Loda
Loda

Reputation: 1990

iOS 5 : https ( ASIHTTPRequest) stop working

I got an app which use ASIHTTPRequest.

I recompiled my app with iOS 5 (sdk : 5.0 / xcode: 4.2 Build 4D199 ) and the https connections fail with error message (the same call with https disabled works fine):

Error Domain=ASIHTTPRequestErrorDomain Code=1 "A connection failure occurred" UserInfo=0xa8e66e0 {NSUnderlyingError=0xa8ac6c0 "The operation couldn’t be completed. (OSStatus error -9844.)", NSLocalizedDescription=A connection failure occurred}

With debug log enabled:

[STATUS] Starting asynchronous request <ASIFormDataRequest: 0xd96fc00>

[CONNECTION] Request <ASIFormDataRequest: 0xd96fc00> will not use a persistent connection

[STATUS] Request <ASIFormDataRequest: 0xd96fc00>: Failed

[CONNECTION] Request #(null) failed and will invalidate connection #(null)

I found this related post: https://devforums.apple.com/message/537440#537440 which could explain my problem.

based on the idea that iOS 5 prefer TLS 1.2, I try changing the setting kCFStreamSocketSecurityLevelTLSv1 in AIHTTPRequest.m                    

  NSDictionary *sslProperties = [[NSDictionary alloc] initWithObjectsAndKeys:
                                     [NSNumber numberWithBool:YES],
kCFStreamSSLAllowsExpiredCertificates,
                                     [NSNumber numberWithBool:YES], kCFStreamSSLAllowsAnyRoot,
                                     [NSNumber numberWithBool:NO],  kCFStreamSSLValidatesCertificateChain,
                                     kCFNull,kCFStreamSSLPeerName,
                                      kCFStreamSocketSecurityLevelTLSv1, kCFStreamSSLLevel,// my modif
                                     nil];

with no success. Maybe my modification is incorrect?

Details:

I do not know if the issue is a certificate story (like TLS version) or something else.

any help/idea is welcome !

Upvotes: 9

Views: 13623

Answers (5)

ValentiGoClimb
ValentiGoClimb

Reputation: 750

Here is the final solution:

https://developer.apple.com/library/ios/#technotes/tn2287/_index.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/DTS40011309

        NSDictionary *sslProperties = [[NSDictionary alloc] initWithObjectsAndKeys:
                                       [NSNumber numberWithBool:YES], kCFStreamSSLAllowsExpiredCertificates,
                                       [NSNumber numberWithBool:YES], kCFStreamSSLAllowsAnyRoot,
                                       [NSNumber numberWithBool:NO],  kCFStreamSSLValidatesCertificateChain,
                                       kCFNull,kCFStreamSSLPeerName,
                                       @"kCFStreamSocketSecurityLevelTLSv1_0SSLv3", kCFStreamSSLLevel,
                                       nil];

Adding this param:

                                       @"kCFStreamSocketSecurityLevelTLSv1_0SSLv3", kCFStreamSSLLevel,

Upvotes: 6

weibel
weibel

Reputation: 143

On our setup the problem was fixed by inserting

[sslProperties setObject:(NSString *)kCFStreamSocketSecurityLevelSSLv3 forKey:(NSString *)kCFStreamSSLLevel];

just above

CFReadStreamSetProperty((CFReadStreamRef)[self readStream], kCFStreamPropertySSLSettings, sslProperties);

in the Handle SSL certificate settings section.

EDIT: According to http://developer.apple.com/library/ios/#technotes/tn2287/_index.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/DTS40011309 the following should be more robust

[sslProperties setObject:@"kCFStreamSocketSecurityLevelTLSv1_0SSLv3" forKey:(NSString *)kCFStreamSSLLevel];

Upvotes: 6

Ryan Gregg
Ryan Gregg

Reputation: 11

Try using kCFStreamSocketSecurityLevelSSLv3 instead of TLSv1. That worked for me when I ran into a similar situation. I'm not sure why the auto-negotiation isn't falling back to the right protocol, but at least on some servers it seems to fail under ASIHttpRequest where it would work with NSURLConnection.

Upvotes: 1

Christ
Christ

Reputation: 450

looks like the ASIHTTPRequest is being abandoned. and the current version got issue with iOS 5.

http://groups.google.com/group/asihttprequest/browse_thread/thread/7731197dbe71c260

they recommend moving to NSURLConnection.

Upvotes: 5

JosephH
JosephH

Reputation: 37495

These are the things I would try:

  1. Download a fresh copy of asihttprequest, put it into a newly created very simple app that just makes single http and see if it behaves the same
  2. Try against other https servers see if you get the same behaviour (try with some of the big name ones, eg https://twitter.com - linkedin, google, etc, all have https versions too)
  3. Try the same server in Safari (still on the iOS device)

For what it's worth, I have ASIHTTPRequest on iOS5 working fine with my customer's https servers - I didn't have to make any changes for iOS5.

Upvotes: 1

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