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MapKit JS authorization token invalid for Chinese network
Hello 👋🏼, We are using MapKit JS to display maps on our application working on two domains .com and .cn. Everything is working for all ours users in the world except for users using Chinese local network. After investigation, there is an error display in the browser console: [MapKit] Initialization failed because the authorization token is invalid. As the tokens are used as they are for the rest of the world, we know that they are valid... 😕 Problem appears on all browsers: Current versions of MapKit JS mapkit-typescript @ 5.18.2 https://cdn.apple-mapkit.com/mk/5.49.x/mapkit.js Do you have any tips, suggestions to help us 🙏 ? Aurélien.
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2.6k
Jul ’21
iOS Background Execution Limits
I regularly see questions, both here on the Apple Developer Forums and in my Day Job™ at DTS, that are caused by a fundamental misunderstanding of how background execution works on iOS. These come in many different variants, for example: How do I keep my app running continuously in the background? If I schedule a timer, how do I get it to fire when the screen is locked? How do I run code in the background every 15 minutes? How do I set up a network server that runs in the background? How can my app provide an IPC service to another one of my apps while it’s in the background? How can I resume my app in the background if it’s been ‘force quit’ by the user? The short answer to all of these is You can’t. iOS puts strict limits on background execution. Its default behaviour is to suspend your app shortly after the user has moved it to the background; this suspension prevents the process from running any code. There’s no general-purpose mechanism for: Running code continuously in the background Running code at some specific time in the background Running code periodically at a guaranteed interval Resuming in the background in response to a network or IPC request [1] However, iOS does provide a wide range of special-purpose mechanisms for accomplishing specific user goals. For example: If you’re building a music player, use the audio background mode to continue playing after the user has moved your app to the background. If you’re building a timer app, check out the AlarmKit framework. On older systems, use a local notification to notify the user when your timer has expired. If you’re building a video player app, use AVFoundation’s download support. Keep in mind that the above is just a short list of examples. There are many other special-purpose background execution mechanisms, so you should search the documentation for something appropriate to your needs. IMPORTANT Each of these mechanisms fulfils a specific purpose. Do not attempt to use them for some other purpose. Before using a background API, read clause 2.5.4 of the App Review Guidelines. Additionally, iOS provides some general-purpose mechanisms for background execution: To resume your app in the background in response to an event on your server, use a background notification (aka a ‘silent’ push). For more information, see Pushing background updates to your App. To request a small amount of background execution time to refresh your UI, use the BGAppRefreshTaskRequest class. To request extended background execution time, typically delivered overnight when the user is asleep, use the BGProcessingTaskRequest class. To continue user-visible work after the user has left your app, use the BGContinuedProcessingTask class. To prevent your app from being suspended for a short period of time so that you can complete some user task, use a UIApplication background task. For more information on this, see UIApplication Background Task Notes. To download or upload a large HTTP resource, use an URLSession background session. All of these mechanisms prevent you from abusing them to run arbitrary code in the background. As an example, consider the URLSession resume rate limiter. For more information about these limitations, and background execution in general, I strongly recommend that you watch WWDC 2020 Session 10063 Background execution demystified [2]. It’s an excellent resource. Specifically, this talk addresses a common misconception about the app refresh mechanism (BGAppRefreshTaskRequest and the older background fetch API). Folks assume that app refresh will provide regular background execution time. That’s not the case. The system applies a range of heuristics to decide which apps get app refresh time and when. This is a complex issue, one that I’m not going to try to summarise here, but the take-home message is that, if you expect that the app refresh mechanism will grant you background execution time, say, every 15 minutes, you’ll be disappointed. In fact, there are common scenarios where it won’t grant you any background execution time at all! Watch the talk for the details. [1] iOS 26 introduced support for general-purpose IPC, in the form of enhanced security helper extensions. However, these can only be invoked by the container app, and that means there’s no background execution benefit. [2] Sadly the video is currently not available from Apple. I’ve left the link in place just in case it comes back. When the user ‘force quits’ an app by swiping up in the multitasking UI, iOS interprets that to mean that the user doesn’t want the app running at all. So: If the app is running, iOS terminates it. iOS also sets a flag that prevents the app from being launched in the background. That flag gets cleared when the user next launches the app manually. This gesture is a clear statement of user intent; there’s no documented way for your app to override the user’s choice. Note In some circumstances iOS will not honour this flag. The exact cases where this happens are not documented and have changed over time. Finally, if you have questions about background execution that aren’t covered by the resources listed here, please open a new thread on the forums with the details. Put it in a reasonable subtopic and tag it appropriately for the technology you’re using; if nothing specific springs to mind, use Background Tasks. Also, make sure to include details about the specific problem you’re trying to solve because, when it comes to background execution, the devil really is in the details. Share and Enjoy — Quinn “The Eskimo!” @ Developer Technical Support @ Apple let myEmail = "eskimo" + "1" + "@" + "apple.com" Change history: 2026-01-09 Added a reference to AlarmKit. Added a reference to BGContinuedProcessingTask. Add a footnote about IPC and another one about WWDC 2020 Session 10063. Made other minor editorial changes. 2024-03-21 Added a discussion of ‘force quit’. 2023-05-11 Added a paragraph that explains a common misconception about the app refresh mechanism. Made other minor editorial changes. 2021-08-12 Added more entries to the common questions list, this time related to networking and IPC. Made minor editorial changes. 2021-07-26 Extended the statement about what’s not possible to include “running code periodically at a guaranteed interval”. 2021-07-22 First posted.
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29k
Jul ’21
How do you get user consent for ConsumptionRequest?
https://developer.apple.com/documentation/appstoreserverapi/send_consumption_information If the customer provided consent, respond by calling this API and sending the consumption data in the ConsumptionRequest to the App Store. If not, respond by calling this API and setting the customerConsented value to false in the ConsumptionRequest; don't send any other information. Since our server would be receiving CONSUMPTION_REQUEST server notifications and will be the one calling the Consumption API, how do we know if the user has provided consent? That info doesn't seem to be in the server notification or anywhere else.
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1.1k
Jul ’21
EtreCheck (from Etresoft, Inc)
Hello I've noticed that this product, heavily promoted on the ASC forums for many years, is no longer available from the Apple App Store. Can anyone tell me the reason why the product is no longer supported? Friends have asked me if it is 'safe' to use. Is it? Note to moderator: If I'm asking in the wrong places, please redirect my question. Thank you.
