"No records found"
If I create a new record on the console, I can copy the record name.
I can then query for recordName and get that individual record back.
BUT no other queries work. I cannot query all records. I cannot query by individual property.
Just returns "no records found"
Seems like my indexes got messed up. Is there a way to reset indexes on prod?
This is on a coredata.cloudkit managed zone.
iCloud & Data
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So i created an App and for some time it was working fine. The app has features to show pdf to users without logging in. I needed to upload all data to cloudkit on public database.
I was not having knowledge that there are 2 mode being a noob in coding so after i saved all records in development mode in cloudkit when i published my app, i was not able to see them (Reason because live mode works in Production mode).
So i need help now to transfer data from development mode to production mode or any app or code that can help me upload all data in production mode.
Topic:
App & System Services
SubTopic:
iCloud & Data
Tags:
CloudKit
CloudKit Dashboard
CloudKit Console
why not working?
Topic:
App & System Services
SubTopic:
iCloud & Data
Hello everyone,
I'm trying to adopt the new Staged Migrations for Core Data and I keep running into an error that I haven't been able to resolve.
The error messages are as follows:
warning: Multiple NSEntityDescriptions claim the NSManagedObject subclass 'Movie' so +entity is unable to disambiguate.
warning: 'Movie' (0x60000350d6b0) from NSManagedObjectModel (0x60000213a8a0) claims 'Movie'.
error: +[Movie entity] Failed to find a unique match for an NSEntityDescription to a managed object subclass
This happens for all of my entities when they are added/fetched. Movie is an abstract entity subclass, and it has the error error: +[Movie entity] Failed to find which is unique to the subclass entities, but this occurs for all entities.
The NSPersistentContainer is loaded only once, and I set the following option after it's loaded:
storeDescription.setOption(
[stages],
forKey: NSPersistentStoreStagedMigrationManagerOptionKey
)
The warnings and errors only appear after I fetch or save to context. It happens regardless of whether the database was migrated or not. In my test project, using the generic NSManagedObject with NSEntityDescription.insertNewObject(forEntityName: "MyEntity", into: context) does not cause the issue. However, using the generic NSManagedObject is not a viable option for my app.
Setting the module to "Current Project Module" doesn't change anything, except that it now prints "claims 'MyModule.Show'" in the warnings. I have verified that there are no other entities with the same name or renameIdentifier.
Has anyone else encountered this issue, or can offer any suggestions on how to resolve it?
Thanks in advance for any help!
I have not had any successful Schema Migration with CloudKit so far so I'm trying to do with with just very basic attributes, with multiple Versioned Schemas
This is the code in my App Main
var sharedModelContainer: ModelContainer = {
let schema = Schema(versionedSchema: AppSchemaV4.self)
do {
return try ModelContainer(
for: schema,
migrationPlan: AppMigrationPlan.self,
configurations: ModelConfiguration(cloudKitDatabase: .automatic))
} catch {
fatalError("Could not create ModelContainer: \(error)")
}
}()
var body: some Scene {
WindowGroup {
ItemListView()
}
.modelContainer(sharedModelContainer)
}
And this is the code for my MigrationPlan and VersionedSchemas.
