Dear all,
We *think* we can now reproduce the problem. Clearly writing the last
e-mail has focussed our attention :)
Summary.
We have a simple Ionic app that would call the Aerogear notification
handler when notifications were receive in the foreground and when the
app was in the background. The Aerogear notification handler would
sometimes be called and sometimes NOT be called when a notification was
received when the app was not started. See our long previous e-mails
detailing the problem.
We think we can now reproduce the problem as follows:
1. Kill the app.
2. Send a notification down to the app.
3. It appears in the iOS notification drawer
4. Click on the notification. if the Aerogear handler has worked then go
to 1 and repeat. We want a failure :)
5. If the Aerogear handler is NOT called, then put the app into the
background using the Home button and then click on the app icon to
resume.
6. The notification is now processed by the Aerogear handler. We can now
see it.
We are at a loss to explain this, we found it by accident, but we think
it shows some sort of timing issue somewhere because if we pull out the
various Javascript files the Aerogear plugin seems to work consistently
at startup. We have checked and checked the JavaScript files and cannot
see any error with them at all at load time.
All suggestions welcome now.
Rob
On 20 Dec 2015, at 19:26, Rob Willett wrote:
Erik, Sebastien,
We’ve spent a significant part of the weekend looking into this
issue and we have still not got to the bottom of it.
We have built a very simple Ionic test app that works in isolation. We
have used the default Ionic tabs at
http://ionicframework.com/getting-started/
We then add in our Javascript files as <script> entries in the
index.html file (shown for example)
```
<script src="js/polygon.js"></script>
<script src="js/urls.js"></script>
<script src="js/utilities.js"></script>
<script src="js/moment.js"></script>
<script src="js/perimeter.js"></script>
<script src="js/leaflet.markercluster-src.js"></script>
<script src="js/cycle.js"></script>
<script src="js/clipper.js"></script>
<script src="js/easy_button.js"></script>
<script src="js/graham_scan.js"></script>
<script src="js/sha.js"></script>
<script src="js/r-tree.js"></script>
<script src="js/angular-leaflet-directive.min.js"></script>
<script src="pouchdb/L.TileLayer.PouchDBCached.js"></script>
<script src="pouchdb/pouchdb-5.1.0.min.js"></script>
```
We do NOT call any functions within any of these files, indeed we make
no reference to these files beyond including them in the index.html
file. Our dummy html templates make no reference to them. We simply
load the javascript files in. We get no errors from including the
files. We have used the controllers and services as provided by the
dummy sample Ionic app.
If we then send foreground notifications, the notifications are always
handled by the Aerogear notification handler.
If we send notifications to the app when it is in the background, the
notifications are always handled by the Aerogear notification handler.
If we kill by swiping up the app, we get the notifications but when we
click on the notification from the main IOS screen it is arbitrary as
to whether the notification is handled by the Aerogear handler when
the app starts up. Sometimes the handler is called, but once the
handler is not called, the Aerogear notification handler never appears
to be called again. If we reinstall the app it sometimes works again
and sometimes it fails.
We can reinstall the app and the Aerogear notification handler might
be called or it might not. We just ran the app with 20 tests to the
app, each time killing the app and then sending down a a notification
and it started the Aerogear notification handler each time. We then
reinstall the app again, no changes in the code and it simply
doesn’t process any notification when the app is closed. The
notification turns up, but no event is called to the Aerogear event
handler.
Given that we are getting arbitrary results from the same codebase,
clearly something is remiss. Sometimes it works and sometimes it
doesn’t. There is no logic that we can see. We’ve closed down
Xcode after installing, we’ve started and stopped our sample app a
few times to try and make sure its closed down, ew are sending exactly
the same payload each time.
We feel that there is some sort of timing or race condition, or if
this was a piece of C code, that we are overwriting somewhere we
shouldn’t be. It has that sort of feeling of a pointer going bad but
we cannot see where the issue is at all. The fact that we get
different results from doing the same install is very worrying but we
can’t say whether its the Aerogear plugin, Ionic or our code.
