@laserpecker/react-native-location
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2.5.1 • Public • Published

react-native-location

MIT License Supports Android and iOS Supports React Native >= 0.46 CircleCI Status

Native GPS location support for React Native. You might decide to use this library over the built-in geolocation because it includes some additional features:

  • Allows you choose what type of permission to ask for ("when in use" or "always"). The built-in geolocation library will look at your plist file and choose "always" if you have the NSLocationAlwaysUsageDescription property, however, you might have a usecase where you want to start by asking the user for "while in use" permission and later upgrade the permission to "always" when they turn on a feature which requires background location.
  • Ability to check the current permission status (RNLocation.getCurrentPermission).
  • Allows you to monitor the device heading.

Installation

Install the library using either Yarn:

yarn add react-native-location

or using npm:

npm install --save react-native-location

You then need to link the native parts of the library for the platforms you are using. Click on the arrow to show the steps for each platform.

iOS Installation Instructions

1a. Automatically link with the CLI tool

The easiest way to link the library is using the CLI tool by running this command from the root of your project:

react-native link react-native-location

1b. Install with Cocoapods

You can also link the library using Cocoapods by adding this line to your Podfile:

pod 'react-native-location', :path => '../node_modules/react-native-location/react-native-location.podspec'

1c. Or manually link the library

If you can't or don't want to use the CLI tool, you can also manually link the library using the intructions in the React NAtive documentation.

2. Ensure you have the CoreLocation library linked

This is not required if you have installed using Cocoapods.

You then need to make sure you have the iOS CoreLocation library linked to your project.

To do this, click on the your project in XCode (the name of your project at the top of the left panel), select your apps build target, go to the Build Phases tab then in the Link Binary With Libraries section add CoreLocation.framework.

3. Info.plist usage descriptions

Finally, you then need to make sure you have the correct usage discriptions inside your Info.plist file. The message will show in the Alert box when your app requests permissions and lets the user know why you are asking for that permissions. They are also part of the App Store review process.

If you are only requesting "when in use" (foreground) location access you just need to make sure you have the NSLocationWhenInUseUsageDescription item in your Plist.

If you are requesting "always" (background) permission you will also need to add NSLocationAlwaysAndWhenInUseUsageDescription and NSLocationAlwaysUsageDescription into your PList file.

The easiest way to add these is to find your Info.plist in Xcode, right click on it, and then choose "edit as source code". You can then enter the items you need into the file:

<key>NSLocationWhenInUseUsageDescription</key>
<string>This is the plist item for NSLocationWhenInUseUsageDescription</string>
<key>NSLocationAlwaysAndWhenInUseUsageDescription</key>
<string>This is the plist item for NSLocationAlwaysAndWhenInUseUsageDescription</string>
<key>NSLocationAlwaysUsageDescription</key>
<string>This is the plist item for NSLocationAlwaysUsageDescription</string>

4. Background mode setup (optional)

For background location to work, a few things need to be configured:

  1. In the Xcode project, go to Capabilities, switch on "Background Modes" and check "Location updates".
  2. Set NSLocationAlwaysAndWhenInUseUsageDescription and NSLocationAlwaysUsageDescription in your Info.plist file.
  3. For iOS 9+, set allowsBackgroundLocationUpdates to true when configuring the library in your Javascript code. Like this:
RNLocation.configure({ allowsBackgroundLocationUpdates: true });
Android Installation Instructions

1a. Automatically link the library using the CLI tool

The easiest way to link the library is using the CLI tool by running this command from the root of your project:

react-native link react-native-location

1b. Manually link the library

If you can't or don't want to use the CLI tool, you can manually link the library by making the following changes (click on the arrow to show the steps):

Steps to manually link the library

android/settings.gradle

include ':react-native-location'
project(':react-native-location').projectDir = new File(rootProject.projectDir, '../node_modules/react-native-location/android')

android/app/build.gradle

dependencies {
   ...
   implementation project(':react-native-location')
}

android/app/src/main/.../MainApplication.java

On top, where imports are:

import com.github.reactnativecommunity.location.RNLocationPackage;

Add the RNLocationPackage class to your list of exported packages.

@Override
protected List<ReactPackage> getPackages() {
    return Arrays.asList(
            new MainReactPackage(),
            new RNLocationPackage()
    );
}

2. Android manifest permissions

You need to ensure that your AndroidManifest.xml contains this line:

<uses-permission android:name="android.permission.ACCESS_COARSE_LOCATION"/>

If you want to access fine location then you should also include:

<uses-permission android:name="android.permission.ACCESS_FINE_LOCATION"/>

3. Install the Google Fused Location provider dependency (optional)

The library provides two methods of getting the location on Android. The default is the builtin location manager, however, you can optionally choose to install the Fused Location library which provides more accurate and faster results. The downside is that it will only work on devices with Google Play Services installed and configured (which is most Android devices in the west, but not Kindle devices or Asian markets).