typealias Item = AppSchemaV4.Item3
enum AppMigrationPlan: SchemaMigrationPlan {
static var schemas: [any VersionedSchema.Type] {
[AppSchemaV1.self, AppSchemaV2.self, AppSchemaV3.self, AppSchemaV4.self]
}
static var stages: [MigrationStage] {
[migrateV1toV2, migrateV2toV3, migrateV3toV4]
}
static let migrateV1toV2 = MigrationStage.lightweight(
fromVersion: AppSchemaV1.self,
toVersion: AppSchemaV2.self
)
static let migrateV2toV3 = MigrationStage.lightweight(
fromVersion: AppSchemaV2.self,
toVersion: AppSchemaV3.self
)
static let migrateV3toV4 = MigrationStage.custom(
fromVersion: AppSchemaV3.self,
toVersion: AppSchemaV4.self,
willMigrate: nil,
didMigrate: { context in
// Fetch all Item1 instances
let item1Descriptor = FetchDescriptor<AppSchemaV3.Item1>()
let items1 = try context.fetch(item1Descriptor)
// Fetch all Item2 instances
let item2Descriptor = FetchDescriptor<AppSchemaV3.Item2>()
let items2 = try context.fetch(item2Descriptor)
// Convert Item1 to Item3
for item in items1 {
let newItem = AppSchemaV4.Item3(name: item.name, text: "Migrated from Item1 on \(item.date)")
context.insert(newItem)
}
// Convert Item2 to Item3
for item in items2 {
let newItem = AppSchemaV4.Item3(name: item.name, text: "Migrated from Item2 with value \(item.value)")
context.insert(newItem)
}
try? context.save()
}
)
}
enum AppSchemaV1: VersionedSchema {
static var versionIdentifier: Schema.Version = Schema.Version(1, 0, 0)
static var models: [any PersistentModel.Type] {
[Item1.self]
}
@Model class Item1 {
var name: String = ""
init(name: String) {
self.name = name
}
}
}
enum AppSchemaV2: VersionedSchema {
static var versionIdentifier: Schema.Version = Schema.Version(2, 0, 0)
static var models: [any PersistentModel.Type] {
[Item1.self]
}
@Model class Item1 {
var name: String = ""
var date: Date = Date()
init(name: String) {
self.name = name
self.date = Date()
}
}
}
enum AppSchemaV3: VersionedSchema {
static var versionIdentifier: Schema.Version = Schema.Version(3, 0, 0)
static var models: [any PersistentModel.Type] {
[Item1.self, Item2.self]
}
@Model class Item1 {
var name: String = ""
var date: Date = Date()
init(name: String) {
self.name = name
self.date = Date()
}
}
@Model class Item2 {
var name: String = ""
var value: Int = 0
init(name: String, value: Int) {
self.name = name
self.value = value
}
}
}
enum AppSchemaV4: VersionedSchema {
static var versionIdentifier: Schema.Version = Schema.Version(4, 0, 0)
static var models: [any PersistentModel.Type] {
[Item1.self, Item2.self, Item3.self]
}
@Model class Item1 {
var name: String = ""
var date: Date = Date()
init(name: String) {
self.name = name
self.date = Date()
}
}
@Model class Item2 {
var name: String = ""
var value: Int = 0
init(name: String, value: Int) {
self.name = name
self.value = value
}
}
@Model class Item3 {
var name: String = ""
var text: String = ""
init(name: String, text: String) {
self.name = name
self.text = text
}
}
}
My experiment was:
To create Items for every version of the schema
Updating the typealias along the way to reflect the latest Item version.
Updating the Schema in my ModelContainer to reflect the latest Schema Version.
By AppSchemaV4, I have expected all my Items to be displayed/migrated to Item3, but it does not seem to be the case.
I can only see newly created Item3 records.
My question is, is there something wrong with how I'm doing the migrations? or are migrations not really working with CloudKit right now?
I have encountered an issue with a customer’s data access after they migrated to a different iCloud account, and I’m looking for guidance.
The Situation:
The customer was logged into their account on my app, which was associated with a specific iCloud account (iCloud A).
They had all their app data available while using iCloud A.
The customer then switched to a new iCloud account (iCloud B) on the same device, while still using the same app account.
After switching iCloud accounts, their data is no longer visible in the app or my CloudKit dashboard.
My Investigation:
I accessed the customer’s CloudKit data via the CloudKit Console, acting as their iCloud account.
I couldn’t find the private database zone or any of their records when accessing iCloud A through the console.
I don’t believe the data was deleted since actions performed under iCloud B shouldn’t affect data stored in iCloud A.
My Hypothesis:
I suspect that the customer’s old iCloud account (iCloud A) may have downgraded or stopped paying for iCloud storage.
If the iCloud subscription is inactive or expired, could that prevent me from accessing their CloudKit data?
Would renewing the iCloud subscription for iCloud A restore access to the missing data?
Questions:
Does an unpaid or expired iCloud account restrict access to CloudKit records, even if they weren’t deleted?
Would paying for iCloud storage again restore the data previously stored in CloudKit?
Is there any way to recover the customer’s CloudKit data if they are unable to access their old iCloud account?
If anyone has a simpler approach to recovering the customer’s iCloud-stored app data or has experience dealing with iCloud migrations like this, I’d appreciate your insights. Thank you in advance for any advice!
Hello,
I tried to validate if my app was properly syncing to the cloud. To test this, I created some data in the app, and then deleted the app, and reinstalled. I was expecting the data to still exist but it isn't. Is this a valid test or is the data expected to be deleted when app is deleted?
