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Background: In order to make web requests to an API endpoint, I need to scrape a website and retrieve a token every 25-30 seconds. I'm doing this with a WKWebView and injecting some custom JavaScript using WKUserScript to retrieve AJAX response headers containing the token. Please focus on the question specifically and not on this background information - I'm attempting this entirely for my own educational purposes.

Goal

I will have different 'model' classes, or even just other UIViewControllers, that may need to call the shared UIViewController to retrieve this token to make an authenticated request.

Maybe I might abstract this into one "Sdk" class. Regardless, this 'model' SDK class could be instantiated and used by any other ViewController.

More info

I would like to be able to call the UIViewController of the WKWebView and retrieve some data. Unless I re-create it every 25 seconds, I need to run it in the background or share it. I would like to be able to run a UIViewController 'in the background' and receive some information from it once WKWebView has done it's thing.

I know there are multiple ways of communicating with another ViewController including delegation and segueing. However, I'm not sure that these help me keep the view containing the WKWebView existing in the background so I can call it's ViewController and have it re-perform the scrape. Delegation may work for normal code, but what about one that must have the view existing? Would I have to re-create this WKWebView dynamically each time a different model, or view controller, were to try and get this token?

One post suggests utilising ContainerViewControllers. From this, I gather that in the 'master' ViewController (the one containing the other ones), I could place the hidden WKWebView to do it's thing and communicate to the child view controllers that way via delegation.

Another post suggests using AppDelegate and making it a shared service. I'm completely against using a Singleton as it is widely considered an anti-pattern. There must be another way, even if a little more complex, that helps me do what I want without resorting to this 'cheat'.

This post talks about communicating between multiple ViewControllers, but I can't figure out how this would be useful when something needs to stay running and executing things.

How about any other ways to do this? Run something in a background thread with a strong pointer so it doesn't get discarded? I'm using Xcode 9.2, Swift 4, and iOS 11. As I'm very new to iOS programming, any small code examples on this would be appreciated.

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  • if your scraping it, it doesnt neccesarily have to render? which means you could just wrap it in a singleton like NSObject structure that handles all of the refreshing and any controller can access it Dec 7, 2017 at 16:07
  • Thanks, I put in my message that I'm not looking to use a Singleton. That would be simple, and a last resort. I've added why I don't want to use a Singleton there :) Side-question, it would not need to render to perform the scraping etc??
    – Jimbo
    Dec 7, 2017 at 16:09
  • So if I understood correctly, you need to make a call to get the token every 30 seconds, and you need that up to date token available for any view controller to use? Dec 7, 2017 at 16:10
  • then still make a wrapper, as I stated and pass it between classes, it doesnt have to be a singleton, whichever pattern you choose its not going to work out loosely bound, least bound would probably be use a DB to store the last known key, make a wrapper and inject the context, save the key on every successful scrape, fetch the key every time something wants to use it Dec 7, 2017 at 16:11
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    kinda, you dont have to actually add the WKWebview to anything, so you dont need to set anything to hidden, just make a class of NSObject with a var webView: WKWebView, init it and there you have it, it will still work 100%, you will just never render it. the NSobject can be made from anywhere, maybe in your app delegate, and as long as you keep a ref to it, you can inject an NSManagedObject context or as stated simply us UserDefaults to store the key, anything that needs it can pull from the same persistence Dec 7, 2017 at 16:17

2 Answers 2

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Unfortunately, WKWebView must be in the view hierarchy to use it. You must have added it as a sub view of an on-screen view controller.

This was fine for me. I added this off-screen so it was not visible. Hidden attribute might have worked as well. Either way you must call addSubview with it to make it work.

There are some other questions and answers here which verify this.

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Here is a way if you don't wish to use a singleton.

1- In the DidFinishlaunchingWithOptions, Make a timer that runs in the background and call a method inside the app delegate Called FetchNewToken.

2- In FetchNewToken, make the call needed and retrieve the new token (you can use alamofire or any 3rd library to make the call easier for you).

Up on successfully retrieving the token, save it in NSUserDefaults under the name upToDateToken

You can access this token anywhere from the application using NSUserDefaults and it will always be up to date.

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    Thanks! But I'm not looking for the Singleton, it's widely regarded as an anti-pattern (and I do mention this in my question).
    – Jimbo
    Dec 7, 2017 at 16:07
  • Again thanks Mohammad. Both Singleton and, seemingly, AppDelegate usage provide a global variable which I'm trying to avoid. However, if I can't get anything else working, I'll use it. So for now, leave your answer here and if I can't do anything else I'll use this and mark it as the answer :)
    – Jimbo
    Dec 7, 2017 at 16:29

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