update tableview if data is changed online - ios

We are making an app for the hotel where we have already made an app where orders can be placed through app. All those orders can be seen on web portal by refreshing the page.
Now client requested to create an app where waiter can see the order on his iPad.
For that we will be having the tableview where all list of orders will be shown.
However I am not getting how I will refresh the table/ add the data if new order is made.
In short once order is made, at same instance waiter should get alert and table view should be updated.
Note: iPad/ iPhone get the data through webservice.
This can be achieved by calling webservice every 1 min or 30 seconds.
However I don't want to do this way...
If new stuff is added, webservice will send that data and I will add that data in my tableview. Means webservice will send me listener that new data is added
I need to know how can I listen this listener if webservice send me listener.
Any useful info on this would be appreciated.
Below link helped me for TCP in iOS.
http://www.tekritisoftware.com/sites/default/files/Socket_Programing_for_IOS.pdf

You could implement it using a TCP-based client-server approach, where the iPad is the client.
The iPad client connects to the server using authentication so you know which waiter is using the iPad.
The TCP uses duplex communication over the TCP socket so either side can send a message to the other.
If the server has something to give to the iPad/client/waiter then it simply sends it to them.
If the client wants to send a message to the server, like "I'm taking a break", or whatever, then it simply sends it to the server.
The range of information you can share between the client and server is actually unlimited.
There is no 6.
This requires the server to be written as well, however, so this solution is more than just iOS development. However a webservice would need similar development anyway.

Related

Host page locally on iOS

I didn't know it was possible on iOS but lately I went to Japan and one of the free wifi apps wanted to install profile into my iPhone. When I confirmed installation it simply opened Safari with 127.0.0.1. It loaded some page and downloaded profile from there. How do I host some page on iOS?
Creating web server is nothing hard. It is lot of coding of course, but the principle is pretty easy.
There is lot of 3rd party libraries on the github (GCDWebService) just try to search for "ios http server"
To create it manually you need few steps:
1) With the help of CFSocketCreate you open new socket with specific port (standard HTTP 80, or secured one 443 should be forbidden without root access rights) what going to listen on network interface on incomming requests.
2) You need to prepare some receiver what will be triggered as soon as some request income. You can use NSFileHandle class and register NSFileHandleConnectionAcceptedNotification in your notification center. And allow background mode with acceptConnectionInBackgroundAndNotify method. But I recommend to read the manual first
NSFileHandle Apple documentation
3) Process the incoming request. The selector what you register is called and in NSNotification.userInfo property is the incoming request, and you can generate some page here and open it in safari, or in your app or do whatever you want.
4) If you want received some POST data or streams, there is needs to register NSFileHandleDataAvailableNotification what trigger selector as soon as some data to read are available.

Send some data to contact from app (Objective-C, Swift)

Is there any way I can send some data to contact from contacts app? for example some string or integer? E.g. I have an app, when user open it the app shows all contacts from Contacts app. and when he tap one of the contact the app must send data to the persons phone. Must I do it with web service or there is any way to do it without web service?
P.S. sorry for my english!
There is no way to do this using built-in iOS libraries without invoking a UI. You can send an SMS message using the MFMessageComposeViewController class. That displays a UI to the user. If I remember correctly you can prepopulate the view with the content you want to send, but the user can edit it.
Likewise there is the MFMailComposeViewController for sending email, with or without attachments.
If you want to send data to another user without displaying a UI to the user you will need to either use a webservice or come up with your own system (involving a server you manage, a TCP socket connection between copies of your app running on both devices, or some other custom development)

How to handle the address book in my application in an effective way

I am creating an app which using address book.I am sending all my contacts to server each time to get the list of contacts who all are using the app and I should get the notification for new users in my contacts.I don’t think it is an effective way(sending all contacts everytime).Can any one suggest me how to handle the scenarios like edit contact,delete contact.How to avoid the sending of all contacts to server each time when I am opening the app.Also suggest me an effective algorithm to make best app
You could just send the changed contact to the server, use an additional field like, status and save this status from the last time you sync to server, if a contact created, or edited or deleted, you just need to change this field to not sync, and when you sending data to the server, send this not synced data to the server.

