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How to whitelist Apple to access AASA file?
We have implemented Universal Links for iOS. We have deployed the following file as per the documentation: /.well-known/apple-app-site-association Everything works fine until my organization applied domain-level block on traffic out side my country. We need to whitelist Apple servers but we cannot find their IPs or domains used to access this file.
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2.3k
Nov ’22
iOS Network Signal Strength
This issue has cropped up many times here on DevForums. Someone recently opened a DTS tech support incident about it, and I used that as an opportunity to post a definitive response here. If you have questions or comments about this, start a new thread and tag it with Network so that I see it. Share and Enjoy — Quinn “The Eskimo!” @ Developer Technical Support @ Apple let myEmail = "eskimo" + "1" + "@" + "apple.com" iOS Network Signal Strength The iOS SDK has no general-purpose API that returns Wi-Fi or cellular signal strength in real time. Given that this has been the case for more than 10 years, it’s safe to assume that it’s not an accidental omission but a deliberate design choice. For information about the Wi-Fi APIs that are available on iOS, see TN3111 iOS Wi-Fi API overview. Network performance Most folks who ask about this are trying to use the signal strength to estimate network performance. This is a technique that I specifically recommend against. That’s because it produces both false positives and false negatives: The network signal might be weak and yet your app has excellent connectivity. For example, an iOS device on stage at WWDC might have terrible WWAN and Wi-Fi signal but that doesn’t matter because it’s connected to the Ethernet. The network signal might be strong and yet your app has very poor connectivity. For example, if you’re on a train, Wi-Fi signal might be strong in each carriage but the overall connection to the Internet is poor because it’s provided by a single over-stretched WWAN. The only good way to determine whether connectivity is good is to run a network request and see how it performs. If you’re issuing a lot of requests, use the performance of those requests to build a running estimate of how well the network is doing. Indeed, Apple practices what we preach here: This is exactly how HTTP Live Streaming works. Remember that network performance can change from moment to moment. The user’s train might enter or leave a tunnel, the user might step into a lift, and so on. If you build code to estimate the network performance, make sure it reacts to such changes. Keeping all of the above in mind, iOS 26 beta has two new APIs related to this issue: Network framework now offers a linkQuality property. See this post for my take on how to use this effectively. The WirelessInsights framework can notify you of anticipated WWAN condition changes. But what about this code I found on the ’net? Over the years various folks have used various unsupported techniques to get around this limitation. If you find code on the ’net that, say, uses KVC to read undocumented properties, or grovels through system logs, or walks the view hierarchy of the status bar, don’t use it. Such techniques are unsupported and, assuming they haven’t broken yet, are likely to break in the future. But what about Hotspot Helper? Hotspot Helper does have an API to read Wi-Fi signal strength, namely, the signalStrength property. However, this is not a general-purpose API. Like the rest of Hotspot Helper, this is tied to the specific use case for which it was designed. This value only updates in real time for networks that your hotspot helper is managing, as indicated by the isChosenHelper property. But what about MetricKit? MetricKit is so cool. Amongst other things, it supports the MXCellularConditionMetric payload, which holds a summary of the cellular conditions while your app was running. However, this is not a real-time signal strength value. But what if I’m working for a carrier? This post is about APIs in the iOS SDK. If you’re working for a carrier, discuss your requirements with your carrier’s contact at Apple. Revision History 2025-07-02 Updated to cover new features in the iOS 16 beta. Made other minor editorial changes. 2022-12-01 First posted.
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4.6k
Dec ’22
NSPersistentCloudKitContainer - Import failed with error: Error Domain=NSCocoaErrorDomain Code=4864
The NSPersistentCloudKitContainer synchronization between core data and iCloud was working fine with phone 15.1. Connected a new iPhone iOS 15.5, it gives error: CoreData: debug: CoreData+CloudKit: -[NSCloudKitMirroringDelegate managedObjectContextSaved:](2504): <NSCloudKitMirroringDelegate: 0x28198c000>: Observed context save: <NSPersistentStoreCoordinator: 0x2809c9420> - <NSManagedObjectContext: 0x2819ad520> 2022-12-05 13:32:28.377000-0600 r2nr[340:6373] [error] error: CoreData+CloudKit: -[NSCloudKitMirroringDelegate _importFinishedWithResult:importer:](1245): <PFCloudKitImporter: 0x2837dd740>: Import failed with error: Error Domain=NSCocoaErrorDomain Code=4864 "*** -[NSKeyedUnarchiver _initForReadingFromData:error:throwLegacyExceptions:]: incomprehensible archive (0x53, 0x6f, 0x6d, 0x65, 0x20, 0x65, 0x78, 0x61)" UserInfo={NSDebugDescription=*** -[NSKeyedUnarchiver _initForReadingFromData:error:throwLegacyExceptions:]: incomprehensible archive (0x53, 0x6f, 0x6d, 0x65, 0x20, 0x65, 0x78, 0x61)} CoreData: error: CoreData+CloudKit: -[NSCloudKitMirroringDelegate _importFinishedWithResult:importer:](1245): <PFCloudKitImporter: 0x2837dd740>: Import failed with error: Error Domain=NSCocoaErrorDomain Code=4864 "*** -[NSKeyedUnarchiver _initForReadingFromData:error:throwLegacyExceptions:]: incomprehensible archive (0x53, 0x6f, 0x6d, 0x65, 0x20, 0x65, 0x78, 0x61)" UserInfo={NSDebugDescription=*** -[NSKeyedUnarchiver _initForReadingFromData:error:throwLegacyExceptions:]: incomprehensible archive (0x53, 0x6f, 0x6d, 0x65, 0x20, 0x65, 0x78, 0x61)} I go back and try with my old iPhone iOS 15.1, gives same error.
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1.2k
Dec ’22
URLSessionDownloadTaskDelegate functions not called when using URLSession.download(for:), but works when using URLSession.downloadTask(with:)
I'm struggling to understand why the async-await version of URLSession download task APIs do not call the delegate functions, whereas the old non-async version that returns a reference to the download task works just fine. Here is my sample code: class DownloadDelegate: NSObject, URLSessionDownloadDelegate { func urlSession(_ session: URLSession, downloadTask: URLSessionDownloadTask, didWriteData bytesWritten: Int64, totalBytesWritten: Int64, totalBytesExpectedToWrite: Int64) { // This only prints the percentage of the download progress. let calculatedProgress = Float(totalBytesWritten) / Float(totalBytesExpectedToWrite) let formatter = NumberFormatter() formatter.numberStyle = .percent print(formatter.string(from: NSNumber(value: calculatedProgress))!) } } // Here's the VC. final class DownloadsViewController: UIViewController { private let url = URL(string: "https://pixabay.com/get/g0b9fa2936ff6a5078ea607398665e8151fc0c10df7db5c093e543314b883755ecd43eda2b7b5178a7e613a35541be6486885fb4a55d0777ba949aedccc807d8c_1280.jpg")! private let delegate = DownloadDelegate() private lazy var session = URLSession(configuration: .default, delegate: delegate, delegateQueue: nil) // for the async-await version private var task: Task&lt;Void, Never&gt;? // for the old version private var downloadTask: URLSessionDownloadTask? override func viewWillAppear(_ animated: Bool) { super.viewWillAppear(animated) task?.cancel() task = nil task = Task { let (_, _) = try! await session.download(for: URLRequest(url: url)) self.task = nil } // If I uncomment this, the progress listener delegate function above is called. // downloadTask?.cancel() // downloadTask = nil // downloadTask = session.downloadTask(with: URLRequest(url: url)) // downloadTask?.resume() } } What am I missing here?
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2.1k
Jan ’23
StoreKit2: .purchase() not working after expiry of subscription in app, but renewing in AppStore sandbox does...
