Get device information using react-native

react-native-device-info

Device Information for React Native iOS and Android.

Installation

Using npm:

npm install --save react-native-device-info

or using yarn:

yarn add react-native-device-info

⚠️ If you are on React Native > 0.47, you must use version 0.11.0 of this library or higher

Linking

Automatic

react-native link react-native-device-info

(or using rnpm for versions of React Native < 0.27)

rnpm link react-native-device-info

Manual

iOS (via Cocoa Pods)

Add the following line to your build targets in your Podfile

pod 'RNDeviceInfo', :path => '../node_modules/react-native-device-info'

Then run pod install

iOS (without Cocoa Pods)

In XCode, in the project navigator:

  • Right click Libraries
  • Add Files to [your project's name]
  • Go to node_modules/react-native-device-info
  • Add the .xcodeproj file

In XCode, in the project navigator, select your project.

  • Add the libRNDeviceInfo.a from the deviceinfo project to your project's Build Phases ➜ Link Binary With Libraries
  • Click .xcodeproj file you added before in the project navigator and go the Build Settings tab. Make sure All is toggled on (instead of Basic).
  • Look for Header Search Paths and make sure it contains both $(SRCROOT)/../react-native/React and $(SRCROOT)/../../React
  • Mark both as recursive (should be OK by default).

Run your project (Cmd+R)

(Thanks to @brysgo for writing the instructions)

Android
  • optional in android/build.gradle:
...
  ext {
    // dependency versions
    googlePlayServicesVersion = "<Your play services version>" // default: "+"
    compileSdkVersion = "<Your compile SDK version>" // default: 23
    buildToolsVersion = "<Your build tools version>" // default: "25.0.2"
    targetSdkVersion = "<Your target SDK version>" // default: 22
  }
...
  • in android/app/build.gradle:
dependencies {
    ...
    compile "com.facebook.react:react-native:+"  // From node_modules
+   compile project(':react-native-device-info')
}
  • in android/settings.gradle:
...
include ':app'
+ include ':react-native-device-info'
+ project(':react-native-device-info').projectDir = new File(rootProject.projectDir, '../node_modules/react-native-device-info/android')

With React Native 0.29+

  • in MainApplication.java:
+ import com.learnium.RNDeviceInfo.RNDeviceInfo;

  public class MainApplication extends Application implements ReactApplication {
    //......

    @Override
    protected List<ReactPackage> getPackages() {
      return Arrays.<ReactPackage>asList(
+         new RNDeviceInfo(),
          new MainReactPackage()
      );
    }

    ......
  }

With older versions of React Native:

  • in MainActivity.java:
+ import com.learnium.RNDeviceInfo.RNDeviceInfo;

  public class MainActivity extends ReactActivity {
    ......

    @Override
    protected List<ReactPackage> getPackages() {
      return Arrays.<ReactPackage>asList(
+       new RNDeviceInfo(),
        new MainReactPackage()
      );
    }
  }

(Thanks to @chirag04 for writing the instructions)

Windows
  • Open the solution in Visual Studio for your Windows apps
  • right click your in the Explorer and click Add > Existing Project...
  • Navigate to ./<app-name>/node_modules/react-native-device-info/windows/RNDeviceInfo and add RNDeviceInfo.csproj
  • this time right click on your React Native Windows app under your solutions directory and click Add > Reference...
  • check the RNDeviceInfo you just added and press ok
  • open up MainReactNativeHost.cs for your app and edit the file like so:
+ using RNDeviceInfo;
......
        protected override List<IReactPackage> Packages => new List<IReactPackage>
        {
            new MainReactPackage(),
+           new RNDeviceInfoPackage(),
        };

(Thanks to @josephan for writing the instructions)

Usage

var DeviceInfo = require('react-native-device-info');
// or import DeviceInfo from 'react-native-device-info';

API

Method Return Type iOS Android Windows Since
getAPILevel() number 0.12.0
getApplicationName() string 0.14.0
getBatteryLevel() Promise<number> 0.18.0
getBrand() string 0.9.3
getBuildNumber() string ?
getBundleId() string ?
getCarrier() string 0.13.0
getDeviceCountry() string 0.9.0
getDeviceId() string 0.5.0
getDeviceLocale() string 0.7.0
getDeviceName() string ?
getFirstInstallTime() number 0.12.0
getFontScale() number 0.15.0
getFreeDiskStorage() number 0.15.0
getIPAddress() Promise<string> 0.12.0
getInstallReferrer() string 0.19.0
getInstanceID() string ?
getLastUpdateTime() number 0.12.0
getMACAddress() Promise<string> 0.12.0
getManufacturer() string ?
getMaxMemory() number 0.14.0
getModel() string ?
getPhoneNumber() string 0.12.0
getReadableVersion() string ?
getSerialNumber() string 0.12.0
getSystemName() string ?
getSystemVersion() string ?
getTimezone() string ?
getTotalDiskCapacity() number 0.15.0
getTotalMemory() number 0.14.0
getUniqueID() string ?
getUserAgent() string 0.7.0
getVersion() string ?
is24Hour() boolean 0.13.0
isEmulator() boolean ?
isPinOrFingerprintSet() (callback)boolean 0.10.1
isTablet() boolean ?

getAPILevel()

Gets the API level.