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5.3k
Aug ’21
CoreBluetooth drops connection on WatchOS 8.0.1
Since WatchOS 8.0.1 CoreBluetooth drops an active connection if the App goes to background (or back to foreground). This can be reproduced easily with this sample code: Interacting with Bluetooth Peripherals During Background App Refresh If you run the app on the Apple Watch and turn your wrist, an active connection is terminated. In the output window you can read: 2021-10-20 20:22:41.210839+0200 BARBluetooth WatchKit Extension[382:94603] [BluetoothReceiver] disconnected from Sender. The same is the case with my other Watch Apps, that are connecting to BLE devices. As far as I remember, with WatchOS 8.0 everything was fine. Since this occurs even on WWDC21 sample code this must be a bug. Is there a way to fix it for myself, or do I have to wait until it gets fixed by Apple?
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1.6k
Oct ’21
AppStore.sync() not restoring purchases
On an app that was using the old API for In-App Purchases (StoreKit 1). The app is already published on the App Store. The purchase is non-consumable. While trying to migrate to StoreKit 2, I'm unable to restore purchases. Specifically displaying and purchasing products works as expected, but when deleting and reinstalling the app, and then trying to restore purchases I can't do it. I'm trying to restore them using the new APIs but it doesn't seem to be working. What I have tried so far: I'm listening for transaction updates during the whole lifetime of the app, with: Task.detached { for await result in Transaction.updates { if case let .verified(safe) = result { } } } I have a button that calls this method, but other than prompting to log in again with the Apple ID it doesn't seem to have any effect at all: try? await AppStore.sync() This doesn't return any item for await result in Transaction.currentEntitlements { if case let .verified(transaction) = result { } } This doesn't return any item for await result in Transaction.all { if case let .verified(transaction) = result { } } As mentioned before I'm trying this after purchasing the item and deleting the app. So I'm sure it should be able to restore the purchase. Am trying this both with a Configuration.storekit file on the simulator, and without it on a real device, in the Sandbox Environment. Has anyone being able to restore purchases using StoreKit 2? PD: I already filed a feedback report on Feedback Assistant, but so far the only thing that they have replied is: Because StoreKit Testing in Xcode is a local environment, and the data is tied to the app, when you delete the app you're also deleting all the transaction data for that app in the Xcode environment. The code snippets provided are correct usage of the API. So yes, using a Configuration.storekit file won't work on restoring purchases, but if I can't restore them on the Sandbox Environment I'm afraid that this won't work once released, leaving my users totally unable to restore what they have already purchased.
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2.0k
Oct ’21
Is it possible to open the Settings app programatically in watchOS?
I'm currently using Swift to write an independent Apple Watch app for watchOS 7+. My app uses Location Services, and in case the user doesn't allow that at first, I'd like to have a button inside my watchOS app to send my user to the part of the Settings app (inside watchOS) where he can give the appropriate permissions for the app. I know that in iOS/macOS you can use the openSettingsURLString string from UIApplication to do what I want, but it's not available in watchOS and I haven't found any equivalent resource inside the WKExtension class (normally the equivalent for UIApplication in the watchOS environment). Does anyone know if there's any way to programatically open the Apple Watch Settings app from my watchOS app? I'm asking since as far as I understand asking for Location permissions again would not work since the user has already refused to allow the permissions before, making the authorization status "denied". I understand as well that there's the possibility of showing a modal and directing the user to go to Settings and allow the use of location services (as in "Please go to Settings > Privacy > Location Services > [AppName] to allow the use of location services") but I'd like if I could direct the user there instead as one might do in iOS. The code below is what I'm trying to do - but (of course) it crashes since I'm not actually passing any system URL. .alert(isPresented: $alertVisible) { Alert (title: Text("Please allow our app to use location services in order to get Weather Data"), message: Text("Go to Settings?"), primaryButton: .default(Text("Settings"), action: { WKExtension.shared().openSystemURL(URL(string: "")!) //UIApplication.shared.open(URL(string: UIApplication.openSettingsURLString)!) }),
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1.2k
Nov ’21
Tricky behavior of attribute names in CSSearchQuery, can't find documentation
I am wanting to not only surface my content in the system-level Spotlight search results but also to utilize the same index for my in-app search screen. The very few examples or tutorials I could find all craft a CSSearchQuery string using just the "title" attribute. I can't figure out where to look to understand how to search across other attributes. My most pressing need is to be able to perform a CSSearchQuery looking for a search term in the .htmlContentData attribute. If I search for this term in the system search field it returns results, so I know it's being indexed. However when I use a search query (in my app) like htmlContentData == "someSearchTerm" I get zero results. This frustration has led to some more general questions like: How do you know what attribute names are available to use in the search query? Is it just a string literal that's exactly the same as the CSSearchableItemAttributeSet property in Swift? e.g. property .htmlContentData is referred to as "htmlContentData" in the query string? Also, is there any way to just search across all attributes with CSSearchQuery? Obviously using the system Spotlight search (from Home Screen) you don't have to specify if you're searching the title or htmlContentData, it just finds it in either. Yet for CSSearchQuery I have to know up-front which fields I want to look in?
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1k
Nov ’21
[WatchOS] Error while trying to insertRouteData into HKWorkoutRouteBuilder
I've ran into an error with the insertRouteData function of the HKWorkoutRouteBuilder that I can't seem to find any information on. The error is "Unable to find location series 1A193D3B-AFF5-41D8-A967-B1BE08D9F543 during data insert.". It seems to only happen when trying to insert very long routes, in the most recent case it was a 5 hour bike ride with 5900 samples. I save all the route data in a sqlite table as backup and after checking out the data there isn't any red flags as to why it would not insert correctly. Has anyone seen this before and could offer some insight or point me in the right direction to find the source of the error?
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1.3k
Nov ’21
Multiple Apple Pay relationships with differing apple-developer-merchantid-domain-association files
I've encountered an issue where we need multiple domain associations with separate Apple Pay implementations. Briefly, we have a /.well-known/apple-developer-merchantid-domain-association already setup with Stripe, and now we need another, different version of the file to get setup with FreedomPay. FreedomPay insists this file represents a three-way relationship between all parties and I have no reason to disbelieve them. I'm wondering if anyone has encountered this or if there is a standard procedure. I'm currently trying to find documentation on the exact way Apple Pay verification interacts with this file to see if we can produce it dynamically.
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5.4k
Nov ’21
CloudKit: how to handle CKError partialFailure when using NSPersistentCloudKitContainer?