Hi, thanks for reading my question. I need help with some odd behaviour with product.purchase() not triggering a confirmation dialog after a subscription has expired and trying to purchase it again. Seeing this in iOS 16.2 and 15.7.2 (haven't tried any other versions) on actual devices, not in simulator. I'm using a sandbox user on the sandbox environment (not using the local store kit config file testing option). Using a newly created sandbox user, first subscription purchase goes through just fine, dialog box pops up, login with sandbox user, get confirmation of purchase and then Transaction.currentEntitlements has one item as expected. It auto renews for 12 times (each time Transaction.currentEntitlements contains the correct results) and then expires, as expected for sandbox. Transaction.currentEntitlements is then also empty, as expected. All good so far. Now I want to test purchasing it again...Call product.purchase() again to renew/start a new subscription and nothing happens, no confirm purchase dialog box pops up at all. The purchase function simply exits BUT returns success (as in the following gets called) but in self.updatePurchasedProducts(), Transaction.currentEntitlements is empty. case let .success(.verified(transaction)):      // Successful purchase       await transaction.finish()      await self.updatePurchasedProducts() if I instead go to Settings->App Store->Sandbox User-> Manage Subscriptions and renew the subscription there, instead of in my app, then Transaction.currentEntitlements has a new entry and all is good again. Alternatively, if I create yet another new sandbox user and logout of the old one I was using, I am once again able to purchase from within the app, so .purchase() once again works as normal. Is there something I am missing about expired subscriptions and trying to purchase them again in the app? Is this a sandbox issue and in production I'll have no problem? The sandbox user has purchasing enabled in Settings->App Store. I've also tried calling AppStore.sync() (which is in my "Restore Purchase" button) before calling product.purchase() after the subscription stops renewing, expires and this issue comes up, doesn't resolve it. Also have a less important question, the initial call to product.purchase(), the one that works as expected, has a bit of a delay before the confirmation dialog pops up, a few seconds, which will probably result in the user clicking the buy button again thinking it didn't work. Is a bit of a delay normal for sandbox? Will it be ok in production? When it fails, and I have to renew in Settings->AppStore->Sandbox user, there's also a bit of a delay after I return to my app, 5-15 or so seconds, before the transaction observer fires and currentEntitlements is checked again, is there a way to reduce this delay? Thank you! Colin @MainActor class IAPManager: NSObject, ObservableObject {  // removed other functions.....   func purchase(_ product: Product) async throws {    let result = try await product.purchase()     switch result {    case let .success(.verified(transaction)):      // Successful purchase       await transaction.finish()      await self.updatePurchasedProducts()    case let .success(.unverified(_, error)):       break     case .pending:       break     case .userCancelled:       break     @unknown default:       break   } }  func updatePurchasedProducts() async {     for await result in Transaction.currentEntitlements {       guard case .verified(let transaction) = result else {         continue       }       if transaction.revocationDate == nil {         self.purchasedProductIDs.insert(transaction.productID)       } else {         self.purchasedProductIDs.remove(transaction.productID)       }     }   } }
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12k
Jan ’23
Tap to Pay on iPhone - Distribution Provisioning Profile Issue
Hi guys, I'm trying to upload my app with Tap to Pay on iPhone functionality. However, I'm getting error message "Profile doesn't include com.apple.developer.proximity-reader.payment.acceptance entitlement." I've confirmed many times that I have the distribution profile with this capability. Any idea what might be the issue? The development environment works perfectly.
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1.9k
Jan ’23
Regarding Delay/timed out issue of IOS push notifications
Dear Team, Hope You are dong good! Problem Description:- We are facing a huge delay in receiving IOS Push notifications on concerned devices. Found System.Timeout.Exception Error in IOS Logs(Screenshot & Recent Logs attached) Found a network delay between service installed servers & APNS(Apple Push Notification Service) Destination URL & Ports using in Push Notification service:- api.push.apple.com api.development.push.apple.com Destination Port-443 Also Found the error(TCP reset From server) between source(service installed server) & Destination (Apple Push Notification Service)-Screenshot attached Please have a look around the above  points & requesting advice regarding the below:- How to resolve this delay in reaching IOS push Notifications in concerned devices? Should we call more URL’s from services? If yes please provide URL’s/Ports to be opened from services ? Awaiting your Replies, Thanks,
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1.5k
Feb ’23
Ping without CFSockets
All of our uses of CFSockets have started causing crashes in iOS 16. They seem to be deprecated so we are trying to transition over to using the Network framework and NWConnection to try to fix the crashes. One of our uses of them is to ping a device on the local network to make sure it is there and online and provide a heartbeat status in logs as well as put the application into a disabled state if it is not available as it is critical to the functionality of the app. I know it is discouraged to disable any functionality based on the reachability of a resource but this is in an enterprise environment where the reachability of this device is mission critical. I've seen other people ask about the ability to ping with the Network framework and the answers I've found have said that this is not possible and pointed people to the SimplePing sample code but it turns out our existing ping code is already using this technique and it is crashing just like our other CFSocket usages, inside CFSocketInvalidate with the error BUG IN CLIENT OF LIBPLATFORM: Trying to recursively lock an os_unfair_lock. Is there any updated way to perform a ping without using the CFSocket APIs that now seem to be broken/unsupported on iOS 16?
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2k
Feb ’23
StoreKit 2 - Is it necessary to finish unverified transactions?
The sample code provided in https://developer.apple.com/wwdc21/10114 doesn't appear to call finish() on unverified transactions, and I haven't been able to find any documentation regarding what to do with unfinished transactions. However, Apple has always emphasized the importance of finishing transactions, and since a transaction object is provided even with the unverified state, I'd love some guidance!
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2.8k
Feb ’23
Shortcut to Send Address to Tesla Navigation
Hi, new to this forum. Recently discovered how to share a location in Maps app with my Tesla to automatically start navigating. How cool is that! Being the nerd that I am, I wrote a shortcut to select a contact and share it's address with my Tesla. That way, I don't leave the Maps app in memory to use up my battery, and don't have to go to all the trouble of swiping Maps out of memory. JK. Anyway, when I share the shortcut-selected address with the Tesla, it says "Error this content could not be shared". To me this means the address as shared by the shortcut is not in the same format as when you share it directly from Maps. So the question is, how can I send a properly formatted location from my shortcut? Thanks...
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1.8k
Feb ’23
DriverKit driver doesn't appear in Settings when installed with iPad app
I'm working on a DriverKit driver. I have it running on macOS, including a very simple client app written in SwiftUI. Everything is working fine there. I've added iPadOS as a destination for the app as demonstrated in the WWDC video on DriverKit for iPadOS. The app builds and runs on my iPad, as expected (after a little work to conditionalize out my use of SystemExtensions.framework for installation on macOS). However, after installing and running the app on an iPad, the driver does not show up in Settings->General, nor in the app-specific settings pane triggered by the inclusion of a settings bundle in the app. I've confirmed that the dext is indeed being included in the app bundle when built for iPadOS (in MyApp.app/SystemExtensions/com.me.MyApp.MyDriver.dext). I also can see in the build log that there's a validation step for the dext, and that seems to be succeeding. I don't know why the app isn't being discovered -- or in any case surfaced to the user -- when the app is installed on the iPad. Has anyone faced this problem and solved it? Are there ways to troubleshoot installation/discovery of an embedded DriverKit extensions on iOS? Unlike on macOS, I don't really see any relevant console messages.
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2.1k
Feb ’23
A Peek Behind the NECP Curtain
From time to time the subject of NECP grows up, both here on DevForums and in DTS cases. I’ve posted about this before but I wanted to collect those tidbits into single coherent post. If you have questions or comments, start a new thread in the App & System Services > Networking subtopic and tag it with Network Extension. That way I’ll be sure to see it go by. Share and Enjoy — Quinn “The Eskimo!” @ Developer Technical Support @ Apple let myEmail = "eskimo" + "1" + "@" + "apple.com" A Peek Behind the NECP Curtain NECP stands for Network Extension Control Protocol. It’s a subsystem within the Apple networking stack that controls which programs have access to which network interfaces. It’s vitally important to the Network Extension subsystem, hence the name, but it’s used in many different places. Indeed, a very familiar example of its use is the Settings > Mobile Data [1] user interface on iOS. NECP has no explicit API, although there are APIs that are offer some insight into its state. Continuing the Settings > Mobile Data example above, there is a little-known API, CTCellularData in the Core Telephony framework, that returns whether your app has access to WWAN. Despite having no API, NECP is still relevant to developers. The Settings > Mobile Data example is one place where it affects app developers but it’s most important for Network Extension (NE) developers. A key use case for NECP is to prevent VPN loops. When starting an NE provider, the system configures the NECP policy for the NE provider’s process to prevent it from using a VPN interface. This means that you can safely open a network connection inside your VPN provider without having to worry about its traffic being accidentally routed back to you. This is why, for example, an NE packet tunnel provider can use any networking API it wants, including BSD Sockets, to run its connection without fear of creating a VPN loop [1]. One place that NECP shows up regularly is the system log. Next time you see a system log entry like this: type: debug time: 15:02:54.817903+0000 process: Mail subsystem: com.apple.network category: connection message: nw_protocol_socket_set_necp_attributes [C723.1.1:1] setsockopt 39 SO_NECP_ATTRIBUTES … you’ll at least know what the necp means (-: Finally, a lot of NECP infrastructure is in the Darwin open source. As with all things in Darwin, it’s fine to poke around and see how your favourite feature works, but do not incorporate any information you find into your product. Stuff you uncover by looking in Darwin is not considered API. [1] Settings > Cellular Data if you speak American (-: [2] Network Extension providers can call the createTCPConnection(to:enableTLS:tlsParameters:delegate:) method to create an NWTCPConnection [3] that doesn’t run through the tunnel. You can use that if it’s convenient but you don’t need to use it. [3] NWTCPConnection is now deprecated, but there are non-deprecated equivalents. For the full story, see NWEndpoint History and Advice. Revision History 2025-12-12 Replaced “macOS networking stack” with “Apple networking stack” to avoid giving the impression that this is all about macOS. Added a link to NWEndpoint History and Advice. Made other minor editorial changes. 2023-02-27 First posted.