Topic:
App & System Services
SubTopic:
iCloud & Data
Hey everyone, I have a question. When creating an app, how should I design a message table that involves personal privacy? The content is stored locally on the user's device, and then encrypted in the server database? How should I design it?
Topic:
App & System Services
SubTopic:
iCloud & Data
Hi,
I’m completely stuck with a very strange CloudKit problem that started recently and has now killed all iCloud sync for a live production app.
What is happening
Production container: iCloud.gainzCloud (created ~11 months ago, has been working perfectly until now)
In Xcode 26.0 (17A321):
→ Signing & Capabilities → iCloud is enabled
→ Container correctly shows as iCloud.gainzCloud
→ App builds and runs on device/simulator with zero provisioning or container errors
CloudKit Dashboard (https://icloud.developer.apple.com/dashboard/): completely blank – “No containers found”
Result: CloudKit sync is dead for every user (development + production environments)
What I know for sure
Apple Developer Support confirmed the container iCloud.gainzCloud still exists and is correctly attached to my Team ID on their backend
Personal iCloud (Mail, Notes, Photos, etc.) syncs perfectly on the same Mac / same Apple ID under macOS Tahoe 26.1
I have NOT changed the password on either the Apple ID or the Developer Program account
New containers I create appear in Xcode but never show up in the Dashboard
Environment
macOS Tahoe 26.1 (latest)
Xcode Version 26.0 (17A321)
Has anyone on the new Tahoe/Xcode 26 releases seen the CloudKit Dashboard suddenly go completely empty while Xcode still “sees” the container just fine?
Any known trick to force the dashboard to re-index containers or clear whatever cache is broken?
Thanks a lot in advance – this is blocking all iCloud functionality for a released app with active users.
Topic:
App & System Services
SubTopic:
iCloud & Data
Hi all,
In my SwiftUI / SwiftData / Cloudkit app which is a series of lists, I have a model object called Project which contains an array of model objects called subprojects:
final class Project1
{
var name: String = ""
@Relationship(deleteRule: .cascade, inverse: \Subproject.project) var subprojects : [Subproject]?
init(name: String)
{
self.name = name
self.subprojects = []
}
}
The user will select a project from a list, which will generate a list of subprojects in another list, and if they select a subproject, it will generate a list categories and if the user selects a category it will generate another list of child objects owned by category and on and on.
This is the pattern in my app, I'm constantly passing arrays of model objects that are the children of other model objects throughout the program, and I need the user to be able to add and remove things from them.
My initial approach was to pass these arrays as bindings so that I'd be able to mutate them. This worked for the most part but there were two problems: it was a lot of custom binding code and when I had to unwrap these bindings using init?(_ base: Binding<Value?>), my program would crash if one of these arrays became nil (it's some weird quirk of that init that I don't understand at al).
As I'm still learning the framework, I had not realized that the @model macro had automatically made my model objects observable, so I decided to remove the bindings and simply pass the arrays by reference, and while it seems these references will carry the most up to date version of the array, you cannot mutate them unless you have access to the parent and mutate it like such:
project.subcategories?.removeAll { $0 == subcategory }
project.subcategories?.append(subcategory)
This is weirding me out because you can't unwrap subcategories before you try to mutate the array, it has to be done like above. In my code, I like to unwrap all optionals at the moment that I need the values stored in them and if not, I like to post an error to the user. Isn't that the point of optionals? So I don't understand why it's like this and ultimately am wondering if I'm using the correct design pattern for what I'm trying to accomplish or if I'm missing something? Any input would be much appreciated!
Also, I do have a small MRE project if the explanation above wasn't clear enough, but I was unable to paste in here (too long), attach the zip or paste a link to Google Drive. Open to sharing it if anyone can tell me the best way to do so. Thanks!
Hello everyone,
I am experiencing a persistent authentication error when querying a custom user profile record, and the error message seems to be a red herring.
My Setup:
I have a custom CKRecord type called ColaboradorProfile.
When a new user signs up, I create this record and store their hashed password, salt, nickname, and a custom field called loginIdentifier (which is just their lowercase username).
In the CloudKit Dashboard, I have manually added an index for loginIdentifier and set it to Queryable and Searchable. I have deployed this schema to Production.
The Problem:
During login, I run an async function to find the user's profile using this indexed loginIdentifier.
