Related
When I read Apple Docs, they mention 3 types of notification: local, remote, and silent.
Local notification can be inferred from its name, that is sent by the app locally.
However, what is the difference between the other two types?
EDIT: While this answer is fully applicable, there are some additions (not changes) to notifications in iOS 12. I highly recommend watching WWDC 2018: What’s New in User Notifications and read this amazing and must read article.
Main changes are:
grouped notifications along with summary format
provisional notifications ie show notifications directly in notification center without user permission
critical notifications which ignore 'do not disturb' or 'mute'
ability to interact with the notifications in the extensions
ability to completely reset or update actions
ability to deeplink into app's notification Settings from phone's Notification Center
IMPORTANT NOTE: Not sure since when but from the Apple docs, the 'silent notification' has been renamed to 'background notification'
There are too many settings that need to be set right for it to work. I'll try to dissect them and make them easier to understand.
Overall, several things are important.
the overall difference between a silent and user notification
different types of user notifications
how a remote notification, i.e. the payload, is configured from your server
how to enable push notifications and remote notifications from background modes on your project
how to register your token with APNs for remote and silent notifications and APNs architecture
how to request permission for user notifications
enabling 'background app refresh' and 'notifications' from the device
what is content-available
understanding that the iOS is upstream to your app when it comes to receiving a remote notification
what happens when the OS receives notifications when the app has been user-terminated
A note on reliability and APNs architecture
I highly recommend everyone to watch the first 7 minutes of: WWDC 2015: What's new in Notifications. From there, the presenter mentions that there are 2 major types of notifications:
Silent Notifications
They happen in the background, hence you never see any alert/badge/sound. Things get downloaded without you knowing about them.
iOS 11 bug
See here.
iOS 11 initial releases were buggy for silent notifications. Make sure
you have the latest version for your testing, otherwise, it may not
work
User Notifications
As the name says, it has something to do with the user. That is, the user will see an alert/badge or hear a sound. It has 2 types.
Local Notifications
A Local Notification can be triggered in 3 different ways:
UNLocationNotificationTrigger:
You see an alert when you're close to a Walmart store.
UNTimeIntervalNotificationTrigger: e.g. You see an alert every 10 minutes.
UNCalendarNotificationTrigger like December 1st 1:00PM 2017.
Remote Notifications
They are similar to local notifications but they are triggered from the server, e.g. a WhatsApp message that has a From field (Mom) and a body field (I love you!).
Token registration and APNs architecture:
To receive a silent or remote notification, you need to register for a token using:
application.registerForRemoteNotifications()
👆 Registering does NOT require user permission. This makes silent notifications to become seamless. See this moment of the WWDC video
Silent notifications are enabled by default. The user does not need
to approve your -- does not give permission to your app to use them,
and you can just start using them without asking the user for
permission.
From WWDC
Remember APNs is delivered to your users by APNs and not by your server. So your iOS code must send this token to your server. So the server can associate a given device token with the user. When you want to push to a certain user, your server just tells APNs to send a payload to a specific token. What's important to understand is that your server and APNs are two different things
The flow of it looks like this:
Â
Â
server/provider sends a payload to APNs
APNs send a notification to all target devices of a given account. e.g. your iPhone, Mac could both receive notifications for emails/messages.
Then your iPhone/Mac will deliver that message to the app. APNs don't directly send messages to your app. It sends it to the device. Then the iOS sends it to your app.
For more on this see docs APNs Overview and Sending Notification Requests to APNs
To be able to show badges/alerts/sounds, you need to request permission from the user:
UNUserNotificationCenter.current().requestAuthorization(options: [.alert, .badge, .sound]) { (granted, error) in
guard error == nil else {
//Display Error.. Handle Error.. etc..
return
}
if granted {
//Do stuff here..
//Register for RemoteNotifications. Your Remote Notifications can display alerts now :)
application.registerForRemoteNotifications()
}
else {
//Handle user denying permissions..
}
}
Question: Do I need to request access once for local notifications and once for remote notifications?
No. Just write the snippet above and it will request access for both remote and local.
Now let's get to the tricky part :D
Xcode Project + iPhone Settings
Do I need to enable something to receive silent notifications?
You must enable Push Notifications from your Xcode capabilities:
If you don't enable this, your app won't receive a token. And without a token, the server doesn't recognize you.
To be able to download stuff from the background, you need to enable: remote notifications from background modes.
To enable backgroundModes, you can do it either using your plist or Xcode capabilities.
