• Stars
    star
    114
  • Rank 308,031 (Top 7 %)
  • Language
    TypeScript
  • License
    MIT License
  • Created over 8 years ago
  • Updated 6 months ago

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Be the first to send feedback to the community and the maintainers!

Repository Details

Node client for connecting to Apple's Push Notification Service using the new HTTP/2 protocol with JSON web tokens

apns2

npm version Twitter

Node client for connecting to Apple's Push Notification Service using the new HTTP/2 protocol with JSON web tokens.


Create Client

Create an APNS client using a signing key:

import { ApnsClient } from 'apns2'

const client = new ApnsClient({
  team: `TFLP87PW54`,
  keyId: `123ABC456`,
  signingKey: fs.readFileSync(`${__dirname}/path/to/auth.p8`),
  defaultTopic: `com.tablelist.Tablelist`,
  requestTimeout: 0, // optional, Default: 0 (without timeout)
  keepAlive: true, // optional, Default: 5000
})

Sending Notifications

Basic

Send a basic notification with message:

import { Notification } from 'apns2'

const bn = new Notification(deviceToken, { alert: 'Hello, World' })

try {
  await client.send(bn)
} catch (err) {
  console.error(err.reason)
}

Send a basic notification with message and options:

import { Notification } from 'apns2'

const bn = new Notification(deviceToken, {
  alert: 'Hello, World',
  badge: 4,
  data: {
    userId: user.getUserId
  }
})

try {
  await client.send(bn)
} catch (err) {
  console.error(err.reason)
}

Silent

Send a silent notification using content-available key:

import { SilentNotification } from 'apns2'

const sn = new SilentNotification(deviceToken)

try {
  await client.send(sn)
} catch (err) {
  console.error(err.reason)
}

Note: Apple recommends that no options other than the content-available flag be sent in order for a notification to truly be silent and wake up your app in the background. Therefore this class does not accept any additional options in the constructor.

Many

Send multiple notifications concurrently:

import { Notification } from 'apns2'

const notifications = [
  new Notification(deviceToken1, { alert: 'Hello, World' }),
  new Notification(deviceToken2, { alert: 'Hello, World' })
]

try {
  await client.sendMany(notifications)
} catch (err) {
  console.error(err.reason)
}

Advanced

For complete control over the push notification packet use the base Notification class:

import { Notification } from 'apns2'

const notification = new Notification(deviceToken, {
  aps: { ... }
})

try {
  await client.send(notification)
} catch(err) {
  console.error(err.reason)
}

Available options can be found at APNS Payload Options

Error Handling

All errors are defined in ./lib/errors.js and come directly from APNS Table 4

You can easily listen for these errors by attaching an error handler to the APNS client:

import { Errors } from 'apns2'

// Listen for a specific error
client.on(Errors.badDeviceToken, (err) => {
  // Handle accordingly...
  // Perhaps delete token from your database
  console.error(err.reason, err.statusCode, err.notification.deviceToken)
})

// Listen for any error
client.on(Errors.error, (err) => {
  console.error(err.reason, err.statusCode, err.notification.deviceToken)
})

Environments

By default the APNS client connects to the production push notification server. This is identical to passing in the options:

const client = new ApnsClient({
  host: 'api.push.apple.com'
  ...
})

To connect to the development push notification server, pass the options:

const client = new ApnsClient({
  host: 'api.sandbox.push.apple.com'
  ...
})

Requirements

apns2 requires Node.js v16 or later