Forked from jpoz/APNS
a gem for the Apple Push Notification Service.
sudo gem install apns
Convert your certificate
In Keychain access export your certificate as a p12. Then run the following command to convert it to a .pem
openssl pkcs12 -in cert.p12 -out cert.pem -nodes -clcerts
After you have your .pem file. Set what host, port, certificate file location on the APNS class:
APNS.host = 'gateway.push.apple.com'
# gateway.sandbox.push.apple.com is default
APNS.pem = '/path/to/pem/file'
# this is the file you just created
APNS.port = 2195
# this is also the default. Shouldn't ever have to set this, but just in case Apple goes crazy, you can.
Then to send a push notification you can either just send a string as the alert or give it a hash for the alert, badge and sound.
device_token = '123abc456def'
APNS.send_notification(device_token, 'Hello iPhone!' )
APNS.send_notification(device_token, :alert => 'Hello iPhone!', :badge => 1, :sound => 'default')
You can also send multiple notifications using the same connection to Apple:
device_token = '123abc456def'
n1 = APNS::Notification.new(device_token, 'Hello iPhone!' )
n2 = APNS::Notification.new(device_token, :alert => 'Hello iPhone!', :badge => 1, :sound => 'default')
APNS.send_notifications([n1, n2])
You can send other application specific information as well.
APNS.send_notification(device_token, :alert => 'Hello iPhone!', :badge => 1, :sound => 'default',
:other => {:sent => 'with apns gem'})
This will add the other hash to the same level as the aps hash:
{"aps":{"alert":"Hello iPhone!","badge":1,"sound":"default"},"sent":"with apns gem"}
After you setup push notification for your application with Apple. You need to ask Apple for you application specific device token.
- (void)applicationDidFinishLaunching:(UIApplication *)application
{
// Register with apple that this app will use push notification
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] registerForRemoteNotificationTypes:(UIRemoteNotificationTypeAlert |
UIRemoteNotificationTypeSound | UIRemoteNotificationTypeBadge)];
// Your app startup logic...
return YES;
}
- (void)application:(UIApplication *)application didRegisterForRemoteNotificationsWithDeviceToken:(NSData *)deviceToken
{
// Convert the binary data token into an NSString (see below for the implementation of this function)
NSString *deviceTokenAsString = stringFromDeviceTokenData(deviceToken);
// Show the device token obtained from apple to the log
NSLog(@"deviceToken: %@", deviceTokenAsString);
}
This snippet comes from this stackoverflow post’s anwser.
NSString* stringFromDeviceTokenData(NSData *deviceToken) { const char *data = [deviceToken bytes]; NSMutableString* token = [NSMutableString string]; for (int i = 0; i < [deviceToken length]; i++) { [token appendFormat:@"%02.2hhX", data[i]]; } return [[token copy] autorelease]; }
For more information on Apple Push Notifications you can see Apple Developer Documentation here.