The reason you can do it, either way, is because plist is closer to your code and is the old way, perhaps it's there for legacy support. Xcode capabilities is the newer, easy way.
plist:
Item 0 is just an index, it's not the key of a dictionary (something you normally see in plist), the UIBackgroundModes is an array of Strings. The strings must only come from an accepted value from the UIBackgroundModes Array.
Xcode Capabilities:
Check the Remote Notification in Xcode under background modes as below:
If you don't do any of the above, then toggling off notifications with:
will kill Remote & Local Notifications
However, if you do enable background app refresh from plist or Xcode capabilities, then even with notifications turned off for the app, you will still receive silent notifications!
If the user wants to disable silent notifications, he would have to disable both notifications and disable 'background app refresh for your app / across the system.
To disable 'background app refresh' across your system, you have to do this:
Why am I saying all this? To explain to you that settings of silent and push notifications are different for the user and the restrictions for sending them are different. For more, see this moment from the WWDC video. See here instead (the previous link was dead):
Silent notifications are enabled by default.
The user does not need to approve your does not give permission to
your app to use them, and you can just start using them without asking
the user for permission.
But silent notifications are the mechanism behind background app
refresh.
At any point you know that the user can go in settings and disable
them.
So you can't depend on them always being available.
You don't know if the user the turn them off, and you are not getting
a notification anymore.
This also means that silent notifications are delivered with the best
effort.
That means that when the notification arrives on the user's device,
the system is going to make some choices.
It's going to use different signals from the device and from the user
behavior, like power or the time of day to decide when it is a good
time to deliver the notification and launch your app.
It may try to save battery or it may try to match the user behavior
and make the content available when the user is more likely to use it.
Also see here.
CAVEAT: Even if you disable app background refresh and disable allow notifications, you can still receive silent notifications if your app is in FOREGROUND. If your app is in the background, it won't be delivered.
Do I need to enable something to receive remote notifications?
You just need to enable Push Notifications from your Xcode capabilities:
If you don't enable this, your app won't receive a token. And without a token, the server doesn't recognize you.
APNs Payload structure
Curious... Can you tell me what should my payload look like?
I highly recommend you see Apple§ documentation. It's very clear AND ALSO SEE Sending Notification Requests to APNs. Basically platform makes an HTTP/2 call to APNs and sends the desired payload. Sending the correct headers is critical otherwise your notifications are not delivered to the devices!
Thanks, but can you just tell me the important parts?
uhhmm... OK, but just so you know this is from the link I just said:
For Silent Notifications there is a single criterion:
The payload's aps dictionary must include the content-available key
with a value of 1.
Per docs you can send other fields
If there are user-visible updates that go along with the background
update, you can set the alert, sound, or badge keys in the aps
dictionary, as appropriate.
A sample payload would look like this:
{
"aps" : {
"content-available" : 1
},
"acme1" : "bar",
"acme2" : 42
}
acme1, acme2, or just some custom data! But for the aps key, you MUST follow Apple's structure, otherwise, it won't map correctly and you won't be able to read data correctly.
Note: I haven't verified this, but another engineer mentioned that if you have provisional notifications enabled then to ensure silent notifications are delivered you must include an alert field with an empty body. For example:
{
"aps" : {
"content-available" : 1,
"alert" : {
"body" : "",
},
},
}
For User Notifications:
You need an alert key inside your aps.
As an example:
{
"aps" : {
"alert" : "You got your emails.",
"badge" : 9,
"sound" : "bingbong.aiff"
},
"acme1" : "bar",
"acme2" : 42
}
There is also a third option which I will discuss further down the answer.
As for what the fixed aps and alert dictionary keys are, see these Apple docs.
OK, got it. What is content-available?
Very simple. It's just a flag that tells your app that you need to wake up and download something because I have content available for download! For more info, see this exact moment.
By default the content-available flag is not included, i.e., by default the notifications you send won't trigger application(_:didReceiveRemoteNotification:fetchCompletionHandler:) or do something in your app. It would just show the notification. If you want to wake up the app (to do something in the background), you need to include content-available and set it to 1.
§: If you're using Firebase, your payload structure and keys may be slightly different. For example, the key content-available is replaced by content_available. For more, see Firebase documentation and also here.
I know you told me that I can only download something into my app when I'm using silent notifications, but is there a way that I can also wake my app up in the background AND download something for remote notifications?
Yes, but then similar to the silent notification, you must also set the content-available flag to 1, so it would know to wake up and download something. Otherwise, it would just pop and alert/badge/sound but won't download anything.
