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I have a ROR application with an API secured by Devise + simple_token_authentication - all working fine. Now I'm building an iOS application using NSURLSession to access the API and handle authentication, which is where i get into trouble.

On load i call the following method to retrieve data from the server. As i understand it, the didReceiveChallenge delegate should be called when getting a 401 unauthorized but nothing happens. I am fairly new to iOS and i might be doing it completely wrong, but i hope someone can help me get past this issue. Thanks!:)

- (void)fetch:(id)sender {

    NSURLSessionConfiguration *config = [NSURLSessionConfiguration ephemeralSessionConfiguration];
    config.HTTPAdditionalHeaders = @{ @"Accept":@"application/json"};

    self.session = [NSURLSession sessionWithConfiguration:config delegate:self delegateQueue:nil];

    NSURLSessionTask *dataTask = [self.session dataTaskWithURL:[NSURL URLWithString:@"http://localhost:3000/api/v1/tasks"] completionHandler:^(NSData *data, NSURLResponse *response, NSError *error) {
        // handle response
        NSLog(@"data %@", data);
    }];

    [dataTask resume];

}

This method never gets called, even after receiving a 401 header.

-(void)URLSession:(NSURLSession *)session task:(NSURLSessionTask *)task didReceiveChallenge:(NSURLAuthenticationChallenge *)challenge completionHandler:(void (^)(NSURLSessionAuthChallengeDisposition, NSURLCredential *))completionHandler {

    NSString *user = @"email";
    NSString *password = @"secretpass";

    NSLog(@"didReceiveChallenge");

    // should prompt for a password in a real app but we will hard code this baby
    NSURLCredential *secretHandshake = [NSURLCredential credentialWithUser:user password:password persistence:NSURLCredentialPersistenceForSession];

    // use block
    completionHandler(NSURLSessionAuthChallengeUseCredential,secretHandshake);

}

2 Answers 2

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If you include a completionHandler in the dataTaskWithURL, then that is what is used and the delegate is never called.

Try setting the completionHandler to Nil:

NSURLSessionTask *dataTask = [self.session dataTaskWithURL:[NSURL URLWithString:@"http://localhost:3000/api/v1/tasks"] completionHandler:Nil];

Then the delegate methods will be used.

On testing this further, you need to return a WWW-Authenticate header to trigger the didReceiveChallenge delegate method. From Apple docs:

Important: The URL loading system classes do not call their delegates to handle request challenges unless the server response contains a WWW-Authenticate header. Other authentication types, such as proxy authentication and TLS trust validation do not require this header.

You can do this by adding a custom authenticate method to your rails app e.g.

  before_filter :authenticate_user!

  private

    def authenticate_user!
      unless current_user
          headers["WWW-Authenticate"] = %(Basic realm="My Realm")          
          render :json => {:message =>I18n.t("errors.messages.authorization_error")}, :status => :unauthorized
      end
    end

I'm still working through this on my app but the above approach does fire the didReceiveChallenge delegate. Hope you find it useful.

A bit more info, the following code in didReceiveChallenge (same as in original question) will handle the logon to the Rails server:

-(void)URLSession:(NSURLSession *)session task:(NSURLSessionTask *)task didReceiveChallenge:(NSURLAuthenticationChallenge *)challenge completionHandler:(void (^)(NSURLSessionAuthChallengeDisposition, NSURLCredential *))completionHandler {
 //   NSLog(@"didReceiveChallenge");

    NSString *ftfID    = (NSString *)[[NSUserDefaults standardUserDefaults] objectForKey:@"ftfID"];
    NSString *ftfPassword    = (NSString *)[[NSUserDefaults standardUserDefaults] objectForKey:@"ftfPassword"];
    NSString *user = ftfID;
    NSString *password = ftfPassword;

    NSURLCredential *secretHandshake = [NSURLCredential credentialWithUser:user password:password persistence:NSURLCredentialPersistenceForSession];

    // use block
    completionHandler(NSURLSessionAuthChallengeUseCredential,secretHandshake);

}

To download working examples of a Rails and iOS app communicating via json requests see https://github.com/petetodd/bright-green-star-client and https://github.com/petetodd/bright-green-star-server.

9
  • Thanks greentor! this is very helpful. didReceiveChallenge is now working. If you find out some more good stuff, please post it:] i will accept your answer soon Dec 19, 2013 at 14:54
  • Glad you found it useful. If you're looking to Post data using NSURLSession you might find this answer useful: Using NSDictionary to Post params In my iPhone app I register/logon users then post data to my Rails app.
    – Peter Todd
    Dec 21, 2013 at 10:06
  • Hey @greentor, can i ask how you are handling the json login process with devise? Jan 5, 2014 at 15:26
  • A bit more info now added to the answer showing how to deal with logon challenge.
    – Peter Todd
    Jan 6, 2014 at 8:14
  • Hi @user3108730 - I think you are already doing what I added for didReceiveChallenge. I attempt a post, a challenge is received, logon successful and the post continues (with Rails app using the User I logged on as). If your didReceiveChallenge fires what response are you getting from devise? (use didCompleteWithError delegate to get details)
    – Peter Todd
    Jan 6, 2014 at 8:33
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Be sure you're using the :database_authenticatable strategy in your User model and config.http_authenticatable = true in the devise initializer:

# models/user.rb
...
devise :database_authenticatable, # and more
...


# config/initializers/devise.rb
...
config.http_authenticatable = true
...
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  • Hey Troy, thanks for your answer. I didn't have config.http_authenticatable = true, but it still doesn't work. I think the problem might be more related to the iOS part and the didReceiveChallenge delegate Dec 17, 2013 at 11:38
  • Try adding the other delegate methods to see what's going on - i.e. – URLSession:task:didCompleteWithError: and – URLSession:task:willPerformHTTPRedirection:newRequest:completionHandler:
    – Troy
    Dec 17, 2013 at 16:37

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