I'm using NSPersistentCloudKitContainer with Core Data and I receive errors because my iCloud space is full. The errors printed are the following: <CKError 0x280df8e40: "Quota Exceeded" (25/2035); server message = "Quota exceeded"; op = 61846C533467A5DF; uuid = 6A144513-033F-42C2-9E27-693548EF2150; Retry after 342.0 seconds>. I want to inform the user about this issue, but I can't find a way to access the details of the error. I'm listening to NSPersistentCloudKitContainer.eventChangedNotification, I receive a error of type .partialFailure. But when I want to access the underlying errors, the partialErrorsByItemID property on the error is nil. How can I access this Quota Exceeded error? import Foundation import CloudKit import Combine import CoreData class SyncMonitor { fileprivate var subscriptions = Set<AnyCancellable>() init() { NotificationCenter.default.publisher(for: NSPersistentCloudKitContainer.eventChangedNotification) .sink { notification in if let cloudEvent = notification.userInfo?[NSPersistentCloudKitContainer.eventNotificationUserInfoKey] as? NSPersistentCloudKitContainer.Event { guard let ckerror = cloudEvent.error as? CKError else { return } print("Error: \(ckerror.localizedDescription)") if ckerror.code == .partialFailure { guard let errors = ckerror.partialErrorsByItemID else { return } for (_, error) in errors { if let currentError = error as? CKError { print(currentError.localizedDescription) } } } } } // end of sink .store(in: &subscriptions) } }
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1.5k
Dec ’21
Today Widgets (old widgets) disappear after EVERY app update.
We had "Today widgets" that worked perfect for a long time. After introducing the new Widgets Extension we added a Widgets Bundle to our app. Now after every app update the old widgets disappear from "Today view" and can be bring back ONLY by rebooting the iPhone. Sometime when they disappear, in today view appears the first widget from the Widgets Bundle. I've tested other apps too and it happens every time to apps that support old and new widgets (Xiaomi Home app for example). Does anyone have a clue how to fix that?
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2.4k
Dec ’21
app background launch unexpectedly
Our app will launch automatically in the background,Doubt is the result of background fetch ,so we cancel the background modes setting of the background fetch,but we still can see the performFetchWithCompletionHandler method called when app launch in the background。Background launch will cause some bugs in our app. We don't want the app to start in the background. We hope to get help
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905
Jan ’22
CoreData CloudKit Sync not working between iOs and MacOS
Hi All, I work on a cross platform app, iOS/macOS. All devises on iOS could synchronize data from Coredata : I create a client, I see him an all iOS devices. But when I test on macOs (with TestFlight) the Mac app could not get any information from iOs devices. On Mac, cloud drive is working because I could download and upload documents and share it between all devices, so the account is working but with my App on MacOS, there is no synchronisation. idea????
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1.3k
Jan ’22
Embedding self-built WebKit framework in Mac app
I'm trying to embed a self-built copy of the WebKit frameworks to a macOS app. Most importantly I hope to get some features to work which Safari offers, but WKWebView in macOS doesn't (getDisplayMedia, Service Workers, WebInspector). Many years ago I was successful in using a self-built WebKit copy in this Mac app, but it seems the WebKit framework got more complex since them, I guess because of WKWebView's architecture. That time I had to open the projects for the main frameworks in Xcode, select the framework bundle in the target and change the "Installation Directory" setting to the path @executable_path/../Frameworks. After building WebKit using the build script, I could use otool -L to confirm the changed installation path, which then was displayed for example as @executable_path/../Frameworks/WebCore.framework/Versions/A/WebCore I tried the same with a current WebKit build: I copied the products for WebKit.framework, WebCore.framework, JavaScriptCore.framework, WebKitLegacy.framework, WebGPU.framework and WebInspectorUI.framework to my app and added it to the "Frameworks, Libraries and Embedded Content" section in the Project's Target/General tab and selected "Embed & Sign" for each framework. In "Build Phases" I made sure that WebCore.framework and WebGPU.framework are only in the "Copy Files" phase (Destination Frameworks) and not in "Link Binary with Libraries", as WebCore is linked through the WebKit umbrella framework and WebGPU gave another error (not sure about how to deal with that framework, as in the system it's in a PrivateFrameworks subfolder). In "Build Settings" I made sure that @executable_path/../Frameworks is entered for "Runpath Search Paths" (it was already probably because of Cocoapods, together with @loader_path/../Frameworks. When I build my app, the system's WebKit version is used. Only when I add the environment variable DYLD_FRAMEWORK_PATH with value @executable_path/../Frameworks in the run scheme, the embedded self-build WebKit frameworks are used. Because of currently necessary backward compatibility my app can use the legacy WebView or WKWebView. The legacy WebView works perfectly with the embedded WebKitLegacy.framework. But if I try to open any URL in WKWebView, no content is rendered and in the console output I can see: Safe Exam Browser[21391:145678] [Process] 0x10c67d760 - [PID=0] WebProcessProxy::didFinishLaunching: Invalid connection identifier (web process failed to launch) Safe Exam Browser[21391:145678] [Process] 0x10c67d760 - [PID=0] WebProcessProxy::processDidTerminateOrFailedToLaunch: reason=4 Safe Exam Browser[21391:145678] [ProcessSuspension] 0x10c005040 - [PID=0, throttler=0x10c67d8d8] ProcessThrottler::Activity::invalidate: Ending background activity / 'WebProcess initialization' Safe Exam Browser[21391:145678] [Process] 0x10c67d760 - [PID=0] WebProcessProxy::shutDown: Safe Exam Browser[21391:145678] [Process] 0x7fbe89064020 - [pageProxyID=40, webPageID=41, PID=0] WebPageProxy::processDidTerminate: (pid 0), reason 4 2022-02-14 12:53:01.764074+0100 Safe Exam Browser[21391:145678] [Process] 0x10c67d760 - [PID=0] WebProcessProxy::processTerminated: Safe Exam Browser[21391:145678] [Loading] 0x7fbe89064020 - [pageProxyID=40, webPageID=41, PID=0] WebPageProxy::dispatchProcessDidTerminate: reason=Crash Safe Exam Browser[21391:146842] [SEBOSXWKWebViewController webViewWebContentProcessDidTerminate:<Safe_Exam_Browser.SEBOSXWKWebView: 0x7fbe88f8b1c0>] I have the impression that the web process might fail to launch because I didn't embed all necessary parts of the self-built WebKit (the product folder contains a large number of XPC, dylib and .a files). Or some additional paths have to be adjusted before building WebKit, so that the embedded frameworks/libraries are used and not the system provided ones. I also looked at the bundle of the Safari Technology Preview and can see some similarities but also differences. I would be grateful if anybody could provide me with information how to embed a self-built copy of WebKit into a macOS app. Unfortunately I didn't find any Mac open source browser using an embedded copy of WebKit to get some inspiration from.