IMPORTANT NOTES:
If your app has only silent notifications, just enable "push notifications" + "remote notifications" from capabilities and set content-available to 1 for each payload.
If your app has only remote notifications, just enable "push notifications" from capabilities. There's nothing to do for the content-available.
However, if you want your notifications to show an alert/badge/sound and also download something in the background, you must have both "remote notifications" and "push notifications" enabled + set content-available to 1.
(THIRD OPTION)
{
"aps" : {
"content-available" : 1
"alert" : "You got your emails.",
"badge" : 9,
"sound" : "bingbong.aiff"
},
"acme1" : "bar",
"acme2" : 42
}
This moment from WWDC video mentions the 👆
To Quote the Apple Engineer:
Now, you can in a user remote notification, you can set the same
content available flag that you set in silent notifications, and that
allows your app to have some time to download the content or update
the content that it wants to be displayed so that when the user taps
on the notification, your content is available. And the user sees what
it does. This is a way to have a silent notification inside a user
notifications like a summary.
Notifications and iOS Application life-cycle
I'm confused about remote notifications. I thought whenever I get a notification, my app becomes active in the background and downloads something. Can you explain?
e.g. at this moment:
Your iPhone has just received a remote notification with a body of "no sender". To receive this, WhatsApp ** doesn't** have to be running in the background, i.e., you don't need "Remote Notifications" enabled from BackgroundModes. You would still receive the notification even if your app was force-quit or suspended because the process is managed by the OS, not the WhatsApp app. However, if you want to be able to download the actual message or its image/video to WhatsApp (so that once your user opens WhatsApp, the video would be sitting there waiting for the user), well then you need your app to become active. To do so, you need content-available : 1 and implement application(_:didReceiveRemoteNotification:fetchCompletionHandler:) .
Similarly, if you disable cellular data for an app, you would still receive its notifications. However, by tapping on that notification, the user won't be able to make any network requests for that app. They would only be able to open the app.
Or as for another similar scenario, if the server/access point you're connected to has restricted access for, say, WhatsApp, it would still allow you to receive the APNs notifications. However, by tapping on that notification, the user won't be able to make any network requests for that app. They would only be able to open the app.
CAVEAT: If the app was force-quit by the user, then while you do get the notification for the above-mentioned reasons, you can't do anything to bring the app out of its terminated state automatically (even if you had content-available set to 1). None of your delegate methods would be hit. The user must open the app and only then your delegate methods will be reached.
A note on reliability and APNs architecture:
Although notifications are heavily used to deliver the actual content to the app, they are somewhat NOT designed to deliver content to the app. Rather, they are designed to notify the user that "hey something new has arrived (a 2b message or a 50kb small image, or a 10MB image or a 2 GB video). Open the app if you like. By the way, here's a small piece of it (the actual message itself if it can fit, the title of the image or a thumbnail shown in the notification, a title of the video or a thumbnail shown in the video". For more, see iOS APNs “best-effort” fallback. To repeat, you never download the 40MB attachment sent in the email. You just get notified of its existence. You send just enough (a thumbnail view of the attachment) so that the user is informed of what's new and can decide whether or not they need to open the app for more. When I was new to iOS, I thought you actually send the image/video through the push notification. You don't!
Specifically in the case of silent notifications:
When a device receives a background notification, the system may hold
and delay the delivery of the notification, which can have the
following side effects:
When the system receives a new background notification, it discards the older notification and only holds the newest one.
If something force quits or kills the app, the system discards the held notification.
If the user launches the app, the system immediately delivers the held notification.
Pushing Background Updates to Your App docs
APNs sends a limited number of silent notifications—notifications with the content-available key—per day. In addition, if the device has already exceeded its power budget for the day, silent notifications are not sent again until the power budget resets, which happens once a day. These limits are disabled when testing your app from Xcode. See Pushing Background Updates to Your App.
Troubleshooting tips for handling errors returned from ANPs
Even for remote user notifications, the user may be off of the internet and this could cause expired content or APNs could throttle you if you're sending notifications too many or too quickly. See here again
Long story short the APNs and OS are King and you're beneath it. Hence you cannot rely on it to conform to your every command. Having that said it's super reliable in the sense that you see most messaging apps utilize it successfully.
Addendum How to generate push notification certificate, .p12 or .pem and how to test it all out?
Just see this terrific answer. It has the most number of screenshots I've ever seen.
