I would like to detect a specific USB is plugged in/removed in my application. For now, I can get the deviceName with this tutorial Working With USB Device Interfaces. But, how can I do the callback function of (deviceAdded)IOServiceMatchingCallBack in Swift.
I tried as follows, but I got an error: Cannot convert value of type '(UnsafePointer, iterator: io_iterator_t) -> ()' to expected argument type 'IOServiceMatchingCallback!'
func detectUSBEvent() {
var portIterator: io_iterator_t = 0
var kr: kern_return_t = KERN_FAILURE
let matchingDict = IOServiceMatching(kIOUSBDeviceClassName)
let vendorIDString = kUSBVendorID as CFStringRef!
let productIDString = kUSBProductID as CFStringRef!
CFDictionarySetValue(matchingDict, unsafeAddressOf(vendorIDString), unsafeAddressOf(VendorID))
CFDictionarySetValue(matchingDict, unsafeAddressOf(productIDString), unsafeAddressOf(ProductID))
// To set up asynchronous notifications, create a notification port and add its run loop event source to the program’s run loop
let gNotifyPort: IONotificationPortRef = IONotificationPortCreate(kIOMasterPortDefault)
let runLoopSource: Unmanaged<CFRunLoopSource>! = IONotificationPortGetRunLoopSource(gNotifyPort)
let gRunLoop: CFRunLoop! = CFRunLoopGetCurrent()
CFRunLoopAddSource(gRunLoop, runLoopSource.takeUnretainedValue(), kCFRunLoopDefaultMode)
// Notification of first match:
kr = IOServiceAddMatchingNotification(gNotifyPort, kIOFirstMatchNotification, matchingDict, deviceAdded, nil, &portIterator)
deviceAdded(nil, iterator: portIterator)
}
func deviceAdded(refCon: UnsafePointer<Void>, iterator: io_iterator_t) {
if let usbDevice: io_service_t = IOIteratorNext(iterator)
{
let name = String()
let cs = (name as NSString).UTF8String
let deviceName: UnsafeMutablePointer<Int8> = UnsafeMutablePointer<Int8>(cs)
let kr: kern_return_t = IORegistryEntryGetName(usbDevice, deviceName)
if kr == KERN_SUCCESS {
let deviceNameAsCFString = CFStringCreateWithCString(kCFAllocatorDefault, deviceName,
kCFStringEncodingASCII)
print(deviceNameAsCFString)
// if deviceNameAsCFString == XXX
// Do Something
}
}
}
Got this working thanks! Only problem was that I wasn't using the iterator in my callback function, so that function wasn't even getting called! Seems like strange behaviour to me, but that was my problem
Here's a Swift 3 version, using closures instead of global functions (a closure w/o a context can be bridged to a C function pointer), using GCD instead of Runloops (much nicer API), using callbacks and dispatches to inform about events and using real objects instead of static objects or singletons:
And here is some simple test code to test that class (set product and vendor ID as appropriate for your USB device):
It works after I put the callback function out the class. However, I don't know why.