I'm looking to implement USB monitoring for FIDO2 authentication through a custom Authorization Plugin, specifically for the below ones.
This plugin applies to the following macOS authorization mechanisms:
system.login.console — login window authentication
system.login.screensaver — screensaver unlock authentication
The goal is to build a GUI AuthPlugin, an authorization plugin that presents a custom window prompting the user to "Insert your FIDO key”. Additionally, the plugin should detect when the FIDO2 device is removed and respond accordingly.
Additional Info:
We have already developed a custom authorization plugin which is a primary authentication using OTP at login and Lock Screen. We are now extending to include FIDO2 support as a primary.
Our custom authorization plugin is designed to replace the default loginwindow:login mechanism with a custom implementation.
Question: Is there a reliable approach to achieve the USB monitoring functionality through a custom authorization plugin? Any guidance or pointers on this would be greatly appreciated.
Prioritize user privacy and data security in your app. Discuss best practices for data handling, user consent, and security measures to protect user information.
Selecting any option will automatically load the page
Post
Replies
Boosts
Views
Created
It seems it is not possible to give a CLI app (non .app bundle) full disk access in macOS 26.1. This seems like a bug and if not that is a breaking change. Anybody seeing the same problem?
Our application needs full disk access for a service running as a LaunchDaemon. The binary is located in a /Library subfolder.
Hello,
I’m experiencing an issue with email deliverability when sending messages through Apple’s private email relay service.
Our app uses “Sign in with Apple” and sends communication emails to users through relay addresses . Messages are successfully delivered but are consistently being placed in users’ spam or junk folders.
Configuration summary:
Domain: myapp.example
Mail server: OVH SMTP
SPF and DKIM: Active and validated
Domain and sender registered under “Sign in with Apple for Email Communication”
Messages pass SPF and DKIM checks successfully, but emails relayed by Apple’s private service are still being marked as spam.
Could anyone confirm if there are additional steps or configurations required to improve deliverability (e.g., DMARC alignment or specific header requirements)?
Thank you for your help!
Hi everyone,
We just completed an App Store Connect app transfer between two developer teams and ran into what seems like an inconsistency with TN3159 (Migrating Sign in with Apple users for an app transfer).
According to the technote, both the source and destination teams should be able to call /auth/usermigrationinfo for 60 days after the transfer, even if the migration wasn’t run beforehand. However, right after the transfer completed, the source team (Team A) started receiving:
{"error":"invalid_client"}
on all /auth/usermigrationinfo requests, even though /auth/token with scope=user.migration still works fine.
What we verified before transfer:
Team A’s Sign in with Apple key (ES256) was linked to the app and Services ID.
OAuth flow for com.org.appname.web returned valid tokens, and the decoded ID token showed aud=com.org.appname.web with a valid private relay email, confirming the key was trusted.
What happens after transfer:
The key now shows “Enabled Services: —” and the App/Services IDs are no longer selectable in the Developer portal.
/auth/usermigrationinfo immediately returns invalid_client for Team A, even within the same day of the transfer.
This effectively makes Team A unable to generate transfer_sub values, blocking the migration flow TN3159 describes.
Questions:
Is Team A supposed to retain authorization to call /auth/usermigrationinfo for 60 days post-transfer?
If yes, is there any known workaround to re-authorize the key or temporarily re-bind it to the transferred identifiers?
If not, does this mean transfer_sub must be generated before transfer acceptance, contrary to how TN3159 reads?
Would really appreciate any confirmation or guidance from Apple or anyone who’s gone through this recently.
Thanks,
Topic:
Privacy & Security
SubTopic:
Sign in with Apple
Tags:
Sign in with Apple REST API
Sign in with Apple
Hi everyone,
I’m looking for clarification on best practices for storing API keys in an iOS app — for example, keys used with RevenueCat, PostHog, AWS Rekognition, barcode scanners, and similar third-party services.
I understand that hard-coding API keys directly in the app’s source code is a bad idea, since they can be extracted from the binary. However, using a .plist file doesn’t seem secure either, as it’s still bundled with the app and can be inspected.
I’m wondering:
What are Apple’s recommended approaches for managing these kinds of keys?