The push notification will let the user know that they receive a notification (Showing the notification popup for example). The silent notification will update, but the user won't get notified about it.
In any case, you can perform actions when notified with silent, just as if it was a push notification. The only difference is the user will not get notify with the popup notification.
With push notification:
With silent notification:
The difference is in the payload:
Push notification:
aps {
content-available: 1
alert: {...}
}
Silent notification:
aps {
content-available: 0
alert: {...}
}
And you have to set in Capabilities the background mode you choose.
Silent push notification reaches device, user does not know anything about the notification but his app gets the notification and app will be given some time to download new content and present it to the user, regardless to the state of the app (i.e. running or not running)
Remote push notification method is called only when your app is running. If app is suspended or not running, then the system wakes up or launches your app and puts it into the background running state before calling the method.
This method is intended for showing the updated content to the user.When this method is called, your app has up to 30 seconds of wall-clock time to perform the download operation and call the specified completion handler block. If the handler is not called in time, your app will be suspended.
For more technical details, you can go through this links:
Apple Notifications
Silent Notifications
When I read Apple Docs, they mention 3 types of notification: local, remote, and silent.
Local notification can be inferred from its name, that is sent by the app locally.
However, what is the difference between the other two types?
EDIT: While this answer is fully applicable, there are some additions (not changes) to notifications in iOS 12. I highly recommend watching WWDC 2018: What’s New in User Notifications and read this amazing and must read article.
Main changes are:
grouped notifications along with summary format
provisional notifications ie show notifications directly in notification center without user permission
critical notifications which ignore 'do not disturb' or 'mute'
ability to interact with the notifications in the extensions
ability to completely reset or update actions
ability to deeplink into app's notification Settings from phone's Notification Center
IMPORTANT NOTE: Not sure since when but from the Apple docs, the 'silent notification' has been renamed to 'background notification'
There are too many settings that need to be set right for it to work. I'll try to dissect them and make them easier to understand.
Overall, several things are important.
the overall difference between a silent and user notification
different types of user notifications
how a remote notification, i.e. the payload, is configured from your server
how to enable push notifications and remote notifications from background modes on your project
how to register your token with APNs for remote and silent notifications and APNs architecture
how to request permission for user notifications
enabling 'background app refresh' and 'notifications' from the device
what is content-available
understanding that the iOS is upstream to your app when it comes to receiving a remote notification
what happens when the OS receives notifications when the app has been user-terminated
A note on reliability and APNs architecture
I highly recommend everyone to watch the first 7 minutes of: WWDC 2015: What's new in Notifications. From there, the presenter mentions that there are 2 major types of notifications:
Silent Notifications
They happen in the background, hence you never see any alert/badge/sound. Things get downloaded without you knowing about them.
iOS 11 bug
See here.
iOS 11 initial releases were buggy for silent notifications. Make sure
you have the latest version for your testing, otherwise, it may not
work
User Notifications
As the name says, it has something to do with the user. That is, the user will see an alert/badge or hear a sound. It has 2 types.
Local Notifications
A Local Notification can be triggered in 3 different ways:
UNLocationNotificationTrigger:
You see an alert when you're close to a Walmart store.
UNTimeIntervalNotificationTrigger: e.g. You see an alert every 10 minutes.
UNCalendarNotificationTrigger like December 1st 1:00PM 2017.
Remote Notifications
They are similar to local notifications but they are triggered from the server, e.g. a WhatsApp message that has a From field (Mom) and a body field (I love you!).
Token registration and APNs architecture:
To receive a silent or remote notification, you need to register for a token using:
application.registerForRemoteNotifications()
👆 Registering does NOT require user permission. This makes silent notifications to become seamless. See this moment of the WWDC video
Silent notifications are enabled by default. The user does not need
to approve your -- does not give permission to your app to use them,
and you can just start using them without asking the user for
permission.
From WWDC
Remember APNs is delivered to your users by APNs and not by your server. So your iOS code must send this token to your server. So the server can associate a given device token with the user. When you want to push to a certain user, your server just tells APNs to send a payload to a specific token. What's important to understand is that your server and APNs are two different things
The flow of it looks like this:
Â
Â
server/provider sends a payload to APNs
APNs send a notification to all target devices of a given account. e.g. your iPhone, Mac could both receive notifications for emails/messages.
Then your iPhone/Mac will deliver that message to the app. APNs don't directly send messages to your app. It sends it to the device. Then the iOS sends it to your app.
