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Notifications

Configure Push notifications

Note

All the public APIs in the SDK should be called after initializing the SDK via Helpshift.install() API

Push notifications via Helpshift

urbanAirshipNotif.png

Helpshift allows you to send Push notifications when an agent replies to a conversation.

Prerequisites

Implement FCM push in your app.

For FCM, refer to the Firebase Cloud Messaging documentation.

Configure Helpshift Agent Dashboard

To enable the Helpshift system to send push notifications to your users you will have to add an Android as a platform in your app (if you have not added already). And then click on the push notifications option.

Enter your FCM key credentials per app, via the Settings page > App listing in the left navigation > Scroll down to Push Notifications settings section for the app.

For FCM users, the API key can be found at your Firebase API Console


Configure SDK

  1. Send the device registration id to Helpshift via the Helpshift.registerDeviceToken API

public class MyFirebaseMessagingService extends FirebaseMessagingService {

// ...
@Override
public void onNewToken(String newToken) {
// your logic to save the token here for the app
Helpshift.registerPushToken(newToken);
}
}

  1. Using FCM's new FirebaseMessagingService which provides "RemoteMessage" argument, you should use Helpshift.handlePush API which takes a Map argument.

@Override
public void onMessageReceived(RemoteMessage message) {
Map<String, String> data = message.getData();
String origin = data.get("origin");
if (origin != null && origin.equals("helpshift")) {
Helpshift.handlePush(data);
}
}



In-app notifications

In-app notifications are similar to notifications in the notification drawer . Unlike push notifications, they appear only when you app is running.

These notifications are sent when an agent replies to a customer's issue. Your customers can go straight into the conversation screen when they tap on the notification.

Note

If the FCM device token is registered for push notifications, then in-app notifications will be disabled. In-app notifications are disabled to avoid duplicate notifications from both push notifications and in-app notifications.

Customizing notification icons

By default the application icon is used as the notification icon. You can customize the notification icons using the config in the install call.


public class MainApplication extends Application {

@Override
public void onCreate() {
super.onCreate();

Map<String, Object> configurations = new HashMap<>();
configurations.put("notificationIcon", R.drawable.notification_icon);
configurations.put("notificationLargeIcon", R.drawable.notification_large_icon);

// Install call
Helpshift.install(this,
"<PLATFORM_ID>",
"<DOMAIN>",
configurations);
}
}


Customizing notification sound

By default the default device notification sound is used for helpshift notifications. You can customize the notification sound using the config in the install call.

For example:


public class MainApplication extends Application {

@Override
public void onCreate() {
super.onCreate();

Map<String, Object> configurations = new HashMap<>();
configurations.put("notificationSoundId", R.raw.notification_sound);

// Install call
Helpshift.install(this,
"<PLATFORM_ID>",
"<DOMAIN>",
configurations);
}
}

Customizing notification channels

Starting from Android Oreo, Helpshift notifications will create a default channel named In-app Support. If you want to customize the name and description for the default channel, you can do so by using the config in the install call.

Example:


public class MainApplication extends Application {

@Override
public void onCreate() {
super.onCreate();

Map<String, Object> configurations = new HashMap<>();
configurations.put("notificationChannelId", "your channel name here");

// Install call
Helpshift.install(this,
"<PLATFORM_ID>",
"<DOMAIN>",
configurations);
}
}


Configuring in-app notifications

If you do not want the in-app notification support provided by the Helpshift SDK, you can set the flag to false. The default value of this flag is true i.e., in app notification will be enabled.

  • Flag: enableInAppNotification
  • Values: true/false
  • Default: true

Example:


public class MainApplication extends Application {

@Override
public void onCreate() {
super.onCreate();

Map<String, Object> configurations = new HashMap<>();
configurations.put("enableInAppNotification", false);

// Install call
Helpshift.install(this,
"<PLATFORM_ID>",
"<DOMAIN>",
configurations);
}
}


Showing notification count when replies are sent to the user

To fetch unread messages count from the server you can call requestUnreadMessageCount(boolean shouldFetchFromServer) API. This API will return unread messages count via delegate. Based on the value of shouldFetchFromServer, the locally stored count will be returned if shouldFetchFromServer is false else from the server by fetching remotely when shouldFetchFromServer is true.


private void updateAppBadgeCount(){
Helpshift.requestUnreadMessageCount(true)
}

// ...
Helpshift.setHelpshiftEventsListener(new HelpshiftEventsListener() {
@Override
public void onEventOccurred(@NonNull String eventName, Map<String, Object> data) {
switch(eventName){
case HelpshiftEvent.RECEIVED_UNREAD_MESSAGE_COUNT:
int count = (int) data.get(HelpshiftEvent.DATA_MESSAGE_COUNT);
boolean fromCache = (boolean) data.get(HelpshiftEvent.DATA_MESSAGE_COUNT_FROM_CACHE);
if (fromCache) {
Log.d("Notification Count", "local" + count);
} else {
Log.d("Notification Count", "server" + count);
}
}
}
// ...


  • The notification count is fetched via this API from the SDK cache and Helpshift's servers (indicated by the value of fromCache in the example above). However, the count from Helpshift’s servers is rate limited and it returns the value only if a subsequent call is made to the API, after the reset timeout or when the user just closes the chat screen (whichever is earlier). For an active issue, the reset timeout is 1 minute and 5 minutes for inactive issues.