Thanks,
Rob
On 18 Dec 2015, at 17:26, Rob Willett wrote:
> Erok,
>
> We’ve not forgotten the notification issue, we’re still working
> on it to try and get to the bottom of it. The problem for us is that
> its not so simple to cut code out and try and reduce the problem
> down. Our code is quite interlinked, for good or for worse.
>
> We’ve added some simple sound debugging to the Objective C source
> for the Aerogear plugin. This means that we can hear where things are
> when the plugin starts up from a cold start after receiving a
> notification. This works quite well.
>
> We initially added a beep to here
>
> ```
> - (void)notificationReceived {
> NSLog(@"Notification received");
>
> AudioServicesPlaySystemSound(1005);
>
>
> if (notificationMessage && self.callbackId) {
> ```
>
> and this works whenever we get a notification in the foreground and
> when the app is in the background. We then started tracing backwards
> in the source code to see what called notificationReceived
>
> We can see it here
>
> ```
> - (void)register:(CDVInvokedUrlCommand *)command; {
> NSLog(@"register");
> self.callbackId = command.callbackId;
>
> AudioServicesPlaySystemSound(1007);
>
> isInline = NO;
>
> [self.commandDelegate runInBackground:^{
> NSMutableDictionary *options = [self parseOptions:command];
> [self saveConfig:options];
>
> // when running under iOS 8 we will use the new API for APNS
> registration
> #if __IPHONE_OS_VERSION_MAX_ALLOWED >= 80000
> if ([[UIApplication sharedApplication]
> respondsToSelector:@selector(registerUserNotificationSettings:)]) {
> UIUserNotificationSettings* notificationSettings =
> [UIUserNotificationSettings
> settingsForTypes:UIUserNotificationTypeAlert |
> UIUserNotificationTypeBadge | UIUserNotificationTypeSound
> categories:nil];
> [[UIApplication sharedApplication]
> registerUserNotificationSettings:notificationSettings];
> [[UIApplication sharedApplication]
> registerForRemoteNotifications];
> } else {
> [[UIApplication sharedApplication]
> registerForRemoteNotificationTypes: (UIRemoteNotificationTypeBadge |
> UIRemoteNotificationTypeSound | UIRemoteNotificationTypeAlert)];
> }
>
> #else
> [[UIApplication sharedApplication]
> registerForRemoteNotificationTypes: (UIRemoteNotificationTypeBadge |
> UIRemoteNotificationTypeSound | UIRemoteNotificationTypeAlert)];
> #endif
>
> CDVPluginResult* pluginResult = [CDVPluginResult
> resultWithStatus:CDVCommandStatus_NO_RESULT];
> [pluginResult setKeepCallback:@YES];
> [self.commandDelegate sendPluginResult:pluginResult
> callbackId:command.callbackId];
> }];
>
> if (notificationMessage) // if there is a pending startup
> notification
> {
> AudioServicesPlaySystemSound(1024);
>
> [self notificationReceived]; // go ahead and process it
> }
> }
> ````
>
> So we add some more beeps in to track down whats going on. We add
> AudioServicesPlaySystemSound(1007) at the beginning of the function
> and add AudioServicesPlaySystemSound(1024) just before we call the
> notificationReceived method.
>
> We get the first sounds on startup but do NOT get the second set of
> sounds. It looks like notificationMessage is not being set at
> application startup.
>
> Our problem now is that we are not Objective-C developers so we are
> struggling to debug much further. So trying to understand how
> notificationMessage is set and defined as its declared as @synthesis
> is unclear. We’ll start reading and learning quickly but as this is
> new for us, so we will be slow.
>
> Any suggestions welcomed,
>
> Rob
>
> On 16 Dec 2015, at 16:54, Erik Jan de Wit wrote:
>
>> Hi Rob,
>>
>> What you could try is to debug this in xcode, when the notification
>> is
>> touched it should launch the app and that will in turn call the JS
>> callback. Would be good to see if this code is called 100% of the
>> time.
>>
>> You can put a breakpoint here:
>>
https://github.com/aerogear/aerogear-cordova-push/blob/master/src/ios/App...
>>
>> That code will execute on cold start and here:
>>
https://github.com/aerogear/aerogear-cordova-push/blob/master/src/ios/AGP...
