app2-api/modules/push/push.service.js

162 lines
6.4 KiB
JavaScript

const moment = require('moment');
const { Expo } = require('expo-server-sdk');
const { generateService, parseParamsToFindOptions } = require('../../helpers/service.helper');
const models = require('../../core/models');
// Create a new Expo SDK client
const expo = new Expo();
const extraMethods = {
isValidPushToken: (token) => {
return Expo.isExpoPushToken(token);
},
getPushToken: (params) => {
return models.UserDevice.findOne({
where: params,
});
},
sendNotification: async (messages) => {
// The Expo push notification service accepts batches of notifications so
// that you don't need to send 1000 requests to send 1000 notifications. We
// recommend you batch your notifications to reduce the number of requests
// and to compress them (notifications with similar content will get
// compressed).
/**
* There is a limit on the number of push notifications (100) you can send at once.Use
* `chunkPushNotifications` to divide an array of push notification messages into appropriately
* sized chunks
*/
// Later, after the Expo push notification service has delivered the
// notifications to Apple or Google (usually quickly, but allow the the service
// up to 30 minutes when under load), a "receipt" for each notification is
// created. The receipts will be available for at least a day; stale receipts
// are deleted.
//
// The ID of each receipt is sent back in the response "ticket" for each
// notification. In summary, sending a notification produces a ticket, which
// contains a receipt ID you later use to get the receipt.
//
// The receipts may contain error codes to which you must respond. In
// particular, Apple or Google may block apps that continue to send
// notifications to devices that have blocked notifications or have uninstalled
// your app. Expo does not control this policy and sends back the feedback from
// Apple and Google so you can handle it appropriately.
let chunks = expo.chunkPushNotifications(messages);
let tickets = await _sendPushNotificationsAsync(chunks);
console.log(tickets);
let receiptIds = [];
let invalidTokens = [];
for (let [key, ticket] of tickets.entries()) {
// NOTE: Not all tickets have IDs; for example, tickets for notifications
// that could not be enqueued will have error information and no receipt ID.
if (ticket.id) {
receiptIds.push(ticket);
} else {
if ((ticket.status === 'error') && (ticket.details.error === 'DeviceNotRegistered')) {
invalidTokens.push({
...messages[key],
valid: false,
invalidated: moment(),
});
}
}
}
console.log(receiptIds);
console.log(invalidTokens);
let receiptIdChunks = expo.chunkPushNotificationReceiptIds(receiptIds);
let xxx = await _getPushNotificationsResultAsync(receiptIdChunks);
let notifications = await _saveNotifications(messages, tickets);
return new Promise(function (resolve) { resolve(notifications) });
}
};
module.exports = generateService(models.UserDevice, extraMethods);
const _sendPushNotificationsAsync = async function (chunks) {
let tickets = [];
// Send the chunks to the Expo push notification service. There are
// different strategies you could use. A simple one is to send one chunk at a
// time, which nicely spreads the load out over time:
for (let chunk of chunks) {
try {
let ticketChunk = await expo.sendPushNotificationsAsync(chunk);
tickets.push(...ticketChunk);
// NOTE: If a ticket contains an error code in ticket.details.error, you
// must handle it appropriately. The error codes are listed in the Expo
// documentation:
// https://docs.expo.io/versions/latest/guides/push-notifications#response-format
} catch (error) {
console.error(error);
}
}
return new Promise(function (resolve) { resolve(tickets) });
};
const _getPushNotificationsResultAsync = async function (receiptIdChunks) {
// Like sending notifications, there are different strategies you could use
// to retrieve batches of receipts from the Expo service.
let result = [];
console.log(receiptIdChunks);
for (let chunk of receiptIdChunks) {
try {
let receipts = await expo.getPushNotificationReceiptsAsync(chunk);
console.log('hola', receipts);
// The receipts specify whether Apple or Google successfully received the
// notification and information about an error, if one occurred.
for (let key in receipts) {
if (receipts[key].status === 'ok') {
result.push[receipts[key]];
continue;
} else if (receipts[key].status === 'error') {
console.error(`There was an error sending a notification: ${receipts[key].message}`);
if (receipts[key].details && receipts[key].details.error) {
// The error codes are listed in the Expo documentation:
// https://docs.expo.io/versions/latest/guides/push-notifications#response-format
// You must handle the errors appropriately.
console.error(`The error code is ${receipts[key].details.error}`);
}
}
}
} catch (error) {
console.error(error);
}
}
return new Promise(function (resolve) { resolve(result) });
}
const _saveNotifications = async function (messages, tickets) {
let notifications = [];
messages.forEach(function (message, index) {
let notification = models.Notification.build({
...message,
ticket: tickets[index].id,
status: tickets[index].status,
error: (tickets[index].status === 'error') ? tickets[index].details.error : undefined,
});
notifications.push(notification);
});
return new Promise(function (resolve) { resolve(notifications) });
}