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I'd like to know if anyone of you guys did a download speed throttling with the use of AFNetworking framework. My app uses AFN to download large files and I'd like to introduce a speed limit feature as well.

My best guess it to sleep the operation inside AFURLConnectionOperation method connection:(NSURLConnection *) connection didReceiveData:(NSData *)data? If this is the right approach, how to best implement it to avoid any timeouts etc. Any thoughts?

Thanks!

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  • Download using normal speed and then call NSThread.sleep :)
    – Tricertops
    Aug 10, 2014 at 14:59

2 Answers 2

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I've tried using this method but its not much promising.

If you use sleep etc in connection:didReceiveData: of NSURLConnection, it receives the data and fills its buffer(1MB approx. in max delay with full speed net) and then calls connection:didReceiveData:. With this you will give spikes of net usage. I don't think this is what you want.

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You could use two different techniques to throttle your network :

  • Use Apple's "Network Link Conditioner"

    • if you are testing on a developer enabled device : Go to "Settings" > "Developer" > "Network Link Conditioner", the switch to Enable and choose a profile
    • if you are testing on the Simulator, which would use you Mac's own network connection, you can download the "Network Link Conditioner" prefpane for OSX (See Mattt's article here on NSHipster)
  • Or use OHHTTPStubs which can both stub your requests with some fake data (very useful for testing, including generating some error cases not easily reproducible in real life), but also introduce a delay in the response and fake network latency and slow networks. (You may search Google for examples on using it using AFNetworking, there are plenty of articles about it)

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