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2.6k
Feb ’23
Debugging a Network Extension Provider
I regularly see folks struggle to debug their Network Extension providers. For an app, and indeed various app extensions, debugging is as simple as choosing Product > Run in Xcode. That’s not the case with a Network Extension provider, so I thought I’d collect together some hints and tips to help you get started. If you have any comments or questions, create a new thread here on DevForums. Put it in the App & System Services > Networking and tag it with Network Extension. Share and Enjoy — Quinn “The Eskimo!” @ Developer Technical Support @ Apple let myEmail = "eskimo" + "1" + "@" + "apple.com" Debugging a Network Extension Provider Debugging a Network Extension provider presents some challenges; its not as simple as choosing Product > Run in Xcode. Rather, you have to run the extension first and then choose Debug > Attach to Process. Attaching is simple, it’s the running part that causes all the problems. When you first start out it can be a challenge to get your extension to run at all. Add a First Light Log Point The first step is to check whether the system is actually starting your extension. My advice is to add a first light log point, a log point on the first line of code that you control. The exact mechanics of this depend on your development, your deployment target, and your NE provider’s packaging. In all cases, however, I recommend that you log to the system log. The system log has a bunch of cool features. If you’re curious, see Your Friend the System Log. The key advantage is that your log entries are mixed in with system log entries, which makes it easier to see what else is going on when your extension loads, or fails to load. IMPORTANT Use a unique subsystem and category for your log entries. This makes it easier to find them in the system log. For more information about Network Extension packaging options, see TN3134 Network Extension provider deployment. Logging in Swift If you’re using Swift, the best logging API depends on your deployment target. On modern systems — macOS 11 and later, iOS 14 and later, and aligned OS releases — it’s best to use the Logger API, which is shiny and new and super Swift friendly. For example: let log = Logger(subsystem: "com.example.galactic-mega-builds", category: "earth") let client = "The Mice" let answer = 42 log.log(level: .debug, "run complete, client: \(client), answer: \(answer, privacy: .private)") If you support older systems, use the older, more C-like API: let log = OSLog(subsystem: "com.example.galactic-mega-builds", category: "earth") let client = "The Mice" let answer = 42 os_log(.debug, log: log, "run complete, client: %@, answer: %{private}d", client as NSString, answer) Logging in C If you prefer a C-based language, life is simpler because you only have one choice: #import <os/log.h> os_log_t log = os_log_create("com.example.galactic-mega-builds", "earth"); const char * client = "The Mice"; int answer = 42; os_log_debug(log, "run complete, client: %s, answer: %{private}d", client, answer); Add a First Light Log Point to Your App Extension If your Network Extension provider is packaged as an app extension, the best place for your first light log point is an override of the provider’s initialiser. There are a variety of ways you could structure this but here’s one possibility: import NetworkExtension import os.log class PacketTunnelProvider: NEPacketTunnelProvider { static let log = Logger(subsystem: "com.example.myvpnapp", category: "packet-tunnel") override init() { self.log = Self.log log.log(level: .debug, "first light") super.init() } let log: Logger … rest of your code here … } This uses a Swift static property to ensure that the log is constructed in a race-free manner, something that’s handy for all sorts of reasons. It’s possible for your code to run before this initialiser — for example, if you have a C++ static constructor — but that’s something that’s best to avoid. Add a First Light Log Point to Your System Extension If your Network Extension provider is packaged as a system extension, add your first light log point to main.swift. Here’s one way you might structure that: import NetworkExtension func main() -> Never { autoreleasepool { let log = PacketTunnelProvider.log log.log(level: .debug, "first light") NEProvider.startSystemExtensionMode() } dispatchMain() } main() See how the main function gets the log object from the static property on PacketTunnelProvider. I told you that’d come in handy (-: Again, it’s possible for your code to run before this but, again, that’s something that’s best to avoid. App Extension Hints Both iOS and macOS allow you to package your Network Extension provider as an app extension. On iOS this is super reliable. I’ve never seen any weirdness there. That’s not true on macOS. macOS lets the user put apps anywhere; they don’t have to be placed in the Applications directory. macOS maintains a database, the Launch Services database, of all the apps it knows about and their capabilities. The app extension infrastructure uses that database to find and load app extensions. It’s not uncommon for this database to get confused, which prevents Network Extension from loading your provider’s app extension. This is particularly common on developer machines, where you are building and rebuilding your app over and over again. The best way to avoid problems is to have a single copy of your app extension’s container app on the system. So, while you’re developing your app extension, delete any other copies of your app that might be lying around. If you run into problems you may be able to fix them using: lsregister, to interrogate and manipulate the Launch Services database pluginkit, to interrogate and manipulate the app extension state [1] IMPORTANT Both of these tools are for debugging only; they are not considered API. Also, lsregister is not on the default path; find it at /System/Library/Frameworks/CoreServices.framework/Frameworks/LaunchServices.framework/Versions/A/Support/lsregister. For more details about pluginkit, see the pluginkit man page. When debugging a Network Extension provider, add buttons to make it easy to save and remove your provider’s configuration. For example, if you’re working on a packet tunnel provider you might add: A Save Config button that calls the saveToPreferences(completionHandler:) method to save the tunnel configuration you want to test with A Remove Config button that calls the removeFromPreferences(completionHandler:) method to remove your tunnel configuration These come in handy when you want to start again from scratch. Just click Remove Config and then Save Config and you’ve wiped the slate clean. You don’t have to leave these buttons in your final product, but it’s good to have them during bring up. [1] This tool is named after the PluginKit framework, a private framework used to load this type of app extension. It’s distinct from the ExtensionKit framework which is a new, public API for managing extensions. System Extension Hints macOS allows you to package your Network Extension provider as a system extension. For this to work the container app must be in the Applications directory [1]. Copying it across each time you rebuild your app is a chore. To avoid that, add a Build post-action script: Select your app’s scheme and choose Product > Scheme > Edit Scheme. On the left, select Build. Click the chevron to disclose all the options. Select Post-actions. In the main area, click the add (+) button and select New Run Script Action. In the “Provide build settings from” popup, select your app target. In the script field, enter this script: ditto "${BUILT_PRODUCTS_DIR}/${FULL_PRODUCT_NAME}" "/Applications/${FULL_PRODUCT_NAME}" Now, each time you build your app, this script will copy it to the Applications directory. Build your app now, both to confirm that this works and to enable the next step. The next issue you’ll find is that choosing Product > Run runs the app from the build products directory rather than the Applications directory. To fix that: Edit your app’s scheme again. On the left, select Run. In the main area, select the Info tab. From the Executable popup, choose Other. Select the copy of your app in the Applications directory. Now, when you choose Product > Run, Xcode will run that copy rather than the one in the build products directory. Neat-o! For your system extension to run your container app must activate it. As with the Save Config and Remote Config buttons described earlier, it’s good to add easy-to-access buttons to activate and deactivate your system extension. With an app extension the system automatically terminates your extension process when you rebuild it. This is not the case with a system extension; you’ll have to deactivate and then reactivate it each time. Each activation must be approved in System Settings > Privacy & Security. To make that easier, leave System Settings running all the time. This debug cycle leaves deactivated but not removed system extensions installed on your system. These go away when you restart, so do that from time to time. Once a day is just fine. macOS includes a tool, systemextensionctl, to interrogate and manipulate system extension state. The workflow described above does not require that you use it, but it’s good to keep in mind. Its man page is largely content free so run the tool with no arguments to get help. [1] Unless you disable System Integrity Protection, but who wants to do that? You Can Attach with the Debugger Once your extension is running, attach with the debugger using one of two commands: To attach to an app extension, choose Debug > Attach to Process > YourAppExName. To attach to a system extension, choose Debug > Attach to Process by PID or Name. Make sure to select Debug Process As root. System extensions run as root so the attach will fail if you select Debug Process As Me. But Should You? Debugging networking code with a debugger is less than ideal because it’s common for in-progress network requests to time out while you’re stopped in the debugger. Debugging Network Extension providers this way is especially tricky because of the extra steps you have to take to get your provider running. So, while