Azure SDK for iOS (June 2022)
The Azure SDK team is pleased to announce our June 2022 client library releases.
2 packages released this month.
Stable Packages (2)
-
Communication Calling
-
Communication Chat
Release highlights
Communication Calling 2.1.0 Changelog
Features Added
- Voice and video calling support in Azure government.
- Push Notifications support for stopping an incoming call because it was answered in another device, or caller cancelled, etc.
Bugs fixed
- Fix for internal update when Call Id changes in the middle of a call.
- Fix for fetching token from background thread blocks the creation of CallAgent.
- Fix for simulator crash when UI window size is returned as zero.
- Fix for audio not flowing issue when resume ACS call from PSTN call.
Communication Chat 1.2.0 Changelog
Features Added
- Added two new events
realTimeNotificationConnected
andrealTimeNotificationDisconnected
that allow the developer to know when the connection to the real time notification server is active.
Need help
- For reference documentation visit the Azure SDK for iOS documentation.
- For tutorials, samples, quick starts and other documentation, visit the Azure SDK for iOS repository.
- File an issue via Github Issues.
- Check previous questions or ask new ones on
StackOverflow using the
azure
andios
tags.
Latest Releases
View all the latest versions of iOS packages here.
Installation Instructions
To install the latest GA and beta libraries, we recommend you use the Swift Package Manager. As an alternative, you may also integrate the libraries using CocoaPods.
Xcode
To add the Azure SDK for iOS to your application, follow the instructions in Adding Package Dependencies to Your App:
With your project open in Xcode 11 or later, select File > Swift Packages > Add Package Dependency… Enter the clone URL of the Swift Package Manager mirror repository for the library you wish to include (it will have the form SwiftPM-<NAME>
, i.e.: https://github.com/Azure/SwiftPM-AzureCore.git) and click Next. For the version rule, specify the exact version or version range you wish to use with your application and click Next. Finally, place a checkmark next to each client library you wish to use with your application, ensure your application target is selected in the Add to target dropdown, and click Finish.
Swift CLI
To add the Azure SDK for iOS to your application, follow the example in Importing Dependencies:
Open your project’s Package.swift
file and add a new package dependency to your project’s dependencies
section, specifying the clone URL of the Swift Package Manager mirror repository and the version specifier you wish to use:
// swift-tools-version:5.3
dependencies: [
...
.package(name: "AzureCommunicationChat", url: "https://github.com/Azure/SwiftPM-AzureCommunicationChat.git", from: "1.2.0"),
]
Next, add each client library you wish to use in a target to the target’s array of dependencies
:
targets: [
...
.target(
name: "MyTarget",
dependencies: [
"AzureCommunicationChat",
...
]
)
]
Cocoapods
CocoaPods is a dependency manager for Objective-C and Swift projects. You can install it with the following command:
$ [sudo] gem install cocoapods
CocoaPods 1.5+ is required.
To integrate one or more client libraries into your project using CocoaPods, specify them in your Podfile, providing the version specifier you wish to use. To ensure compatibility when using multiple client libraries in the same project, use the same version specifier for all Azure SDK client libraries within the project:
platform :ios, '12.0'
# Comment the next line if you don't want to use dynamic frameworks
use_frameworks!
target 'MyTarget' do
pod 'AzureCommunicationCalling', '2.1.0'
pod 'AzureCommunicationChat', '1.2.0'
...
end
Then, run the following command:
$ pod install
Feedback
If you have a bug or feature request for one of the libraries, please post an issue to GitHub.