>>
>> That is where the onNotification callback gets invoked.
>>
>> Hope this helps,
>>
>> On Wed, Dec 16, 2015 at 5:14 PM, Rob Willett
>> <rob.aerogear(a)robertwillett.com
>>> wrote:
>>
>>> Sebastien
>>>
>>> Yes, we do it at that point, $ionicPlatform.ready. I include the
>>> whole of
>>> that area of code for reference but we’re not expecting you to
>>> debug it for
>>> us. Merely to demonstrate its there.
>>>
>>> At the moment all we want the code to do is put an alert up.
>>>
>>> .run(function($ionicPlatform , CordovaService) {
>>> $ionicPlatform.ready(function() {
>>> if (window.StatusBar) {
>>> // org.apache.cordova.statusbar required
>>> StatusBar.styleDefault();
>>> }
>>>
>>> ConsoleLog('<<< Cordova ready >>>');
>>>
>>> /* This seems to remove an annoying page flicker on iOS when the
>>> keyboard is displayed */
>>> cordova.plugins.Keyboard.disableScroll(true);
>>>
>>> isDeviceReady = true;
>>>
>>> var uuid = "D26FBAF1-2EF2-4614-875F-4497EC4212D5/JFL1-0/ios_app";
>>>
>>> var aeroGearPushConfig = {
>>> pushServerURL: "https://push-jambuster.rhcloud.com/ag-push/",
>>> ios: {
>>> variantID: “XXXXX”,
>>> variantSecret: “YYYYYYY”
>>> } ,
>>> // sendMetricInfo: true,
>>> alias: uuid
>>> };
>>>
>>> push.register(function (event) {
>>> alert("EVENT = " + JSON.stringify(event));
>>>
>>> } , function () {
>>> if (1)
>>> {
>>> // alert("AeroGearSuccessHandler: OK " + JSON.stringify(uuid));
>>> // ConsoleLog("UUID = " + uuid);
>>> }
>>> } , function () {
>>> } , aeroGearPushConfig);
>>>
>>> We were still loading up another 18,000 lines of code so we need to
>>> start
>>> pruning that back until we have something that works.
>>>
>>> Rob
>>>
>>> On 16 Dec 2015, at 16:04, Sebastien Blanc wrote:
>>>
>>> In the ionic app when do you do the registration of UPS ? on the
>>> platformReady event ?
>>>
>>> On Wed, Dec 16, 2015 at 4:54 PM, Rob Willett <
>>> rob.aerogear(a)robertwillett.com
>>>
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>> Erik,
>>>
>>> We have built the simplest possible app we can that uses the
>>> Aerogear
>>> push plugin but using the ionic tabs starter kit.
>>>
>>>
http://ionicframework.com/getting-started/
>>>
>>> We have taken the code directly from the Cordova simple app that we
>>> have
>>> got working and put it into the Ionic app.
>>>
>>> if we follow your tests as below:
>>>
>>> 1.
>>>
>>> IOS App in foreground, we send a simple push notification from the
>>> Aerogear console - Works OK, We can see the event. Good
>>> 2.
>>>
>>> IOS App in background, we send a simple push notification from the
>>> Aerogear console - Works OK, We can see the event. Good
>>> 3.
>>>
>>> IOS App killed, we send a simple push notification from the
>>> Aerogear
>>>
>>> console and some of the time when we click on the notification in
>>> the
>>> notification drawer we do NOT get the notification handler called.
>>> Not
>>> so good
>>>
>>>
>>> However it does appear to work most of the time with our minimal
>>> Ionic
>>> app, but some of the time it fails. We had a run of 1 in 2 failures
>>> when
>>> we click on the notification. Now we have just done 20 runs in a
>>> row,
>>> each time killing the app after receiving the notification and not
>>> a
>>> single failure. Nothing changed.
>>>
>>> We cannot find any obvious reason for this so we are still
>>> investigating.
>>>
>>> We have reconfigured our main app to work the same way as the
>>> minimal
>>> app but we are still getting the same issues as before, we can see
>>> the
>>> notification in the drawer but clicking on it does NOT call the
>>> same
>>> handler with the same code as the minimal app. We get zero calls to
>>> the
>>> notification event handler.