you can attach with the debugger, and that’s a great option in some cases, it’s often better not to do that. Rather, consider the following approach: Write the core logic of your provider so that you can unit test each subsystem outside of the provider. This may require some scaffolding but the time you take to set that up will pay off once you encounter your first gnarly problem. Add good logging to your provider to help debug problems that show up during integration testing. I recommend that you treat your logging as a feature of your product. Carefully consider where to add log points and at what level to log. Check this logging code into your source code repository and ship it — or at least the bulk of it — as part of your final product. This logging will be super helpful when it comes to debugging problems that only show up in the field. Remember that, when using the system log, log points that are present but don’t actually log anything are very cheap. In most cases it’s fine to leave these in your final product. Now go back and read Your Friend the System Log because it’s full of useful hints and tips on how to use the system log to debug the really hard problems. General Hints and Tips Install the Network Diagnostics and VPN (Network Extension) profiles [1] on your test device. These enable more logging and, most critically, the recording of private data. For more info about that last point, see… you guessed it… Your Friend the System Log. Get these profiles from our Bug Reporting > Profiles and Logs page. When you’re bringing up a Network Extension provider, do your initial testing with a tiny test app. I regularly see folks start out by running Safari and that’s less than ideal. Safari is a huge app with lots of complexity, so if things go wrong it’s hard to tell where to look. I usually create a small test app to use during bring up. The exact function of this test app varies by provider type. For example: If I’m building a packet tunnel provider, I might have a test function that makes an outgoing TCP connection to an IP address. Once I get that working I add another function that makes an outgoing TCP connection to a DNS name. Then I start testing UDP. And so on. Similarly for a content filter, but then it makes sense to add a test that runs a request using URLSession and another one to bring up a WKWebView. If I’m building a DNS proxy provider, my test app might use CFHost to run a simple name-to-address query. Also, consider doing your bring up on the Mac even if your final target is iOS. macOS has a bunch of handy tools for debugging networking issues, including: dig for DNS queries nc for TCP and UDP connections netstat to display the state of the networking stack tcpdump for recording a packet trace [2] Read their respective man pages for all the details. On the other hand, the build / run / debug cycle is simpler on iOS than it is on macOS, especially when you’re building a system extension on macOS. Even if your ultimate goal is to build a macOS-only system extension, if your provider type supports app extension packaging then you should consider whether it makes sense to adopt that packaging just for to speed up your development. If you do decide to try this, be aware that a packaging change can affect your code. See Network Extension Provider Packaging for more on that. [1] The latter is not a profile on macOS, but just a set of instructions. [2] You can use an RVI packet trace on iOS but it’s an extra setup step. Revision History 2026-04-01 Added a suggestion about provider packaging to the General Hints and Tips section. 2023-12-15 Fixed a particularly egregious typo (and spelling error in a section title, no less!). 2023-04-02 Fixed one of the steps in Sytem Extension Hints.
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4.2k
Mar ’23
Screen time API can be disabled easily
We have developed a Parental/Self control app using Screen time API. We have used individual authentication to authorize the app, using the instructions here: https://developer.apple.com/documentation/familycontrols/authorizationcenter The problem is , that individual auth can be disabled easily , by the following steps: enter Settings app. in Settings app, click on the Parental/Self control app. click to disable screen time restriction. show the device owner's face/fingerprint. (or pin code) Why is that a problem: Parental control apps, or self-control apps, are about giving control to the software, To make it hard for the user to disable the restrictions. So using the flow I have introduced above, it's super-easy for a user to disable his Parental control restrictions, which misses the entire point of Parental/Self control idea. Furthermore, not only the user have the means to unlock his screen time restrictions, he also MUST have the means to unlock it. This makes Screen time (with individual auth) useless: I have a code ready to make a great parental control app for my clients, with amazing ideas, but I can't use the Screen time API unless this problem is fixed. Why child-parent auth is not enough: My clients are grownups people between ages of 15-40, that are interested in self-control, so they don't have iCloud child accounts. also, the child-parent auth solution forces my clients to give some control to other person, and my clients prefer their privacy. Some of them prefer self-control and not parental-control. What I suggest as a solution: 1: Give more options to users how to disable the Screen time restrictions. including: a second faceID / FingerPrint (that isn't the same as the one used to unlock the device) a second pin password. a string password 2: Give the users the option to choose to not have the device's owner Face/Finger/Pincode ID , as a method to disable the Screen time restrictions.
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6.5k
Mar ’23
HomePod mini temperature sensor in HomeKit with Mac Catalyst
Updated version of this post My HomePod mini is now on version 16.4, so the the temperature and humidity sensors are enabled. The data properly shows up in the Home app on my various devices. In my HomeKit iPad app running on Mac Catalyst, however, the data does not show up. I would expect the HomePod mini to show up in HMHome.accessories with a service of type HMServiceTypeTempatureSensor. I see all of my other HomeKit accessories, just not the HomePod mini. I have tried with the latest Xcode (14.3) and highest available iOS Target and Minimum Deployment (16.4), macOS version 13.3. I have not, as of this writing, upgraded my HomeKit architecture, however. Note that I haven't tried the app on an actual iPad (and the iOS simulator doesn't expose my HomeKit environment.)
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1.8k
Apr ’23
App review - ipad issue
Hello everybody, I have a never ending issue with appstore review, an need a QUICK HELP ! I am submitting a new app (oral training), for Iphones only. I disabled other devices (such as Ipas) via Xcode. In the appstore informations form, it is obligatory to provide ipad screens, so I provided screens showing Iphone experience. Appstore team asked me to remove it because I don't authorize Ipads. But if I remove those screens, form cannot be sent. I don't understantd how to proceed. Thanks for the help Regards Jean
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Apr ’23
XPC listener initialized in System Extesnion invalidates incoming connection under certain conditions
I found a problem where a process tries to connect to System Extension and connection is invalidated. XPC listener has to be disposed and initialized again. This happens when System Extension executes tasks in following order: NSXPCListener initialized NSXPCListener.resume() NSProvider.startSystemExtensionMode() Result: Connection is invalidated and not only that the client has to retry connection, nut also System Extension must reinitialize listener (execute step 1 and 2). However if I call NSProvider.startSystemExtensionMode() NSXPCListener initialized NSXPCListener.resume() It works as expected and even if the connection is invalidated/interrupted, client process can always reconnect and no other action is necessary in System Extension (no need to reinitialize XPC listener), In Apple docs about NSProvider.startSystemExtensionMode() it says that this method starts handling request, but in another online article written by Scott Knight I found that startSystemExtensionMode() also starts listener server. Is that right? PLease could you add this info into the docs if it is so? https://knight.sc/reverse%20engineering/2019/08/24/system-extension-internals.html I would like to use following logic: Call NSProvider.startSystemExtensionMode() only under certain circumstances - I have received some configuration that I need to process and do some setup. If I don't receive it, there is no reason to call startSystemExtensionMode() yet, I don't need to handle handleNewFlow() yet. Connect XPC client to System Extension under certain conditions. Ideally communicate with client even though System Extension is not handling network requests yet, that is without receiving handleNewFlow(). Basically I consider XPC and System Extension handling network requests as separate things. Is that correct, are they separate and independent? Does XPC communication really depend on calling startSystemExtensionMode()? Another potential issue: Is it possible that XPC listener fails to validate connection when client tries to connect before System Extension manages to complete init and park the main thread in CFRunLoop? Note: These querstions arose mostly from handling upgrades of System Extension (extension is already running, network filter is created and is connected and new version of the app upgrades System Exension). Thanks.
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1.4k
Apr ’23
How to whitelist Apple to access AASA file?
We have implemented Universal Links for iOS. We have deployed the following file as per the documentation: /.well-known/apple-app-site-association Everything works fine until my organization applied domain-level block on traffic out side my country. We need to whitelist Apple servers but we cannot find their IPs or domains used to access this file.
