EDIT2 - Rewrote the question
I want to do some web service communication in the background. I am using Sudzc as the handler of HTTPRequests and it works like this:
SudzcWS *service = [[SudzcWS alloc] init];
[service sendOrders:self withXML:@"my xml here" action:@selector(handleOrderSending:)];
[service release];
It sends some XML to the webservice, and the response (in this one, a Boolean) is handled in the selector specified:
- (void)handleOrderSending:(id)value
{
//some controls
if ([value boolValue] == YES)
{
//my stuff
}
}
When I tried to use Grand Central Dispatch on my sendOrders:withXML:action:
method, I noticed that the selector is not called. And I believe the reason for that is that NSURLConnection delegate messages are sent to the thread of which the connection is created But the thread does not live that long, it ends when the method finishes, killing any messages to the delegate.
Regards
EDIT1
[request send]
method:
- (void) send {
//dispatch_async(backgroundQueue, ^(void){
// If we don't have a handler, create a default one
if(handler == nil) {
handler = [[SoapHandler alloc] init];
}
// Make sure the network is available
if([SoapReachability connectedToNetwork] == NO) {
NSError* error = [NSError errorWithDomain:@"SudzC" code:400 userInfo:[NSDictionary dictionaryWithObject:@"The network is not available" forKey:NSLocalizedDescriptionKey]];
[self handleError: error];
}
// Make sure we can reach the host
if([SoapReachability hostAvailable:url.host] == NO) {
NSError* error = [NSError errorWithDomain:@"SudzC" code:410 userInfo:[NSDictionary dictionaryWithObject:@"The host is not available" forKey:NSLocalizedDescriptionKey]];
[self handleError: error];
}
// Output the URL if logging is enabled
if(logging) {
NSLog(@"Loading: %@", url.absoluteString);
}
// Create the request
NSMutableURLRequest* request = [NSMutableURLRequest requestWithURL: url];
if(soapAction != nil) {
[request addValue: soapAction forHTTPHeaderField: @"SOAPAction"];
}
if(postData != nil) {
[request setHTTPMethod: @"POST"];
[request addValue: @"text/xml; charset=utf-8" forHTTPHeaderField: @"Content-Type"];
[request setHTTPBody: [postData dataUsingEncoding: NSUTF8StringEncoding]];
if(self.logging) {
NSLog(@"%@", postData);
}
}
//dispatch_async(dispatch_get_main_queue(), ^(void){
// Create the connection
conn = [[NSURLConnection alloc] initWithRequest: request delegate: self];
if(conn) {
NSLog(@" POST DATA %@", receivedData);
receivedData = [[NSMutableData data] retain];
NSLog(@" POST DATA %@", receivedData);
} else {
// We will want to call the onerror method selector here...
if(self.handler != nil) {
NSError* error = [NSError errorWithDomain:@"SoapRequest" code:404 userInfo: [NSDictionary dictionaryWithObjectsAndKeys: @"Could not create connection", NSLocalizedDescriptionKey,nil]];
[self handleError: error];
}
}
//});
//finished = NO;
// while(!finished) {
//
// [[NSRunLoop currentRunLoop] runMode:NSDefaultRunLoopMode beforeDate:[NSDate distantFuture]];
//
// }
//});
}
The parts that are commented out are the various things I tried. The last part worked but I'M not sure if that's a good way. In the NURLConnection
delegate method of the class, here is what happens:
- (void)connectionDidFinishLoading:(NSURLConnection *)connection {
NSError* error;
if(self.logging == YES) {
NSString* response = [[NSString alloc] initWithData: self.receivedData encoding: NSUTF8StringEncoding];
NSLog(@"%@", response);
[response release];
}
CXMLDocument* doc = [[CXMLDocument alloc] initWithData: self.receivedData options: 0 error: &error];
if(doc == nil) {
[self handleError:error];
return;
}
id output = nil;
SoapFault* fault = [SoapFault faultWithXMLDocument: doc];
if([fault hasFault]) {
if(self.action == nil) {
[self handleFault: fault];
} else {
if(self.handler != nil && [self.handler respondsToSelector: self.action]) {
[self.handler performSelector: self.action withObject: fault];
} else {
NSLog(@"SOAP Fault: %@", fault);
}
}
} else {
CXMLNode* element = [[Soap getNode: [doc rootElement] withName: @"Body"] childAtIndex:0];
if(deserializeTo == nil) {
output = [Soap deserialize:element];
} else {
if([deserializeTo respondsToSelector: @selector(initWithNode:)]) {
element = [element childAtIndex:0];
output = [deserializeTo initWithNode: element];
} else {
NSString* value = [[[element childAtIndex:0] childAtIndex:0] stringValue];
output = [Soap convert: value toType: deserializeTo];
}
}
if(self.action == nil) { self.action = @selector(onload:); }
if(self.handler != nil && [self.handler respondsToSelector: self.action]) {
[self.handler performSelector: self.action withObject: output];
} else if(self.defaultHandler != nil && [self.defaultHandler respondsToSelector:@selector(onload:)]) {
[self.defaultHandler onload:output];
}
}
[self.handler release];
[doc release];
[conn release];
conn = nil;
[self.receivedData release];
}
The delegate is unable to send messages because the thread it is dies when -(void)send
finishes.
The method definition for sendOrders
suggests that it is already designed to execute requests in an asynchronous fashion. You should have a look into the implementation of sendOrders: withXML: action:
to find out if this is the case.
Without seeing your implementation using GCD or the code from SudzcWS it's hard to say what's going wrong. Despite the preceding caveats, the following might be of use.
It looks like you may be releasing SudzcWS *service
before it is completed.
The following:
SudzcWS *service = [[SudzcWS alloc] init];
dispatch_async(aQueue, ^{
[sevice sendOrders:self withXML:xml action:@selector(handleOrderSending:)];
}
[service release];
could fail unless SudzcWS retains itself. You dispatch your block asynchronously, it gets put in a queue, and execution of the method continues. service
is released and gets deallocated before the block executes or while service
is waiting for a response from the webserver.
Unless otherwise specified, calling a selector will execute that selector on the same thread it is called on. Doing something like:
SudzcWS *service = [[SudzcWS alloc] init];
dispatch_async(aQueue, ^{
[sevice sendOrders:self withXML:xml action:@selector(handleOrderSending:)];
}
- (void)handleOrderSending:(id)value
{
//some controls
//your stuff
[service release];
}
should ensure that both the sendOrders:
method and the handleOrderSending:
are executed on the queue aQueue
and that service
is not released until it has executed the selector.
This will require you to keep a pointer to service
so that handleOrderSending:
can release it. You might also want to consider simply hanging onto a single SudzcWS instance instead of creating and releasing one each time you want to use it, this should make your memory management much easier and will help keep your object graph tight.