For more on this see docs APNs Overview and Sending Notification Requests to APNs
To be able to show badges/alerts/sounds, you need to request permission from the user:
UNUserNotificationCenter.current().requestAuthorization(options: [.alert, .badge, .sound]) { (granted, error) in
guard error == nil else {
//Display Error.. Handle Error.. etc..
return
}
if granted {
//Do stuff here..
//Register for RemoteNotifications. Your Remote Notifications can display alerts now :)
application.registerForRemoteNotifications()
}
else {
//Handle user denying permissions..
}
}
Question: Do I need to request access once for local notifications and once for remote notifications?
No. Just write the snippet above and it will request access for both remote and local.
Now let's get to the tricky part :D
Xcode Project + iPhone Settings
Do I need to enable something to receive silent notifications?
You must enable Push Notifications from your Xcode capabilities:
If you don't enable this, your app won't receive a token. And without a token, the server doesn't recognize you.
To be able to download stuff from the background, you need to enable: remote notifications from background modes.
To enable backgroundModes, you can do it either using your plist or Xcode capabilities.
The reason you can do it, either way, is because plist is closer to your code and is the old way, perhaps it's there for legacy support. Xcode capabilities is the newer, easy way.
plist:
Item 0 is just an index, it's not the key of a dictionary (something you normally see in plist), the UIBackgroundModes is an array of Strings. The strings must only come from an accepted value from the UIBackgroundModes Array.
Xcode Capabilities:
Check the Remote Notification in Xcode under background modes as below:
If you don't do any of the above, then toggling off notifications with:
will kill Remote & Local Notifications
However, if you do enable background app refresh from plist or Xcode capabilities, then even with notifications turned off for the app, you will still receive silent notifications!
If the user wants to disable silent notifications, he would have to disable both notifications and disable 'background app refresh for your app / across the system.
To disable 'background app refresh' across your system, you have to do this:
Why am I saying all this? To explain to you that settings of silent and push notifications are different for the user and the restrictions for sending them are different. For more, see this moment from the WWDC video. See here instead (the previous link was dead):
Silent notifications are enabled by default.
The user does not need to approve your does not give permission to
your app to use them, and you can just start using them without asking
the user for permission.
But silent notifications are the mechanism behind background app
refresh.
At any point you know that the user can go in settings and disable
them.
So you can't depend on them always being available.
You don't know if the user the turn them off, and you are not getting
a notification anymore.
This also means that silent notifications are delivered with the best
effort.
That means that when the notification arrives on the user's device,
the system is going to make some choices.
It's going to use different signals from the device and from the user
behavior, like power or the time of day to decide when it is a good
time to deliver the notification and launch your app.
It may try to save battery or it may try to match the user behavior
and make the content available when the user is more likely to use it.
Also see here.
CAVEAT: Even if you disable app background refresh and disable allow notifications, you can still receive silent notifications if your app is in FOREGROUND. If your app is in the background, it won't be delivered.
Do I need to enable something to receive remote notifications?
You just need to enable Push Notifications from your Xcode capabilities:
If you don't enable this, your app won't receive a token. And without a token, the server doesn't recognize you.
APNs Payload structure
Curious... Can you tell me what should my payload look like?
I highly recommend you see Apple§ documentation. It's very clear AND ALSO SEE Sending Notification Requests to APNs. Basically platform makes an HTTP/2 call to APNs and sends the desired payload. Sending the correct headers is critical otherwise your notifications are not delivered to the devices!
Thanks, but can you just tell me the important parts?
uhhmm... OK, but just so you know this is from the link I just said:
For Silent Notifications there is a single criterion:
The payload's aps dictionary must include the content-available key
with a value of 1.
Per docs you can send other fields
If there are user-visible updates that go along with the background
update, you can set the alert, sound, or badge keys in the aps
dictionary, as appropriate.
A sample payload would look like this:
{
"aps" : {
"content-available" : 1
},
"acme1" : "bar",
"acme2" : 42
}
acme1, acme2, or just some custom data! But for the aps key, you MUST follow Apple's structure, otherwise, it won't map correctly and you won't be able to read data correctly.
Note: I haven't verified this, but another engineer mentioned that if you have provisional notifications enabled then to ensure silent notifications are delivered you must include an alert field with an empty body. For example:
{
"aps" : {
"content-available" : 1,
"alert" : {
"body" : "",
},
},
}
For User Notifications:
You need an alert key inside your aps.