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3
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2.3k
Activity
Nov ’22
iOS Network Signal Strength
This issue has cropped up many times here on DevForums. Someone recently opened a DTS tech support incident about it, and I used that as an opportunity to post a definitive response here. If you have questions or comments about this, start a new thread and tag it with Network so that I see it. Share and Enjoy — Quinn “The Eskimo!” @ Developer Technical Support @ Apple let myEmail = "eskimo" + "1" + "@" + "apple.com" iOS Network Signal Strength The iOS SDK has no general-purpose API that returns Wi-Fi or cellular signal strength in real time. Given that this has been the case for more than 10 years, it’s safe to assume that it’s not an accidental omission but a deliberate design choice. For information about the Wi-Fi APIs that are available on iOS, see TN3111 iOS Wi-Fi API overview. Network performance Most folks who ask about this are trying to use the signal strength to estimate network performance. This is a technique that I specifically recommend against. That’s because it produces both false positives and false negatives: The network signal might be weak and yet your app has excellent connectivity. For example, an iOS device on stage at WWDC might have terrible WWAN and Wi-Fi signal but that doesn’t matter because it’s connected to the Ethernet. The network signal might be strong and yet your app has very poor connectivity. For example, if you’re on a train, Wi-Fi signal might be strong in each carriage but the overall connection to the Internet is poor because it’s provided by a single over-stretched WWAN. The only good way to determine whether connectivity is good is to run a network request and see how it performs. If you’re issuing a lot of requests, use the performance of those requests to build a running estimate of how well the network is doing. Indeed, Apple practices what we preach here: This is exactly how HTTP Live Streaming works. Remember that network performance can change from moment to moment. The user’s train might enter or leave a tunnel, the user might step into a lift, and so on. If you build code to estimate the network performance, make sure it reacts to such changes. Keeping all of the above in mind, iOS 26 beta has two new APIs related to this issue: Network framework now offers a linkQuality property. See this post for my take on how to use this effectively. The WirelessInsights framework can notify you of anticipated WWAN condition changes. But what about this code I found on the ’net? Over the years various folks have used various unsupported techniques to get around this limitation. If you find code on the ’net that, say, uses KVC to read undocumented properties, or grovels through system logs, or walks the view hierarchy of the status bar, don’t use it. Such techniques are unsupported and, assuming they haven’t broken yet, are likely to break in the future. But what about Hotspot Helper? Hotspot Helper does have an API to read Wi-Fi signal strength, namely, the signalStrength property. However, this is not a general-purpose API. Like the rest of Hotspot Helper, this is tied to the specific use case for which it was designed. This value only updates in real time for networks that your hotspot helper is managing, as indicated by the isChosenHelper property. But what about MetricKit? MetricKit is so cool. Amongst other things, it supports the MXCellularConditionMetric payload, which holds a summary of the cellular conditions while your app was running. However, this is not a real-time signal strength value. But what if I’m working for a carrier? This post is about APIs in the iOS SDK. If you’re working for a carrier, discuss your requirements with your carrier’s contact at Apple. Revision History 2025-07-02 Updated to cover new features in the iOS 16 beta. Made other minor editorial changes. 2022-12-01 First posted.
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4.6k
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Dec ’22
NSPersistentCloudKitContainer - Import failed with error: Error Domain=NSCocoaErrorDomain Code=4864
The NSPersistentCloudKitContainer synchronization between core data and iCloud was working fine with phone 15.1. Connected a new iPhone iOS 15.5, it gives error: CoreData: debug: CoreData+CloudKit: -[NSCloudKitMirroringDelegate managedObjectContextSaved:](2504): <NSCloudKitMirroringDelegate: 0x28198c000>: Observed context save: <NSPersistentStoreCoordinator: 0x2809c9420> - <NSManagedObjectContext: 0x2819ad520> 2022-12-05 13:32:28.377000-0600 r2nr[340:6373] [error] error: CoreData+CloudKit: -[NSCloudKitMirroringDelegate _importFinishedWithResult:importer:](1245): <PFCloudKitImporter: 0x2837dd740>: Import failed with error: Error Domain=NSCocoaErrorDomain Code=4864 "*** -[NSKeyedUnarchiver _initForReadingFromData:error:throwLegacyExceptions:]: incomprehensible archive (0x53, 0x6f, 0x6d, 0x65, 0x20, 0x65, 0x78, 0x61)" UserInfo={NSDebugDescription=*** -[NSKeyedUnarchiver _initForReadingFromData:error:throwLegacyExceptions:]: incomprehensible archive (0x53, 0x6f, 0x6d, 0x65, 0x20, 0x65, 0x78, 0x61)} CoreData: error: CoreData+CloudKit: -[NSCloudKitMirroringDelegate _importFinishedWithResult:importer:](1245): <PFCloudKitImporter: 0x2837dd740>: Import failed with error: Error Domain=NSCocoaErrorDomain Code=4864 "*** -[NSKeyedUnarchiver _initForReadingFromData:error:throwLegacyExceptions:]: incomprehensible archive (0x53, 0x6f, 0x6d, 0x65, 0x20, 0x65, 0x78, 0x61)" UserInfo={NSDebugDescription=*** -[NSKeyedUnarchiver _initForReadingFromData:error:throwLegacyExceptions:]: incomprehensible archive (0x53, 0x6f, 0x6d, 0x65, 0x20, 0x65, 0x78, 0x61)} I go back and try with my old iPhone iOS 15.1, gives same error.
Replies
2
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1
Views
1.2k
Activity
Dec ’22
URLSessionDownloadTaskDelegate functions not called when using URLSession.download(for:), but works when using URLSession.downloadTask(with:)
I'm struggling to understand why the async-await version of URLSession download task APIs do not call the delegate functions, whereas the old non-async version that returns a reference to the download task works just fine. Here is my sample code: class DownloadDelegate: NSObject, URLSessionDownloadDelegate { func urlSession(_ session: URLSession, downloadTask: URLSessionDownloadTask, didWriteData bytesWritten: Int64, totalBytesWritten: Int64, totalBytesExpectedToWrite: Int64) { // This only prints the percentage of the download progress. let calculatedProgress = Float(totalBytesWritten) / Float(totalBytesExpectedToWrite) let formatter = NumberFormatter() formatter.numberStyle = .percent print(formatter.string(from: NSNumber(value: calculatedProgress))!) } } // Here's the VC. final class DownloadsViewController: UIViewController { private let url = URL(string: "https://pixabay.com/get/g0b9fa2936ff6a5078ea607398665e8151fc0c10df7db5c093e543314b883755ecd43eda2b7b5178a7e613a35541be6486885fb4a55d0777ba949aedccc807d8c_1280.jpg")! private let delegate = DownloadDelegate() private lazy var session = URLSession(configuration: .default, delegate: delegate, delegateQueue: nil) // for the async-await version private var task: Task&lt;Void, Never&gt;? // for the old version private var downloadTask: URLSessionDownloadTask? override func viewWillAppear(_ animated: Bool) { super.viewWillAppear(animated) task?.cancel() task = nil task = Task { let (_, _) = try! await session.download(for: URLRequest(url: url)) self.task = nil } // If I uncomment this, the progress listener delegate function above is called. // downloadTask?.cancel() // downloadTask = nil // downloadTask = session.downloadTask(with: URLRequest(url: url)) // downloadTask?.resume() } } What am I missing here?
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5
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1
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2.1k
Activity
Jan ’23
StoreKit2: .purchase() not working after expiry of subscription in app, but renewing in AppStore sandbox does...
