Reputation: 131
My app has a 1 month autorenewal subscription. When the user clicks on a "Buy a subscription" button I am saving date of purchase to shared preferences. Then, after 1 month, I need to check is this subscription is still valid. So how can I implement it?
Upvotes: 5
Views: 11383
Reputation: 386
Yeah, as to the vulnerabilities, there is one way to take the issue of users changing their time manually just to deceive the app, the solution I thought of is letting the DateTime come from the server this way, whether users change the Date and Time or not you end up with the correct time frame. I hope this helps.
As to checking whether subscription has expired, just follow the step @awaik gave and in addition, you can make request to your api to store the dateTime when the subscription was purchased and when you expect the subscription to expire. I suggest you save the purchase date and expected date in your server rather than on user device as clearing the cache or data directory of the app will lead to loss of the saved data. Goodluck.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 12287
==== UPDATE from 11.03.2020
Hi, I can see this post still reading by people who looking for a method of how to work with subscription in Flutter. During 2019 I made two apps with thousands installs where users can buy a renewable subscription on the 2 platforms. Until February 2020 I used for this package from Flutter team https://pub.dev/packages/in_app_purchase, BUT - there is no way to get info about the user to unsubscribe in iOS. This is not the plugin issue, but the iOS approach for the process. We should implement our own backend for security reasons (by the way Google also recommends to do the same, but still left the way to check state directly from the app).
So, after some researches, I found guys who made backend and plugin and it is free until you have less than 10 000 USD revenue for the month. https://www.revenuecat.com/ https://pub.dev/packages/purchases_flutter
I've implemented this plugin in my apps and it works like a charm. There is some good approaches that allow you to get a subscription state at any point in the app. I'm going to make an example and article, but not sure about the timing.
====
UPDATE from 15.07.2019. Just to save time. The answer below was given for an outdated plugin for payments. After that Flutter team made plugin https://pub.dev/packages/in_app_purchase and I recommend using it.
=====
The best way is to use a secure backend server for receiving Real-time Developer Notifications. But, it is possible to check status directly in the application. So, when user tries to get access to some paid functionality you can check whether his subscription is active or not. Below is the example:
Create somewhere the file with the class
import 'dart:io' show Platform;
import 'package:flutter/services.dart';
import 'package:flutter_inapp_purchase/flutter_inapp_purchase.dart';
import 'dart:async';
class SubcsriptionStatus {
static Future<bool> subscriptionStatus(
String sku,
[Duration duration = const Duration(days: 30),
Duration grace = const Duration(days: 0)]) async {
if (Platform.isIOS) {
var history = await FlutterInappPurchase.getPurchaseHistory();
for (var purchase in history) {
Duration difference =
DateTime.now().difference(purchase.transactionDate);
if (difference.inMinutes <= (duration + grace).inMinutes &&
purchase.productId == sku) return true;
}
return false;
} else if (Platform.isAndroid) {
var purchases = await FlutterInappPurchase.getAvailablePurchases();
for (var purchase in purchases) {
if (purchase.productId == sku) return true;
}
return false;
}
throw PlatformException(
code: Platform.operatingSystem, message: "platform not supported");
}
}
Import it where you need to check subscription status and use in Constructor. For example:
class _SubscriptionState extends State<Subscription> {
bool userSubscribed;
_SubscriptionState() {
SubcsriptionStatus.subscriptionStatus(iapId, const Duration(days: 30), const
Duration(days: 0)).then((val) => setState(() {
userSubscribed = val;
}));
}
}
In variable userSubscribed will be the state - true or false. (Please note you have to add flutter_inapp_purchase to your project).
Upvotes: 15
Reputation: 4356
There's a few ways of doing this, but I would not do this on the mobile device.
On Device like you asked for
Install Flutter Cache Manager, on start set a cache key value 'Subscription' to true with maxAgeCacheObject: Duration (days: 30). On every start check if that key still exists in the cache. If it does then it's still valid otherwise it has expired.
Suggested solution using FirebaseFunction
I would suggest setting up a backend to manage all this. This is not a task for the mobile device. You can have a Cloud Function from firebase where you pass a unique device id and it'll return whether the subscription is still valid or not. A serverless function should work for that. Pseudo steps:
Upvotes: 3