Does Xcode Cloud offer a built-in or best-practice method for securely injecting environment variables or secrets at build time?
Would using an external service like AWS Secrets Manager or another server-side solution make sense for this use case?
Any insights or examples of how others are handling this securely within Apple’s ecosystem would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks for considering my questions!
— Paul
Topic:
Privacy & Security
SubTopic:
General
Hello,
When using ASWebAuthenticationSession with an HTTPS callback URL (Universal Link), I receive the following error:
Authorization error: The operation couldn't be completed.
Application with identifier jp.xxxx.yyyy.dev is not associated with domain xxxx-example.go.link.
Using HTTPS callbacks requires Associated Domains using the webcredentials service type for xxxx-example.go.link.
I checked Apple’s official documentation but couldn’t find any clear statement that webcredentials is required when using HTTPS callbacks in ASWebAuthenticationSession.
What I’d like to confirm:
Is webcredentials officially required when using HTTPS as a callback URL with ASWebAuthenticationSession?
If so, is there any official documentation or technical note that states this requirement?
Environment
iOS 18.6.2
Xcode 16.4
Any clarification or official references would be greatly appreciated.
Thank you.
Topic:
Privacy & Security
SubTopic:
General
Tags:
iOS
Security
Authentication Services
Universal Links
I understand from the recent Apple Developer News that Korean developers are now required to register a URL to receive notifications from the Apple server when creating or modifying a Sign in With Apple Service ID. However, it is not clear whether simply registering the URL is sufficient, or if it is also mandatory to implement the real-time processing of those notifications. I am inquiring whether the processing part is also a mandatory requirement.
Topic:
Privacy & Security
SubTopic:
Sign in with Apple
Tags:
Sign in with Apple
Sign in with Apple JS
I've been spending days trying to solve the memory leak in a small menu bar application I've wrote (SC Menu). I've used Instruments which shows the leaks and memory graph which shows unreleased allocations. This occurs when someone views a certificate on the smartcard.
Basically it opens a new window and displays the certificate, the same way Keychain Access displays a certificate. Whenever I create an SFCertificateView instance and set setDetailsDisclosed(true) - a memory leak happens. Instruments highlights that line.
import Cocoa
import SecurityInterface
class ViewCertsViewController: NSViewController {
var selectedCert: SecIdentity? = nil
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
self.view = NSView(frame: NSRect(x: 0, y: 0, width: 500, height: 500))
self.view.wantsLayer = true
var secRef: SecCertificate? = nil
guard let selectedCert else { return }
let certRefErr = SecIdentityCopyCertificate(selectedCert, &secRef)
if certRefErr != errSecSuccess {
os_log("Error getting certificate from identity: %{public}@", log: OSLog.default, type: .error, String(describing: certRefErr))
return
}
let scrollView = NSScrollView()
scrollView.translatesAutoresizingMaskIntoConstraints = false
scrollView.borderType = .lineBorder
scrollView.hasHorizontalScroller = true
scrollView.hasVerticalScroller = true
let certView = SFCertificateView()
guard let secRef = secRef else { return }
certView.setCertificate(secRef)
certView.setDetailsDisclosed(true)
certView.setDisplayTrust(true)
certView.setEditableTrust(true)
certView.setDisplayDetails(true)
certView.setPolicies(SecPolicyCreateBasicX509())
certView.translatesAutoresizingMaskIntoConstraints = false
scrollView.documentView = certView
view.addSubview(scrollView)
// Layout constraints
NSLayoutConstraint.activate([
scrollView.leadingAnchor.constraint(equalTo: view.leadingAnchor),
scrollView.trailingAnchor.constraint(equalTo: view.trailingAnchor),
scrollView.topAnchor.constraint(equalTo: view.topAnchor),
scrollView.bottomAnchor.constraint(equalTo: view.bottomAnchor),
// Provide certificate view a width and height constraint
certView.widthAnchor.constraint(equalTo: scrollView.widthAnchor),
certView.heightAnchor.constraint(greaterThanOrEqualToConstant: 500)
])
}
}
https://github.com/boberito/sc_menu/blob/dev_2.0/smartcard_menu/ViewCertsViewController.swift
Fairly simple.