Hi, thanks for reading my question. I need help with some odd behaviour with product.purchase() not triggering a confirmation dialog after a subscription has expired and trying to purchase it again. Seeing this in iOS 16.2 and 15.7.2 (haven't tried any other versions) on actual devices, not in simulator. I'm using a sandbox user on the sandbox environment (not using the local store kit config file testing option). Using a newly created sandbox user, first subscription purchase goes through just fine, dialog box pops up, login with sandbox user, get confirmation of purchase and then Transaction.currentEntitlements has one item as expected. It auto renews for 12 times (each time Transaction.currentEntitlements contains the correct results) and then expires, as expected for sandbox. Transaction.currentEntitlements is then also empty, as expected. All good so far. Now I want to test purchasing it again...Call product.purchase() again to renew/start a new subscription and nothing happens, no confirm purchase dialog box pops up at all. The purchase function simply exits BUT returns success (as in the following gets called) but in self.updatePurchasedProducts(), Transaction.currentEntitlements is empty. case let .success(.verified(transaction)):      // Successful purchase       await transaction.finish()      await self.updatePurchasedProducts() if I instead go to Settings->App Store->Sandbox User-> Manage Subscriptions and renew the subscription there, instead of in my app, then Transaction.currentEntitlements has a new entry and all is good again. Alternatively, if I create yet another new sandbox user and logout of the old one I was using, I am once again able to purchase from within the app, so .purchase() once again works as normal. Is there something I am missing about expired subscriptions and trying to purchase them again in the app? Is this a sandbox issue and in production I'll have no problem? The sandbox user has purchasing enabled in Settings->App Store. I've also tried calling AppStore.sync() (which is in my "Restore Purchase" button) before calling product.purchase() after the subscription stops renewing, expires and this issue comes up, doesn't resolve it. Also have a less important question, the initial call to product.purchase(), the one that works as expected, has a bit of a delay before the confirmation dialog pops up, a few seconds, which will probably result in the user clicking the buy button again thinking it didn't work. Is a bit of a delay normal for sandbox? Will it be ok in production? When it fails, and I have to renew in Settings->AppStore->Sandbox user, there's also a bit of a delay after I return to my app, 5-15 or so seconds, before the transaction observer fires and currentEntitlements is checked again, is there a way to reduce this delay? Thank you! Colin @MainActor class IAPManager: NSObject, ObservableObject {  // removed other functions.....   func purchase(_ product: Product) async throws {    let result = try await product.purchase()     switch result {    case let .success(.verified(transaction)):      // Successful purchase       await transaction.finish()      await self.updatePurchasedProducts()    case let .success(.unverified(_, error)):       break     case .pending:       break     case .userCancelled:       break     @unknown default:       break   } }  func updatePurchasedProducts() async {     for await result in Transaction.currentEntitlements {       guard case .verified(let transaction) = result else {         continue       }       if transaction.revocationDate == nil {         self.purchasedProductIDs.insert(transaction.productID)       } else {         self.purchasedProductIDs.remove(transaction.productID)       }     }   } }
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14
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8
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12k
Activity
Jan ’23
Get Serial Number From Device?
I have a project that need to get serial number and network SSID. I have looking anywhere to get those 2 value but no luck to find it. is there anyway i can get those information from the device?
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3
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0
Views
1.3k
Activity
Jan ’23
Tap to Pay on iPhone - Distribution Provisioning Profile Issue
Hi guys, I'm trying to upload my app with Tap to Pay on iPhone functionality. However, I'm getting error message "Profile doesn't include com.apple.developer.proximity-reader.payment.acceptance entitlement." I've confirmed many times that I have the distribution profile with this capability. Any idea what might be the issue? The development environment works perfectly.
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4
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0
Views
1.9k
Activity
Jan ’23
Core Data externally stored binary data not deleted with record
I have an image field on a Core Data entity with "Allows External Storage" enabled. When I delete a record, the external binary data file remains on disk. How can I ensure that all externally stored data is deleted along with the record?
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4
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2
Views
1.3k
Activity
Feb ’23
Regarding Delay/timed out issue of IOS push notifications
Dear Team, Hope You are dong good! Problem Description:- We are facing a huge delay in receiving IOS Push notifications on concerned devices. Found System.Timeout.Exception Error in IOS Logs(Screenshot & Recent Logs attached) Found a network delay between service installed servers & APNS(Apple Push Notification Service) Destination URL & Ports using in Push Notification service:- api.push.apple.com api.development.push.apple.com Destination Port-443 Also Found the error(TCP reset From server) between source(service installed server) & Destination (Apple Push Notification Service)-Screenshot attached Please have a look around the above  points & requesting advice regarding the below:- How to resolve this delay in reaching IOS push Notifications in concerned devices? Should we call more URL’s from services? If yes please provide URL’s/Ports to be opened from services ? Awaiting your Replies, Thanks,
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1
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1
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1.5k
Activity
Feb ’23
Ping without CFSockets
All of our uses of CFSockets have started causing crashes in iOS 16. They seem to be deprecated so we are trying to transition over to using the Network framework and NWConnection to try to fix the crashes. One of our uses of them is to ping a device on the local network to make sure it is there and online and provide a heartbeat status in logs as well as put the application into a disabled state if it is not available as it is critical to the functionality of the app. I know it is discouraged to disable any functionality based on the reachability of a resource but this is in an enterprise environment where the reachability of this device is mission critical. I've seen other people ask about the ability to ping with the Network framework and the answers I've found have said that this is not possible and pointed people to the SimplePing sample code but it turns out our existing ping code is already using this technique and it is crashing just like our other CFSocket usages, inside CFSocketInvalidate with the error BUG IN CLIENT OF LIBPLATFORM: Trying to recursively lock an os_unfair_lock. Is there any updated way to perform a ping without using the CFSocket APIs that now seem to be broken/unsupported on iOS 16?
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7
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0
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2k
Activity
Feb ’23
StoreKit 2 - Is it necessary to finish unverified transactions?
The sample code provided in https://developer.apple.com/wwdc21/10114 doesn't appear to call finish() on unverified transactions, and I haven't been able to find any documentation regarding what to do with unfinished transactions. However, Apple has always emphasized the importance of finishing transactions, and since a transaction object is provided even with the unverified state, I'd love some guidance!
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4
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1
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2.8k
Activity
Feb ’23
Shortcut to Send Address to Tesla Navigation
Hi, new to this forum. Recently discovered how to share a location in Maps app with my Tesla to automatically start navigating. How cool is that! Being the nerd that I am, I wrote a shortcut to select a contact and share it's address with my Tesla. That way, I don't leave the Maps app in memory to use up my battery, and don't have to go to all the trouble of swiping Maps out of memory. JK. Anyway, when I share the shortcut-selected address with the Tesla, it says "Error this content could not be shared". To me this means the address as shared by the shortcut is not in the same format as when you share it directly from Maps. So the question is, how can I send a properly formatted location from my shortcut? Thanks...
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1
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1
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1.8k
Activity
Feb ’23
DriverKit driver doesn't appear in Settings when installed with iPad app
I'm working on a DriverKit driver. I have it running on macOS, including a very simple client app written in SwiftUI. Everything is working fine there. I've added iPadOS as a destination for the app as demonstrated in the WWDC video on DriverKit for iPadOS. The app builds and runs on my iPad, as expected (after a little work to conditionalize out my use of SystemExtensions.framework for installation on macOS). However, after installing and running the app on an iPad, the driver does not show up in Settings->General, nor in the app-specific settings pane triggered by the inclusion of a settings bundle in the app. I've confirmed that the dext is indeed being included in the app bundle when built for iPadOS (in MyApp.app/SystemExtensions/com.me.MyApp.MyDriver.dext). I also can see in the build log that there's a validation step for the dext, and that seems to be succeeding. I don't know why the app isn't being discovered -- or in any case surfaced to the user -- when the app is installed on the iPad. Has anyone faced this problem and solved it? Are there ways to troubleshoot installation/discovery of an embedded DriverKit extensions on iOS? Unlike on macOS, I don't really see any relevant console messages.
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6
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2
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2.1k
Activity
Feb ’23
A Peek Behind the NECP Curtain
From time to time the subject of NECP grows up, both here on DevForums and in DTS cases. I’ve posted about this before but I wanted to collect those tidbits into single coherent post. If you have questions or comments, start a new thread in the App & System Services > Networking subtopic and tag it with Network Extension. That way I’ll be sure to see it go by. Share and Enjoy — Quinn “The Eskimo!” @ Developer Technical Support @ Apple let myEmail = "eskimo" + "1" + "@" + "apple.com" A Peek Behind the NECP Curtain NECP stands for Network Extension Control Protocol. It’s a subsystem within the Apple networking stack that controls which programs have access to which network interfaces. It’s vitally important to the Network Extension subsystem, hence the name, but it’s used in many different places. Indeed, a very familiar example of its use is the Settings > Mobile Data [1] user interface on iOS. NECP has no explicit API, although there are APIs that are offer some insight into its state. Continuing the Settings > Mobile Data example above, there is a little-known API, CTCellularData in the Core Telephony framework, that returns whether your app has access to WWAN. Despite having no API, NECP is still relevant to developers. The Settings > Mobile Data example is one place where it affects app developers but it’s most important for Network Extension (NE) developers. A key use case for NECP is to prevent VPN loops. When starting an NE provider, the system configures the NECP policy for the NE provider’s process to prevent it from using a VPN interface. This means that you can safely open a network connection inside your VPN provider without having to worry about its traffic being accidentally routed back to you. This is why, for example, an NE packet tunnel provider can use any networking API it wants, including BSD Sockets, to run its connection without fear of creating a VPN loop [1]. One place that NECP shows up regularly is the system log. Next time you see a system log entry like this: type: debug time: 15:02:54.817903+0000 process: Mail subsystem: com.apple.network category: connection message: nw_protocol_socket_set_necp_attributes [C723.1.1:1] setsockopt 39 SO_NECP_ATTRIBUTES … you’ll at least know what the necp means (-: Finally, a lot of NECP infrastructure is in the Darwin open source. As with all things in Darwin, it’s fine to poke around and see how your favourite feature works, but do not incorporate any information you find into your product. Stuff you uncover by looking in Darwin is not considered API. [1] Settings > Cellular Data if you speak American (-: [2] Network Extension providers can call the createTCPConnection(to:enableTLS:tlsParameters:delegate:) method to create an NWTCPConnection [3] that doesn’t run through the tunnel. You can use that if it’s convenient but you don’t need to use it. [3] NWTCPConnection is now deprecated, but there are non-deprecated equivalents. For the full story, see NWEndpoint History and Advice. Revision History 2025-12-12 Replaced “macOS networking stack” with “Apple networking stack” to avoid giving the impression that this is all about macOS. Added a link to NWEndpoint History and Advice. Made other minor editorial changes. 2023-02-27 First posted.
