netwatcher
netwatcher
is a cross-platform Rust library for enumerating network interfaces and their IP addresses, featuring the ability to watch for changes to those interfaces efficiently. It uses platform-specific methods to detect when interface changes have occurred instead of polling, which means that you find out about changes more quickly and there is no CPU or wakeup overhead when nothing is happening.
Current platform support
Platform | Min Version | List | Watch | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Windows | - | ✅ | ✅ | |
Mac | - | ✅ | ✅ | Watch creates background thread |
Linux | - | ✅ | ✅ | Watch creates background thread |
iOS | - | ✅ | ✅ | Watch creates background thread |
Android | 5.0 | ✅ | ✅ | Watch requires extra setup. See Android Setup instructions below. |
Usage
Listing interfaces
// Returns a HashMap from ifindex (a `u32`) to an `Interface` struct
let interfaces = list_interfaces.unwrap;
for i in interfaces.values
Watching for changes to interfaces
let handle = watch_interfaces.unwrap;
// keep `handle` alive as long as you want callbacks
// ...
drop;
Android Setup
Ensure the app module which is going to end up running netwatcher
has these permissions:
You will also need to make sure that netwatcher
gets access to the Android app's Context
. There is built-in support for the ndk-context crate. What this means is that if you're using certain frameworks for building all-Rust Android apps then it will be able to pick up the context automatically. In other situations, the Rust code in your app will have to call netwatcher::set_android_context
(example code).
There is a test app included in the repo that provides a full example. MainActivity.kt is an activity with some methods defined in Rust. app-native/src/lib.rs provides the native implementations of those methods. This includes an example of calling set_android_context
, and using the netwatcher
library to watch for interface changes, passing the results back to the Java GUI.
Licence
MIT