Hi,
is it somehow possible to access a key that was generated by the DCAppAttestService generateKey() function?
I need to be 100% sure that no actor from within or outside of my app can access the generated key with the DeviceCheck Framework. It would also be helpful to get some official resources to the topic.
Thank you in advance,
Mike
I am developing a daemon-based product that needs a cryptographic, non-spoofable proof of machine identity so a remote management server can grant permissions based on the physical machine.
I was thinking to create a signing key in the Secure Enclave and use a certificate signed by that key as the machine identity. The problem is that the Secure Enclave key I can create is only accessible from user context, while my product runs as a system daemon and must not rely on user processes or launchAgents.
Could you please advise on the recommended Apple-supported approaches for this use case ?
Specifically, Is there a supported way for a system daemon to generate and use an unremovable Secure Enclave key during phases like the pre-logon, that doesn't have non user context (only the my application which created this key/certificate will have permission to use/delete it)
If Secure Enclave access from a daemon is not supported, what Apple-recommended alternatives exist for providing a hardware-backed machine identity for system daemons?
I'd rather avoid using system keychain, as its contents may be removed or used by root privileged users.
The ideal solution would be that each Apple product, would come out with a non removable signing certificate, that represent the machine itself (lets say that the cetificate name use to represent the machine ID), and can be validated by verify that the root signer is "Apple Root CA"
Hello everybody,
in my React Native-Expo-Firebase app, I am trying to integrate Sign in with Apple, along with the related token revocation at user deletion.
I did succeed in integrating the login, and the app correctly appears in the Apple Id list (the list of apps currently logged with Apple ID).
The problem is that, if I select the app and press "Interrupt Apple login usage for this app", the app simply stays there, nothing happens.
If I do the same with another app, this works fine.
Either if I do this via my iPhone's settings, or via https://account.apple.com/account/manage -> Sign in with Apple, I get the same result, the app cannot be removed.
I hope I managed to explain my situation clearly, I'd be happy to provide more info if necessary.
Thank you in advance.
Topic:
Privacy & Security
SubTopic:
Sign in with Apple
Tags:
Accounts
Privacy
Sign in with Apple
Authentication Services
I have an Autofill Passkey Provider working for Safari and Chrome via WebAuthn protocol. Unfortunately, Chrome will not offer my extension as a logon credential provider unless I add the credential to the ASCredentialIdentityStore.
I wonder what is the best way to access the ASCredentialIdentityStore from an AutoFill extension? I understand I cannot access it directly from the extension context, so what is the best way to trigger my container app to run, based on a new WebAuthn registration? The best I can think of so far is for the www site to provide an App Link to launch my container app as part of the registration ceremony.
Safari will offer my extension even without adding it to the ASCredentialIdentityStore, so I guess I should file a request with Chrome to work this way too, given difficulty of syncing ASCredentialIdentityStore with WebAuthn registration.
Hello,
I'm an application developer related to Apple system extensions. I developed an endpoint security system extension that can run normally before the 14.x system. However, after I upgraded to 15.x, I found that when I uninstalled and reinstalled my system extension, although the system extension was installed successfully, a system warning box would pop up when I clicked enable in the Settings, indicating a failure.
I conducted the following test. I reinstalled a brand-new MAC 15.x system. When I installed my applications, the system extensions could be installed successfully and enabled normally. However, when I uninstalled and reinstalled, my system extension couldn't be enabled properly and a system warning popped up as well. I tried disabling SIP and enabling System Extension Developers, but it still didn't work.
When the system warning box pops up, I can see some error log information through the console application, including an error related to
Failed to authorize right 'com.apple.system-extensions.admin' by client '/System/Library/ExtensionKit/Extensions/SettingsSystemExtensionController.appex' [2256] for authorization created by '/System/Library/ExtensionKit/Extensions/SettingsSystemExtensionController.appex' [2256] (3,0) (-60005) (engine 179)
as shown in the screenshot.