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2.6k
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Feb ’23
Debugging a Network Extension Provider
I regularly see folks struggle to debug their Network Extension providers. For an app, and indeed various app extensions, debugging is as simple as choosing Product > Run in Xcode. That’s not the case with a Network Extension provider, so I thought I’d collect together some hints and tips to help you get started. If you have any comments or questions, create a new thread here on DevForums. Put it in the App & System Services > Networking and tag it with Network Extension. Share and Enjoy — Quinn “The Eskimo!” @ Developer Technical Support @ Apple let myEmail = "eskimo" + "1" + "@" + "apple.com" Debugging a Network Extension Provider Debugging a Network Extension provider presents some challenges; its not as simple as choosing Product > Run in Xcode. Rather, you have to run the extension first and then choose Debug > Attach to Process. Attaching is simple, it’s the running part that causes all the problems. When you first start out it can be a challenge to get your extension to run at all. Add a First Light Log Point The first step is to check whether the system is actually starting your extension. My advice is to add a first light log point, a log point on the first line of code that you control. The exact mechanics of this depend on your development, your deployment target, and your NE provider’s packaging. In all cases, however, I recommend that you log to the system log. The system log has a bunch of cool features. If you’re curious, see Your Friend the System Log. The key advantage is that your log entries are mixed in with system log entries, which makes it easier to see what else is going on when your extension loads, or fails to load. IMPORTANT Use a unique subsystem and category for your log entries. This makes it easier to find them in the system log. For more information about Network Extension packaging options, see TN3134 Network Extension provider deployment. Logging in Swift If you’re using Swift, the best logging API depends on your deployment target. On modern systems — macOS 11 and later, iOS 14 and later, and aligned OS releases — it’s best to use the Logger API, which is shiny and new and super Swift friendly. For example: let log = Logger(subsystem: "com.example.galactic-mega-builds", category: "earth") let client = "The Mice" let answer = 42 log.log(level: .debug, "run complete, client: \(client), answer: \(answer, privacy: .private)") If you support older systems, use the older, more C-like API: let log = OSLog(subsystem: "com.example.galactic-mega-builds", category: "earth") let client = "The Mice" let answer = 42 os_log(.debug, log: log, "run complete, client: %@, answer: %{private}d", client as NSString, answer) Logging in C If you prefer a C-based language, life is simpler because you only have one choice: #import <os/log.h> os_log_t log = os_log_create("com.example.galactic-mega-builds", "earth"); const char * client = "The Mice"; int answer = 42; os_log_debug(log, "run complete, client: %s, answer: %{private}d", client, answer); Add a First Light Log Point to Your App Extension If your Network Extension provider is packaged as an app extension, the best place for your first light log point is an override of the provider’s initialiser. There are a variety of ways you could structure this but here’s one possibility: import NetworkExtension import os.log class PacketTunnelProvider: NEPacketTunnelProvider { static let log = Logger(subsystem: "com.example.myvpnapp", category: "packet-tunnel") override init() { self.log = Self.log log.log(level: .debug, "first light") super.init() } let log: Logger … rest of your code here … } This uses a Swift static property to ensure that the log is constructed in a race-free manner, something that’s handy for all sorts of reasons. It’s possible for your code to run before this initialiser — for example, if you have a C++ static constructor — but that’s something that’s best to avoid. Add a First Light Log Point to Your System Extension If your Network Extension provider is packaged as a system extension, add your first light log point to main.swift. Here’s one way you might structure that: import NetworkExtension func main() -> Never { autoreleasepool { let log = PacketTunnelProvider.log log.log(level: .debug, "first light") NEProvider.startSystemExtensionMode() } dispatchMain() } main() See how the main function gets the log object from the static property on PacketTunnelProvider. I told you that’d come in handy (-: Again, it’s possible for your code to run before this but, again, that’s something that’s best to avoid. App Extension Hints Both iOS and macOS allow you to package your Network Extension provider as an app extension. On iOS this is super reliable. I’ve never seen any weirdness there. That’s not true on macOS. macOS lets the user put apps anywhere; they don’t have to be placed in the Applications directory. macOS maintains a database, the Launch Services database, of all the apps it knows about and their capabilities. The app extension infrastructure uses that database to find and load app extensions. It’s not uncommon for this database to get confused, which prevents Network Extension from loading your provider’s app extension. This is particularly common on developer machines, where you are building and rebuilding your app over and over again. The best way to avoid problems is to have a single copy of your app extension’s container app on the system. So, while you’re developing your app extension, delete any other copies of your app that might be lying around. If you run into problems you may be able to fix them using: lsregister, to interrogate and manipulate the Launch Services database pluginkit, to interrogate and manipulate the app extension state [1] IMPORTANT Both of these tools are for debugging only; they are not considered API. Also, lsregister is not on the default path; find it at /System/Library/Frameworks/CoreServices.framework/Frameworks/LaunchServices.framework/Versions/A/Support/lsregister. For more details about pluginkit, see the pluginkit man page. When debugging a Network Extension provider, add buttons to make it easy to save and remove your provider’s configuration. For example, if you’re working on a packet tunnel provider you might add: A Save Config button that calls the saveToPreferences(completionHandler:) method to save the tunnel configuration you want to test with A Remove Config button that calls the removeFromPreferences(completionHandler:) method to remove your tunnel configuration These come in handy when you want to start again from scratch. Just click Remove Config and then Save Config and you’ve wiped the slate clean. You don’t have to leave these buttons in your final product, but it’s good to have them during bring up. [1] This tool is named after the PluginKit framework, a private framework used to load this type of app extension. It’s distinct from the ExtensionKit framework which is a new, public API for managing extensions. System Extension Hints macOS allows you to package your Network Extension provider as a system extension. For this to work the container app must be in the Applications directory [1]. Copying it across each time you rebuild your app is a chore. To avoid that, add a Build post-action script: Select your app’s scheme and choose Product > Scheme > Edit Scheme. On the left, select Build. Click the chevron to disclose all the options. Select Post-actions. In the main area, click the add (+) button and select New Run Script Action. In the “Provide build settings from” popup, select your app target. In the script field, enter this script: ditto "${BUILT_PRODUCTS_DIR}/${FULL_PRODUCT_NAME}" "/Applications/${FULL_PRODUCT_NAME}" Now, each time you build your app, this script will copy it to the Applications directory. Build your app now, both to confirm that this works and to enable the next step. The next issue you’ll find is that choosing Product > Run runs the app from the build products directory rather than the Applications directory. To fix that: Edit your app’s scheme again. On the left, select Run. In the main area, select the Info tab. From the Executable popup, choose Other. Select the copy of your app in the Applications directory. Now, when you choose Product > Run, Xcode will run that copy rather than the one in the build products directory. Neat-o! For your system extension to run your container app must activate it. As with the Save Config and Remote Config buttons described earlier, it’s good to add easy-to-access buttons to activate and deactivate your system extension. With an app extension the system automatically terminates your extension process when you rebuild it. This is not the case with a system extension; you’ll have to deactivate and then reactivate it each time. Each activation must be approved in System Settings > Privacy & Security. To make that easier, leave System Settings running all the time. This debug cycle leaves deactivated but not removed system extensions installed on your system. These go away when you restart, so do that from time to time. Once a day is just fine. macOS includes a tool, systemextensionctl, to interrogate and manipulate system extension state. The workflow described above does not require that you use it, but it’s good to keep in mind. Its man page is largely content free so run the tool with no arguments to get help. [1] Unless you disable System Integrity Protection, but who wants to do that? You Can Attach with the Debugger Once your extension is running, attach with the debugger using one of two commands: To attach to an app extension, choose Debug > Attach to Process > YourAppExName. To attach to a system extension, choose Debug > Attach to Process by PID or Name. Make sure to select Debug Process As root. System extensions run as root so the attach will fail if you select Debug Process As Me. But Should You? Debugging networking code with a debugger is less than ideal because it’s common for in-progress network requests to time out while you’re stopped in the debugger. Debugging Network Extension providers this way is especially tricky because of the extra steps you have to take to get your provider