6

I can't consistently read response from a server if I use code below.

Header:

#import <Foundation/Foundation.h>
@interface TestHttpClient : NSObject<NSURLSessionDelegate, NSURLSessionTaskDelegate, NSURLSessionDownloadDelegate>

-(void)POST:(NSString*) relativePath payLoad:(NSData*)payLoad;

@end

Implementation:

#import "TestHttpClient.h"

@implementation TestHttpClient

-(void)POST:(NSString*)relativePath payLoad:(NSData*)payLoad
{
    NSURL* url = [NSURL URLWithString:@"http://apps01.ditat.net/mobile/batch"];

    // Set URL credentials and save to storage
    NSURLCredential *credential = [NSURLCredential credentialWithUser:@"BadUser" password:@"BadPassword" persistence: NSURLCredentialPersistencePermanent];
    NSURLProtectionSpace *protectionSpace = [[NSURLProtectionSpace alloc] initWithHost:[url host] port:443 protocol:[url scheme] realm:@"Ditat mobile services endpoint" authenticationMethod:NSURLAuthenticationMethodHTTPBasic];
    [[NSURLCredentialStorage sharedCredentialStorage] setDefaultCredential:credential forProtectionSpace:protectionSpace];

    // Configure session
    NSURLSessionConfiguration *sessionConfig = [NSURLSessionConfiguration ephemeralSessionConfiguration];
    sessionConfig.timeoutIntervalForRequest = 30.0;
    sessionConfig.timeoutIntervalForResource = 60.0;
    sessionConfig.HTTPMaximumConnectionsPerHost = 1;
    sessionConfig.URLCredentialStorage = [NSURLCredentialStorage sharedCredentialStorage]; // Should this line be here??

    NSURLSession *session =     [NSURLSession sessionWithConfiguration:sessionConfig delegate:self delegateQueue:[NSOperationQueue mainQueue]];

    // Create request object with parameters
    NSMutableURLRequest *request =
    [NSMutableURLRequest requestWithURL:url cachePolicy:NSURLRequestReloadIgnoringLocalCacheData timeoutInterval:60.0];

    // Set header data
    [request setHTTPMethod:@"POST"];
    [request setValue:@"application/x-protobuf" forHTTPHeaderField:@"Content-Type"];
    [request setValue:@"Version 1.0" forHTTPHeaderField:@"User-Agent"];
    [request setValue:@"Demo" forHTTPHeaderField:@"AccountId"];
    [request setValue:@"1234-5678" forHTTPHeaderField:@"DeviceSerialNumber"];
    [request setValue:@"iOS 7.1" forHTTPHeaderField:@"OSVersion"];
    [request setHTTPBody:payLoad];

    // Call session to post data to server??
    NSURLSessionDownloadTask *downloadTask = [session downloadTaskWithRequest:request];
    [downloadTask resume];
}

-(void)invokeDelegateWithResponse:(NSHTTPURLResponse *)response fileLocation:(NSURL*)location
{
    NSLog(@"HttpClient.invokeDelegateWithResponse - code %ld", (long)[response statusCode]);
}

#pragma mark - NSURLSessionDownloadDelegate
- (void)URLSession:(NSURLSession *)session downloadTask:(NSURLSessionDownloadTask *)downloadTask
didFinishDownloadingToURL:(NSURL *)location
{
    NSLog(@"NSURLSessionDownloadDelegate.didFinishDownloadingToURL");
    [self invokeDelegateWithResponse:(NSHTTPURLResponse*)[downloadTask response] fileLocation:location];
    [session invalidateAndCancel];
}

// Implemented as blank to avoid compiler warning
-(void)URLSession:(NSURLSession *)session downloadTask:(NSURLSessionDownloadTask *)downloadTask
     didWriteData:(int64_t)bytesWritten
totalBytesWritten:(int64_t)totalBytesWritten
totalBytesExpectedToWrite:(int64_t)totalBytesExpectedToWrite
{
}

// Implemented as blank to avoid compiler warning
-(void)URLSession:(NSURLSession *)session downloadTask:(NSURLSessionDownloadTask *)downloadTask
didResumeAtOffset:(int64_t)fileOffset
expectedTotalBytes:(int64_t)expectedTotalBytes
{
}

Can be called from any VC (place code under button action for example)

-(IBAction)buttonTouchUp:(UIButton *)sender
{
    TestHttpClient *client = [[TestHttpClient alloc] init];
    [client POST:@"" payLoad:nil];
    return;
}

If you start program and call this code - it will show in NSLog completion with 401. Second try - will not work. Or might work if wait a little. But it won't send server requests as you push button.

NSURLSession somehow "remembers" failed attempts and won't return anything? Why is this behavior? I want to see 2 NSLog messages every time I push button.

9
  • 2
    Do you need to implement your own wrapper, or could you use an existing framework? AFNetworking is a good choice. Even if you can't use it, you may find the answer in it's implementation.
    – i_am_jorf
    Jul 21, 2014 at 17:21
  • AFNetworking is a wrapper too, doubt it will solve my problem, just add another level of code.. I prefer to figure it out myself and not use 3rd party library, especially that all I do is download files.. My guess it that somehow response being cached and I just need to code some kind of forced cleanup..
    – katit
    Jul 21, 2014 at 17:27
  • In terms of always seeing two requests (rather than just the first time), that may be because you're creating a new NSURLSession for every request. You really want to create a single NSURLSession and have subsequent requests use that same session.
    – Rob
    Jul 21, 2014 at 17:46
  • Probably unrelated to your problem at hand, but your didReceiveChallenge should probably have an else condition that calls the completionHandler with NSURLSessionAuthChallengeCancelAuthenticationChallenge. If that if statement fails, your current implementation will stall if you don't call that completionHandler at all.
    – Rob
    Jul 21, 2014 at 17:48
  • Rob, I see doubles on a single request, it's just the way built in clients work. I've seen it in .NET behaving the same
    – katit
    Jul 21, 2014 at 17:48

1 Answer 1

26
+50

TL;DR; You are not handling authentication correctly in your example.