If you would like to use the Google Play Services Fused Location provider, then you need to add these dependencies to your android/app/build.gradle file:

implementation "com.google.android.gms:play-services-base:16.0.1"
implementation "com.google.android.gms:play-services-location:16.0.0"

Example application

In the example folder is a React Native sample app which you can use as a sample implementation to start from.

The app requests permissions, takes reading every 5 distance and starts immediately. To use in the iOS simulator, look on the Debug -> Location menu for sample trips that will show you updating location such as City Bycicle Ride, City Run, and Freeway Drive.

Example App

Usage

import RNLocation from 'react-native-location';

RNLocation.configure({
  distanceFilter: 5.0
})

RNLocation.requestPermission({
  ios: "whenInUse",
  android: {
    detail: "coarse"
  }
}).then(granted => {
    if (granted) {
      this.locationSubscription = RNLocation.subscribeToLocationUpdates(locations => {
        /* Example location returned
        {
          speed: -1,
          longitude: -0.1337,
          latitude: 51.50998,
          accuracy: 5,
          heading: -1,
          altitude: 0,
          altitudeAccuracy: -1
          floor: 0
          timestamp: 1446007304457.029,
          fromMockProvider: false
        }
        */
      })
    }
  })

Methods

To access the methods, you need import the react-native-location module. This is done through import RNLocation from 'react-native-location'.

Configuration

RNLocation.configure

This is used to configure the location provider. You can use this to enable background mode, filter location updates to a certain distance change, and ensure you have the power settings set correctly for your use case.

You can call configure multiple times at it will only change the setting which you pass to it. For example if you only want to change activityType, you can call configure with just that property present.

RNLocation.configure({
    distanceFilter: 100, // Meters
    desiredAccuracy: {
      ios: "best",
      android: "balancedPowerAccuracy"
    },
    // Android only
    androidProvider: "auto",
    interval: 5000, // Milliseconds
    fastestInterval: 10000, // Milliseconds
    maxWaitTime: 5000, // Milliseconds
    // iOS Only
    activityType: "other",
    allowsBackgroundLocationUpdates: false,
    headingFilter: 1, // Degrees
    headingOrientation: "portrait",
    pausesLocationUpdatesAutomatically: false,
    showsBackgroundLocationIndicator: false,
})

There are the valid configuration options and what they do:

Option Platforms Description Values Documentation
distanceFilter Android iOS The minimum distance in meters that the device location needs to change before the location update callback in your app is called. Defaults to 0 for no filtering. number Android Docs Apple Docs
desiredAccuracy Android iOS

The accuracy of the location data. Defaults to best on iOS and balancedPowerAccuracy on Android.

Valid options for android: balancedPowerAccuracy, highAccuracy, lowPower, or noPower.

Valid options for ios: bestForNavigation, best, nearestTenMeters, hundredMeters, or threeKilometers.

{ android: string, ios: string } Android Docs Apple Docs
androidProvider Android The provider which is used on Android to get the location. Your app must include the Google Play services dependencies to use the playServices location provider. By default it will choose the playServices location provider if it detects that the dependencies are installed, otherwise, it will use the standard Android version which does not require Google Play Services to be installed. Note that auto only checks that the dependencies are installed, not that the user has the Google Play services APK installed and set up correctly. "auto", "playServices", or "standard"
interval Android

Set the desired interval for active location updates, in milliseconds.

The location client will actively try to obtain location updates for your application at this interval, so it has a direct influence on the amount of power used by your application. Choose your interval wisely.

This interval is inexact. You may not receive updates at all (if no location sources are available), or you may receive them slower than requested. You may also receive them faster than requested (if other applications are requesting location at a faster interval).

number Android Docs
fastestInterval Android

Explicitly set the fastest interval for location updates, in milliseconds.

This controls the fastest rate at which your application will receive location updates, which might be faster than `interval` in some situations (for example, if other applications are triggering location updates).

This allows your application to passively acquire locations at a rate faster than it actively acquires locations, saving power.

By default this is 6x the `interval`.

number Android Docs
maxWaitTime Android

Sets the maximum wait time in milliseconds for location updates.

If you pass a value at least 2x larger than the interval specified with setInterval(long), then location delivery may be delayed and multiple locations can be delivered at once.

number Android Docs
allowsBackgroundLocationUpdates iOS A Boolean value indicating whether the app should receive location updates when suspended. Requires permissions to always access the users location. Defaults to false. boolean Apple Docs
activityType iOS The type of user activity associated with the location updates. Defaults to other. "other", "automotiveNavigation", "fitness", "otherNavigation", or "airborne" Apple Docs
headingFilter iOS The minimum angle in degrees that the device heading needs to change before the heading update callback in your app is called. Defaults to 0 for no filtering. number
headingOrientation iOS The device orientation to use when computing heading values. Defaults to portrait. "portrait", "portraitUpsideDown", "landscapeLeft", or "landscapeRight" Apple Docs
pausesLocationUpdatesAutomatically iOS A Boolean value indicating whether the location manager object may pause location updates. Defaults to true. boolean Apple Docs
showsBackgroundLocationIndicator iOS A Boolean indicating whether the status bar changes its appearance when location services are used in the background. Defaults to false. Only works on iOS 11+ and is ignored for earlier versions of iOS. boolean Apple Docs

Permissions

Correctly managing permissions is key to working with the users location in mobile apps.