As an example:
{
"aps" : {
"alert" : "You got your emails.",
"badge" : 9,
"sound" : "bingbong.aiff"
},
"acme1" : "bar",
"acme2" : 42
}
There is also a third option which I will discuss further down the answer.
As for what the fixed aps and alert dictionary keys are, see these Apple docs.
OK, got it. What is content-available?
Very simple. It's just a flag that tells your app that you need to wake up and download something because I have content available for download! For more info, see this exact moment.
By default the content-available flag is not included, i.e., by default the notifications you send won't trigger application(_:didReceiveRemoteNotification:fetchCompletionHandler:) or do something in your app. It would just show the notification. If you want to wake up the app (to do something in the background), you need to include content-available and set it to 1.
§: If you're using Firebase, your payload structure and keys may be slightly different. For example, the key content-available is replaced by content_available. For more, see Firebase documentation and also here.
I know you told me that I can only download something into my app when I'm using silent notifications, but is there a way that I can also wake my app up in the background AND download something for remote notifications?
Yes, but then similar to the silent notification, you must also set the content-available flag to 1, so it would know to wake up and download something. Otherwise, it would just pop and alert/badge/sound but won't download anything.
IMPORTANT NOTES:
If your app has only silent notifications, just enable "push notifications" + "remote notifications" from capabilities and set content-available to 1 for each payload.
If your app has only remote notifications, just enable "push notifications" from capabilities. There's nothing to do for the content-available.
However, if you want your notifications to show an alert/badge/sound and also download something in the background, you must have both "remote notifications" and "push notifications" enabled + set content-available to 1.
(THIRD OPTION)
{
"aps" : {
"content-available" : 1
"alert" : "You got your emails.",
"badge" : 9,
"sound" : "bingbong.aiff"
},
"acme1" : "bar",
"acme2" : 42
}
This moment from WWDC video mentions the 👆
To Quote the Apple Engineer:
Now, you can in a user remote notification, you can set the same
content available flag that you set in silent notifications, and that
allows your app to have some time to download the content or update
the content that it wants to be displayed so that when the user taps
on the notification, your content is available. And the user sees what
it does. This is a way to have a silent notification inside a user
notifications like a summary.
Notifications and iOS Application life-cycle
I'm confused about remote notifications. I thought whenever I get a notification, my app becomes active in the background and downloads something. Can you explain?
e.g. at this moment:
Your iPhone has just received a remote notification with a body of "no sender". To receive this, WhatsApp ** doesn't** have to be running in the background, i.e., you don't need "Remote Notifications" enabled from BackgroundModes. You would still receive the notification even if your app was force-quit or suspended because the process is managed by the OS, not the WhatsApp app. However, if you want to be able to download the actual message or its image/video to WhatsApp (so that once your user opens WhatsApp, the video would be sitting there waiting for the user), well then you need your app to become active. To do so, you need content-available : 1 and implement application(_:didReceiveRemoteNotification:fetchCompletionHandler:) .
Similarly, if you disable cellular data for an app, you would still receive its notifications. However, by tapping on that notification, the user won't be able to make any network requests for that app. They would only be able to open the app.
Or as for another similar scenario, if the server/access point you're connected to has restricted access for, say, WhatsApp, it would still allow you to receive the APNs notifications. However, by tapping on that notification, the user won't be able to make any network requests for that app. They would only be able to open the app.
CAVEAT: If the app was force-quit by the user, then while you do get the notification for the above-mentioned reasons, you can't do anything to bring the app out of its terminated state automatically (even if you had content-available set to 1). None of your delegate methods would be hit. The user must open the app and only then your delegate methods will be reached.
A note on reliability and APNs architecture:
Although notifications are heavily used to deliver the actual content to the app, they are somewhat NOT designed to deliver content to the app. Rather, they are designed to notify the user that "hey something new has arrived (a 2b message or a 50kb small image, or a 10MB image or a 2 GB video). Open the app if you like. By the way, here's a small piece of it (the actual message itself if it can fit, the title of the image or a thumbnail shown in the notification, a title of the video or a thumbnail shown in the video". For more, see iOS APNs “best-effort” fallback. To repeat, you never download the 40MB attachment sent in the email. You just get notified of its existence. You send just enough (a thumbnail view of the attachment) so that the user is informed of what's new and can decide whether or not they need to open the app for more. When I was new to iOS, I thought you actually send the image/video through the push notification. You don't!
Specifically in the case of silent notifications:
When a device receives a background notification, the system may hold
and delay the delivery of the notification, which can have the
following side effects:
When the system receives a new background notification, it discards the older notification and only holds the newest one.