This is what happens when an iOS or MacOS client encounters a URL that requires authentication:

  1. The client requests a resource from the server GET www.example.com/protected

  2. The server response for that request has a status code of 401 and includes the WWW-Authenticate header. This tells the client this is a protected resource, and specifies what authentication method to use to access the resource. In iOS and MacOS, this is the "authentication challenge" that a delegate responds to. The WWW-Authenticate header is specifically mentioned in the documentation to highlight this.

    • Normally on iOS and MacOS, if a delegate is not provided or does not handle authentication challenges, the URL loading system will try to find an appropriate credential for this resource and authentication type by looking in NSURLCredentialStorage. It looks for a matching credential that has been saved as the default.

    • If a delegate implementing authentication IS provided, it's up to that delegate to provide a credential for that resource.

  3. When the system has a credential for the authentication challenge the request is attempted again with the credential.

    GET www.example.com/protected Authorization: Basic blablahaala

This explains the behavior you see in Charles, and is the correct behavior according to the various HTTP specifications.

Obviously, if you do not want to implement a delegate for your connection you have the option of putting a credential for the resource you are accessing in NSURLCredentialStorage. The system will use this, and will not require you to implement a delegate for the credential.

Create an NSURLCredential:

credential = [NSURLCredential credentialWithUser:@"some user" password:@"clever password" persistence: NSURLCredentialPersistencePermanent];

NSURLCredentialPersistencePermanent will tell NSURLCredentialStorage to store this permanently in the keychain. There are other possible values you can use, such as NSURLCredentialPersistenceForSession. These are covered in the documentation. . You should avoid using NSURLCredentialPersistencePermanent with credentials that have not been validated, use session or none until the credential has been validated. You have probably seen projects using 'KeychainWrapper' or directly accessing the Keychain API to save internet usernames and passwords - this is not the preferred way to do this, NSURLCredentialStorage is.

Create an NSURLProtectionSpace with the correct host, port, protocol, realm, and authentication method:

protectionSpace = [[NSURLProtectionSpace alloc] initWithHost:[url host] port:443 protocol:[url scheme] realm:@"Protected Area" authenticationMethod:NSURLAuthenticationMethodHTTPBasic];

Note that [[url port] integerValue] will not provide defaults for HTTP (80) or HTTPS (443). You must provide those. The realm MUST match what the server provides.

Finally, put it into NSURLCredentialStorage:

[[NSURLCredentialStorage sharedCredentialStorage] setDefaultCredential:credential forProtectionSpace:protectionSpace];

This will allow the URL loading system to use this credential from this point forward. Essentially the same process can also be used for a SSL/TLS server trust reference as well.

In your question you are handling server trust, but not the NSURLAuthenticationMethodHTTPBasic . When your application receives an authentication challenge for the HTTP Basic Auth, you are not responding to it, and things go downhill from there. In your case, you probably do not need to implement URLSession:didReceiveChallenge:completionHandler: at all if you do the steps above to set the default basic authentication credential for this protection space. The system will handle the NSURLAuthenticationMethodServerTrust by performing the default trust evaluation. The system will then find the default credential you set for this protection space for basic authentication and use that.

UPDATE

Based on new information in the comments, and running a modified version of the code, OP is actually getting this error in response to his request: NSURLConnection/CFURLConnection HTTP load failed (kCFStreamErrorDomainSSL, -9813) This error can be found in SecureTransport.h. The root certificate on the server credentials doesn't exist or is not trusted by the system. This is very rare, but can happen. Technote 2232 explains how to customize the server trust evaluation in the client to allow this certificate.

21
  • You should remove the authentication related methods of your delegate as well. Between those and setting your own auth headers, there's your problem. When it can't authenticate you are either preventing it from returning an error, or you're not seeing/handling the error.
    – quellish
    Jul 27, 2014 at 22:48
  • Again, in didReceiveChallenge you are handing the server trust challenger, but NOT the basic authentication challenge. It's getting into a loop because the server is telling the client to authenticate, but you are not handling the challenge. You do not need didReceiveChallenge at all for this to work.
    – quellish
    Jul 28, 2014 at 16:40
  • 1. You are not performing any server trust evaluation that is different from the system default. 2. You are not performing any basic auth at all in your delegate, and implementing didReceiveChallenge prevents the system from doing it. You can remove this delegate method, and the system will do both challenges.
    – quellish
    Jul 28, 2014 at 17:06
  • Server trust does not need to be done separately unless you need to customize the server trust evaluation as per Technote 2232. You are not doing any trust evaluation in your implementation, so I assume you have no need to customize trust evaluation. If you are using a self signed certificate, etc. you would. Your server trust evaluation in your implementation just looks for an existing credential. It doesn't evaluation the server trust.
    – quellish
    Jul 28, 2014 at 17:13
  • What error are you getting back from the session when that happens? Are you handling the error at all?
    – quellish
    Jul 28, 2014 at 17:20

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.