I need to implement a Mac OS X application. In my application I need to do two things:
- Execute / Open an appl开发者_如何学JAVAication when a particular type of USB device is connected to the system.
- Read the data from USB and upload it to a web server.
I do not have much experience in Mac OS X development. Can anyone please suggest the best documents to reach my goals?
You can use launchd. Try man launchd and man launchd.plist.
It seems that launchd can work with USB events, even though this feature is poorly documented. I found it on: man xpc_set_event_stream_handler
Here's an example. If you put the following into: ~/Library/LaunchAgents/com.example.plist
, your program should start when a USB device is connected.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE plist PUBLIC -//Apple Computer//DTD PLIST 1.0//EN http://www.apple.com/DTDs/PropertyList-1.0.dtd >
<plist version="1.0">
<dict>
<key>Label</key>
<string>com.example.program</string>
<key>ProgramArguments</key>
<array>
<string>/path/to/program</string>
</array>
<key>LaunchEvents</key>
<dict>
<key>com.apple.iokit.matching</key>
<dict>
<key>com.apple.device-attach</key>
<dict>
<key>idProduct</key>
<integer>1234</integer>
<key>idVendor</key>
<integer>1337</integer>
<key>IOProviderClass</key>
<string>IOUSBDevice</string>
<key>IOMatchLaunchStream</key>
<true/>
</dict>
</dict>
</dict>
</dict>
</plist>
Depending on the type of device you might able to set an application to open automatically via the iPhoto/Image Capture preferences. That will work only for a limited class of devices, for an application already present on the computer and will require changing the preferences on the computer manually.
In general, there's no way to automatically run arbitrary applications on CD/DVD/USB insert because it's a security problem.
Julien Pilet's answer worked for me. However, to get it to not constantly relaunch the app when the device is still connected when closing the app, I had to:
- call
xpc_set_event_stream_handler()
in my app delegateapplicationDidFinishLaunching
:
xpc_set_event_stream_handler("com.apple.iokit.matching", NULL, ^(xpc_object_t event) {
// Every event has the key XPC_EVENT_KEY_NAME set to a string that
// is the name you gave the event in your launchd.plist.
const char *name = xpc_dictionary_get_string(event, XPC_EVENT_KEY_NAME);
// IOKit events have the IORegistryEntryNumber as a payload.
uint64_t id = xpc_dictionary_get_uint64(event, "IOMatchLaunchServiceID");
// Reconstruct the node you were interested in here using the IOKit
// APIs.
NSLog(@"Received event: %s: %llu",name,id);
});
- add KeepAlive/false key/value pair to the plist
- add
IOMatchLaunchStream/true
key/value pair to thecom.apple.device-attach
dict in the plist. This is in addition to theIOMatchStream
key already there. Not sure why that has to be there, I found a reference to it here: http://asciiwwdc.com/2013/sessions/702
Also don't forget to register the plist with the system using
launchctl load <path to your plist>
Note that this seems to work, but I never get the NSLog message from the xpc stream handler.
It really depends on what sort of application you are looking at.
It does look like there is no way to do it in a similar fashion to udev for example.
Two possible solutions are:
- Write a custom wrapper driver for your device
- Use libusb and have a daemon to wait for certain device.
And in fact one could write a program with libusb which will handle this sort of tasks according to a given config file, that would be also cross-platform since libusb supports quite a few platforms.
You may be able to set Folder Actions to run a command on mount. This would assume that the device always mounts in the same place, i.e. /Volumes/My\ Device/ - if peripherals were added or removed in between mounts, the mount point may change. You can learn more about Folder Actions by right clicking a directory and clicking "Folder Actions Setup". The trick would be to make sure that the device always mounts in the same place.
Alternatively, you may be able to use launchd to run a command on mount. This link may help. Lingon is a great app to edit daemons.
Either way, you could use the Folder Action or daemon to call a simple script to grab the contents of the device and upload them to wherever you please.
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