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apns

Plugin to implement APNS push notifications on iOS

Usage

  1. On iOS, make sure you have correctly configured your app to support push notifications, and that you have generated certificate/token for sending pushes. For more infos see section How to run example app on iOS

  2. Add the following lines to the didFinishLaunchingWithOptions method in the AppDelegate.m/AppDelegate.swift file of your iOS project

Objective-C:

if (@available(iOS 10.0, *)) {
  [UNUserNotificationCenter currentNotificationCenter].delegate = (id<UNUserNotificationCenterDelegate>) self;
}

Swift:

if #available(iOS 10.0, *) {
  UNUserNotificationCenter.current().delegate = self as? UNUserNotificationCenterDelegate
}
  1. Add flutter_apns_only as a dependency in your pubspec.yaml file.
  2. Using createPushConnector() method, configure push service according to your needs. PushConnector closely resembles FirebaseMessaging, so Firebase samples may be useful during implementation. You should create the connector as soon as possible to get the onLaunch callback working on closed app launch.
import 'package:flutter_apns/apns.dart';

final connector = createPushConnector();
connector.configure(
    onLaunch: _onLaunch,
    onResume: _onResume,
    onMessage: _onMessage,
);
connector.requestNotificationPermissions()
  1. Build on device and test your solution using CURL (iOS, see How to run example app on iOS).

Additional APNS features:

Displaying notification while in foreground

final connector = createPushConnector();
if (connector is ApnsPushConnector) {
  connector.shouldPresent = (x) => Future.value(true);
}

Handling predefined actions

Firstly, configure supported actions:

final connector = createPushConnector();
if (connector is ApnsPushConnector) {
  connector.setNotificationCategories([
    UNNotificationCategory(
      identifier: 'MEETING_INVITATION',
      actions: [
        UNNotificationAction(
          identifier: 'ACCEPT_ACTION',
          title: 'Accept',
          options: [],
        ),
        UNNotificationAction(
          identifier: 'DECLINE_ACTION',
          title: 'Decline',
          options: [],
        ),
      ],
      intentIdentifiers: [],
      options: [],
    ),
  ]);
}

Then, handle possible actions in your push handler:

Future<dynamic> onPush(String name, RemoteMessage payload) {
  final action = UNNotificationAction.getIdentifier(payload.data);

  if (action == 'MEETING_INVITATION') {
    // do something
  }

  return Future.value(true);
}

Note: if user clicks your notification while app is in the background, push will be delivered through onResume without actually waking up the app. Make sure your handling of given action is quick and error free, as execution time in for apps running in the background is very limited.

Check the example project for fully working code.

Troubleshooting

  1. Ensure that you are testing on actual device. NOTE: this may not be needed from 11.4: https://ohmyswift.com/blog/2020/02/13/simulating-remote-push-notifications-in-a-simulator/
  2. If onToken method is not being called, add error logging to your AppDelegate, see code below.
  3. Open Console app for macOS, connect your device, and run your app. Search for "PUSH registration failed" string in logs. The error message will tell you what was wrong.

swift

import UIKit
import Flutter

@UIApplicationMain
@objc class AppDelegate: FlutterAppDelegate {
  override func application(
    _ application: UIApplication,
    didFinishLaunchingWithOptions launchOptions: [UIApplication.LaunchOptionsKey: Any]?
  ) -> Bool {
    GeneratedPluginRegistrant.register(with: self)
    return super.application(application, didFinishLaunchingWithOptions: launchOptions)
  }

  func application(_ application: UIApplication, didFailToRegisterForRemoteNotificationsWithError error: Error) {
     NSLog("PUSH registration failed: \(error)")
  }
}

objc

#include "AppDelegate.h"
#include "GeneratedPluginRegistrant.h"

@implementation AppDelegate

- (BOOL)application:(UIApplication *)application
    didFinishLaunchingWithOptions:(NSDictionary *)launchOptions {
  [GeneratedPluginRegistrant registerWithRegistry:self];
  // Override point for customization after application launch.
  return [super application:application didFinishLaunchingWithOptions:launchOptions];
}

-(void)application:(UIApplication *)application didFailToRegisterForRemoteNotificationsWithError:(NSError *)error {
    NSLog(@"%@", error);
}

@end

How to run example app on iOS

Setting up push notifications on iOS can be tricky since there is no way to permit Apple Push Notification Service (APNS) which requires a complicated certificate setup. The following guide describes a step by step approach to send push notifications from your Mac to an iPhone utilizing the example app of this package. This guide only describes debug environment setup.

  1. Open example ios folder with Xcode
  2. Select Runner -> Signing & Capabilities
  3. Select your development team and add a globally unique bundle identifier. The one on the picture is already occupied:
  4. Go to https://developer.apple.com/account/resources/identifiers/list/bundleId and press on the plus button
  5. Select "App IDs" and press continue
  6. Select type "App"
  7. Select "App ID Prefix" which should be same as "Team ID"
  8. Enter description and bundle ID. The latter one needs to be the same as the bundle ID specified in 3.
  9. Select push notification capability
  10. Press on "Continue" and then on "Register"
  11. Go to https://developer.apple.com/account/resources/certificates and add a new certificate by pressing on the plus-button.
  12. Select 'Apple Push Notification service SSL (Sandbox & Production)'
  13. Select the app ID that you hav defined in point 4.-10.
  14. Select a Certificate Signing Request (CSR) file. See https://help.apple.com/developer-account/#/devbfa00fef7 on how to create this certificate
  15. When having finished, download the newly created Apple Push Services certificate
  16. Add certificate to your local keychain by opening the newly downloaded file
  17. Press on "login" on the upper left corner of your keychain window and select the tab "My Certificates"
  18. Right click on the Apple-Push-Services-certificate and export it as .p12-file
  19. Convert p12-file to pem-file by following command. Please consider that "flutterApns" needs to be replaced by your respective certificate name.
    More info
    openssl pkcs12 -in flutterApns.p12 -out flutterApns.pem -nodes -clcerts
    
  20. Start example app on physical iPhone device from Xcode or your favorite IDE.
  21. Device token gets automatically printed when application was able to retrieve push token from APNS. This happens after accepting notification permission prompt.
  22. Send the following CURL from you development Mac. You can execute CURLs by copy-pasting them into Terminal and hit enter.
    More info
    curl -v \
    -d '{"aps":{"alert":"<your_message>","badge":2}}' \
    -H "apns-topic: <bundle_identifier_of_registered_app>" \
    -H "apns-priority: 10" \
    --http2 \
    --cert <file_path_to_downloaded_signed_and_converted_certificate>.pem \
    https://api.development.push.apple.com/3/device/<device_token>
    
  23. A push notification does appear if the example app is in background.

When not utilizing the example app, you need to additionally setup push notification capability inside Xcode and add the code mentioned in usage.

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Flutter Plugin for APNS push notifications

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