问题
I'm new to objective-c and i'm having a hard time with a AFNetworking.
So the thing is that i want to make a simple POST request to a server who will send me back a salt. I'v make a simple app, in order to test my request but i don't understand why i'm getting the error code 999.
Here a sample of my code.
+ (void)simpleRequest; {
NSURL *mailserver = [NSURL URLWithString:@"https://localhost:4443/"];
AFHTTPSessionManager *manager = [[AFHTTPSessionManager alloc]initWithBaseURL:mailserver];
manager.securityPolicy.allowInvalidCertificates = TRUE;
manager.responseSerializer = [AFJSONResponseSerializer serializer];
manager.requestSerializer = [AFJSONRequestSerializer serializer];
NSDictionary *parameters = @{@"username": @"testtest"};
[manager POST:@"api/v0/login/salt" parameters:parameters success:^(NSURLSessionDataTask *operation, id responseObject) {
NSLog(@"JSON: %@", responseObject);
} failure:^(NSURLSessionDataTask *operation, NSError *error) {
NSLog(@"Error: %@", error);
}];
}
I' have link this code to a simple Button which's calling this function.
I have an other app, in ruby motion which's work fined with this function i can get the response without any error. But with this simple app i can't do any request, they all returned this error code 999.
Error: Error Domain=NSURLErrorDomain Code=-999 "cancelled" UserInfo={NSErrorFailingURLKey=https://localhost:4443/api/v0/login/salt, NSLocalizedDescription=cancelled, NSErrorFailingURLStringKey=https://localhost:4443/api/v0/login/salt}
So i'm really wondering what i'm doing wrong, anyone can help me on this ? Thanks
EDIT:
Is it the good way for saving the manager in a property or am i doing something wrong ? If it's the good way, this seems to not work Thanks for the help
.h file
@property (nonatomic, retain) AFHTTPSessionManager *session;
.m file
@synthesize session;
- (IBAction)log:(id)sender {
NSURL *mailserver = [NSURL URLWithString:@"https://localhost:4443/"];
self.session = [[AFHTTPSessionManager alloc]initWithBaseURL:mailserver];
self.session.securityPolicy.allowInvalidCertificates = TRUE;
self.session.responseSerializer = [AFJSONResponseSerializer serializer];
self.session.requestSerializer = [AFJSONRequestSerializer serializer];
NSDictionary *parameters = @{@"username": @"testtest"};
[self.session POST:@"api/v0/login/salt" parameters:parameters success:^(NSURLSessionDataTask *operation, id responseObject) {
NSLog(@"JSON: %@", responseObject);
} failure:^(NSURLSessionDataTask *operation, NSError *error) {
NSLog(@"Error: %@", error);
}];
回答1:
In my case iOS 9 SDK's "App transport security" cause AFNetworking error code : -999. If you're trying to reach a server that doesn't have a SSL add keys like screenshot below.
回答2:
In my case iOS 10 SDK's caused AFNetworking error code -999. If you're trying to reach a server that has SSL and you don't want to check it out, add some privacy Policy to Afnetworking
AFSecurityPolicy *securityPolicy = [AFSecurityPolicy policyWithPinningMode:AFSSLPinningModeNone];
securityPolicy.allowInvalidCertificates = YES;
[securityPolicy setValidatesDomainName:NO];
回答3:
That's error -999, not 999. That is NSURLErrorCancelled
. Your request has been cancelled before it can be completed.
Looking at your code, you aren't retaining the AFHTTPSessionManager *manager
anywhere. This means that the manager will be disposed as soon as +simpleRequest
returns. I'm guessing that this is what is cancelling your request.
You need to save the manager so that it lives for the full duration of the request. Save it in a property somewhere.
回答4:
I noticed that your API endpoint indicates to a secure connection:
httpS://localhost:4443/api/v0/login/salt
Just try it just in case, maybe it repeats your situation.
In my case, this was a typo in the API manager code. Which from the part can be said is connected with App Transport Security Settings.
Just changed the protected protocol from httpS://
to http://
and the error:
NSURLErrorDomain Code = -999 "cancelled"
was gone and it all worked!
+And also if you had a similar problem. Be sure to discuss this with a backend specialist who deals with the server or API configuration for your application. This means that the server does not have valid security certificates. Perhaps you still need a secure connection. Or this specialist can again configure everything back from http://
to httpS://
, and I'm not sure (did not check) whether this will work again when in the code you are already using a non-secure http://
connection.
回答5:
[Original OP question may not mention Cordova but this link was very high in the search result when Googling this issue]
For my Cordova project (or similar), turns out it was a plugin issue. Make sure you're not missing any plugins and make sure they're installed properly without issue.
Easiest way to verify this is simply to start fresh by recreating the Cordova project (cordova create <path>
) along with the required platforms (cordova platform add <platform name>
) and add each plugin with the verbose flag (--verbose) so that you can see if anything went wrong in the console log while the plugin is being downloaded, added to project and installed for each platform (cordova plugin add cordova-plugin-device --verbose
)
Recap:
cordova create <path>
cordova platform add <platform name>
cordova plugin add cordova-plugin-device --verbose
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/33146003/afnetworking-with-request-error-code-999