RadarKit 1.2.0

RadarKit 1.2.0

TestsTested
LangLanguage Obj-CObjective C
License MIT
ReleasedLast Release Nov 2021

Maintained by Javier Rosas, Jacob Wan, David Turnbull, Aristotelis Mertis.



RadarKit 1.2.0

  • By
  • David Turnbull

Citrix ITM Radar Runner for Apple iOS and MacOS

Quick Start

  • Add the CocoaPod. "RadarKit" or "RadarKit/ObjC"
  • Create an instance of the RadarKit class.
  • Call the start method with your zoneId and customerId.
  • Call didReceiveMemoryWarning from your delegate of the same name.

Swift

Step by step guide for Xcode 8 and Swift. We'll create the simplest possible application with the Radar client embedded.

  • Create a new iOS project as a "Single View App". Give it a name and make sure the language option is set to "Swift".

  • Add the CocoaPod to your Podfile and pod install.

    use_frameworks!
    pod 'RadarKit'
    
  • Edit the ViewController class. Add the four lines containing "radarkit" so it looks like the code below. You will need to use your real zone ID and customer ID for this to actually send data, but it's ok to test with 00000.

    import UIKit
    import RadarKit
    
    class ViewController: UIViewController {
    
        let radarkit = RadarKit()
    
        override func viewDidLoad() {
            super.viewDidLoad()
            radarkit.start(forZoneId: 1, customerId: 00000)
        }
    
        override func didReceiveMemoryWarning() {
            super.didReceiveMemoryWarning()
            radarkit.didReceiveMemoryWarning()
        }
    }
    
  • Run the program. You are done.

Objective-C

Step by step guide for Xcode 8 and Objective-C. We'll create the simplest possible application with the Radar client embedded.

  • Create a new iOS project as a "Single View App". Give it a name and make sure the language option is set to "Objective-C".

  • Add the CocoaPod to your Podfile and pod install.

     pod 'RadarKit/ObjC'
    
  • Edit "ViewController.m". Add the five lines containing "radarkit" so it looks like the code below. You will need to use your real zone ID and customer ID for this to actually send data, but it's ok to test with 00000.

     #import "ViewController.h"
     #import "RadarKit.h"
    
     @interface ViewController ()
     { @private RadarKit *radarkit; }
     @end
    
     @implementation ViewController
    
     - (void)viewDidLoad {
         [super viewDidLoad];
         radarkit = [RadarKit new];
         [radarkit startForZoneId:1 customerId:00000];
     }
    
     - (void)didReceiveMemoryWarning {
         [super didReceiveMemoryWarning];
         [radarkit didReceiveMemoryWarning];
     }
    
     @end
    
  • Run the program. You are done.

Using the API

radarkit.start may be called repeatedly. Every time you call this a new probing session will run. Be aware that there is a waiting period between sessions (currently 1 minute, subject to change).

radarkit.didReceiveMemoryWarning will free up all but a few bytes of memory. Note that after calling this there is startup cost the next time start is called.

Notes

All this does is load our radar tag in a WebView with a little bit of throttling to handle the case where someone isn't connected to the internet.

Because WebView is a UI element you must call the API on the main UI thread. https://developer.apple.com/documentation/code_diagnostics/main_thread_checker

You can confirm it's working in the Develop tab of Safari on your Mac. For example, there will be a menu entry for Simulator which should have a submenu that contains radar.cedexis.com - radar.html. If you see the radar.html part then WebKit is successfully running the radar client.