So how do you use this library? Well, it's pretty easy. Just follow this
template. First, set up an enum
with all of your API targets. Note that you
can include information as part of your enum. Let's look at a common example. First we create a new file named MyService.swift
:
enum MyService {
case zen
case showUser(id: Int)
case createUser(firstName: String, lastName: String)
case updateUser(id: Int, firstName: String, lastName: String)
case showAccounts
}
This enum is used to make sure that you provide implementation details for each
target (at compile time). You can see that parameters needed for requests can be defined as per the enum cases parameters. The enum must additionally conform to the TargetType
protocol. Let's get this done via an extension in the same file:
// MARK: - TargetType Protocol Implementation
extension MyService: TargetType {
var baseURL: URL { URL(string: "https://api.myservice.com")! }
var path: String {
switch self {
case .zen:
return "/zen"
case .showUser(let id), .updateUser(let id, _, _):
return "/users/\(id)"
case .createUser(_, _):
return "/users"
case .showAccounts:
return "/accounts"
}
}
var method: Moya.Method {
switch self {
case .zen, .showUser, .showAccounts:
return .get
case .createUser, .updateUser:
return .post
}
}
var task: Task {
switch self {
case .zen, .showUser, .showAccounts: // Send no parameters
return .requestPlain
case let .updateUser(_, firstName, lastName): // Always sends parameters in URL, regardless of which HTTP method is used
return .requestParameters(parameters: ["first_name": firstName, "last_name": lastName], encoding: URLEncoding.queryString)
case let .createUser(firstName, lastName): // Always send parameters as JSON in request body
return .requestParameters(parameters: ["first_name": firstName, "last_name": lastName], encoding: JSONEncoding.default)
}
}
var sampleData: Data {
switch self {
case .zen:
return "Half measures are as bad as nothing at all.".utf8Encoded
case .showUser(let id):
return "{\"id\": \(id), \"first_name\": \"Harry\", \"last_name\": \"Potter\"}".utf8Encoded
case .createUser(let firstName, let lastName):
return "{\"id\": 100, \"first_name\": \"\(firstName)\", \"last_name\": \"\(lastName)\"}".utf8Encoded
case .updateUser(let id, let firstName, let lastName):
return "{\"id\": \(id), \"first_name\": \"\(firstName)\", \"last_name\": \"\(lastName)\"}".utf8Encoded
case .showAccounts:
// Provided you have a file named accounts.json in your bundle.
guard let url = Bundle.main.url(forResource: "accounts", withExtension: "json"),
let data = try? Data(contentsOf: url) else {
return Data()
}
return data
}
}
var headers: [String: String]? {
return ["Content-type": "application/json"]
}
}
// MARK: - Helpers
private extension String {
var urlEscaped: String {
addingPercentEncoding(withAllowedCharacters: .urlHostAllowed)!
}
var utf8Encoded: Data { Data(self.utf8) }
}
(The String
extension is just for convenience – you don't have to use it.)
You can see that the TargetType
protocol makes sure that each value of the enum translates into a full request. Each full request is split up into the baseURL
, the path
specifying the subpath of the request, the method
which defines the HTTP method and task
with options to specify parameters to be added to the request.
Note that at this point you have added enough information for a basic API networking layer to work. By default Moya will combine all the given parts into a full request:
let provider = MoyaProvider<MyService>()
provider.request(.createUser(firstName: "James", lastName: "Potter")) { result in
// do something with the result (read on for more details)
}
// The full request will result to the following:
// POST https://api.myservice.com/users
// Request body:
// {
// "first_name": "James",
// "last_name": "Potter"
// }
provider.request(.updateUser(id: 123, firstName: "Harry", lastName: "Potter")) { result in
// do something with the result (read on for more details)
}
// The full request will result to the following:
// POST https://api.myservice.com/users/123?first_name=Harry&last_name=Potter
Always remember to retain the provider somewhere: if you fail to do so, it will be released automatically, potentially before you receive any response.
The TargetType
specifies both a base URL for the API and the sample data for
each enum value. The sample data are Data
instances, and could represent
JSON, images, text, whatever you're expecting from that endpoint.
You can also set up custom endpoints to alter the default behavior to your needs. For example:
let endpointClosure = { (target: MyService) -> Endpoint in
return Endpoint(url: URL(target: target).absoluteString, sampleResponseClosure: {.networkResponse(200, target.sampleData)}, method: target.method, task: target.task, httpHeaderFields: target.headers)
}
The block you provide will be invoked every time an API call is to be made. Its
responsibility is to return an Endpoint
instance configured for use by Moya.
Most of the time, this closure is just a straight translation from target,
method and task into an Endpoint
instance. However, since it's a
closure, it'll be executed at each invocation of the API, so you could do
whatever you want. Say you want to test network error conditions like timeouts, too.
let failureEndpointClosure = { (target: MyService) -> Endpoint in
let sampleResponseClosure = { () -> (EndpointSampleResponse) in
if shouldTimeout {
return .networkError(NSError())
} else {
return .networkResponse(200, target.sampleData)
}
}
return Endpoint(url: URL(target: target).absoluteString, sampleResponseClosure: sampleResponseClosure, method: target.method, task: target.task, httpHeaderFields: target.headers)
}
Notice that returning sample data is required. One of the key benefits of Moya is that it makes testing the app or running the app using stubbed responses for API calls really easy.
Great, now we're all set. Just need to create our provider.
// Tuck this away somewhere where it'll be visible to anyone who wants to use it
var provider: MoyaProvider<MyService>!
// Create this instance at app launch
let provider = MoyaProvider(endpointClosure: endpointClosure)
Neato. Now how do we make a request?
provider.request(.zen) { result in
// do something with `result`
}
The request
method is given a MyService
value (.zen
), which contains all the
information necessary to create the Endpoint
– or to return a stubbed
response during testing.
The Endpoint
instance is used to create a URLRequest
(the heavy lifting is
done via Alamofire), and the request is sent (again - Alamofire). Once
Alamofire gets a response (or fails to get a response), Moya will wrap the
success or failure in a Result
enum. result
is either
.success(Moya.Response)
or .failure(MoyaError)
.
You will need to unpack the data and status code from Moya.Response
.
provider.request(.zen) { result in
switch result {
case let .success(moyaResponse):
let data = moyaResponse.data // Data, your JSON response is probably in here!
let statusCode = moyaResponse.statusCode // Int - 200, 401, 500, etc
// do something in your app
case let .failure(error):
// TODO: handle the error == best. comment. ever.
}
}
Take special note: a .failure
means that the server either didn't receive the
request (e.g. reachability/connectivity error) or it didn't send a response
(e.g. the request timed out). If you get a .failure
, you probably want to
re-send the request after a time delay or when an internet connection is
established.
Once you have a .success(response)
you might want to filter on status codes or
convert the response data to JSON. Moya.Response
can help!
do {
try moyaResponse.filterSuccessfulStatusCodes()
let data = try moyaResponse.mapJSON()
}
catch {
// show an error to your user
}