>>>
>>> We are wondering if there is a timing issue somewhere in our code,
>>> but
>>> we can’t see it. We also wondered if the size of the code we are
>>> loading is the cause of a timing issue as well.
>>>
>>> Is there any way of adding more debugging into the Aerogear push
>>> plugin
>>> to see if we can track things down that way?
>>>
>>> Its very frustrating, but thanks for your help to date. It does
>>> look
>>> like its an interaction with our code, Ionic and the Aerogear
>>> plugin. My
>>> money is on our code though. We’ll now start pulling working code
>>> out
>>> of our app until we get back to the minimal app. Only 18,604 lines
>>> to go
>>> :)
>>>
>>> Rob
>>>
>>> On 15 Dec 2015, at 10:36, Erik Jan de Wit wrote:
>>>
>>> Hi Rob,
>>>
>>> That would be a bug, although I can not reproduce it, to test it
>>> this
>>> is
>>> what I've done to test it:
>>> $ > cordova create push-test <my bundle id>
>>> $ > cordova platform add ios
>>> $ > cordova plugin add aerogear-cordova-push
>>>
>>> copy paste your js code into www/js/index.js onDeviceReady, changed
>>> pushServerUrl and variant info and changed quotes to " (this is
>>> your
>>> email
>>> client no doubt) and changed : into ; after console.log("Success")
>>>
>>> Attach Safari debugger and send a message when the app is in the
>>> foreground
>>> and get in the console:
>>>
>>> HandleAeroGearNotification: event =>
>>>
>>>
>>>
{"alert":"test","foreground":true,"coldstart":false,"sound":"default","badge":-1,"payload":{}}
>>>
>>> I press the home button and send the app to the background send
>>> another
>>> message and 'touch' the message to launch the app:
>>>
>>> HandleAeroGearNotification: event =>
>>>
>>>
>>>
{"alert":"background","foreground":false,"coldstart":false,"sound":"default","badge":-1,"payload":{}}
>>>
>>> The I kill the app by pressing home twice and swiping over the app
>>> to
>>> remove it send another message and 'touch' it to launch the app.
>>> This
>>> kills
>>> my safari debugger so no way to see the console log, but in this
>>> case
>>> coldstart should be true. To test this better changed the code to
>>> alert
>>> instead of console:
>>>
>>> function HandleAeroGearNotification(event) {
>>> alert("HandleAeroGearNotification: event => " +
event.coldstart);
>>>
>>> // Stuff cut for clarity
>>> }
>>>
>>> I send another notification 'touch' it to launch the app and see
>>> the
>>> alert
>>> box display the text:
>>>
>>> HandleAeroGearNotification: event => true
>>>
>>> Hope this helps
>>>
>>> On Mon, Dec 14, 2015 at 10:20 PM, Rob Willett <
>>> rob.aerogear(a)robertwillett.com> wrote:
>>>
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> We think we have found a possible bug in the Aerogear Cordova 2.0.4
>>> push
>>> plugin specifically on the iOS side.
>>> Summary
>>>
>>> We have two versions of our app, an Android and an IOS version.
>>> Both
>>> use
>>> the latest Cordova push plugin 2.0.4. They also both have the
>>> latest
>>> Cordova platforms, android 4.1.1, ios 3.9.2. Both the iOS and
>>> Android
>>> versions are compiled at the same time. We are running cordova
>>> 5.3.3
>>> with
>>> Ionic 1.7.8 (?).
>>>
>>> 1.
>>>
>>> We make sure that both apps are NOT started up on each device. We
>>> also
>>> check they are NOT in the background.
>>> 2.
>>>
>>> We send the same simple notification to each device. This
>>> notification
>>> config is as below, we have anonymised the variants and alias in
>>> this
>>> JSON
>>> structure, though we can report that the UPS server sends the data
>>> correctly. We use the additionalData flag to provide the
>>> information
>>> necessary to decide which notification has been clicked in the
>>> notification
>>> drawer.
