I have a cocoa class set up that I want to use to connect to a RESTful web service I'm building. I have decided to use HTTP Basic Authentication on my PHP backend like so…
<?php
if (!isset($_SERVER['PHP_AUTH_USER'])) {
header('WWW-Authenticate: Basic realm="My Realm"');
header('HTTP/1.0 401 Unauthorized');
//Stuff that users will see if they click 'Cancel'
exit;
}
else {
//Validation Code
echo "You entered info.";
}
?>
At this point I'm using a synchronous NSURLConnection, which I understand the Apple documentation states has less support for Authentication.
But is it even possible at all? I can do cookie authentication very easily sans NSURLProtectionSpaces or NSURLCredentials or any of the authentication classes. Also, are there any resources where I can read more about the Cocoa Authentication classes?
Thanks.
UPDATE: mikeabdullahuk The code you supplied (the second example) is almost identical to what I had written. I have done some more investigating, and discovered that the NSURLConnection is returning an error…
Error Domain=NSURLErrorDomain Code=-1012 UserInfo=0x1a5170 "Operation could not be completed. (NSURLErrorDomain error -1012.)"
The code corresponds to NSURLErrorUserCancelledAuthentication. So apparently my code is not accessing the NSURLCredentialStorage and instead is canceling the authentication. Could this have anything to do with the PHP HTTP Authentication functions? I'm quite confused at this point.
In a situation where a 401 or other authentication challenge is unacceptable/impossible, I sometimes use a dummy CFHTTPMessage to generate the authetication line, then copy that back into the NSURLRequest:
This may seem completely a bizarre way to do it but it is tolerant of situations where the username/password aren't URL clean and where NSURLRequest refuses to consult the NSURLCredentialStorage because the server isn't actually sending a HTTP 401 (for example it sends a regular page instead).
Set your credential as the default credential for the protectionspace:
At this point, any subsequent NSURLConnection that is challenged using a protection space that matches what you set will use this credential
I would note mikeabdullahuk's answer is good but also if you use NSURLCredentialPersistencePermanent instead of per session it will store the credentials in the users keychain so next time you can check NSURLCredentialStorage for a non nil value for the default credentials for a protection space and if you get a non nil value you can just pass the credentials in. I am using this method right now for a delicious.com client I am writing and it works very well in my tests.
A synchronous
NSURLConnection
will absolutely work withNSURLCredentialStorage
. Here's how things usually work:NSURLConnection
requests the page from the serverNSURLConnection
looks to see what credentials it can glean from the URLNSURLConnection
will also consultNSURLCredentialStorage
to fill in the gapsNSURLConnection
will send the-connection:didReceiveAuthenticationChallenge:
delegate method asking for credentialsNSURLConnection
now finally has full credentials, it retries the original request including authorization data.By using the synchronous connection method, you only lose out on step 5, the ability to provide custom authentication. So, you can either pre-provide authentication credentials in the URL, or place them in
NSURLCredentialStorage
before sending the request. e.g.or: