Is there any configuration like android user-permission in iOS to control access to internet?
I think all new projects access to internet by default, is that correct?
When I send a request to the internet it returns 0 http-error code, it means I can't access to the internet.
yes, it is correct all the new ios project have access to the internet by default.
A status code of 0 in an NSHTTPURLResponse object generally means there was no response and can occur for various reasons. The server will never return a status of 0 as this is not a valid HTTP status code.
Any http request will first be processed by the operating system, and during that phase you can get an error. Getting an error means that your request never got a response from the server (and with the exception of https requests where certificates were not accepted, most likely didn't reach the server).
If this phase succeeds, then you get eventually a reply from the server. This may take time, you may have to wait 60 seconds. Which is why you do all your internet requests on a background thread. That reply will have a status code (status, not error). The status code is NEVER 0.
By default, iOS doesn't allow http requests, and doesn't allow https requests to unsave servers, so you better use only https unless you have a very good reason. You will need a very good reason to convince Apple to let your app on the app store if you want http requests to succeed. But if you get this wrong, you get an error quite early on.
A status of zero most likely means that a background request didn't finish by the time you read the status, a basic programming mistake. You need to learn how background threads and callbacks work. Without that, you won't be able to use http successfully.
Also google for "Reachability" which can tell you if your app currently has internet access (like when WiFi and Mobile Data are turned off, or in Airplane mode).
Related
I'm experiencing slow response times for my first http POST request to my server.
This happens both in Android and iOS networking libraries. (Volley on Android, and Alamofire in iOS).
First response is roughly 0.7s-0.9s, whereas subsequent requests are 0.2s.
I'm guessing this is due to the session being kept-alive by the server, therefore eliminating the need for establishing a new session on each request.
I figure I can make a dummy request when the app starts to start the session, but it doesn't seem very elegant.
I also control the server side (Node.js) so if any configuration needs to be done there I can also try it.
Investigating a little further, I tried sending an https CONNECT request before issuing the first "real" POST request, and the behavior replicates.
After 30 seconds or so, the connection is dropped (probably at the iOS URLSession level, the load balancer is configured to keep connections as 60 seconds).
In theory this makes sense because setting up an https connection takes up several (12 total) packets and I'm on an inter continental connection.
So my solution is to send a CONNECT request when I expect the user to send a regular request.
I have a client/server application where the client is an iOS app and the server is a RESTful api. I have received complaints of requests timing out and I know that some/most of the time, this is due to poor wifi connectivity. In these situations I would like to display an error message on the client which indicates whether the request was received by the server.
Is it possible in iOS to tell the difference between a HTTP request that never reaches the intended destination and one that makes it all the way to the intended destination but never receives a response?
API Call only after you check whether your internet connectivity is reachable or not .show error message if not connected to internet(this is due to poor wifi connectivity)
Example : Check for internet connection availability in Swift
When its checked make api call handle error code 404(never reaches the intended destination) and 504(timeout error code never receives a response) and let user make it success only when status code is 200.But its good to handle 401(authorization error) also.
I don't know which library you are using that why can't provide any code example right now
Try Alamofire Library in swift I suggest handled error codes very well.
I have an app that lets the user send messages with images. A user might hit send, then immediately close their phone or switch to another app.
We were running into an issue that if there's temporarily a bad network connection the message would fail to send. We switched to using NSURLSession backgroundConfigurationWithIdentifier so that backgrounding the app doesn't immediately time out the running request. We switched to using this for all our api requests, thinking that it wouldn't hurt for every request to able to continue in the background if the app were closed at the wrong time.
Fast forward a couple weeks we're noticing all requests seem slow. Using wireshark I just discovered that this background session seems to use a new http connection per request, meaning it requires setting up a TCP connection and new TLS handshake for every request, which was adding a ~500ms latency on every request in our app. This is a pretty big deal but I can't find this behavior documented anywhere, including the link above or Apple's background transfer considerations.
So my question is, is this behavior expected, or am I doing something wrong somewhere? Is there an easy way with NSURLSession to make an HTTP request that will use an existing keep-alive connection if there is one, but can fall back to the backgroundConfiguration if the app gets moved to the background?
NSURLSession is the recommended way to fulfill your use case. Have you tried setting backgroundSessionConfig.discretionary = true
iOS Reference
A Boolean value that determines whether background tasks can be
scheduled at the discretion of the system for optimal performance.
If that doesn't help, I recommend filing a bug with iOS.
I am developing an iOS app that makes an API request to my server hosted in Heroku.
In my slow internet connection environment, the API request (via Http Get) sometimes results in a timeout. The response time is usually 2000 ms if not timing out.