Push Notifications through BES/BIS , BlackBerry

I am trying to use push notifications for OS < 7.X .
I downloaded the sample server / client code. I deployed the client code on my device and the low-level-sample code on the tomcat provided.
For the record , when i registered for push notifications here i registered using the BIS option. Now that i was actually given a blackberry i was informed it is using BES ( i dont think though this is the root of the problem that i am going to describe..).
On the device , in the sample application i put all the correct settings given from the email i received.
Both my pc which is running the tomcat server and my phone are connected to the same wifi.
I am trying from the device browser to connect to the server , eg https://196.84.32.112:8443/low-level-sample
and the browser opens the page normally , meaning that i am able to connect to my server from the mobile.
Now when i hit register from the device sample app ( i have tried both BIS/BES options on the settings ) , i always get the following error :
Request to register failed. Cause by java.io.IOException: Network operation[Subscribe] failed. Make sure that Content Provider URL is accessible.
In the log i get :
Opening URL: my server url appended with info like username/password/model/connection type etc
Content Provider network command [ Subscribe] failed , caused by could not connect to 196.84.32.112:8443
Command "register" failed with error: java.io.IOException: Network operation[Subscribe] failed. Make sure that Content Provider URL is accessible.
A thought is that i should register again for new push keys and use the BIS/BES option instead of only BIS , but here the problem seems to be no connectivity with the local server , not the RIM server. I already tried to register though and i am waiting for the mail with the new settings.
Also i am a bit confused with the BIS / BES option. I have no idea if my users will have BIS or BES enabled so what do i put in my code ?! In the sample application it asks me to select between BIS or BES but when the app is going to production and i need to programmatically make that choice what will i choose?! Or this choice is made only for the evaluation/development of the app and on production there is another server ?
I think all the right things have been said here, but I'm hoping we can consolidate some of the answers, and wrap this question up.
You haven't shared your code, which makes things more difficult, but many people use the RIM/BlackBerry provided PushDemo source, where a connection suffix is hardcoded in /pushdemo/com/rim/samples/device/push/PushUtils.java:
private static String getConnectionSuffix() {
return ";deviceside=false;ConnectionType=mds-public";
}
I'm also guessing this from having read your other question.
By doing this, you've hardcoded the BlackBerry transport type of BIBS. BlackBerry supports many different transports, like BES, BIS, BIBS, or WAP. The BIBS transport will send the request from your device, out to BlackBerry's servers, which are on the internet. (Note: this part is probably confusing to an iOS/Android developer, since those platforms don't provide Apple/Google network intermediaries to relay normal HTTP/S traffic)
Then, the request is relayed to your server, which is at:
196.84.32.112:8443
I'm pretty sure that TCP/IP endpoint is not available from the Internet (I can't reach it). So, that's why it fails for you.
You can take this URL
https://196.84.32.112:8443/low-level-sample
and paste it into your BlackBerry device's browser, and it will work. Your device is configured for BES, which uses your company's internal servers. Those internal servers can reach the 196.84.32.112:8443 endpoint, so it seems to work for you. But, that's because you haven't hardcoded the transport, as you have in the push code that uses getConnectionSuffix(). The device browser is smart enough to figure out a transport that works, and BES works to reach that intranet server.
Hopefully, that explains the confusing part.
Solutions
As others have said, a solution is to get your company's IT people to make IP address 196.84.32.112 and port 8443 accessible through their firewall. That would allow the BlackBerry servers to reach it successfully.
Another solution would be to change the PushUtils.java code to avoid the BIBS transport:
private static String getConnectionSuffix() {
return ";deviceside=false";
}
If you want really flexible code, then I'd suggest rewriting that PushUtils.java code, because it appears to use the pre-5.0 HTTP connection logic. ConnectionFactory in OS 5.0+ makes this easier, and more robust, when supporting multiple transports ...
To answer your question about supporting users with multiple transports, take a look at this blackberry.com example, specifically the MyConnectionFactory class. It allows you to select which transports your app allows, and which it tries first.
Ultimately, the decision to make your server public or not depends on how it's going to be used, and whether you'll have non-corporate internet clients trying to register with your corporate server.
Let me first explain the registration flow for BB Push Demo:
When you click on Register the device will
Inform your web application that the device wants to register. For this it will send the information about the device to your Web Application (the so called ContentProvider). You are expected to store that information in your database. This step happens in the ContentProviderProtocol.performCommand() method of the push demo.
Inform the BB Push Server that the device wants to register for receiving push notifications from your application. This happens in the BpasProtocol.register() method of the push sdk.
Step 1 is only necessary if you want to know who all are registered for push notifications (maybe if you want to send individual push notifications to each device and not broadcast the message to all registered users). In that case, you will probably need other information like that user's preferences etc for customizing the push anyway.
Now the error you are getting is from the step 1. For step 1 to succeed, your device should be able to connect to your web app which it is not able to.
To solve this problem, either you have to make your web app publicly accessible (and be ready to handle the load) or comment out the step 1 from the app by making ContentProviderProtocol.performCommand() return without doing anything.
PS: The webapp used in step 1 need not be same as your push initiator. The webapp is simply being used for tracking who all is registered for receiving the push and should ideally be located in the cloud on a distributed architecture if you expect a lot of users.

How to load content from iCloud or other server to viewController in App

I am developing an App that shows annotations with popovers that appear when the user taps the detailDisclosureButton. I am thinking that the details should come from a server so that if new locations had to be added (i.e. more annotations on the map) and therefore new details content had to be added, that this could somehow be done from iCloud or some other server in order to update the App.
How does one go about connecting information that sits on a server (say html and photos, plus location data) to the App? Are there specific data access methods for connecting to the server that would exist in my viewController class?
Thanks,
you can use AFNetworking (https://github.com/AFNetworking/AFNetworking) - it's great for server connection stuff. There are plenty of tutorials with this.

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