Siren

Siren 🚨

Notify users when a new version of your app is available and prompt them to upgrade.

Swift Support CocoaPods SwiftPM Compatible Accio supported


Important Information

I stopped being a proactive iOS engineer in 2021. For the time being, I will keep this library maintained for the community, but I will not be proactively adding features.


Table of Contents


Meta

About

Siren checks a user’s currently installed version of your iOS app against the version that is currently available in the App Store.

If a new version is available, a language localized alert can be presented to the user informing them of the newer version, and giving them the option to update the application. Alternatively, Siren can notify your app through alternative means, such as a custom user interface.

Siren is built to work with the Semantic Versioning system.

Features

Current Features


Screenshots

Ports


Installation and Integration

Installation Instructions

Swift Version Branch Name Will Continue to Receive Updates?
5.5+ master Yes
5.1-5.4 swift5.4 No
5.0 swift5.0 No
4.2 swift4.2 No
4.1 swift4.1 No
3.2 swift3.2 No
3.1 swift3.1 No
2.3 swift2.3 No

CocoaPods

pod 'Siren' # Swift 5.5+
pod 'Siren', :git => 'https://github.com/ArtSabintsev/Siren.git', :branch => 'swift5.4' # Swift 5.1-5.4
pod 'Siren', :git => 'https://github.com/ArtSabintsev/Siren.git', :branch => 'swift5.0' # Swift 5.0
pod 'Siren', :git => 'https://github.com/ArtSabintsev/Siren.git', :branch => 'swift4.2' # Swift 4.2
pod 'Siren', :git => 'https://github.com/ArtSabintsev/Siren.git', :branch => 'swift4.1' # Swift 4.1
pod 'Siren', :git => 'https://github.com/ArtSabintsev/Siren.git', :branch => 'swift3.2' # Swift 3.2
pod 'Siren', :git => 'https://github.com/ArtSabintsev/Siren.git', :branch => 'swift3.1' # Swift 3.1
pod 'Siren', :git => 'https://github.com/ArtSabintsev/Siren.git', :branch => 'swift2.3' # Swift 2.3

Swift Package Manager

.Package(url: "https://github.com/ArtSabintsev/Siren.git", majorVersion: 6)

Implementation Examples

Implementing Siren is as easy as adding two lines of code to your app in either AppDelegate.swift or SceneDelegate.swift:

AppDelegate.swift Example

import Siren // Line 1
import UIKit

@UIApplicationMain
class AppDelegate: UIResponder, UIApplicationDelegate {
    var window: UIWindow?

    func application(_ application: UIApplication, didFinishLaunchingWithOptions launchOptions: [UIApplication.LaunchOptionsKey : Any]? = nil) -> Bool {
        window?.makeKeyAndVisible()

	Siren.shared.wail() // Line 2

        return true
    }
}

SceneDelegate.swift Example

import Siren // Line 1
import UIKit

class SceneDelegate: UIResponder, UIWindowSceneDelegate {

    var window: UIWindow?

    func scene(_ scene: UIScene, willConnectTo session: UISceneSession, options connectionOptions: UIScene.ConnectionOptions) {
        window?.makeKeyAndVisible()

	Siren.shared.wail() // Line 2

        return true
    }
}

Siren also has plenty of customization options. All examples can be found in the Example Project’s AppDelegate file. Uncomment the example you’d like to test.


Device-Specific Checks

Localization

Siren is localized for the following languages:

Arabic, Armenian, Basque, Chinese (Simplified and Traditional), Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, Estonian, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Latvian, Lithuanian, Malay, Norwegian (Bokmål), Persian (Afghanistan, Iran, Persian), Polish, Portuguese (Brazil and Portugal), Romanian, Russian, Serbian (Cyrillic and Latin), Slovenian, Spanish, Swedish, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, Urdu, Vietnamese

If your user’s device is set to one of the supported locales, an update message will appear in that language. If a locale is not supported, than the message will appear in English.

You may want the update dialog to always appear in a certain language, ignoring the user’s device-specific setting. You can enable it like so:

// In this example, we force the `Russian` language.
Siren.shared.presentationManager = PresentationManager(forceLanguageLocalization: .russian)

Device Compatibility

If an app update is available, Siren checks to make sure that the version of iOS on the user’s device is compatible with the one that is required by the app update. For example, if a user has iOS 11 installed on their device, but the app update requires iOS 12, an alert will not be shown. This takes care of the false positive case regarding app updating.


Testing

Testing Siren Locally

Temporarily change the version string in Xcode (within the .xcodeproj file) to an older version than the one that’s currently available in the App Store. Afterwards, build and run your app, and you should see the alert.

If you currently don’t have an app in the store, change your bundleID to one that is already in the store. In the sample app packaged with this library, we use Facebook’s Bundle ID: com.facebook.Facebook.

Words of Caution

Occasionally, the iTunes JSON will update faster than the App Store CDN, meaning the JSON may state that the new version of the app has been released, while no new binary is made available for download via the App Store. It is for this reason that Siren will, by default, wait 1 day (24 hours) after the JSON has been updated to prompt the user to update. To change the default setting, please modify the value of showAlertAfterCurrentVersionHasBeenReleasedForDays.


App Submission

App Store Review

The App Store reviewer will not see the alert. The version in the App Store will always be older than the version being reviewed.

Phased Releases

In 2017, Apple announced the ability to rollout app updates gradually (a.k.a. Phased Releases). Siren will continue to work as it has in the past, presenting an update modal to all users. If you opt-in to a phased rollout for a specific version, you have a few choices:


Attribution

Special Thanks

A massive shout-out and thank you goes to the following folks:

Creator

Arthur Ariel Sabintsev