Skip to content

nativescript-community/https

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

@nativescript-community/https

Downloads per month NPM Version

Nativescript plugin for https requests


Table of Contents

* [Installation](#installation)
		* [A drop-in replacement for the [default http module](https://docs.nativescript.org/cookbook/http).](#a-drop-in-replacement-for-the-default-http-modulehttpsdocsnativescriptorgcookbookhttp)
* [Features](#features)
* [FAQ](#faq)
* [Installation](#installation-1)
* [Examples](#examples)
	* [Hitting an API using `GET` method](#hitting-an-api-using-get-method)
* [Configuration](#configuration)
	* [Installing your SSL certificate](#installing-your-ssl-certificate)
		* [Enabling SSL pinning](#enabling-ssl-pinning)
		* [Disabling SSL pinning](#disabling-ssl-pinning)
	* [useLegacy](#uselegacy)
	* [Cookie](#cookie)
	* [Enabling Cache](#enabling-cache)
	* [Multipart form data](#multipart-form-data)
	* [Options](#options)
* [Webpack / bundling](#webpack--bundling)
* [`iOS` Troubleshooting](#ios-troubleshooting)
* [`Android` troubleshooting](#android-troubleshooting)

Installation

Run the following command from the root of your project:

ns plugin add @nativescript-community/https

Easily integrate the most reliable native networking libraries with the latest and greatest HTTPS security features.

Android: version 4.x using okhttp 4.x changing minSDKVersion to 21! If lower needed stick to 3.x

Plugin version 2.0.0 bumps AFNetworking on iOS to 4.0.0 which no longer relies on UIWebView. Make sure to run pod repo update to get the latest AFNetworking pod on your development machine.

A drop-in replacement for the default http module.

Features

  • Modern TLS & SSL security features
  • Shared connection pooling reduces request latency
  • Silently recovers from common connection problems
  • Everything runs on a native background thread
  • Transparent GZIP
  • HTTP/2 support
  • Multiform part
  • Cache
  • Basic Cookie support

FAQ

What the flip is SSL pinning and all this security mumbo jumbo?

How to make your apps more secure with SSL pinning.

Do I have to use SSL pinning?

No. This plugin works out of the box without any security configurations needed. Either way you'll still benefit from all the features listed above.

Installation

tns plugin add @nativescript-community/https

Examples

Hitting an API using GET method

import * as Https from '@nativescript-community/https';
Https.request({
    url: 'https://httpbin.org/get',
    method: 'GET',
    timeout: 30, // seconds (default 10)
})
    .then(function (response) {
        console.log('Https.request response', response);
    })
    .catch(function (error) {
        console.error('Https.request error', error);
    });

Configuration

Installing your SSL certificate

Create a folder called assets in your projects app folder like so <project>/app/assets. Using chrome, go to the URL where the SSL certificate resides. View the details then drag and drop the certificate image into the assets folder.

Installing your SSL certificate

Enabling SSL pinning

import { knownFolders } from 'file-system';
import * as Https from '@nativescript-community/https';
let dir = knownFolders.currentApp().getFolder('assets');
let certificate = dir.getFile('httpbin.org.cer').path;
Https.enableSSLPinning({ host: 'httpbin.org', certificate });

Once you've enabled SSL pinning you CAN NOT re-enable with a different host or certificate file.

Disabling SSL pinning

import * as Https from '@nativescript-community/https';
Https.disableSSLPinning();

All requests after calling this method will no longer utilize SSL pinning until it is re-enabled once again.

useLegacy

There is a new option called useLegacy. You can set of every request options. When using that option the request will behave more like {N} http module.

  • the content returned by a request is not the resulting string but an object. It follows HTTPContent format for the most part. You can call toJSON or toFile. The only difference is that toFile returns a Promise<File> which means that it is async and run in a background thread!
  • an error return a content too allowing you to read its content.

Cookie

By default basic Cookie support is enabled to work like in {N} http module. In the future more options will be added

Enabling Cache

import { knownFolders, path } from '@nativescript/core/file-system';
import * as Https from '@nativescript-community/https';
Https.setCache({
    diskLocation: path.join(knownFolders.documents().path, 'httpcache'),
    diskSize: 10 * 1024 * 1024, // 10 MiB
});

/// later on when calling your request you can use the cachePolicy option

Multipart form data

If you set the Content-Type header to "multipart/form-data" the request body will be evaluated as a multipart form data. Each body parameter is expected to be in this format:

{
	data: any
    parameterName: string,
    fileName?: string
    contentType?: string
}

if fileName and contentType are set then data is expected to be either a NSData on iOS or a native.Array<number> on Android.

