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Warning

This repository is deprecated and it was moved to the monorepo. Repository will remain live to support old versions of the library, but any new updates MUST be done on the monorepo.

Swift Client library to interact with Supabase Storage.

Prelude: RLS

A lot of bug reports get filed towards all the Supabase Storage libraries because RLS is easy to get wrong for the un-initiated.

Before you can use any client service, you should follow the RLS guides on Supabase's website. You will need to create policies on each bucket individually or use global ones on the storage/object and storage/bucket sections.

For image/video uploads from users, there is a key example on how to setup basic RLS for all CRUD operations here. Pay particular attention to the difference between USING and WITH CHECK keyword for POSTGRES SQL.

Once you have RLS setup for ALL CRUD operations you should be able to use the bucket with the clients. There are some issues with uploading or downloading with buckets that change their permission levels from public to private and vice versa, so use caution when playing around with those settings if you're experimenting. If you experience a bunch of 404's with uploads and downloads, try deleting the bucket and re-initializing it.

Instantiating the client

If you're using the full supabase-swift experience, you can create a reference to the storage client by accessing the following:

import Supabase
import SupabaseStorage

lazy var supabaseClient: SupabaseClient = {
    return SupabaseClient(supabaseURL: supabaseUrl, supabaseKey: apiKey)
}()

lazy var supabaseStorageClient: SupabaseStorageClient = {
    return supabaseClient.storage
}()

If you're experiencing errors using this instance, or would just like to construct your own, you may do so via:

func storageClient(bucketName: String = "photos") async -> StorageFileApi? {
    guard let jwt = try? await supabaseClient.auth.session.accessToken else { return nil}
    return SupabaseStorageClient(
        url: "\(supabaseUrl)/storage/v1",
        headers: [
            "Authorization": "Bearer \(jwt)",
            "apikey": apiKey,
        ]
    ).from(id: bucketName)
}

Architecturally, a pattern you can follow is holding these values and functions in a provider class using a simple Singleton pattern or inject it with something like Resolver.

class SupabaseProvider {
    
    private let apiDictionaryKey = "supabase-key"
    private let supabaseUrlKey = "supabase-url"
    
    private init() {}
    
    static let shared = SupabaseProvider()
    
    lazy var supabaseClient: SupabaseClient = {
        return SupabaseClient(supabaseURL: supabaseUrl, supabaseKey: apiKey)
    }()
    
    func loggedInUserId() async -> String? {
        return try? await SupabaseProvider.shared.supabaseClient.auth.session.user.id.uuidString
    }
    
    private var keysPlist: NSDictionary {
        if
            let path = Bundle.main.path(forResource: "Keys", ofType: "plist"),
            let dictionary = NSDictionary(contentsOfFile: path) {
            return dictionary
        }
        fatalError("You must have a Keys.plist file in your application codebase.")
    }
    
    private var apiKey: String {
        guard let apiKey = keysPlist[apiDictionaryKey] as? String else {
            fatalError("Your Keys.plist must have a key of: \(apiDictionaryKey) and a corresponding value of type String.")
        }
        return apiKey
    }
    
    var supabaseUrl: URL {
        guard let url = keysPlist[supabaseUrlKey] as? String else {
            fatalError("Your Keys.plist must have a key of: \(supabaseUrlKey) and a corresponding value of type String.")
        }
        return URL(string: url)!
    }
    
    // Storage
    
    func storageClient(bucketName: String = "photos") async -> StorageFileApi? {
        guard let jwt = try? await supabaseClient.auth.session.accessToken else { return nil}
        return SupabaseStorageClient(
            url: "\(supabaseUrl)/storage/v1",
            headers: [
                "Authorization": "Bearer \(jwt)",
                "apikey": apiKey,
            ]
        ).from(id: bucketName)
    }
}

Uploading and Downloading

With your client of choice, you can download via the following given some RLS and naming conventions illustrated above.

Example of converting a .png image download to a UIImage for a UIImageView:

if let data = try? await SupabaseProvider.shared.storageClient()?.download(
    path: profilePhotoUrl
) {
    imageView.image = UIImage(data: data)
}

Example of uploading an image via a UIImageView's current UIImage and saving it to a user's bucket folder:

func loggedInUserId() async -> String? {
    return try? await SupabaseProvider.shared.client.auth.session.user.id.uuidString
}

guard let image = imageView.image?.pngData() else { return }

// Note that Swift has UUID's all capitalized, but Supabase will always lowercase
// them.

guard let userId = loggedInUserId().lowercased() else { return }

let fileId = UUID().uuidString
let filename = "\(fileId).png"
let storageClient = await SupabaseProvider.shared.storageClient()
guard let uploadResponseData = try? await storageClient?.upload(
        path: "\(userId)/\(filename)", 
        file: File(
            name: filename, 
            data: image, 
            fileName: filename, 
            contentType: "image/png"), 
            fileOptions: FileOptions(cacheControl: "3600")
        )
    ) else { return }

URL Creation

Signed URL creation is fairly straightforward and is the recommended way to grab URLs from storage devices. For larger files, you should incorporate CoreData to keep them on device, probably with the help of an LRU Cache.

let storageClient = await SupabaseProvider.shared.storageClient(bucketName: "bucket_name")
// URL will expire in 1 hour (3600 seconds)
guard let url = try? await storageClient?.createSignedURL(path: imageUrl, expiresIn: 3600) else {
    return
}
DispatchQueue.main.async {
    guard let data = try? Data(contentsOf: url) else { return }
    self.imageView.image = UIImage(data: data)
}

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