The same problem, mentioned in Cannot approve some extensions in MacOS Sequoia , but there is no solution
I received Apple’s recent notice about the new requirement to provide a server-to-server notification endpoint when registering or updating a Services ID that uses Sign in with Apple.
(Official notice: https://developer.apple.com/news/?id=j9zukcr6
)
We already use Sign in with Apple on our website and app, but only as a login method for pre-registered users, not as a way to create new accounts.
That means users already exist in our system, and Apple login is used only for authentication convenience (similar to linking a social account).
I have some questions about how to properly implement the required server-to-server notifications in this case:
1. email-enabled / email-disabled:
We don’t use or store the email address provided by Apple.
Are we still required to handle these events, or can we safely ignore them if the email is not used in our system?
2. consent-revoked:
We don’t store Apple access or refresh tokens, we use them only during login and discard them immediately.
In this case, do we still need to handle token revocation, or can we simply unlink the Apple login from the user account when receiving this notification?
3. account-delete:
If a user deletes their Apple account, we can unlink the Apple login and remove related Apple data,
but we cannot delete the user’s primary account in our system (since the account exists independently).
Is this acceptable under Apple’s requirements as well?
We want to make sure our implementation aligns with Apple’s policy and privacy requirements, while maintaining consistency with our existing account management system.
If anyone from Apple or other developers who implemented similar logic could provide guidance or share examples, it would be greatly appreciated.
Thank you!
Topic:
Privacy & Security
SubTopic:
Sign in with Apple
Tags:
Sign in with Apple REST API
Sign in with Apple
I'm working on integrating Passkey functionality into my iOS app (targeting iOS 16.0+), and I'm facing an issue where the system dialog still shows the "Save to another device" option during Passkey registration. I want to hide this option to force users to create Passkeys only on the current device.
1. My Current Registration Implementation
Here’s the code I’m using to create a Passkey registration request. I’ve tried to use ASAuthorizationPlatformPublicKeyCredentialProvider (which is supposed to target platform authenticators like Face ID/Touch ID), but the "Save to another device" option still appears:
`// Initialize provider for platform authenticators
let provider = ASAuthorizationPlatformPublicKeyCredentialProvider(relyingPartyIdentifier: domain)
// Create registration request
let registrationRequest = provider.createCredentialRegistrationRequest(
challenge: challenge,
name: username,
userID: userId
)
// Optional configurations (tried these but no effect on "another device" option)
registrationRequest.displayName = "Test Device"
registrationRequest.userVerificationPreference = .required
registrationRequest.attestationPreference = .none
// Set up authorization controller
let authController = ASAuthorizationController(authorizationRequests: [registrationRequest])
let delegate = PasskeyRegistrationDelegate(completion: completion)
authController.delegate = delegate
// Trigger the registration flow
authController.performRequests(options: .preferImmediatelyAvailableCredentials)`
2. Observation from Authentication Flow (Working as Expected)
During the Passkey authentication flow (not registration), I can successfully hide the "Use another device" option by specifying allowedCredentials in the ASAuthorizationPlatformPublicKeyCredentialAssertionRequest. Here’s a simplified example of that working code:
let assertionRequest = provider.createCredentialAssertionRequest(challenge: challenge)
assertionRequest.allowedCredentials = allowedCredentials
After adding allowedCredentials, the system dialog no longer shows cross-device options—this is exactly the behavior I want for registration.
3. My Questions
Is there a similar parameter to allowedCredentials (from authentication) that I can use during registration to hide the "Save to another device" option?
Did I miss any configuration in the registration request (e.g., authenticatorAttachment or other properties) that forces the flow to use only the current device’s platform authenticator?
Are there any system-level constraints or WebAuthn standards I’m overlooking that cause the "Save to another device" option to persist during registration?
Any insights or code examples would be greatly appreciated!
We are using Apple's PSSO to federate device login to out own IdP. We have developed our own extension app and deployed it using MDM. Things works fine but there are 2 issues that we are trying to get to the root cause -
On some devices after restarting we see an error message on the logic screen saying "The registration for this device is invalid and must be repaired"
And other error message is "SmartCard configuration is invalid for this account"
For the 1st we have figured out that this happens when the registration doesn't happen fully and the key is not tied to the user so when the disk needs to be decrypted at the FileVault screen the issue is raised.
