Introduction

Starting with Android 2.3, the platform includes an NFC stack and framework API that allows you to read/write to NDEF (NFC Forum Data format) tags. For Android smartphones, that means the requirement is to be running at least Android 2.3 and have a NFC chip on the phone. For iOS, we’ll have to see if the rumors are true that the iPhone 5 is NFC-enabled :).

The only resource I used was the 2011 Google I/O NFC Talk:

and the Sticky Notes demo source code from the NFC talk above.

Let’s pretend that you are an engineer at Facebook working on the Android app, when suddenly the PM tells you that they want to integrate NFC into the Facebook app. Some basic functionality that they want implemented to get started with is to be able to add friends, and check in to places instantly via NFC. This would be a simple way to get started..

(there is no Facebook for Android source code here, I’m writing this tutorial as if we were writing for the app)

P2P Data Transfer – Add Friends Example

Two NFC-enabled devices have the ability to transfer data to each other simultaneously. For example, two people who just met with NFC-enabled phones can quickly touch their phones together to automatically add each other as friends on Facebook.

To begin, both phones have to be running the same Activity in the foreground in order to work. Let’s call this Activity ‘NfcAddFriendsActivity’.

In NfcAddFriendsActivity’s onCreate method, we have the following code:

This sets up the different intents that are needed in order for p2p to work. mNfcPendingIntent is a generic PendingIntent that will be delivered to this activity, Android fills the intent later with the details from the discovered tag before sending it to this activity. The nDefDetected IntentFilter is set to filter for the intent NfcAdapter.ACTION_NDEF_DISCOVERED with the mime type “text/plain”. So there will be a dispatch to the foreground Activity when Android receives an intent matching the IntentFilter we just created.

The next step is to enable pushing NDEF messages and receiving NDEF messages. That means in our onResume method, we call enableNdefExchangeMode which looks like:

These method calls are what allows our device to initiate p2p communiation via NFC. NfcUtils.getUidAsNdef is the method that creates a NDEF message with mime type “text/plain” with the user’s UID as the payload. enableForegroundNdefPush will push this message to the other device. enableForegroundDispatch will set up the listener for the intent that we are filtering for such that when it detects an intent matching the intent filter, it calls our activity’s onNewIntent method:

Here, it parses the received NDEF message and gets the payload which should be the other user’s UID. Then I call fireFriendRequest which is a method that we can assume sends a friend request to the UID that was given.

NfcUtils.getNdefMessages is below, exactly the same as the Sticky Notes demo:

Writing to a NFC Tag – Checking into Places Example

Let’s create a way for people to check in to places simply by tapping on a NFC tag. To start, we need to write some data onto a NFC tag, such that when the user taps on the tag, an Activity will launch based on the type of data stored on the tag. Well, each Facebook “Place” has an id associated with it, so lets write those ids onto NFC tags such that when a user taps on the tag, we can launch the correct Activity, passing the id as a parameter.

Lets assume you have a list of Facebook Places, and when the user clicks on a Place, we prompt them to touch the phone to the tag to write that corresponding Place id onto the tag. So, when the user taps on a place, onListItemClick is called and this is what happens:

I hold the placeid in placeidToWrite , and call enableTagWriteMode . An alert dialog pops up prompting the user to tap the phone to the tag to write. enableTagWriteMode below:

I create a new IntentFilter for the intent NFCAdapter.ACTION_TAG_DISCOVERED , which is the intent to start an Activity when a NFC tag is discovered. Then, like in the adding friends example, enableForegroundDispatch is called to dispatch a discovered tag to the foreground activity. Once this is all set up, and the user taps the phone onto a tag, the ACTION_TAG_DISCOVERED intent is detected and onNewIntent is called:

NfcUtils.getPlaceidAsNdef takes the placeid and creates a NDEF message with mimetype “application/vnd.facebook.places”, which is a custom and vendor-specific mimetype that I made up to distinguish the different NFC tags (places, url, pages) for Facebook. That way, when the phone reads a NFC tag, it knows which Activity to launch (I detect mimetype “application/vnd.fb.places” – I should launch this specific Activity from Facebook).

NfcUtils is my handy utility class for all things NFC. NfcUtils.getPlaceidAsNdef looks like:

Once you construct the NDEF message, you need to actually write it to the tag. NfcUtils.writeTag looks like:

And that’s how you write to a tag. Now, any person with an Android NFC-enabled phone with this build of Facebook for Android would just have to touch their phone onto the sticker (doesn’t need Facebook to be in the foreground), and wham, it takes you straight to the checkin activity with the place already set.

Reading from a NFC tag – Checking into Places Example

Now, we’ll talk about how the phone reads the tag and launch the appropriate Activity.

In the AndroidManifest, we need to write intent-filters that captures the different intents we created with our examples above. Such that when the Android phone receives the intent, it knows where to pass it along. For checking in, we have an Activity called, lets say, CheckInActivity. Within the activity, I am going to write an intent-filter that matches the exact intent I created in the NfcWriteCheckinActivity.

This is a snippet of the AndroidManifest for the app:

Notice the exact specification of the mimetype, which is the custom vendor mimetype that I created for checking in to places. That way, I can have one application, like Facebook, pass different intents to different Activities within Facebook.

Within CheckInActivity, it is fairly simple to extract the placeid and open the checkin activity. You do it in the onResume method of CheckInActivity:

Note: The user ID and the place ID are all written and transmitted in plaintext with no authentication or encryption. FWIW, that may or may not be acceptable for some apps. I haven’t looked into the security implications on NFC, but if you are passing confidential data, you will have to find a way to encrypt the data before writing, verifying the integrity of the data when receiving, and authenticating the entity that sent the data. Since this was a personal hackathon project, I did not implement any security features.

Background

Last semester, I was in IEOR 171 – Technology Leadership which is a course where you form small groups to hypothesize and analyze an industry change in the next ten years. During the beginning of the semester was around the time when Google’s mobile payment service via NFC was leaked, as well as when Gingerbread (Android 2.3) was announced, which is the first version of Android that includes an NFC stack. It was the first time I heard of NFC and I thought that it had tremendous potential for different applications on mobile phones. So I proposed to my group that we research the potential for NFC technology in the United States for the next ten years in the United States. My group was enthusiastic about it, and you can read our final paper in the IEOR 171 section.

Last summer, I interned at Facebook and one of the best things about working there are the hackathons – all night coding sessions with beer, music, and takeout food where you can work on a team or by yourself to build a product out of an idea. Being excited about NFC (see above), I decided to integrate NFC technology into the Facebook for Android app as a personal hackathon project. Overnight, I was able to have a working build of the Facebook app where you can add friends, check in to places, share URLs, and go to a Page via NFC.

I pitched my hackathon project to the Product Managers, Directors, and even Zuck himself (emailed him some demos but he didn’t respond haha). They all said that it was awesome but the problem was not enough NFC-enabled phones in the market – so unfortunately, it is not happening.

I didn’t want all that work to be wasted, so this is a tutorial on how to integrate NFC technology on the Android platform in hopes that people can use it to build cool applications that uses NFC!

You can also read about my second hackathon project, implementing Google Plus’s Instant Upload feature on Facebook.

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Tags: add friend, android, check in, demo, example, facebook, hackathon, integration, ndef, near field communication, nfc, p2p, tutorial