A modern In-App Purchases management framework for iOS developers.
MerchantKit
dramatically simplifies the work indie developers have to do in order to add premium monetizable components to their applications. Track purchased products, offer auto-renewing subscriptions, restore transactions, and much more.
Designed for apps that have a finite set of purchasable products, MerchantKit
is a great way to add an unlockable 'pro tier' to an application, as a one-time purchase or ongoing subscription.
Find out if a product has been purchased:
let product = merchant.product(withIdentifier: "iap.productidentifier")
print("isPurchased: \(merchant.state(for: product).isPurchased))"
Buy a product:
let task = merchant.commitPurchaseTask(for: purchase)
task.onCompletion = { result in
switch result {
case .succeeded(_):
print("purchase completed")
case .failed(let error):
print("\(error)")
}
}
task.start()
Get notified when a subscription expires:
public func merchant(_ merchant: Merchant, didChangeStatesFor products: Set<Product>) {
if let subscriptionProduct = products.first(where: { $0.identifier == "subscription.protier" }) {
let state = merchant.state(for: subscriptionProduct)
switch state {
case .isPurchased(let info):
print("subscribed, expires \(info.expiryDate)")
default:
print("does not have active subscription")
}
}
}
- Straightforward, concise, API to support non-consumable, consumable and subscription In-App Purchases.
- Simplify the development of In-App Purchase interfaces in apps, including localized formatters to dynamically create strings like "£2.99 per month" or "Seven Day Free Trial".
- No external dependencies beyond what Apple ships with iOS. The project links
Foundation
,StoreKit
,SystemConfiguration
andos
for logging purposes. - Prioritise developer convenience and accessibility over security.
MerchantKit
users accept that some level of piracy is inevitable and not worth chasing. - Permissive open source license.
- Compatibility with latest Swift version using idiomatic language constructs.
The codebase is in flux right now and the project does not guarantee API stability. MerchantKit
is useful, it works, and will probably save you time. That being said, MerchantKit
is by no means finished. The test suite is patchy.
To integrate MerchantKit
into your Xcode project using CocoaPods, specify it in your Podfile
.
pod 'MerchantKit'
To integrate MerchantKit
into your Xcode project using Carthage, specify it in your Cartfile
.
github "benjaminmayo/merchantkit"
Compile the MerchantKit
framework and embed it in your application. You can download the source code from Github and embed the Xcode project into your app, although you'll have to upgrade to the latest releases manually.
- In your app delegate, import
MerchantKit
create aMerchant
instance inapplication(_:, didFinishLaunchingWithOptions:)
. Supply a configuration (such asMerchant.Configuration.default
) and a delegate.
func application(_ application: UIApplication, didFinishLaunchingWithOptions launchOptions: [UIApplicationLaunchOptionsKey: Any]?) -> Bool {
...
self.merchant = Merchant(configuration: .default, delegate: self)
...
}
- Register products as soon as possible (typically within
application(_:, didFinishLaunchingWithOptions:)
). You may want to loadProduct
structures from a file, or simply declaring them as constants in code. These constants can then be referred to statically later.
let product = Product(identifier: "iap.productIdentifier", kind: .nonConsumable)
let otherProduct = Product(identifier: "iap.otherProductIdentifier", kind: .subscription(automaticallyRenews: true))
self.merchant.register([product, otherProduct])
- Call
setup()
on the merchant instance before escaping theapplication(_:, didFinishLaunchingWithOptions:)
method. This tells the merchant to start observing the payment queue.
func application(_ application: UIApplication, didFinishLaunchingWithOptions launchOptions: [UIApplicationLaunchOptionsKey: Any]?) -> Bool {
...
self.merchant = Merchant(configuration: .default, delegate: self)
self.merchant.register(...)
self.merchant.setup()
...
}
- Profit! Or something.
Merchant
is initialized with a configuration object; an instance of Merchant.Configuration
. The configuration controls how Merchant
validates receipts and persist product state to storage.
Most applications can simply use Merchant.Configuration.default
and get the result they expect. You can supply your own Merchant.Configuration
if you want to do something more customized.
Tip: MerchantKit
provides Merchant.Configuration.usefulForTestingAsPurchasedStateResetsOnApplicationLaunch
as a built-in configuration. This can be used to test purchase flows during development as the configuration does not persist purchase states to permanent storage.