Options

export interface HttpsSSLPinningOptions {
    host: string;
    certificate: string;
    allowInvalidCertificates?: boolean;
    validatesDomainName?: boolean;
    commonName?: string;
}
import { HttpRequestOptions } from 'tns-core-modules/http';
export interface HttpsRequestOptions extends HTTPOptions {
    useLegacy?: boolean;
    cachePolicy?: 'noCache' | 'onlyCache' | 'ignoreCache';
    onProgress?: (current: number, total: number) => void;
}
SSLPinning Option Description
host: string This must be the request domain name eg sales.company.org.
commonName?: string Default: options.host, set if certificate CN is different from the host eg *.company.org (Android specific)
certificate: string The uri path to your .cer certificate file.
allowInvalidCertificates?: boolean Default: false. This should always be false if you are using SSL pinning. Set this to true if you're using a self-signed certificate.
validatesDomainName?: boolean Default: true. Determines if the domain name should be validated with your pinned certificate.
Requests Option Description
useLegacy?: boolean Default: false. [IOS only] set to true in order to get the response data (when status >= 300)in the content directly instead of response.body.content.
`cachePolicy?: 'noCache' 'onlyCache'
onProgress?: (current: number, total: number) => void [IOS only] Set the progress callback.

Webpack / bundling

Since you're probably shipping a certificate with your app (like our demo does), make sure it's bundled by Webpack as well. You can do this by adding the certificate(s) with the CopyWebpackPlugin.

iOS Troubleshooting

Please educate yourself on iOS's App Transport Security before starting beef!

If you try and hit an https route without adding it to App Transport Security's whitelist it will not work! You can bypass this behavior by adding the following to your projects Info.plist:

<key>NSAppTransportSecurity</key>
<dict>
    <key>NSAllowsArbitraryLoads</key>
    <true/>
</dict>

This plugin does not add NSAllowsArbitraryLoads to your projects Info.plist for you.

Android troubleshooting

If you app crashes with a message that it's doing too much networking on the main thread, then pass the option allowLargeResponse with value true to the request function.

Thanks

Who Why
Robert Laverty For creating and maintaining this plugin for a long time
Jeff Whelple For contributing
Eddy Verbruggen For maintaining this before it got transferred
AFNetworking AFNetworking A delightful networking framework for iOS, OS X, watchOS, and tvOS.
Square okhttp An HTTP+HTTP/2 client for Android and Java applications.

Examples:

Demos and Development

Repo Setup

The repo uses submodules. If you did not clone with --recursive then you need to call

git submodule update --init

The package manager used to install and link dependencies must be pnpm or yarn. npm wont work.

To develop and test: if you use yarn then run yarn if you use pnpm then run pnpm i

Interactive Menu:

To start the interactive menu, run npm start (or yarn start or pnpm start). This will list all of the commonly used scripts.

Build

npm run build.all

WARNING: it seems yarn build.all wont always work (not finding binaries in node_modules/.bin) which is why the doc explicitly uses npm run

Demos

npm run demo.[ng|react|svelte|vue].[ios|android]

npm run demo.svelte.ios # Example

Demo setup is a bit special in the sense that if you want to modify/add demos you dont work directly in demo-[ng|react|svelte|vue] Instead you work in demo-snippets/[ng|react|svelte|vue] You can start from the install.ts of each flavor to see how to register new demos

Contributing

Update repo

You can update the repo files quite easily

First update the submodules

npm run update

Then commit the changes Then update common files

npm run sync

Then you can run yarn|pnpm, commit changed files if any

Update readme

npm run readme

Update doc

npm run doc

Publish

The publishing is completely handled by lerna (you can add -- --bump major to force a major release) Simply run

npm run publish

modifying submodules

The repo uses https:// for submodules which means you won't be able to push directly into the submodules. One easy solution is t modify ~/.gitconfig and add

[url "ssh://[email protected]/"]
	pushInsteadOf = https://github.com/

Questions

If you have any questions/issues/comments please feel free to create an issue or start a conversation in the NativeScript Community Discord.

Demos and Development

Repo Setup

The repo uses submodules. If you did not clone with --recursive then you need to call

git submodule update --init

The package manager used to install and link dependencies must be pnpm or yarn. npm wont work.

To develop and test: if you use yarn then run yarn if you use pnpm then run pnpm i

Interactive Menu:

To start the interactive menu, run npm start (or yarn start or pnpm start). This will list all of the commonly used scripts.

Build

npm run build.all

WARNING: it seems yarn build.all wont always work (not finding binaries in node_modules/.bin) which is why the doc explicitly uses npm run

Demos

npm run demo.[ng|react|svelte|vue].[ios|android]

npm run demo.svelte.ios # Example

Demo setup is a bit special in the sense that if you want to modify/add demos you dont work directly in demo-[ng|react|svelte|vue] Instead you work in demo-snippets/[ng|react|svelte|vue] You can start from the install.ts of each flavor to see how to register new demos

Contributing

Update repo

You can update the repo files quite easily

First update the submodules

npm run update

Then commit the changes Then update common files

npm run sync

Then you can run yarn|pnpm, commit changed files if any

Update readme

npm run readme

Update doc

npm run doc

Publish

The publishing is completely handled by lerna (you can add -- --bump major to force a major release) Simply run

npm run publish

modifying submodules

The repo uses https:// for submodules which means you won't be able to push directly into the submodules. One easy solution is t modify ~/.gitconfig and add

[url "ssh://[email protected]/"]
	pushInsteadOf = https://github.com/

Questions

If you have any questions/issues/comments please feel free to create an issue or start a conversation in the NativeScript Community Discord.