Here is the relevant authentication code:
func autenticar() async {
// ... setup code (isLoading, etc.)
let lowercasedUsername = username.lowercased()
// My predicate ONLY filters on 'loginIdentifier'
let predicate = NSPredicate(format: "loginIdentifier == %@", lowercasedUsername)
let query = CKQuery(recordType: "ColaboradorProfile", predicate: predicate)
// I only need these specific keys
let desiredKeys = ["password", "passwordSalt", "nickname", "isAdmin", "isSubAdmin", "username"]
let database = CKContainer.default().publicCloudDatabase
do {
// This is the line that throws the error
let result = try await database.records(matching: query, desiredKeys: desiredKeys, resultsLimit: 1)
// ... (rest of the password verification logic)
} catch {
// The error always lands here
logDebug("Error authenticating with CloudKit: \(error.localizedDescription)")
await MainActor.run {
self.errorMessage = "Connection Error: \(error.localizedDescription)"
self.isLoading = false
self.showAlert = true
}
}
}
The Error:
Even though my query predicate only references loginIdentifier, the catch block consistently reports this error:
Error authenticating with CloudKit: Field 'createdBy' is not marked queryable.
I know createdBy (the system creatorUserRecordID) is not queryable by default, but my query isn't touching that field. I already tried indexing createdBy just in case, but the error persists. It seems CloudKit cannot find or use my index for loginIdentifier and is incorrectly reporting a fallback error related to a system field.
Has anyone seen this behavior? Why would CloudKit report an error about createdBy when the query is explicitly on an indexed, custom field?
I'm new to Swift and I'm struggling quite a bit.
Thank you,
My Code:
let op = CKModifyRecordsOperation(recordIDsToDelete:recordIDsToDelete)
op.modifyRecordsCompletionBlock = { _, deleteRecordIDs, error in
if error == nil {
print("successful delete deleteRecordIDS = \(deleteRecordIDs)")
} else {
print("delete error = \(error?.localizedDescription)")
}
}
op.database = CKContainer.default().privateCloudDatabase
op.qualityOfService = .userInitiated
CKContainer.default().privateCloudDatabase.add(op)
My problem is that CKRecord are not deleted once I reinstall the app: when I reinstall the app and try to delete a CloudKit record, the method is executed successfully (error is nil) but the records are still in CloudKit Dashboards.
Topic:
App & System Services
SubTopic:
iCloud & Data
Tags:
CloudKit
CloudKit Dashboard
CloudKit Console
Hi there
We're using CloudKit in our app which, generally, syncs data perfectly between devices. However, recently the sync has stopped working (some changes will never sync and the sync is delayed for several days even with the app open on all devices). CloudKit's logs show the error „You can't save and delete the same record" and „Already have a mirrored relationship registered for this key", etc. We’ve a hunch that this issue is related to a mirrored relationship of one database entity.
Our scenario:
We've subclassed the database entities.
The database model (which we can't share publicly) contains mirrored relationships.
We store very long texts in the database (similar to a Word document that contains markup data – in case that’s relevant).
Deleting all data and starting with a completely new container and bundle identifier didn’t help (we tried that multiple times).
This issue occurs on macOS (15.2(24C101) as well on iOS (18.2).
Any hints on how to get the sync working again? Should we simply avoid mirrored relationships?
Many thanks
In my app, I've been using ModelActors in SwiftData, and using actors with a custom executor in Core Data to create concurrency safe services.
I have multiple actor services that relate to different data model components or features, each that have their own internally managed state (DocumentService, ImportService, etc).
The problem I've ran into, is that I need to be able to use multiple of these services within another service, and those services need to share the same context. Swift 6 doesn't allow passing contexts across actors.
The specific problem I have is that I need a master service that makes multiple unrelated changes without saving them to the main context until approved by the user.
I've tried to find a solution in SwiftData and Core Data, but both have the same problem which is contexts are not sendable. Read the comments in the code to see the issue:
/// This actor does multiple things without saving, until committed in SwiftData.
@ModelActor
actor DatabaseHelper {
func commitChange() throws {
try modelContext.save()
}
func makeChanges() async throws {
// Do unrelated expensive tasks on the child context...
// Next, use our item service
let service = ItemService(modelContainer: SwiftDataStack.shared.container)
let id = try await service.expensiveBackgroundTask(saveChanges: false)
// Now that we've used the service, we need to access something the service created.
// However, because the service created its own context and it was never saved, we can't access it.
let itemFromService = context.fetch(id) // fails
// We need to be able to access changes made from the service within this service,
/// so instead I tried to create the service by passing the current service context, however that results in:
// ERROR: Sending 'self.modelContext' risks causing data races
let serviceFromContext = ItemService(context: modelContext)
// Swift Data doesn't let you create child contexts, so the same context must be used in order to change data without saving.
