UPDATE: The JSON portion of the following was found to work for PUT/POST, but NOT for GET/HEAD/DELETE
After some wrangling, and help outside SO, I got something working, which I wanted to leave as a memento. In the end, I was really very impressed with AFNetworking-2. It was so simple, I kept trying to make it harder than it should have been. Given a jsonDict
method that returns the json packet to send, I created the following:
- (void) submitAuthenticatedRest_PUT
{
// it all starts with a manager
AFHTTPRequestOperationManager *manager = [AFHTTPRequestOperationManager manager];
// in my case, I'm in prototype mode, I own the network being used currently,
// so I can use a self generated cert key, and the following line allows me to use that
manager.securityPolicy.allowInvalidCertificates = YES;
// Make sure we a JSON serialization policy, not sure what the default is
manager.requestSerializer = [AFJSONRequestSerializer serializer];
// No matter the serializer, they all inherit a battery of header setting APIs
// Here we do Basic Auth, never do this outside of HTTPS
[manager.requestSerializer
setAuthorizationHeaderFieldWithUsername:@"basic_auth_username"
password:@"basic_auth_password"];
// Now we can just PUT it to our target URL (note the https).
// This will return immediately, when the transaction has finished,
// one of either the success or failure blocks will fire
[manager
PUT: @"https://101.202.303.404:5555/rest/path"
parameters: [self jsonDict]
success:^(AFHTTPRequestOperation *operation, id responseObject){
NSLog(@"Submit response data: %@", responseObject);} // success callback block
failure:^(AFHTTPRequestOperation *operation, NSError *error){
NSLog(@"Error: %@", error);} // failure callback block
];
}
3 setup statements, followed by 2 message sends, it really is that easy.
EDIT/ADDED: Here's an example @jsonDict implementation:
- (NSMutableDictionary*) jsonDict
{
NSMutableDictionary *result = [[NSMutableDictionary alloc] init];
result[@"serial_id"] = self.serialID;
result[@"latitude"] = [NSNumber numberWithDouble: self.location.latitude];
result[@"longitude"] = [NSNumber numberWithDouble: self.location.longitude];
result[@"name"] = self.name;
if ([self hasPhoto])
{
result[@"photo-jpeg"] = [UIImageJPEGRepresentation(self.photo, 0.5)
base64EncodedStringWithOptions: NSDataBase64Encoding76CharacterLineLength];
}
return result;
}
It should just return a dictionary with string keys, and simple objects as values (NSNumber, NSString, NSArray (I think), etc). The JSON encoder does the rest for you.
与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…