Examples

const apiLevel = DeviceInfo.getAPILevel();

// iOS: ?
// Android: 25
// Windows: ?

Notes

See API Levels


getApplicationName()

Gets the application name.

Examples

const appName = DeviceInfo.getApplicationName(); // "Learnium Mobile"

getBatteryLevel()

Gets the battery level of the device as a float comprised between 0 and 1.

Examples

DeviceInfo.getBatteryLevel().then(batteryLevel => {
  // 0.759999
});

Notes

Returns -1 on the iOS Simulator


getBrand()

Gets the device brand.

Examples

const brand = DeviceInfo.getBrand();

// iOS: "Apple"
// Android: "Xiaomi"
// Windows: ?

getBuildNumber()

Gets the application build number.

Examples

const buildNumber = DeviceInfo.getBuildNumber();

// iOS: "89"
// Android: 4
// Windows: ?

Notes

There is a type inconsistency: Android return an integer instead of the documented string.


getBundleId()

Gets the application bundle identifier.

Examples

const bundleId = DeviceInfo.getBundleId(); // "com.learnium.mobile"

getCarrier()

Gets the carrier name (network operator).

Examples

const carrier = DeviceInfo.getCarrier(); // "SOFTBANK"

getDeviceCountry()

Gets the device country based on the locale information.

Examples

const deviceCountry = DeviceInfo.getDeviceCountry(); // "US"

getDeviceId()

Gets the device ID.

Examples

const deviceId = DeviceInfo.getDeviceId();

// iOS: "iPhone7,2"
// Android: "goldfish"
// Windows: ?

getDeviceLocale()

Gets the device locale.

Examples

const deviceLocale = DeviceInfo.getDeviceLocale();

// iOS: "en"
// Android: "en-US"
// Windows: ?

getDeviceName()

Gets the device name.

Examples

const deviceName = DeviceInfo.getDeviceName();

// iOS: "Becca's iPhone 6"
// Android: ?
// Windows: ?

Android Permissions


getFirstInstallTime()

Gets the time at which the app was first installed, in milliseconds.

Examples

const firstInstallTime = DeviceInfo.getFirstInstallTime();

// Android: 1517681764528

getFontScale()

Gets the device font scale.
The font scale is the ratio of the current system font to the "normal" font size, so if normal text is 10pt and the system font is currently 15pt, the font scale would be 1.5
This can be used to determine if accessability settings has been changed for the device; you may want to re-layout certain views if the font scale is significantly larger ( > 2.0 )

Examples

const fontScale = DeviceInfo.getFontScale(); // 1.2

getFreeDiskStorage()

Gets available storage size, in bytes.

Examples

const freeDiskStorage = DeviceInfo.getFreeDiskStorage();

// Android: 17179869184
// iOS: 17179869184

Notes

From developer.android.com:

Return the primary shared/external storage directory.

Note: don't be confused by the word "external" here. This directory can better be thought as
media/shared storage. It is a filesystem that can hold a relatively large amount of data and
that is shared across all applications (does not enforce permissions). Traditionally this is
an SD card, but it may also be implemented as built-in storage in a device that is distinct
from the protected internal storage and can be mounted as a filesystem on a computer.


getIPAddress()

Gets the device current IP address.

Examples

DeviceInfo.getIPAddress().then(ip => {
  // "92.168.32.44"
});

Android Permissions

Notes

Support for iOS was added in 0.22.0


getInstallReferrer()

Gets the referrer string upon application installation.

Examples

const referrer = DeviceInfo.getInstallReferrer();

// If the app was installed from https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.myapp&referrer=my_install_referrer
// the result will be "my_install_referrer"

getInstanceID()

Gets the application instance ID.

Examples

const instanceId = DeviceInfo.getInstanceID();

// Android: ?

Notes

See https://developers.google.com/instance-id/


getLastUpdateTime()

Gets the time at which the app was last updated, in milliseconds.

Examples

const lastUpdateTime = DeviceInfo.getLastUpdateTime();

// Android: 1517681764992

getMACAddress()

Gets the network adapter MAC address.

Examples

DeviceInfo.getMACAddress().then(mac => {
  // "E5:12:D8:E5:69:97"
});

Android Permissions

Notes

iOS: This method always return "02:00:00:00:00:00" as retrieving the MAC address is disabled since iOS 7


getManufacturer()

Gets the device manufacturer.

Examples

const manufacturer = DeviceInfo.getManufacturer();

// iOS: "Apple"
// Android: "Google"
// Windows: ?

getMaxMemory()

Returns the maximum amount of memory that the VM will attempt to use, in bytes.