If something force quits or kills the app, the system discards the held notification.
If the user launches the app, the system immediately delivers the held notification.
Pushing Background Updates to Your App docs
APNs sends a limited number of silent notifications—notifications with the content-available key—per day. In addition, if the device has already exceeded its power budget for the day, silent notifications are not sent again until the power budget resets, which happens once a day. These limits are disabled when testing your app from Xcode. See Pushing Background Updates to Your App.
Troubleshooting tips for handling errors returned from ANPs
Even for remote user notifications, the user may be off of the internet and this could cause expired content or APNs could throttle you if you're sending notifications too many or too quickly. See here again
Long story short the APNs and OS are King and you're beneath it. Hence you cannot rely on it to conform to your every command. Having that said it's super reliable in the sense that you see most messaging apps utilize it successfully.
Addendum How to generate push notification certificate, .p12 or .pem and how to test it all out?
Just see this terrific answer. It has the most number of screenshots I've ever seen.
The push notification will let the user know that they receive a notification (Showing the notification popup for example). The silent notification will update, but the user won't get notified about it.
In any case, you can perform actions when notified with silent, just as if it was a push notification. The only difference is the user will not get notify with the popup notification.
With push notification:
With silent notification:
The difference is in the payload:
Push notification:
aps {
content-available: 1
alert: {...}
}
Silent notification:
aps {
content-available: 0
alert: {...}
}
And you have to set in Capabilities the background mode you choose.
Silent push notification reaches device, user does not know anything about the notification but his app gets the notification and app will be given some time to download new content and present it to the user, regardless to the state of the app (i.e. running or not running)
Remote push notification method is called only when your app is running. If app is suspended or not running, then the system wakes up or launches your app and puts it into the background running state before calling the method.
This method is intended for showing the updated content to the user.When this method is called, your app has up to 30 seconds of wall-clock time to perform the download operation and call the specified completion handler block. If the handler is not called in time, your app will be suspended.
For more technical details, you can go through this links:
Apple Notifications
Silent Notifications
I was sending two ios push notifications simultaneously, one silent and one alert.
Sometimes, one of the push notification is not received on the device.
When I read about the troubleshooting Push notifications guide - https://developer.apple.com/library/ios/technotes/tn2265/_index.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/DTS40010376-CH1-TNTAG23
It says that - there is a quality of service queue, which holds only one notification per app per device.
So, can't we send multiple notifications to a device almost at a same time?
How Whatsapp does it? If there are ten people chatting with me, I get 10 notifications almost at same time.
Can someone help clear my understanding?
Sending multiple APNS is the same thing as sending single APNS. but let me explain you how to handle multiple APNS.
When your app send multiple APNS at same time the device will show you message like below image.
But if you look in the notification center. you will see all the message separate. Even getting multiple notification in Whatsapp will behave as the above. If you want to try just turn off you mobile or turn off you internet and send approx 50-60 message to that Whatsapp user. you will see the message like above.
Now this is due to APNS handle by OS. but when the app is open then you will receive the APNS in the below method. and from there the TOP apps handle the message. Sometimes even thay are also skiping some message due to show some proper message to user. like in 0.5 second if you receive 10-15 message then they only show 3-5 message random and set badge count to appropriate chat to indicate user that they have receive message from that user too.
This is the how I have also manage multiple notification in one of my datting app.
func application(application: UIApplication, didReceiveRemoteNotification userInfo: [NSObject : AnyObject])
My app uses local notifications based on the timing of events logged with Core Data.
Any time there is a significant change in my Core Data store on the device, I call a function called updateLocalNotifications() that clears existing local notifications and sets up new ones based on the updated data in Core Data.
My NSPersistentStoreCoordinator for Core Data is set up with NSPersistentStoreUbiquitousContentNameKey, so it syncs across devices automatically using iCloud.
Ideally, if the user is running my app on two or more devices, I'd like to be able to run updateLocalNotifications() on all devices whenever the Core Data on iCloud changes.
I have this simple code in AppDelegate to listen for and respond to changes to data on iCloud:
func application(application: UIApplication, didFinishLaunchingWithOptions launchOptions: [NSObject: AnyObject]?) -> Bool {
// update local notifications whenever new iCloud data is received
notificationCenter.addObserver(self, selector: #selector(updateLocalNotifications), name: NSPersistentStoreDidImportUbiquitousContentChangesNotification, object: nil)
...
return true
}
If the app is open and in the foreground on both devices and I log an event on one device, I get the NSPersistentStoreDidImportUbiquitousContentChangesNotification on the other device within about 20 seconds.
