Since all of the issues that ApolloAlamofire worked around have been fixed in Apollo 0.27.0, you're encouraged to update to the latest version of Apollo and rely on those new features instead of using ApolloAlamofire. Thanks to our users and their support during the last few years! ApolloAlamofire is going to be deprecated and its repository archived. Please open an issue if you think there's still a use case for this library.
If you used Apollo iOS library,
you may have stumbled upon a few limitations of a standard HTTPNetworkTransport
provided with the library:
- Can't swap request headers without creating a new
ApolloClient
instance - Can't send requests when the app is in background
- Can't log request/response data
Fortunately, Apollo iOS provides a public NetworkTransport
protocol that allows
us to override behaviour that's limited. Looks like Alamofire
is the most popular iOS networking library and all of the mentioned limitations can be solved
with it. You also probably use Alamofire anyway to acquire authentication tokens for your
GraphQL API, so it makes sense to integrate both Alamofire and Apollo iOS.
This package bundles a NetworkTransport
implementation that wraps Alamofire
and solves these limitations.
When initialising a new ApolloClient
instance instead of
let u = URL(string: "http://localhost:8080/graphql")!
let client = ApolloClient(url: u)
or instead of
let u = URL(string: "http://localhost:8080/graphql")!
let client = ApolloClient(networkTransport: HTTPNetworkTransport(url: u))
use
import ApolloAlamofire
//...
let u = URL(string: "http://localhost:8080/graphql")!
let client = ApolloClient(networkTransport: AlamofireTransport(url: u))
There are additional parameters available for AlamofireTransport
initialiser, e.g. for
a background session you can use it like this:
let c = URLSessionConfiguration.background(withIdentifier: "your-id")
let u = URL(string: "http://localhost:8080/graphql")!
let s = SessionManager(configuration: c)
let t = AlamofireTransport(url: u, sessionManager: s)
let client = ApolloClient(networkTransport: t)
like this for auth headers:
let token = "blah"
let u = URL(string: "http://localhost:8080/graphql")!
let h = ["Authorization": "Bearer \(token)"]
let t = AlamofireTransport(url: u, headers: h)
let client = ApolloClient(networkTransport: t)
or like this for request and response logging:
let u = URL(string: "http://localhost:8080/graphql")!
let t = AlamofireTransport(url: u, loggingEnabled: true)
let client = ApolloClient(networkTransport: t)
Both headers
and loggingEnabled
are also variable properties of AlamofireTransport
.
This allows you to change headers without instantiating a new transport, e.g. when a user
logs out and a different user logs in you can swap authentication headers. If you switch
logging dynamically, loggingEnabled
property can be controlled in the same way
without creating a new AlamofireTransport
instance.
Nice feature of Alamofire is that request logging prints a ready for use curl command, which you can directly copy and paste in terminal to test a request.
All of the initialiser parameters except url
have sensible default values and can be used
in a combination that works best for you.
To run the example project, clone the repo, and open Example/ApolloAlamofire.xcworkspace
in Xcode.
- Xcode 10.0 or later
- Swift 4.2 or later
- iOS 9.0 deployment target or later.
If you integrate the library with CocoaPods, Alamofire and Apollo iOS dependencies are pulled automatically. Currently tested compatible versions are Alamofire 4.x and Apollo iOS 0.10.x.
If you need Xcode 9 and Swift 4.0 support in your project you can use earlier version of ApolloAlamofire: 0.3.0.
CocoaPods is a dependency manager for Swift and Objective-C Cocoa projects. You can install it with the following command:
$ gem install cocoapods
Navigate to the project directory and create Podfile
with the following
command:
$ pod install
Inside of your Podfile
, specify the ApolloAlamofire
pod:
pod 'ApolloAlamofire', '~> 0.6.0'
Then, run the following command:
$ pod install
Open the the YourApp.xcworkspace
file that was created. This should be the
file you use everyday to create your app, instead of the YourApp.xcodeproj
file.
Carthage is a dependency manager that builds your dependencies and provides you with binary frameworks.
Carthage can be installed with Homebrew using the following command:
$ brew update
$ brew install carthage
Inside of your Cartfile
, add GitHub path to ApolloAlamofire
:
github "graphql-community/ApolloAlamofire" ~> 0.6.0
Then, run the following command to build the framework:
$ carthage update
Drag the built framework into your Xcode project.
ApolloAlamofire is available under the MIT license. See the LICENSE file for more info.