}
}
@ModelActor
actor ItemService {
init(context: ModelContext) {
modelContainer = SwiftDataStack.shared.container
modelExecutor = DefaultSerialModelExecutor(modelContext: context)
}
func expensiveBackgroundTask(saveChanges: Bool = true) async throws -> PersistentIdentifier? {
// Do something expensive...
return nil
}
}
Core Data has the same problem:
/// This actor does multiple things without saving, until committed in Core Data.
actor CoreDataHelper {
let parentContext: NSManagedObjectContext
let context: NSManagedObjectContext
/// In Core Data, I can create a child context from a background context.
/// This lets you modify the context and save it without updating the main context.
init(progress: Progress = Progress()) {
parentContext = CoreDataStack.shared.newBackgroundContext()
let childContext = NSManagedObjectContext(concurrencyType: .privateQueueConcurrencyType)
childContext.parent = parentContext
self.context = childContext
}
/// To commit changes, save the parent context pushing them to the main context.
func commitChange() async throws {
// ERROR: Sending 'self.parentContext' risks causing data races
try await parentContext.perform {
try self.parentContext.save()
}
}
func makeChanges() async throws {
// Do unrelated expensive tasks on the child context...
// As with the Swift Data example, I am unable to create a service that uses the current actors context from here.
// ERROR: Sending 'self.context' risks causing data races
let service = ItemService(context: self.context)
}
}
Am I going about this wrong, or is there a solution to fix these errors?
Some services are very large and have their own internal state. So it would be very difficult to merge all of them into a single service. I also am using Core Data, and SwiftData extensively so I need a solution for both.
I seem to have trapped myself into a corner trying to make everything concurrency save, so any help would be appreciated!
When I tried to use a working project with iOS 18 installed on my device, it wouldn't work anymore and crash right away. Before with iOS 17 it was working fine.
I can't access child variables that are saved in an Array in a parent object in SwiftData. The error is always somewhere in these hidden lines:
{
@storageRestrictions(accesses: _$backingData, initializes: _title)
init(initialValue) {
_$backingData.setValue(forKey: \.title, to: initialValue)
_title = _SwiftDataNoType()
}
get {
_$observationRegistrar.access(self, keyPath: \.title)
return self.getValue(forKey: \.title)
}
set {
_$observationRegistrar.withMutation(of: self, keyPath: \.title) {
self.setValue(forKey: \.title, to: newValue)
}
}
}
The child classes are also inserted and saved into the modelContext when created and set to the parent instance, but I also can't fetch them via modelContext.fetch() - Error here is:
Thread 1: EXC_BREAKPOINT (code=1, subcode=0x243a62a4c)
Maybe there is a problem with the relationship between two saved instances.
The parent instances are saved correctly and it was working in iOS 17.
The problem is similar to these two cases:
https://forums.developer.apple.com/forums/thread/762679
https://forums.developer.apple.com/forums/thread/738983
I changed the logic after I reviewed these threads, as I am now linking the parent and child instances, that got rid of one warning in the console.
button.canvas = canvas
modelContext.insert(button)
canvas.buttons = [button]
But in the end those threads were not enough for me to find a fix for my problem.
A small project can be found here:
https://github.com/DonMalte/SwiftDataTest
Topic:
App & System Services
SubTopic:
iCloud & Data
Hello,
My app has had CloudKit enabled for a while, but it's not working. I get the error "Invalid bundle ID for container".
Configure CloudKit in your project from TN3164 suggests changing to a new container. I tried changing to a new container, but this leads to data loss.
The article recommends:
"If your CloudKit container is already used in the production environment and switching to a new container leads to data loss, consider filing a feedback report with the following information to request manually associating your CloudKit container with your app ID."
Where can I request this manual association? Is there anything else I can do?
Thank you for your time and assistance. I’d appreciate a prompt resolution, as this issue is blocking our update. Looking forward to guidance.
I have a ModelActor that creates a hierarchy of models and returns a PersistentIdentifier for the root. I'd like to do that in a transaction, but I don't know of a good method of getting that identifier if the models are created in a transaction.
For instance, an overly simple example:
func createItem(timestamp: Date) throws -> PersistentIdentifier {
try modelContext.transaction {
let item = Item(timestamp: timestamp)
modelContext.insert(item)
}
// how to return item.persistentModelID?
