Note: This only works in Mavericks, it does NOT work in Yosemite.
Mavericks doesn't have the iBeacon support in Core Location that was added to iOS 7. However, Mavericks does now have the ability to act as an BLE peripheral device. Given that an iBeacon is basically a peripheral it should be (and indeed is) possible to use Mavericks as an iBeacon.
In order to create an iBeacon on iOS you first create a CLBeaconRegion
object and then use the peripheralDataWithMeasuredPower:
method to get an NSDictionary
containing the necessary advertisement data to broadcast. If you take the contents of this NSDictionary
from an iOS device and use it on Mavericks then you get an iBeacon.
I have created a class to make this easier and allow you to generate the advertisement data dictionary directly on Mavericks. The source code is available at https://github.com/mttrb/BeaconOSX
The BLCBeaconAdvertisementData
class take the proximityUUID
, major
, minor
and calibrated power values and creates an NSDictionary that can be passed to the startAdvertising:
method of CBPeripheralManager
on Mavericks.
The BLCBeaconAdvertisementData
class is quite simple. The main work is done by the following method:
- (NSDictionary *)beaconAdvertisement {
NSString *beaconKey = @"kCBAdvDataAppleBeaconKey";
unsigned char advertisementBytes[21] = {0};
[self.proximityUUID getUUIDBytes:(unsigned char *)&advertisementBytes];
advertisementBytes[16] = (unsigned char)(self.major >> 8);
advertisementBytes[17] = (unsigned char)(self.major & 255);
advertisementBytes[18] = (unsigned char)(self.minor >> 8);
advertisementBytes[19] = (unsigned char)(self.minor & 255);
advertisementBytes[20] = self.measuredPower;
NSMutableData *advertisement = [NSMutableData dataWithBytes:advertisementBytes length:21];
return [NSDictionary dictionaryWithObject:advertisement forKey:beaconKey];
}
I have a more detailed blog post about this at http://www.blendedcocoa.com/blog/2013/11/02/mavericks-as-an-ibeacon/
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