You can repeatedly test 'buying' any Product
, including non-consumables, simply by restarting the app. As indicated by its unwieldy name, you should not use this configuration in a released application.
The delegate implements the MerchantDelegate
protocol. This delegate provides an opportunity to respond to events at an app-wide level. The MerchantDelegate
protocol declares a handful of methods, but only one is required to be implemented.
func merchant(_ merchant: Merchant, didChangeStatesFor products: Set<Product>) {
// Called when the purchased state of a `Product` changes.
for product in products {
print("updated \(product)")
}
}
The delegate optionally receives loading state change events, and a customization point for handling Promoted In-App Purchase flows that were initiated externally by the App Store. Sensible default implementations are provided for these two methods.
The tasks vended by a Merchant
give developers access to the core operations to fetch and purchase products with interfaces that reflect Swift idioms better than the current StoreKit
offerings. Many apps will not need to directly instantiate tasks. ProductInterfaceController
is the higher-level API offered by MerchantKit
that covers the use case of many projects. In an iOS app, a view controller displaying an upgrade screen would be backed by a single ProductInterfaceController
which encapsulated all necessary product and purchasing logic.
The ProductInterfaceController
class encompasses common behaviours needed to present In-App Purchase for sale. However, it remains abstract enough not be tied down to one specific user interface appearance or layout.
Developers simply provide the list of products to display and tells the controller to fetch data. The delegate
notifies the app when to update its custom UI. It handles loading data, intermittent network connectivity and in-flight changes to the availability and state of products.
See the Example project for a basic implementation of the ProductInterfaceController
.
MerchantKit
includes several formatters to help developers display the cost of In-App Purchases to users.
PriceFormatter
is the simplest. Just give it a Price
and it returns formatted strings like '£3.99' or '$5.99' in accordance with the store's regional locale. You can specify a custom string if the price is free.
SubscriptionPriceFormatter
takes a Price
and a SubscriptionDuration
. Relevant Purchase
objects exposes these values so you can simply pass them along the formatter. It generates strings like '$0.99 per month', '£9.99 every 2 weeks' and '$4.99 for 1 month' depending on the period and whether the subscription will automatically renew.
In addition to the renewal duration, subscriptions can include free trials and other introductory offers. You can use a SubscriptionPeriodFormatter
to format a text label in your application. If you change the free trial offer in iTunes Connect, the label will dynamically update to reflect the changed terms without requiring a new App Store binary. For example:
func subscriptionDetailsForDisplay() -> String? {
guard let terms = purchase.subscriptionTerms, let introductoryOffer = terms.introductoryOffer else { return nil }
let formatter = SubscriptionPeriodFormatter()
switch introductoryOffer {
case .freeTrial(let period): return "\(formatter.string(from: period)) Free Trial" // something like '7 Day Free Trial'
default: ...
}
}
PriceFormatter
works in every locale supported by the App Store. SubscriptionPriceFormatter
and SubscriptionPeriodFormatter
are currently offered in a small subset of languages. Voluntary translations are welcomed.
See the Example project for a demo where you can experiment with various configuration options for PriceFormatter
and SubscriptionPriceFormatter
.
Merchant
tracks the purchased state of non-consumable and subscription products. Consumable products are considered transitory purchases and not recorded beyond the initial time of purchase. Because of their special nature, they must be handled differently. Ensure you supply a consumableHandler
when creating the Merchant. This can by any object that conforms to the MerchantConsumableProductHandler
protocol. The protocol has a single required method:
func merchant(_ merchant: Merchant, consume product: Product, completion: @escaping () -> Void) {
self.addCreditsToUserAccount(for: product, completion: completion) // application-specific handling
}
The Merchant
will always report a consumable product's state as PurchasedState.notPurchased
. Forgetting to implement the delegate method will result in a runtime fatal error.
- Increase the number of localizations for
SubscriptionPriceFormatter
andSubscriptionPeriodFormatter
. - Add extensive documentation with more examples in the Example project.
- Support downloadable content In-App Purchases.
- Probably a lot more stuff I haven't thought of yet.
Developed and managed by Benjamin Mayo, @bzamayo on Twitter.