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2.4k
Feb ’22
Virtualization.framework - Request stop?
Hi! I'm trying to figure out what mechanism request stop sends to the guest to actually request a stop. It doesn't appear that Virtualization.framework implements any ACPI bits relating to power buttons, so unclear how a linux VM would detect that a request has been stopped. I don't see any documentation around what devices are implemented by Virtualization.framework either, in terms of things like realtime clock, etc. Thanks for any help!
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1.6k
Mar ’22
Your Friend the System Log
The unified system log on Apple platforms gets a lot of stick for being ‘too verbose’. I understand that perspective: If you’re used to a traditional Unix-y system log, you might expect to learn something about an issue by manually looking through the log, and the unified system log is way too chatty for that. However, that’s a small price to pay for all its other benefits. This post is my attempt to explain those benefits, broken up into a series of short bullets. Hopefully, by the end, you’ll understand why I’m best friends with the system log, and why you should be too! If you have questions or comments about this, start a new thread and tag it with OSLog so that I see it. Share and Enjoy — Quinn “The Eskimo!” @ Developer Technical Support @ Apple let myEmail = "eskimo" + "1" + "@" + "apple.com" Your Friend the System Log Apple’s unified system log is very powerful. If you’re writing code for any Apple platform, and especially if you’re working on low-level code, it pays to become friends with the system log! The Benefits of Having a Such Good Friend The public API for logging is fast and full-featured. And it’s particularly nice in Swift. Logging is fast enough to leave log points [1] enabled in your release build, which makes it easier to debug issues that only show up in the field. The system log is used extensively by the OS itself, allowing you to correlate your log entries with the internal state of the system. Log entries persist for a long time, allowing you to investigate an issue that originated well before you noticed it. Log entries are classified by subsystem, category, and type. Each type has a default disposition, which determines whether that log entry is enable and, if it is, whether it persists in the log store. You can customise this, based on the subsystem, category, and type, in four different ways: Install a configuration profile created by Apple (all platforms) [2]. Add an OSLogPreferences property to your app’s Info.plist (all platforms). Run the log tool with the config command (macOS only) Create and install a custom configuration profile with the com.apple.system.logging payload (macOS only). When you log a value, you may tag it as private. These values are omitted from the log by default but you can configure the system to include them. For information on how to do that, see Recording Private Data in the System Log. The Console app displays the system log. On the left, select either your local Mac or an attached iOS device. Console can open and work with log snapshots (.logarchive). It also supports surprisingly sophisticated searching. For instructions on how to set up your search, choose Help > Console Help. Console’s search field supports copy and paste. For example, to set up a search for the subsystem com.foo.bar, paste subsystem:com.foo.bar into the field. Console supports saved searches. Again, Console Help has the details. Console supports viewing log entries in a specific timeframe. By default it shows the last 5 minutes. To change this, select an item in the Showing popup menu in the pane divider (for a screenshot, see this post). If you have a specific time range of interest, select Custom, enter that range, and click Apply. Instruments has os_log and os_signpost instruments that record log entries in your trace. Use this to correlate the output of other instruments with log points in your code. Instruments can also import a log snapshot. Drop a .logarchive file on to Instruments and it’ll import the log into a trace document, then analyse the log with Instruments’ many cool features. The log command-line tool lets you do all of this and more from Terminal. The log stream subcommand supports multiple output formats. The default format includes column headers that describe the standard fields. The last column holds the log message prefixed by various fields. For example: cloudd: (Network) [com.apple.network:connection] nw_flow_disconnected … In this context: cloudd is the source process. (Network) is the source library. If this isn’t present, the log came from the main executable. [com.apple.network:connection] is the subsystem and category. Not all log entries have these. nw_flow_disconnected … is the actual message. There’s a public API to read back existing log entries, albeit one with significant limitations on iOS (more on that below). Every sysdiagnose log includes a snapshot of the system log, which is ideal for debugging hard-to-reproduce problems. For more details on that, see Using a Sysdiagnose Log to Debug a Hard-to-Reproduce Problem. For general information about sysdiagnose logs, see Bug Reporting > Profiles and Logs. But you don’t have to use sysdiagnose logs. To create a quick snapshot of the system log, run the log tool with the collect subcommand. If you’re investigating recent events, use the --last argument to limit its scope. For example, the following creates a snapshot of log entries from the last 5 minutes: % sudo log collect --last 5m For more information, see: os > Logging OSLog log man page os_log man page (in section 3) os_log man page (in section 5) WWDC 2016 Session 721 Unified Logging and Activity Tracing [1] Well, most log points. If you’re logging thousands of entries per second, the very small overhead for these disabled log points add up. [2] These debug profiles can also help you focus on the right subsystems and categories. Imagine you’re investigating a CryptoTokenKit problem. If you download and dump the CryptoTokenKit debug profile, you’ll see this: % security cms -D -i "CTK_iOS_Logging.mobileconfig" | plutil -p - { … "PayloadContent" => [ 0 => { … "Subsystems" => { "com.apple.CryptoTokenKit" => {…} "com.apple.CryptoTokenKit.APDU" => {…} } } ] … } That’s a hint that log entries relevant to CryptoTokenKit have a subsystem of either com.apple.CryptoTokenKit and com.apple.CryptoTokenKit.APDU, so it’d make sense to focus on those. Foster Your Friendship Good friendships take some work on your part, and your friendship with the system log is no exception. Follow these suggestions for getting the most out of the system log. The system log has many friends, and it tries to love them all equally. Don’t abuse that by logging too much. One key benefit of the system log is that log entries persist for a long time, allowing you to debug issues with their roots in the distant past. But there’s a trade off here: The more you log, the shorter the log window, and the harder it is to debug such problems. Put some thought into your subsystem and category choices. One trick here is to use the same category across multiple subsystems, allowing you to track issues as they cross between subsystems in your product. Or use one subsystem with multiple categories, so you can search on the subsystem to see all your logging and then focus on specific categories when you need to. Don’t use too many unique subsystem and context pairs. As a rough guide: One is fine, ten is OK, 100 is too much. Choose your log types wisely. The documentation for each OSLogType value describes the default behaviour of that value; use that information to guide your choices. Remember that disabled log points have a very low