}
I can't return the item.persistentModelID from the transaction closure and even if I could, it will be a temporary ID until after the transaction is executed.
I can't create the Item outside the transaction and just have the transaction do an insert because swift will raise a data race error if you then try to return item.persistentModelID.
Is there any way to do this besides a modelContext.fetch* with separate unique identifiers?
I have a very simple CoreData model that has 1 entity and 2 attributes.
This code works fine:
.onChange(of: searchText) { _, text in
evnts.nsPredicate = text.isEmpty ? nil :NSPredicate(format: "eventName CONTAINS %@ " , text )
but I'd like to also search with the same text string for my second attribute (which is a Date). I believe an OR is appropriate for two conditions (find either one). See attempted code below:
evnts.nsPredicate = text.isEmpty ? nil : NSPredicate(format: "(eventName CONTAINS %@) OR (dueDate CONTAINS %i) " , text )
This crashes immediately %@ does the same. Is there a way to accomplish this?
How is SwiftUI not an option below?
Hi,
Before the iOS 17.2 update the saving behavior of SwiftData was very straightforward, by default it saves to persistence storage and can be configured to save in memory only. Now it saves to memory by default and to make it save to persistence storage we need to use modelContext.Save(). But if we don't quit the App the changes will be saved after a while to persistence storage even without running modelContext.Save() ! How confusing can that be for both developer and the user ! Am I missing something here ?
--
Kind Regards
Hi guys. Can someone please confirm this bug so I report it? The issue is that SwiftData relationships don't update the views in some specific situations on devices running iOS 18 Beta. One clear example is with CloudKit. I created a small example for testing. The following code creates two @models, one to store bands and another to store their records. The following code works with no issues. (You need to connect to a CloudKit container and test it on two devices)
import SwiftUI
import SwiftData
struct ContentView: View {
@Environment(\.modelContext) private var modelContext
@Query private var records: [Record]
var body: some View {
NavigationStack {
List(records) { record in
VStack(alignment: .leading) {
Text(record.title)
Text(record.band?.name ?? "Undefined")
}
}
.toolbar {
ToolbarItem {
Button("Add Record") {
let randomNumber = Int.random(in: 1...100)
let newBand = Band(name: "New Band \(randomNumber)", records: nil)
modelContext.insert(newBand)
let newRecord = Record(title: "New Record \(randomNumber)", band: newBand)
modelContext.insert(newRecord)
}
}
}
}
}
}
@Model
final class Record {
var title: String = ""
var band: Band?
init(title: String, band: Band?) {
self.title = title
self.band = band
}
}
@Model
final class Band {
var name: String = ""
var records: [Record]?
init(name: String, records: [Record]?) {
self.name = name
self.records = records
}
}
This view includes a button at the top to add a new record associated with a new band. The data appears on both devices, but if you include more views inside the List, the views on the second device are not updated to show the values of the relationships. For example, if you extract the row to a separate view, the second device shows the relationships as "Undefined". You can try the following code.
struct ContentView: View {
@Environment(\.modelContext) private var modelContext
@Query private var records: [Record]
var body: some View {
NavigationStack {
List {
ForEach(records) { record in
RecordRow(record: record)
}
}
.toolbar {
ToolbarItem {
Button("Add Record") {
let randomNumber = Int.random(in: 1...100)
let newBand = Band(name: "New Band \(randomNumber)", records: nil)
modelContext.insert(newBand)
let newRecord = Record(title: "New Record \(randomNumber)", band: newBand)
modelContext.insert(newRecord)
}
}
}
}
}
}
struct RecordRow: View {
let record: Record
var body: some View {
VStack(alignment: .leading) {
Text(record.title)
Text(record.band?.name ?? "Undefined")
}
}
}
Here I use a ForEach loop and move the row to a separate view. Now on the second device the relationships are nil, so the row shows the text "Undefined" instead of the name of the band.
I attached an image from my iPad. I inserted all the information on my iPhone. The first three rows were inserted with the first view. But the last two rows were inserted after I extracted the rows to a separate view. Here you can see that the relationships are nil and therefore shown as "Undefined". The views are not updated to show the real value of the relationship.
This example shows the issue with CloudKit, but this also happens locally in some situations. The system doesn't detect updates in relationships and therefore doesn't refresh the views.
Please, let me know if you can reproduce the issue. I'm using Mac Sequoia 15.1, and two devices with iOS 18.0.