Examples

const maxMemory = DeviceInfo.getMaxMemory(); // 402653183

getModel()

Gets the device model.

Examples

const model = DeviceInfo.getModel();

// iOS: ?
// Android: ?
// Windows: ?

getPhoneNumber()

Gets the device phone number.

Examples

const phoneNumber = DeviceInfo.getPhoneNumber();

// Android: ?

Android Permissions

Notes

This can return undefined in certain cases and should not be relied on. SO entry on the subject.


getReadableVersion()

Gets the application human readable version.

Examples

const readableVersion = DeviceInfo.getReadableVersion();

// iOS: 1.0.1
// Android: 1.0.1
// Windows: ?

getSerialNumber()

Gets the device serial number.

Examples

const serialNumber = DeviceInfo.getSerialNumber();

// iOS: undefined
// Android: ?
// Windows: ?

getSystemName()

Gets the device OS name.

Examples

const systemName = DeviceInfo.getSystemName();

// iOS: "iOS" on newer iOS devices "iPhone OS" on older devices, including older iPad's.
// Android: "Android"
// Windows: ?

getSystemVersion()

Gets the device OS version.

Examples

const systemVersion = DeviceInfo.getSystemVersion();

// iOS: "11.0"
// Android: "7.1.1"
// Windows: ?

getTimezone()

Gets the device default timezone.

Examples

const timezone = DeviceInfo.getTimezone(); // "Africa/Tunis"

getTotalDiskCapacity()

Gets full disk storage size, in bytes.

Examples

const storageSize = DeviceInfo.getTotalDiskCapacity();

// Android: 17179869184
// iOS: 17179869184

getTotalMemory()

Gets the device total memory, in bytes.

Examples

const totalMemory = DeviceInfo.getTotalMemory(); // 1995018240

getUniqueID()

Gets the device unique ID.

Examples

const uniqueId = DeviceInfo.getUniqueID();

// iOS: "FCDBD8EF-62FC-4ECB-B2F5-92C9E79AC7F9"
// Android: "dd96dec43fb81c97"
// Windows: ?

Notes

  • iOS: This is IDFV so it will change if all apps from the current apps vendor have been previously uninstalled.
  • android: Prior to Oreo, this id (ANDROID_ID) will always be the same once you set up your phone.

getUserAgent()

Gets the device User Agent.

Examples

const userAgent = DeviceInfo.getUserAgent();

// iOS: "Mozilla/5.0 (iPhone; CPU iPhone OS 9_1 like Mac OS X) AppleWebKit/601.1.46 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/9.0 Mobile/13B143"
// Android: ?
// Windows: ?

getVersion()

Gets the application version.

Examples

const version = DeviceInfo.getVersion();

// iOS: "1.0"
// Android: "1.0
// Windows: ?

is24Hour()

Tells if the user preference is set to 24-hour format.

Examples

const is24Hour = DeviceInfo.is24Hour(); // true

isEmulator()

Tells if the application is running in an emulator.

Examples

const isEmulator = DeviceInfo.isEmulator(); // false

isPinOrFingerprintSet()

Tells if a PIN number or a fingerprint was set for the device.

Examples

DeviceInfo.isPinOrFingerprintSet()(isPinOrFingerprintSet => {
  if (!isPinOrFingerprintSet) {
    // ...
  }
});

Notes

  • Since the device setting for PIN/Fingerprint can be modified while the app is still open, this is available via callback instead of as a constant.
  • iOS: Not supported for iOS < 9

isTablet()

Tells if the device is a tablet.

Examples

const isTablet = DeviceInfo.isTablet(); // true

Troubleshooting

When installing or using react-native-device-info, you may encounter the following problems:

[android] - Unable to merge dex / Multiple dex files / Problems with `com.google.android.gms`

react-native-device-info uses com.google.android.gms:play-services-gcm to provide [getInstance()][#getinstance].
This can lead to conflicts when building the Android application.

If you're using a different version of com.google.android.gms:play-services-gcm in your app, you can define the
googlePlayServicesVersion gradle variable in your build.gradle file to tell react-native-device-info what version
it should require.

If you're using a different library that conflicts with com.google.android.gms:play-services-gcm, you can simply
ignore this dependency in your gradle file:

 compile(project(':react-native-device-info')) {
    exclude group: 'com.google.android.gms'
}
[ios] - ld: library not found for -lRNDeviceInfo-tvOS

Seems to be a bug caused by react-native link. You can manually delete libRNDeviceInfo-tvOS.a in Xcode -> [Your iOS build target] -> Build Phrases -> Link Binary with Libraries.

[tests] - Cannot run my test suite when using this library

react-native-device-info contains native code, and needs to be mocked.

Here's how to do it with jest for example:

// in your package.json:
"jest": {
  "setupFiles": [
    "./testenv.js"
  ],


// testenv.js:
jest.mock('react-native-device-info', () => {
  return {
    getModel: jest.fn(),
  };
});

GitHub