cost. It’s fine to leave chatty logging in your product if it’s disabled by default. Some app extension types have access to extremely sensitive user data and thus run in a restricted sandbox, one that prevents them from exporting any data. For example, an iOS Network Extension content filter data provider runs in such a sandbox. While I’ve never investigated this for other app extension types, an iOS NE content filter data provider cannot record system log entries. This restriction only applies if the provider is distribution signed. A development-signed provider can record system log entries. Apple platforms have accumulated many different logging APIs over the years. All of these are effectively deprecated [1] in favour of the system log API discussed in this post. That includes: NSLog (documented here) CFShow (documented here) Apple System Log (see the asl man page) syslog (see the syslog man page) Most of these continue to work [2], simply calling through to the underlying system log. However, there are good reasons to move on to the system log API directly: It lets you control the subsystem and category, making it much easier to track down your log entries. It lets you control whether data is considered private or public. In Swift, the Logger API is type safe, avoiding the classic bug of mixing up your arguments and your format specifiers. [1] Some formally and some informally. [2] Although you might bump into new restrictions. For example, the macOS Tahoe 26 Release Notes describe such a change for NSLog. No Friend Is Perfect The system log API is hard to wrap. The system log is so efficient because it’s deeply integrated with the compiler. If you wrap the system log API, you undermine that efficiency. For example, a wrapper like this is very inefficient: -*-*-*-*-*- DO NOT DO THIS -*-*-*-*-*- void myLog(const char * format, ...) { va_list ap; va_start(ap, format); char * str = NULL; vasprintf(&str, format, ap); os_log_debug(sLog, "%s", str); free(str); va_end(ap); } -*-*-*-*-*- DO NOT DO THIS -*-*-*-*-*- This is mostly an issue with the C API, because the modern Swift API is nice enough that you rarely need to wrap it. If you do wrap the C API, use a macro and have that pass the arguments through to the underlying os_log_xyz macro. Note If you’re curious about why adding a wrapper is bad, see my explanation on this thread. iOS has very limited facilities for reading the system log. Currently, an iOS app can only read entries created by that specific process, using .currentProcessIdentifier scope. This is annoying if, say, the app crashed and you want to know what it was doing before the crash. What you need is a way to get all log entries written by your app (r. 57880434). There are two known bugs with the .currentProcessIdentifier scope. The first is that the .reverse option doesn’t work (r. 87622922). You always get log entries in forward order. The second is that the getEntries(with:at:matching:) method doesn’t honour its position argument (r. 87416514). You always get all available log entries. Xcode 15 has a shiny new console interface. For the details, watch WWDC 2023 Session 10226 Debug with structured logging. For some other notes about this change, search the Xcode 15 Release Notes for 109380695. In older versions of Xcode the console pane was not a system log client (r. 32863680). Rather, it just collected and displayed stdout and stderr from your process. This approach had a number of consequences: The system log does not, by default, log to stderr. Xcode enabled this by setting an environment variable, OS_ACTIVITY_DT_MODE. The existence and behaviour of this environment variable is an implementation detail and not something that you should rely on. Xcode sets this environment variable when you run your program from Xcode (Product > Run). It can’t set it when you attach to a running process (Debug > Attach to Process). Xcode’s Console pane does not support the sophisticated filtering you’d expect in a system log client. When I can’t use Xcode 15, I work around the last two by ignoring the console pane and instead running Console and viewing my log entries there. If you don’t see the expected log entries in Console, make sure that you have Action > Include Info Messages and Action > Include Debug Messages enabled. The system log interface is available within the kernel but it has some serious limitations. Here’s the ones that I’m aware of: Prior to macOS 14.4, there was no subsystem or category support (r. 28948441). There is no support for annotations like {public} and {private}. Adding such annotations causes the log entry to be dropped (r. 40636781). The system log interface is also available to DriverKit drivers. For more advice on that front, see this thread. Metal shaders can log using the interface described in section 6.19 of the Metal Shading Language Specification. Revision History 2026-05-11 Added a link to a post that has a screenshot of the Showing popup in the pane divider. 2025-09-18 Added a link to the macOS Tahoe 26 Release Notes discussion of NSLog. Remove the beta epithet when referring to Xcode 15. It’s been released for a while now (-: 2025-08-19 Added information about effectively deprecated logging APIs, like NSLog. 2025-08-11 Added information about the restricted sandbox applied to iOS Network Extension content filter data providers. 2025-07-21 Added a link to a thread that explains why wrapping the system log API is bad. 2025-05-30 Fixed a grammo. 2025-04-09 Added a note explaining how to use a debug profile to find relevant log subsystems and categories. 2025-02-20 Added some info about DriverKit. 2024-10-22 Added some notes on interpreting the output from log stream. 2024-09-17 The kernel now includes subsystem and category support. 2024-09-16 Added a link to the the Metal logging interface. 2023-10-20 Added some Instruments tidbits. 2023-10-13 Described a second known bug with the .currentProcessIdentifier scope. Added a link to Using a Sysdiagnose Log to Debug a Hard-to-Reproduce Problem. 2023-08-28 Described a known bug with the .reverse option in .currentProcessIdentifier scope. 2023-06-12 Added a call-out to the Xcode 15 Beta Release Notes. 2023-06-06 Updated to reference WWDC 2023 Session 10226. Added some notes about the kernel’s system log support. 2023-03-22 Made some minor editorial changes. 2023-03-13 Reworked the Xcode discussion to mention OS_ACTIVITY_DT_MODE. 2022-10-26 Called out the Showing popup in Console and the --last argument to log collect. 2022-10-06 Added a link WWDC 2016 Session 721 Unified Logging and Activity Tracing. 2022-08-19 Add a link to Recording Private Data in the System Log. 2022-08-11 Added a bunch of hints and tips. 2022-06-23 Added the Foster Your Friendship section. Made other editorial changes. 2022-05-12 First posted.
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14k
May ’22
MapKit JS authorization token invalid for Chinese network
Hello 👋🏼, We are using MapKit JS to display maps on our application working on two domains .com and .cn. Everything is working for all ours users in the world except for users using Chinese local network. After investigation, there is an error display in the browser console: [MapKit] Initialization failed because the authorization token is invalid. As the tokens are used as they are for the rest of the world, we know that they are valid... 😕 Problem appears on all browsers: Current versions of MapKit JS mapkit-typescript @ 5.18.2 https://cdn.apple-mapkit.com/mk/5.49.x/mapkit.js Do you have any tips, suggestions to help us 🙏 ? Aurélien.
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2.6k
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Jul ’21
Core Bluetooth on tvOS
How does core bluetooth work on tvOS? Is it available for use? Any docs would be helpful?
