manup 0.0.2
manup: ^0.0.2 copied to clipboard
Mandatory update for Flutter Apps.
Mandatory Update #
Sometimes you have an app which talks to services in the cloud. Sometimes, those services change, and your app no longer works. Wouldn't it be great if the app could let the user know there's an update? That's what this module does.
Usage #
Remote File #
You need a hosted json file that contains the version metadata. This could be part of your API. However, often the reason for maintenance mode is because your API is down. An s3 bucket may be a safer bet, even though it means a little more work in maintaining the file.
{
"ios": {
"latest": "2.4.1",
"minimum": "2.1.0",
"url": "http://example.com/myAppUpdate",
"enabled": true
},
"android": {
"latest": "2.5.1",
"minimum": "2.1.0",
"url": "http://example.com/myAppUpdate/android",
"enabled": true
}
}
Using the Service Directly #
You can use ManUpService
directly in your code. As part of your app startup logic, use the service to validate the running version.
ManUpService service = ManUpService('https://example.com/manup.json');
ManUpStatus result = await service.validate();
ManUpStatus
will let you know how the version of the app running compares to the metadata:
latest
: The app is the latest versionsupported
: The app is a supported version, but not the latestunsupported
: The app is an unsupported version and should not rundisabled
: The app has been marked as disabled and should not run
Exception Handling #
validate
will throw a ManUpException
if the lookup failed for any reason. Most likely, this will be caused
by the device being offline and unable to retreive the metadata. It is up to you how you want to handle this in your app. Some apps, where a supported version is critical, should probably not run unless the version was validated successfully. However, for other apps, there's probably no problem and the app should continue running.