A React Native Bluetooth Low Energy library.
Originally inspired by https://github.com/don/cordova-plugin-ble-central.
The library is a simple connection with the OS APIs, the BLE stack should be standard but often has different behaviors based on the device used, the operating system and the BLE chip it connects to. Before opening an issue verify that the problem is really the library.
RN 0.60+
RN 0.40-0.59 supported until 6.7.X RN 0.30-0.39 supported until 2.4.3
- iOS 10+
- Android (API 19+)
npm i --save react-native-ble-manager
The library support the react native autolink feature.
Read here the full documentation
The easiest way to test is simple make your AppRegistry point to our example component, like this:
// in your index.ios.js or index.android.js
import React, { Component } from "react";
import { AppRegistry } from "react-native";
import App from "react-native-ble-manager/example/App"; //<-- simply point to the example js!
/*
Note: The react-native-ble-manager/example directory is only included when cloning the repo, the above import will not work
if trying to import react-native-ble-manager/example from node_modules
*/
AppRegistry.registerComponent("MyAwesomeApp", () => App);
- the library is written in typescript and needs to be built before being used for publication or local development, using the provided npm scripts in
package.json
. - the local
example
project is configured to work with the locally built version of the library. To be able to run it, you need to build at least once the library so that its outputs listed as entrypoint inpackage.json
(in thedist
folder) are properly generated for consumption by the example project:
from the root folder:
npm install
npm run build
if you are modifying the typescript files of the library (in
src/
) on the fly, you can runnpm run watch
instead. If you are modifying files from the native counterparts, you'll need to rebuild the whole app for your target environnement (npm run android/ios
).