The problem is I don't ever seem to get NSPersistentStoreDidImportUbiquitousContentChangesNotification when the app is running in the background on the second device. I've done lots of digging, but can't seem to find whether the iCloud sync is actually supposed to be happening in the background, or will only ever happen when my app is in the foreground. I'm still testing this to see if it's just a longer update interval when the app is in the background.
Possible Solution #1 (doesn't seem feasible based on testing so far, but this is what I want to do)
At this point, I'm looking for a solution to get the second device to check iCloud for changes while it's in the background and so a NSPersistentStoreDidImportUbiquitousContentChangesNotification is triggered when there are changes and firing this notification, even if it's less frequently than when the app is in the foreground. There are definitely drawbacks for this approach, like it won't be called if the person manually quits the app after launching it.
Possible Solution #2 (seems possible but complicated)
Another possible solution I'm considering would be to set up a server and use silent push notifications with content-available. That way, when someone logs an event on one device I would ping the server and ask it to send a content-available push to the user's other devices, and I could call updateLocalNotifications() when responding to that push notification. This has a few drawbacks. One is that the content-available push would not work if the app has not been launched after the device is booted or has been manually quit (similar to Solution #1). A second is that it involves a lot more overhead of setting up a server and pinging a server every time the events on a device change, even though that info is already being sent to a server via iCloud.
I've found a few other similar questions (like this one: How can I act on Core Data iCloud sync notification when the app is in the background?), but they don't put forward any possible solutions, so I thought it was worth posting my situation and possible solutions in case there are other people trying to work through a similar problem.
I would prefer a UX design solution for this problem.
It is questionable that the user wants to have your reminders pop up on all her devices. You should provide a setting where the user can switch them off, or rather, on. Make it clear to the user that the reminders will be device specific and that they will only be updated when the app is active, but based on the input from other devices.
For most users this will be expected and acceptable behavior.
I've been looking at this for a few days now and making no progress. I've developed a small test iOS (9.2.1) app that receives push notifications from the Azure Notification Hub. Everything appears to work fine, including the background notification push so long as the app is launched via xcode and is in debug mode.
Every notification I receive via the following callback just writes a file to the documents folder on the device. If I use xcode device explorer, I can see these files appearing
func application(application: UIApplication, didReceiveRemoteNotification userInfo: [NSObject : AnyObject], fetchCompletionHandler completionHandler: (UIBackgroundFetchResult) -> Void) {
makefile(random file name based on timestamp);
completionHandler(UIBackgroundFetchResult.NewData);
}
I have also enabled the following modes in the UIBackgroundModes section of the plist file
fetch
remote-notification
The paypload that I send to the ANS server is:
"aps":{ "sound":"default", "content-available":1 }
Like I have mentioned above, so long as the app is running via xcode, I can press the home button, but it into the background and it will receive the push data fine. However, if I disconnect the USB cable it will stop receiving the background push events.
It's worth noting that the in-built OS notification does appear. Does anyone know what could be the problem here?
EDIT
If I launch the app via xcode, unplug the USB, send the notification - nothing happens. As soon as i reconnect to xcode it comes in and the code is run! Is this something to do with certifications (development / production)
The content-available key indicates iOS should treat this as a silent notification. Silent notifications are silent - they do not show an alert, badge, or play a sound.
A notification payload that contains both the content-available key and user-facing features like a sound or alert may be treated as either. The behavior is undefined - a notification should be silent or not, not both.
Silent notifications are handled by application(didReceiveRemoteNotification:fetchCompletionHandler), not application(_:didReceiveRemoteNotification:). It's possible that when your app does not seem to be getting the notification that iOS is calling this method.
In your case, you may also be getting throttled by iOS. If silent notifications are received too frequently, if you app uses too many resources handling them, etc. iOS will delay delivery of the notification. It will not delay them when launched from Xcode.
Your silent notification should not include a sound. Make that a separate notification, or try playing a sound in the background from inside your app.
Check the rate you are sending silent notifications to your app. At most send 2 an hour.
Verify that your silent notification handling code does not use excessive CPU, memory, or energy. Target using 15mb or less when handling the silent notification. Also make sure the fetchCompletionHandler block is called with 30 seconds of iOS calling application:didReceiveRemoteNotification:fetchCompletionHandler