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2
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473
Activity
Jul ’21
Activity recognition using core motion
as i want to tract activity of iphone user using core motion framework , guide me through .
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2
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2.4k
Activity
Jul ’21
iOS Background Execution Limits
I regularly see questions, both here on the Apple Developer Forums and in my Day Job™ at DTS, that are caused by a fundamental misunderstanding of how background execution works on iOS. These come in many different variants, for example: How do I keep my app running continuously in the background? If I schedule a timer, how do I get it to fire when the screen is locked? How do I run code in the background every 15 minutes? How do I set up a network server that runs in the background? How can my app provide an IPC service to another one of my apps while it’s in the background? How can I resume my app in the background if it’s been ‘force quit’ by the user? The short answer to all of these is You can’t. iOS puts strict limits on background execution. Its default behaviour is to suspend your app shortly after the user has moved it to the background; this suspension prevents the process from running any code. There’s no general-purpose mechanism for: Running code continuously in the background Running code at some specific time in the background Running code periodically at a guaranteed interval Resuming in the background in response to a network or IPC request [1] However, iOS does provide a wide range of special-purpose mechanisms for accomplishing specific user goals. For example: If you’re building a music player, use the audio background mode to continue playing after the user has moved your app to the background. If you’re building a timer app, check out the AlarmKit framework. On older systems, use a local notification to notify the user when your timer has expired. If you’re building a video player app, use AVFoundation’s download support. Keep in mind that the above is just a short list of examples. There are many other special-purpose background execution mechanisms, so you should search the documentation for something appropriate to your needs. IMPORTANT Each of these mechanisms fulfils a specific purpose. Do not attempt to use them for some other purpose. Before using a background API, read clause 2.5.4 of the App Review Guidelines. Additionally, iOS provides some general-purpose mechanisms for background execution: To resume your app in the background in response to an event on your server, use a background notification (aka a ‘silent’ push). For more information, see Pushing background updates to your App. To request a small amount of background execution time to refresh your UI, use the BGAppRefreshTaskRequest class. To request extended background execution time, typically delivered overnight when the user is asleep, use the BGProcessingTaskRequest class. To continue user-visible work after the user has left your app, use the BGContinuedProcessingTask class. To prevent your app from being suspended for a short period of time so that you can complete some user task, use a UIApplication background task. For more information on this, see UIApplication Background Task Notes. To download or upload a large HTTP resource, use an URLSession background session. All of these mechanisms prevent you from abusing them to run arbitrary code in the background. As an example, consider the URLSession resume rate limiter. For more information about these limitations, and background execution in general, I strongly recommend that you watch WWDC 2020 Session 10063 Background execution demystified [2]. It’s an excellent resource. Specifically, this talk addresses a common misconception about the app refresh mechanism (BGAppRefreshTaskRequest and the older background fetch API). Folks assume that app refresh will provide regular background execution time. That’s not the case. The system applies a range of heuristics to decide which apps get app refresh time and when. This is a complex issue, one that I’m not going to try to summarise here, but the take-home message is that, if you expect that the app refresh mechanism will grant you background execution time, say, every 15 minutes, you’ll be disappointed. In fact, there are common scenarios where it won’t grant you any background execution time at all! Watch the talk for the details. [1] iOS 26 introduced support for general-purpose IPC, in the form of enhanced security helper extensions. However, these can only be invoked by the container app, and that means there’s no background execution benefit. [2] Sadly the video is currently not available from Apple. I’ve left the link in place just in case it comes back. When the user ‘force quits’ an app by swiping up in the multitasking UI, iOS interprets that to mean that the user doesn’t want the app running at all. So: If the app is running, iOS terminates it. iOS also sets a flag that prevents the app from being launched in the background. That flag gets cleared when the user next launches the app manually. This gesture is a clear statement of user intent; there’s no documented way for your app to override the user’s choice. Note In some circumstances iOS will not honour this flag. The exact cases where this happens are not documented and have changed over time. Finally, if you have questions about background execution that aren’t covered by the resources listed here, please open a new thread on the forums with the details. Put it in a reasonable subtopic and tag it appropriately for the technology you’re using; if nothing specific springs to mind, use Background Tasks. Also, make sure to include details about the specific problem you’re trying to solve because, when it comes to background execution, the devil really is in the details. Share and Enjoy — Quinn “The Eskimo!” @ Developer Technical Support @ Apple let myEmail = "eskimo" + "1" + "@" + "apple.com" Change history: 2026-01-09 Added a reference to AlarmKit. Added a reference to BGContinuedProcessingTask. Add a footnote about IPC and another one about WWDC 2020 Session 10063. Made other minor editorial changes. 2024-03-21 Added a discussion of ‘force quit’. 2023-05-11 Added a paragraph that explains a common misconception about the app refresh mechanism. Made other minor editorial changes. 2021-08-12 Added more entries to the common questions list, this time related to networking and IPC. Made minor editorial changes. 2021-07-26 Extended the statement about what’s not possible to include “running code periodically at a guaranteed interval”. 2021-07-22 First posted.
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29k
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Jul ’21
How do you get user consent for ConsumptionRequest?
https://developer.apple.com/documentation/appstoreserverapi/send_consumption_information If the customer provided consent, respond by calling this API and sending the consumption data in the ConsumptionRequest to the App Store. If not, respond by calling this API and setting the customerConsented value to false in the ConsumptionRequest; don't send any other information. Since our server would be receiving CONSUMPTION_REQUEST server notifications and will be the one calling the Consumption API, how do we know if the user has provided consent? That info doesn't seem to be in the server notification or anywhere else.
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1.1k
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Jul ’21
EtreCheck (from Etresoft, Inc)
Hello I've noticed that this product, heavily promoted on the ASC forums for many years, is no longer available from the Apple App Store. Can anyone tell me the reason why the product is no longer supported? Friends have asked me if it is 'safe' to use. Is it? Note to moderator: If I'm asking in the wrong places, please redirect my question. Thank you.
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9
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5.3k
Activity
Aug ’21
CoreBluetooth drops connection on WatchOS 8.0.1
Since WatchOS 8.0.1 CoreBluetooth drops an active connection if the App goes to background (or back to foreground). This can be reproduced easily with this sample code: Interacting with Bluetooth Peripherals During Background App Refresh If you run the app on the Apple Watch and turn your wrist, an active connection is terminated. In the output window you can read: 2021-10-20 20:22:41.210839+0200 BARBluetooth WatchKit Extension[382:94603] [BluetoothReceiver] disconnected from Sender. The same is the case with my other Watch Apps, that are connecting to BLE devices. As far as I remember, with WatchOS 8.0 everything was fine. Since this occurs even on WWDC21 sample code this must be a bug. Is there a way to fix it for myself, or do I have to wait until it gets fixed by Apple?