For the "SmartCard configuration is invalid for this account" issue also one aspect is invalid registration but there has been other instances as well where the devices were registered completely but then also the the above error was raised. We verified the registration being completed by checking if the SmartCard is visible in the System Report containing the key.
Has anyone seen the above issues and any possible resolution around it?
I have reached out to support and they simply tell me they are unable to help me, first redirecting me to generic Apple support, after following up they provided the explanation that they only handle administrative tasks and to post on the forums.
I am unable to change my App Tracking Transparency it provides no real error, though network traffic shows a 409 HTTP response from the backend API when trying to save. Here is a screenshot of the result when trying to save.
Does anyone have any suggestions on how to get this resolved? I've commented back to the reviewers and they simply provided help documentation. I have a technical issue and am unable to get anyone to help resolve this.
Hey everyone, I'm hitting a really frustrating issue with App Attest. My app was working perfectly with DCAppAttestService on October 12th, but starting October 13th it started failing with DCError Code 2 "Failed to fetch App UUID" at DCAppAttestController.m:153. The weird part is I didn't change any code - same implementation, same device, same everything.
I've tried switching between development and production entitlement modes, re-registered my device in the Developer Portal, created fresh provisioning profiles with App Attest capability, and verified that my App ID has App Attest enabled. DCAppAttestService.isSupported returns true, so the device supports it. Has anyone else run into this? This is blocking my production launch and I'm not sure if it's something on my end or an Apple infrastructure issue.
I'm experiencing an issue with Sign In with Apple integration in my React Native Expo app (Bundle ID: com.anonymous.TuZjemyApp).
Problem Description:
When users attempt to sign in using Sign In with Apple, they successfully complete Face ID/password authentication, but then receive a "Sign-Up not completed" error message. The authentication flow appears to stop at this point and doesn't return the identity token to my app.
Technical Details:
Frontend Implementation:
Using expo-apple-authentication.
Requesting scopes: FULL_NAME and EMAIL
App is properly configured in app.json with:
usesAppleSignIn: true
Entitlement: com.apple.developer.applesignin
Backend Implementation:
Endpoint: POST /api/auth/apple
Using apple-signin-auth package for token verification
Verifying tokens with audience: com.anonymous.TuZjemyApp
Backend creates/updates user accounts based on Apple ID
Question:
I'm not sure why the authentication flow stops with "Sign-Up not completed" after successful Face ID verification. The identity token never reaches my app. Could you please help me understand:
What might cause this specific error message?
Are there any additional Apple Developer Portal configurations required?
Could this be related to app capabilities or entitlements?
Is there a specific setup needed for the app to properly receive identity tokens?
I set up provisioning profiles, and added Sign in with Apple as a capability and still it doesn't work.
Hello, I currently have an app that includes the "Sign in with Apple" feature, and I need to transfer this app to another app team. I have reviewed all official documentation but have not found the answer I need. My situation has some specificities, and I hope to receive assistance.
The .p8 key created by the original developer team has been lost, and the app’s backend does not use a .p8 key for verification—instead, it verifies by obtaining Apple’s public key. However, according to the official documentation I reviewed, obtaining a transfer identifier during the app transfer process requires a client_secret generated from the original team’s .p8 key. This has left us facing a challenge, and we have two potential approaches to address this issue:
Q1: During the transfer, is it possible to skip obtaining the transfer identifier and proceed directly with the app transfer, without performing any backend operations? Is this approach feasible?
Q2: If the above approach is not feasible, should we create a new .p8 key in the original team’s account and use this new key for the transfer? If a new key is generated, do we need to re-release a new version of the app before initiating the transfer?
If neither of the above approaches is feasible, are there better solutions to resolve our issue? I hope to receive a response. Thank you.
TN3159: Migrating Sign in with Apple users for an app transfer | Apple Developer Documentation/
https://developer.apple.com/documentation/signinwithapple/transferring-your-apps-and-users-to-another-team
Topic:
Privacy & Security
SubTopic:
Sign in with Apple
Tags:
Sign in with Apple REST API
Sign in with Apple