Buford
Apple Push Notification (APN) Provider library for Go 1.6 and HTTP/2. Send remote notifications to iOS, macOS, tvOS and watchOS. Buford can also sign push packages for Safari notifications and Wallet passes.
Please see releases for updates.
Documentation
Buford uses Apple's new HTTP/2 Notification API that was announced at WWDC 2015 and released on December 17, 2015.
API documentation is available from GoDoc.
Also see Apple's Local and Remote Notification Programming Guide, especially the sections on the JSON payload and the Notification API.
Terminology
APN Apple Push Notification
Provider The Buford library is used to create a provider of push notifications.
Service Apple's push notification service that Buford communicates with.
Client An http.Client
provides an HTTP/2 client to communicate with the APN Service.
Notification A payload, device token, and headers.
Device Token An identifier for an application on a given device.
Payload The JSON sent to a device.
Headers HTTP/2 headers are used to set priority and expiration.
Installation
This library requires Go 1.6.2 or better.
go get -u -d github.com/RobotsAndPencils/buford
Buford depends on several packages outside of the standard library, including the http2 package. Its certificate package depends on the pkcs12 and pushpackage depends on pkcs7. They can be retrieved or updated with:
go get -u golang.org/x/net/http2
go get -u golang.org/x/crypto/pkcs12
go get -u github.com/aai/gocrypto/pkcs7
I am still looking for feedback on the API so it may change. Please copy Buford and its dependencies into a vendor/
folder at the root of your project.
Examples
package main
import (
"encoding/json"
"fmt"
"github.com/RobotsAndPencils/buford/certificate"
"github.com/RobotsAndPencils/buford/payload"
"github.com/RobotsAndPencils/buford/payload/badge"
"github.com/RobotsAndPencils/buford/push"
)
// set these variables appropriately
const (
filename = "/path/to/certificate.p12"
password = ""
host = push.Development
deviceToken = "c2732227a1d8021cfaf781d71fb2f908c61f5861079a00954a5453f1d0281433"
)
func main() {
// load a certificate and use it to connect to the APN service:
cert, err := certificate.Load(filename, password)
exitOnError(err)
client, err := push.NewClient(cert)
exitOnError(err)
service := push.NewService(client, host)
// construct a payload to send to the device:
p := payload.APS{
Alert: payload.Alert{Body: "Hello HTTP/2"},
Badge: badge.New(42),
}
b, err := json.Marshal(p)
exitOnError(err)
// push the notification:
id, err := service.Push(deviceToken, nil, b)
exitOnError(err)
fmt.Println("apns-id:", id)
}
See example/push
for the complete listing.
Concurrent use
HTTP/2 can send multiple requests over a single connection, but service.Push
waits for a response before returning. Instead, you can wrap a Service
in a queue to handle responses independently, allowing you to send multiple notifications at once.
queue := push.NewQueue(service, numWorkers)
// process responses (responses may be received in any order)
go func() {
for resp := range queue.Responses {
log.Println(resp)
}
}()
// send the notifications
for i := 0; i < 100; i++ {
queue.Push(deviceToken, nil, b)
}
// done sending notifications, wait for all responses and shutdown
queue.Wait()
It's important to set up a goroutine to handle responses before sending any notifications, otherwise Push will block waiting for room to return a Response.
You can configure the number of workers used to send notifications concurrently, but be aware that a larger number isn't necessarily better, as Apple limits the number of concurrent streams. From the Apple Push Notification documentation:
"The APNs server allows multiple concurrent streams for each connection. The exact number of streams is based on server load, so do not assume a specific number of streams."
See example/concurrent/
for a complete listing.
You can specify an ID, expiration, priority, and other parameters via the Headers struct.
headers := &push.Headers{
ID: "922D9F1F-B82E-B337-EDC9-DB4FC8527676",
Expiration: time.Now().Add(time.Hour),
LowPriority: true,
}
id, err := service.Push(deviceToken, headers, b)
If no ID is specified APNS will generate and return a unique ID. When an expiration is specified, APNS will store and retry sending the notification until that time, otherwise APNS will not store or retry the notification. LowPriority should always be set when sending a ContentAvailable payload.
Custom values
To add custom values to an APS payload, use the Map method as follows:
p := payload.APS{
Alert: payload.Alert{Body: "Message received from Bob"},
}
pm := p.Map()
pm["acme2"] = []string{"bang", "whiz"}
b, err := json.Marshal(pm)
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(b)
}
id, err := service.Push(deviceToken, nil, b)
Error responses
Errors from service.Push
or queue.Response
could be HTTP errors or an error response from Apple. To access the Reason and HTTP Status code, you must convert the error
to a push.Error
as follows:
if e, ok := err.(*push.Error); ok {
switch e.Reason {
case push.ErrBadDeviceToken:
// handle error
}
}
Website Push
Before you can send push notifications through Safari and the Notification Center, you must provide a push package, which is a signed zip file containing some JSON and icons.
Use pushpackage
to write a zip to a http.ResponseWriter
or to a file. It will create the manifest.json
and signature
files for you.
pkg := pushpackage.New(w)
pkg.EncodeJSON("website.json", website)
pkg.File("icon.iconset/icon_128x128@2x.png", "static/icon_128x128@2x.png")
// other icons... (required)
if err := pkg.Sign(cert, nil); err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
NOTE: The filenames added to the zip may contain forward slashes but not back slashes or drive letters.
See example/website/
and the Safari Push Notifications documentation.
Wallet (Passbook) Pass
A pass is a signed zip file with a .pkpass extension and a application/vnd.apple.pkpass
MIME type. You can use pushpackage
to write a .pkpass that contains a pass.json
file.
See example/wallet/
and the Wallet Developer Guide.