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1.6k
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Oct ’21
AppStore.sync() not restoring purchases
On an app that was using the old API for In-App Purchases (StoreKit 1). The app is already published on the App Store. The purchase is non-consumable. While trying to migrate to StoreKit 2, I'm unable to restore purchases. Specifically displaying and purchasing products works as expected, but when deleting and reinstalling the app, and then trying to restore purchases I can't do it. I'm trying to restore them using the new APIs but it doesn't seem to be working. What I have tried so far: I'm listening for transaction updates during the whole lifetime of the app, with: Task.detached { for await result in Transaction.updates { if case let .verified(safe) = result { } } } I have a button that calls this method, but other than prompting to log in again with the Apple ID it doesn't seem to have any effect at all: try? await AppStore.sync() This doesn't return any item for await result in Transaction.currentEntitlements { if case let .verified(transaction) = result { } } This doesn't return any item for await result in Transaction.all { if case let .verified(transaction) = result { } } As mentioned before I'm trying this after purchasing the item and deleting the app. So I'm sure it should be able to restore the purchase. Am trying this both with a Configuration.storekit file on the simulator, and without it on a real device, in the Sandbox Environment. Has anyone being able to restore purchases using StoreKit 2? PD: I already filed a feedback report on Feedback Assistant, but so far the only thing that they have replied is: Because StoreKit Testing in Xcode is a local environment, and the data is tied to the app, when you delete the app you're also deleting all the transaction data for that app in the Xcode environment. The code snippets provided are correct usage of the API. So yes, using a Configuration.storekit file won't work on restoring purchases, but if I can't restore them on the Sandbox Environment I'm afraid that this won't work once released, leaving my users totally unable to restore what they have already purchased.
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2.0k
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Oct ’21
Bluetooth 5 Extended Advertising and LE Coded PHY
When will Apple mobile phones support some of the optional features of Bluetooth 5... specifically Extended Advertising and LE Coded PHY? There are many applications that benefit from having this capability in the mobile phone.
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6
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1.4k
Activity
Nov ’21
Is it possible to open the Settings app programatically in watchOS?
I'm currently using Swift to write an independent Apple Watch app for watchOS 7+. My app uses Location Services, and in case the user doesn't allow that at first, I'd like to have a button inside my watchOS app to send my user to the part of the Settings app (inside watchOS) where he can give the appropriate permissions for the app. I know that in iOS/macOS you can use the openSettingsURLString string from UIApplication to do what I want, but it's not available in watchOS and I haven't found any equivalent resource inside the WKExtension class (normally the equivalent for UIApplication in the watchOS environment). Does anyone know if there's any way to programatically open the Apple Watch Settings app from my watchOS app? I'm asking since as far as I understand asking for Location permissions again would not work since the user has already refused to allow the permissions before, making the authorization status "denied". I understand as well that there's the possibility of showing a modal and directing the user to go to Settings and allow the use of location services (as in "Please go to Settings > Privacy > Location Services > [AppName] to allow the use of location services") but I'd like if I could direct the user there instead as one might do in iOS. The code below is what I'm trying to do - but (of course) it crashes since I'm not actually passing any system URL. .alert(isPresented: $alertVisible) { Alert (title: Text("Please allow our app to use location services in order to get Weather Data"), message: Text("Go to Settings?"), primaryButton: .default(Text("Settings"), action: { WKExtension.shared().openSystemURL(URL(string: "")!) //UIApplication.shared.open(URL(string: UIApplication.openSettingsURLString)!) }),
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3
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1.2k
Activity
Nov ’21
Tricky behavior of attribute names in CSSearchQuery, can't find documentation
I am wanting to not only surface my content in the system-level Spotlight search results but also to utilize the same index for my in-app search screen. The very few examples or tutorials I could find all craft a CSSearchQuery string using just the "title" attribute. I can't figure out where to look to understand how to search across other attributes. My most pressing need is to be able to perform a CSSearchQuery looking for a search term in the .htmlContentData attribute. If I search for this term in the system search field it returns results, so I know it's being indexed. However when I use a search query (in my app) like htmlContentData == "someSearchTerm" I get zero results. This frustration has led to some more general questions like: How do you know what attribute names are available to use in the search query? Is it just a string literal that's exactly the same as the CSSearchableItemAttributeSet property in Swift? e.g. property .htmlContentData is referred to as "htmlContentData" in the query string? Also, is there any way to just search across all attributes with CSSearchQuery? Obviously using the system Spotlight search (from Home Screen) you don't have to specify if you're searching the title or htmlContentData, it just finds it in either. Yet for CSSearchQuery I have to know up-front which fields I want to look in?
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2
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1k
Activity
Nov ’21
[WatchOS] Error while trying to insertRouteData into HKWorkoutRouteBuilder
I've ran into an error with the insertRouteData function of the HKWorkoutRouteBuilder that I can't seem to find any information on. The error is "Unable to find location series 1A193D3B-AFF5-41D8-A967-B1BE08D9F543 during data insert.". It seems to only happen when trying to insert very long routes, in the most recent case it was a 5 hour bike ride with 5900 samples. I save all the route data in a sqlite table as backup and after checking out the data there isn't any red flags as to why it would not insert correctly. Has anyone seen this before and could offer some insight or point me in the right direction to find the source of the error?
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1.3k
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Nov ’21
Multiple Apple Pay relationships with differing apple-developer-merchantid-domain-association files
I've encountered an issue where we need multiple domain associations with separate Apple Pay implementations. Briefly, we have a /.well-known/apple-developer-merchantid-domain-association already setup with Stripe, and now we need another, different version of the file to get setup with FreedomPay. FreedomPay insists this file represents a three-way relationship between all parties and I have no reason to disbelieve them. I'm wondering if anyone has encountered this or if there is a standard procedure. I'm currently trying to find documentation on the exact way Apple Pay verification interacts with this file to see if we can produce it dynamically.
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10
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5.4k
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Nov ’21
CloudKit: how to handle CKError partialFailure when using NSPersistentCloudKitContainer?