  • Ask for the lowest level of permissions you can. You'll almost always only need whenInUse (foreground) permission rather than background.
  • On iOS you only get one chance to ask for permission. If the user requests it the first time this method will always resolves to false.
  • If you ask for always permission then the user gets the chance to accept, but only give you whenInUse permission. The Promise will still resolve to false, however, if you call RNLocation.getCurrentPermission you can check if they actually accepted the lesser permission.
  • You should monitor the permissions and respond to it correctly. The user is able to go to their phone setting and revoke or downgrade permissions at any time.

RNLocation.requestPermission

This method should be called before subscribing to location updates. You need to pass in the type of permission you want for each platform. You can choose not to ignore a platform and it will be ignored. The method returns a promise which resolves to true if the permission was granted and false if not. For Android you can optionally provide a rationale which will be displayed if you ask the user for permission a 2nd time after they have denied permission once.

RNLocation.requestPermission({
  ios: 'whenInUse', // or 'always'
  android: {
    detail: 'coarse', // or 'fine'
    rationale: {
      title: "We need to access your location",
      message: "We use your location to show where you are on the map",
      buttonPositive: "OK",
      buttonNegative: "Cancel"
    }
  }
});

RNLocation.checkPermission

Checks if the currently granted permissions match the given options. You can call this before requestPermission to check if you already have the permission level you would like. This is especially useful if you want to display a message to the user about not having the correct permissions before actually requesting them.

RNLocation.checkPermission({
  ios: 'whenInUse', // or 'always'
  android: {
    detail: 'coarse' // or 'fine'
  }
});

RNLocation.getCurrentPermission

Gets the current permission status. Note that the values will be different on Android and iOS as the permission systems are different. It's usually best to use RNLocation.checkPermission instead of checking the permission status yourself to avoid re-implementing the logic.

RNLocation.getCurrentPermission()
  .then(currentPermission => {
    ...
  })

RNLocation.subscribeToPermissionUpdates

Monitor the permission status for changes.

// Subscribe
const unsubscribe = RNLocation.subscribeToPermissionUpdates(currentPermission => {
  ...
})

// Unsubscribe
unsubscribe();

RNLocation.subscribeToLocationUpdates

Subscribe to location changes with the given listener. Ensure you have the correct permission before calling this method. The location provider will respect the settings you have given it. Each event may return an array with more than one location. This is because the OS might batch location updates together and deliver them all at once. Take a look at the timestamp to find the latest.

// Subscribe
const unsubscribe = RNLocation.subscribeToLocationUpdates(locations => {
  ...
})

// Unsubscribe
unsubscribe();

RNLocation.getLatestLocation

Get the latest location. Ensure you have the correct permission before calling this method.

This will subscribe to location events for you at the unsubscribe when it gets its first valid location. Usually, this method will return very fast with a possibly out of date location, however, in some circumstances it will not return a location. Therefore, this method has a timeout after which the promise will be resovled with null value.

The location provider will respect the settings you have given it, so if you need a location with a certain accuracy, ensure you call RNLocation.configure first. If you want any location then ensure you call RNLocation.configure with no distance filter.

RNLocation.configure({ distanceFilter: null });
RNLocation.getLatestLocation({ timeout: 60000 })
  .then(latestLocation => {
    // Use the location here
  })

RNLocation.subscribeToSignificantLocationUpdates (iOS only)

Subscribe to significant updates to the users location with the given listener. This method does not take into account the distanceFilter which you configured RNLocation with. In most cases, you should call RNLocation.configure with the correct settings and then use RNLocation.subscribeToLocationUpdates to subscribe to the location updates. This will allow you to support both Android and iOS with the same code. For more details, take a look at Apple's documentation.

// Subscribe
const unsubscribe = RNLocation.subscribeToSignificantLocationUpdates(locations => {
  ...
})

// Unsubscribe
unsubscribe();

RNLocation.subscribeToHeadingUpdates (iOS only)

Subscribe to heading changes with the given listener. Ensure you have the correct permission before calling this method. The location provider will respect the settings you have given it.

// Subscribe
const unsubscribe = RNLocation.subscribeToHeadingUpdates(heading => {
  ...
})

// Unsubscribe
unsubscribe();

License

The library is released under the MIT licence. For more information see LICENSE.

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npm i @laserpecker/react-native-location

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