running. So, while you can attach with the debugger, and that’s a great option in some cases, it’s often better not to do that. Rather, consider the following approach: Write the core logic of your provider so that you can unit test each subsystem outside of the provider. This may require some scaffolding but the time you take to set that up will pay off once you encounter your first gnarly problem. Add good logging to your provider to help debug problems that show up during integration testing. I recommend that you treat your logging as a feature of your product. Carefully consider where to add log points and at what level to log. Check this logging code into your source code repository and ship it — or at least the bulk of it — as part of your final product. This logging will be super helpful when it comes to debugging problems that only show up in the field. Remember that, when using the system log, log points that are present but don’t actually log anything are very cheap. In most cases it’s fine to leave these in your final product. Now go back and read Your Friend the System Log because it’s full of useful hints and tips on how to use the system log to debug the really hard problems. General Hints and Tips Install the Network Diagnostics and VPN (Network Extension) profiles [1] on your test device. These enable more logging and, most critically, the recording of private data. For more info about that last point, see… you guessed it… Your Friend the System Log. Get these profiles from our Bug Reporting > Profiles and Logs page. When you’re bringing up a Network Extension provider, do your initial testing with a tiny test app. I regularly see folks start out by running Safari and that’s less than ideal. Safari is a huge app with lots of complexity, so if things go wrong it’s hard to tell where to look. I usually create a small test app to use during bring up. The exact function of this test app varies by provider type. For example: If I’m building a packet tunnel provider, I might have a test function that makes an outgoing TCP connection to an IP address. Once I get that working I add another function that makes an outgoing TCP connection to a DNS name. Then I start testing UDP. And so on. Similarly for a content filter, but then it makes sense to add a test that runs a request using URLSession and another one to bring up a WKWebView. If I’m building a DNS proxy provider, my test app might use CFHost to run a simple name-to-address query. Also, consider doing your bring up on the Mac even if your final target is iOS. macOS has a bunch of handy tools for debugging networking issues, including: dig for DNS queries nc for TCP and UDP connections netstat to display the state of the networking stack tcpdump for recording a packet trace [2] Read their respective man pages for all the details. On the other hand, the build / run / debug cycle is simpler on iOS than it is on macOS, especially when you’re building a system extension on macOS. Even if your ultimate goal is to build a macOS-only system extension, if your provider type supports app extension packaging then you should consider whether it makes sense to adopt that packaging just for to speed up your development. If you do decide to try this, be aware that a packaging change can affect your code. See Network Extension Provider Packaging for more on that. [1] The latter is not a profile on macOS, but just a set of instructions. [2] You can use an RVI packet trace on iOS but it’s an extra setup step. Revision History 2026-04-01 Added a suggestion about provider packaging to the General Hints and Tips section. 2023-12-15 Fixed a particularly egregious typo (and spelling error in a section title, no less!). 2023-04-02 Fixed one of the steps in Sytem Extension Hints.
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Mar ’23
Screen time API can be disabled easily
We have developed a Parental/Self control app using Screen time API. We have used individual authentication to authorize the app, using the instructions here: https://developer.apple.com/documentation/familycontrols/authorizationcenter The problem is , that individual auth can be disabled easily , by the following steps: enter Settings app. in Settings app, click on the Parental/Self control app. click to disable screen time restriction. show the device owner's face/fingerprint. (or pin code) Why is that a problem: Parental control apps, or self-control apps, are about giving control to the software, To make it hard for the user to disable the restrictions. So using the flow I have introduced above, it's super-easy for a user to disable his Parental control restrictions, which misses the entire point of Parental/Self control idea. Furthermore, not only the user have the means to unlock his screen time restrictions, he also MUST have the means to unlock it. This makes Screen time (with individual auth) useless: I have a code ready to make a great parental control app for my clients, with amazing ideas, but I can't use the Screen time API unless this problem is fixed. Why child-parent auth is not enough: My clients are grownups people between ages of 15-40, that are interested in self-control, so they don't have iCloud child accounts. also, the child-parent auth solution forces my clients to give some control to other person, and my clients prefer their privacy. Some of them prefer self-control and not parental-control. What I suggest as a solution: 1: Give more options to users how to disable the Screen time restrictions. including: a second faceID / FingerPrint (that isn't the same as the one used to unlock the device) a second pin password. a string password 2: Give the users the option to choose to not have the device's owner Face/Finger/Pincode ID , as a method to disable the Screen time restrictions.
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Mar ’23
Promotional offer is not showing in In-app subscription sheet.
Hello, I have 2 subscription group. Each group have different plans and promotional offer. I was set 1 month free promotional offer in all plans. While I subscribe any plan IAP sheet is not showing 1 month free promotional offer. I already used with new sandbox account. How can I get promotional offer in IAP sheet?
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Mar ’23
HomePod mini temperature sensor in HomeKit with Mac Catalyst
Updated version of this post My HomePod mini is now on version 16.4, so the the temperature and humidity sensors are enabled. The data properly shows up in the Home app on my various devices. In my HomeKit iPad app running on Mac Catalyst, however, the data does not show up. I would expect the HomePod mini to show up in HMHome.accessories with a service of type HMServiceTypeTempatureSensor. I see all of my other HomeKit accessories, just not the HomePod mini. I have tried with the latest Xcode (14.3) and highest available iOS Target and Minimum Deployment (16.4), macOS version 13.3. I have not, as of this writing, upgraded my HomeKit architecture, however. Note that I haven't tried the app on an actual iPad (and the iOS simulator doesn't expose my HomeKit environment.)
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Apr ’23
App review - ipad issue
Hello everybody, I have a never ending issue with appstore review, an need a QUICK HELP ! I am submitting a new app (oral training), for Iphones only. I disabled other devices (such as Ipas) via Xcode. In the appstore informations form, it is obligatory to provide ipad screens, so I provided screens showing Iphone experience. Appstore team asked me to remove it because I don't authorize Ipads. But if I remove those screens, form cannot be sent. I don't understantd how to proceed. Thanks for the help Regards Jean
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Apr ’23
XPC listener initialized in System Extesnion invalidates incoming connection under certain conditions
I found a problem where a process tries to connect to System Extension and connection is invalidated. XPC listener has to be disposed and initialized again. This happens when System Extension executes tasks in following order: NSXPCListener initialized NSXPCListener.resume() NSProvider.startSystemExtensionMode() Result: Connection is invalidated and not only that the client has to retry connection, nut also System Extension must reinitialize listener (execute step 1 and 2). However if I call NSProvider.startSystemExtensionMode() NSXPCListener initialized NSXPCListener.resume() It works as expected and even if the connection is invalidated/interrupted, client process can always reconnect and no other action is necessary in System Extension (no need to reinitialize XPC listener), In Apple docs about NSProvider.startSystemExtensionMode() it says that this method starts handling request, but in another online article written by Scott Knight I found that startSystemExtensionMode() also starts listener server. Is that right? PLease could you add this info into the docs if it is so? https://knight.sc/reverse%20engineering/2019/08/24/system-extension-internals.html I would like to use following logic: Call NSProvider.startSystemExtensionMode() only under certain circumstances - I have received some configuration that I need to process and do some setup. If I don't receive it, there is no reason to call startSystemExtensionMode() yet, I don't need to handle handleNewFlow() yet. Connect XPC client to System Extension under certain conditions. Ideally communicate with client even though System Extension is not handling network requests yet, that is without receiving handleNewFlow(). Basically I consider XPC and System Extension handling network requests as separate things. Is that correct, are they separate and independent? Does XPC communication really depend on calling startSystemExtensionMode()? Another potential issue: Is it possible that XPC listener fails to validate connection when client tries to connect before System Extension manages to complete init and park the main thread in CFRunLoop? Note: These querstions arose mostly from handling upgrades of System Extension (extension is already running, network filter is created and is connected and new version of the app upgrades System Exension). Thanks.
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Apr ’23