By "sometimes", I mean about one in 10 requests times out (I do not get any meaningful error code).
I also tested this timeout with 2 devices. When one device is waiting for the server to respond for longer than 2000 ms, I use another device to call the api, to which the server responds normally. But the first device still results in a timeout.
I am not quite sure what is to blame here. My internet connection? My api server on Heroku? I also tested this timeout on Postman and got the same results.
PS. I am based out of Bangkok. The ISP with which I experience the most timeouts is True Broadband.
Any and all advice is appreciated.
Thanks in advance
PPS. In response to comments warning that the question is too broad: Let's ask it this way. If our api calls randomly time out, how can we detect whether it is due to a slow internet connection, or if the fault lies in our own server (or something else)?
My iOS app loads images from an nginx HTTP server. After I send 400+ such requests the networking 'gets stuck' and all subsequent HTTP requests result in "The request timed out" error. I can make the images load again only when I restart the app.
Details:
I am using NSURLSession.sharedSession().dataTaskWithURL to send four hundred HTTP GET requests to jpeg files.
Requests are sent sequentially, one after another. The interval between requests is 10 ms.
Each previous unfinished request is cancelled with cancel() method of NSURLSessionDataTask object.
Interestingly:
I can only have this issue with HTTPS requests and when SPDY is enabled on the server.
Non-secure HTTP requests work fine.
Non-SPDY HTTPS requests work fine. I tested it by turning SPDY off on the server side, in the nginx config.
Problem appears both on iOS 8 and 9, on physical device and in the simulator. Both on Wi-Fi and LTE.
When I look at nginx access logs, I can still see the 'stuck' requests coming in. Important nuance: the request log record appears at the exact moment when the iOS app is giving up on it after the time out period ends.
I was hoping to analyze HTTP requests with Charles Proxy but the problem cures itself when requests go through Charles. That is - everything works with Charles, much like effect in quantum mechanics when the fact of looking influences the outcome.
I was able to reproduce the issue when the iOS app connected to two different servers with vastly different nginx configurations. This probably means that the issue is not related to a particular nginx setup.
I analyzed the app using "Activity Monitor" instrument. The number of threads it is using during the bulk HTTP requests jumps from 5 to 10. In comparison, when I send just a single HTTP requests the number of threads jumps to 8. CPU load rarely goes above 30%.
What can be the cause of the issue? Can anyone recommend other ways or tools for analysing and debugging it?
Analysing with scheduling instrument
Demo app
This demo app reproduces the issue 100% of the time for me.
https://github.com/exchangegroup/ImageLoadDemo
Versions and settings
My nginx config: http://pastebin.com/pYYjdxfP
OS X: 10.10.4 (14E46), iOS: 8 and 9, Xcode: 7.0 (7A218), nginx: 1.9.4
Not ideal workaround
I managed to keep requests working only if I create a new NSURLSession for each individual request and clear the previous session with finishTasksAndInvalidate or invalidateAndCancel.
// Request 1
let configuration = NSURLSessionConfiguration.defaultSessionConfiguration()
let session = NSURLSession(configuration: configuration)
session.dataTaskWithURL ...
// Request 2
// clear the previous request
session.finishTasksAndInvalidate()
let session2 = NSURLSession(configuration: configuration)
session2.dataTaskWithURL ...
One possibility is that iOS started sending the request, and then packet loss prevented the headers and request body from being fully delivered.
Another possibility that comes to mind is that your server may not be logging the request until it actually finishes trying to deliver it, which would make the time stamps in the server logs line up with when the connection was closed, rather than when it was opened. (IIRC, that's what Apache does; I haven't worked with nginx, so I can't speak for its behavior.) If that's the case, then this is just a simple connection stall. As for why it is stalling, I couldn't guess.
Does the problem occur exclusively for HTTPS traffic? If you can reproduce it with HTTP, you don't need Charles Proxy; just use OS X's "Internet Sharing" feature, and capture the packets with tcpdump or wireshark, listening on the bridge interface. If you can't reproduce it with HTTP, my money would be on a problem with fetching the CRLs or performing the OCSP check while validating the server's certificate.
Is your app ending up with a huge number of threads as a result of excessive async dispatching to new queues, by any chance? Because that could easily cause all sorts of odd misbehavior.
How long is the timeout? If it is too short, your app might simply be running up against performance limitations of the hardware while processing the results of 400 requests delivered in only four seconds.
Also, are you trying to schedule these requests simultaneously? Because I seem to recall reading about a bug that causes NSURLSession to hit a brick wall if you start too many tasks in a single session at the same time. You might try adding tasks only after the number of tasks in a session drops below some threshold and see if that fixes the problem.