>>>
>>> 'variants' => [‘variant1’,’variant2’ ],
>>> 'message' => {
>>> 'additionalData' => { 'Disruption_Id' =>
'107546',
>>> 'EpochTime' => '1450125268'
>>> },
>>> 'alert' => 'Cannon Street (EC4N) (All Directions) at the
junction
>>> of
>>> King William Street - To facilitate a heavy lift in Cannon Street,
>>> Cannon Street will be closed. Traffic is slow moving on diversion.'
>>> },
>>> 'alias' => [ ‘alias1’ ],
>>> 'ttl' => 600
>>> };
>>>
>>> 1.
>>>
>>> Both devices show the message, the Android device stacks the
>>> message
>>> and the iOS device display an individual message. This looks
>>> correct.
>>> 2.
>>>
>>> Clicking on the Android stacked message starts up the app and the
>>> Javascript notification handler we have defined,
>>> HandleAeroGearNotification
>>> is called
>>>
>>> HandleAeroGearNotification: event => {"alert":"Cannon
Street (EC4N)
>>> (All Directions) at the junction of King William Street - To
>>> facilitate a heavy lift in Cannon Street, Cannon Street will be
>>> closed. Traffic is slow moving on
>>>
>>>
diversion.","coldstart":true,"foreground":true,"payload":{"alert":"Cannon
>>>
>>> Street (EC4N) (All Directions) at the junction of King William
>>> Street
>>> - To facilitate a heavy lift in Cannon Street, Cannon Street will
>>> be
>>> closed. Traffic is slow moving on
diversion.","badge":"-1"}}
>>>
>>> 1.
>>>
>>> Clicking on the notification in the notification drawer on the iOS
>>> device also starts our app up correctly but the notification
>>> handler,
>>> HandleAeroGearNotification(), is NOT called. The app starts up as
>>> normal as
>>> if the notification had not been clicked. We would expect the
>>> notification
>>> handler to be called in iOS as it is in Android.
>>> 2.
>>>
>>> All notifications are cleared on both Android and iOS correctly
>>> when
>>> the app is started up.
>>> 3.
>>>
>>> We define HandleAeroGearNotification as
>>>
>>> var aeroGearPushConfig = {
>>> pushServerURL: "https://push-jambuster.rhcloud.com/ag-push/",
>>> ios: {
>>> variantID: “variantid_obscured”,
>>> variantSecret: “variant_secret_obscured”
>>> } ,
>>> android: {
>>> senderID: "variantid_obscured" ,
>>> variantID: "variant_id_obscured" ,
>>> variantSecret: "variant_secret_obscured"
>>> } ,
>>> sendMetricInfo: true,
>>> alias: alias1
>>> };
>>>
>>> function HandleAeroGearNotification(event) {
>>> console.log(“HandleAeroGearNotification: event => “ +
>>> JSON.stringify(event));
>>>
>>> // Stuff cut for clarity
>>> }
>>>
>>> // Slightly simplified registration event.
>>> push.register(HandleAeroGearNotification , function () {
>>> console.log(“Success”):
>>> } , function () {
>>> console.log(“Failure”);
>>> } , aeroGearPushConfig);
>>>
>>> We cannot see any reference to this issue in the JIRA database and
>>> wondered if it is a bug or not.
>>>
>>> If its a bug we are happy to raise it accordingly.
>>>
>>> Please let us know,
>>>
>>> Thanks
>>>
>>> Rob
>>> ------------------------------
>>>
>>> Aerogear-users mailing list
>>> Aerogear-users(a)lists.jboss.org
>>>
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/aerogear-users
>>>
>>> --
>>> Cheers,
>>> Erik Jan
>>> ------------------------------
>>>
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>>> Aerogear-users(a)lists.jboss.org
>>>
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/aerogear-users
>>>
>>> ------------------------------
>>>
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>>> Aerogear-users(a)lists.jboss.org
>>>
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/aerogear-users
>>>
>>> ------------------------------
>>>
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>>> Aerogear-users(a)lists.jboss.org
>>>
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/aerogear-users
>>>
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
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>>> Aerogear-users(a)lists.jboss.org
>>>
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/aerogear-users
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> Cheers,
>> Erik Jan
>> _______________________________________________
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>>
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>
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