReactPackage> getPackages() {
return Arrays.asList(
new MainReactPackage(),
new NetInfoPackage()
);
}
react-native moduleThis module was created when the NetInfo was split out from the core of React Native. To migrate to this module you need to follow the installation instructions above and then change you imports from:
import { NetInfo } from "react-native";
to:
import NetInfo from "@react-native-community/netinfo";
Start by importing the library:
import NetInfo from "@react-native-community/netinfo";
Returns a promise that resolves to an object with type and effectiveType keys whose values are a ConnectionType and an EffectiveConnectionType), respectively.
NetInfo.getConnectionInfo().then(connectionInfo => {
console.log("Connection type", connectionInfo.type);
console.log("Connection effective type", connectionInfo.effectiveType);
});
ConnectionTypeCross platform values:
none - Device is offlinewifi - Device is online and connected via wifi, or is the iOS simulatorcellular - Device is connected via Edge, 3G, WiMax, or LTEunknown - Error case and the network status is unknownAndroid-only values:
bluetooth - Device is connected via Bluetoothethernet - Device is connected via Ethernetwimax - Device is connected via WiMAXEffectiveConnectionTypeCross platform values:
2g3g4gunknownSubscribe to connection information. The callback is called whenever the connection status changes. The returned object shape is the same as getConnectionInfo above.
const listener = connectionInfo => {
console.log("Connection type", connectionInfo.type);
console.log("Connection effective type", connectionInfo.effectiveType);
};
// Subscribe
const subscription = NetInfo.addEventListener('connectionChange', listener);
// Unsubscribe through remove
subscription.remove();
// Unsubscribe through event name
NetInfo.removeEventListener('connectionChange', listener);
Returns a promise that resolves to a boolean which says if there is an active connection.
Note: This only says if a device has an active connection, not that it is able to reach the internet.
Getting the connection status once:
NetInfo.isConnected.fetch().then(isConnected => {
console.log("Is connected", isConnected);
});
Or subscribing to changes:
const listener = isConnected => {
console.log("Is connected", isConnected);
};
// Subscribe
const subscription = NetInfo.isConnected.addEventListener('connectionChange', listener);
// Unsubscribe through remove
subscription.remove();
// Unsubscribe through event name
NetInfo.isConnected.removeEventListener('connectionChange', listener);
Detect if the current active connection is metered or not. A network is classified as metered when the user is sensitive to heavy data usage on that connection due to monetary costs, data limitations or battery/performance issues.
NetInfo.isConnectionExpensive().then(isConnectionExpensive => {
console.log("Is connection expensive", isConnectionExpensive);
});
Please see the contributing guide.
The library is released under the MIT license. For more information see LICENSE.
FAQs
React Native Network Info API for iOS & Android
The npm package @exodus/netinfo receives a total of 1,525 weekly downloads. As such, @exodus/netinfo popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @exodus/netinfo demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 36 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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