I'm using NSPersistentCloudKitContainer with Core Data and I receive errors because my iCloud space is full. The errors printed are the following: <CKError 0x280df8e40: "Quota Exceeded" (25/2035); server message = "Quota exceeded"; op = 61846C533467A5DF; uuid = 6A144513-033F-42C2-9E27-693548EF2150; Retry after 342.0 seconds>. I want to inform the user about this issue, but I can't find a way to access the details of the error. I'm listening to NSPersistentCloudKitContainer.eventChangedNotification, I receive a error of type .partialFailure. But when I want to access the underlying errors, the partialErrorsByItemID property on the error is nil. How can I access this Quota Exceeded error? import Foundation import CloudKit import Combine import CoreData class SyncMonitor { fileprivate var subscriptions = Set<AnyCancellable>() init() { NotificationCenter.default.publisher(for: NSPersistentCloudKitContainer.eventChangedNotification) .sink { notification in if let cloudEvent = notification.userInfo?[NSPersistentCloudKitContainer.eventNotificationUserInfoKey] as? NSPersistentCloudKitContainer.Event { guard let ckerror = cloudEvent.error as? CKError else { return } print("Error: \(ckerror.localizedDescription)") if ckerror.code == .partialFailure { guard let errors = ckerror.partialErrorsByItemID else { return } for (_, error) in errors { if let currentError = error as? CKError { print(currentError.localizedDescription) } } } } } // end of sink .store(in: &subscriptions) } }
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2
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1.5k
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Dec ’21
Today Widgets (old widgets) disappear after EVERY app update.
We had "Today widgets" that worked perfect for a long time. After introducing the new Widgets Extension we added a Widgets Bundle to our app. Now after every app update the old widgets disappear from "Today view" and can be bring back ONLY by rebooting the iPhone. Sometime when they disappear, in today view appears the first widget from the Widgets Bundle. I've tested other apps too and it happens every time to apps that support old and new widgets (Xiaomi Home app for example). Does anyone have a clue how to fix that?
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2
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2.4k
Activity
Dec ’21
app background launch unexpectedly
Our app will launch automatically in the background,Doubt is the result of background fetch ,so we cancel the background modes setting of the background fetch,but we still can see the performFetchWithCompletionHandler method called when app launch in the background。Background launch will cause some bugs in our app. We don't want the app to start in the background. We hope to get help
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4
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905
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Jan ’22
CoreData CloudKit Sync not working between iOs and MacOS
Hi All, I work on a cross platform app, iOS/macOS. All devises on iOS could synchronize data from Coredata : I create a client, I see him an all iOS devices. But when I test on macOs (with TestFlight) the Mac app could not get any information from iOs devices. On Mac, cloud drive is working because I could download and upload documents and share it between all devices, so the account is working but with my App on MacOS, there is no synchronisation. idea????
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2
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1.3k
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Jan ’22
Embedding self-built WebKit framework in Mac app
I'm trying to embed a self-built copy of the WebKit frameworks to a macOS app. Most importantly I hope to get some features to work which Safari offers, but WKWebView in macOS doesn't (getDisplayMedia, Service Workers, WebInspector). Many years ago I was successful in using a self-built WebKit copy in this Mac app, but it seems the WebKit framework got more complex since them, I guess because of WKWebView's architecture. That time I had to open the projects for the main frameworks in Xcode, select the framework bundle in the target and change the "Installation Directory" setting to the path @executable_path/../Frameworks. After building WebKit using the build script, I could use otool -L to confirm the changed installation path, which then was displayed for example as @executable_path/../Frameworks/WebCore.framework/Versions/A/WebCore I tried the same with a current WebKit build: I copied the products for WebKit.framework, WebCore.framework, JavaScriptCore.framework, WebKitLegacy.framework, WebGPU.framework and WebInspectorUI.framework to my app and added it to the "Frameworks, Libraries and Embedded Content" section in the Project's Target/General tab and selected "Embed & Sign" for each framework. In "Build Phases" I made sure that WebCore.framework and WebGPU.framework are only in the "Copy Files" phase (Destination Frameworks) and not in "Link Binary with Libraries", as WebCore is linked through the WebKit umbrella framework and WebGPU gave another error (not sure about how to deal with that framework, as in the system it's in a PrivateFrameworks subfolder). In "Build Settings" I made sure that @executable_path/../Frameworks is entered for "Runpath Search Paths" (it was already probably because of Cocoapods, together with @loader_path/../Frameworks. When I build my app, the system's WebKit version is used. Only when I add the environment variable DYLD_FRAMEWORK_PATH with value @executable_path/../Frameworks in the run scheme, the embedded self-build WebKit frameworks are used. Because of currently necessary backward compatibility my app can use the legacy WebView or WKWebView. The legacy WebView works perfectly with the embedded WebKitLegacy.framework. But if I try to open any URL in WKWebView, no content is rendered and in the console output I can see: Safe Exam Browser[21391:145678] [Process] 0x10c67d760 - [PID=0] WebProcessProxy::didFinishLaunching: Invalid connection identifier (web process failed to launch) Safe Exam Browser[21391:145678] [Process] 0x10c67d760 - [PID=0] WebProcessProxy::processDidTerminateOrFailedToLaunch: reason=4 Safe Exam Browser[21391:145678] [ProcessSuspension] 0x10c005040 - [PID=0, throttler=0x10c67d8d8] ProcessThrottler::Activity::invalidate: Ending background activity / 'WebProcess initialization' Safe Exam Browser[21391:145678] [Process] 0x10c67d760 - [PID=0] WebProcessProxy::shutDown: Safe Exam Browser[21391:145678] [Process] 0x7fbe89064020 - [pageProxyID=40, webPageID=41, PID=0] WebPageProxy::processDidTerminate: (pid 0), reason 4 2022-02-14 12:53:01.764074+0100 Safe Exam Browser[21391:145678] [Process] 0x10c67d760 - [PID=0] WebProcessProxy::processTerminated: Safe Exam Browser[21391:145678] [Loading] 0x7fbe89064020 - [pageProxyID=40, webPageID=41, PID=0] WebPageProxy::dispatchProcessDidTerminate: reason=Crash Safe Exam Browser[21391:146842] [SEBOSXWKWebViewController webViewWebContentProcessDidTerminate:<Safe_Exam_Browser.SEBOSXWKWebView: 0x7fbe88f8b1c0>] I have the impression that the web process might fail to launch because I didn't embed all necessary parts of the self-built WebKit (the product folder contains a large number of XPC, dylib and .a files). Or some additional paths have to be adjusted before building WebKit, so that the embedded frameworks/libraries are used and not the system provided ones. I also looked at the bundle of the Safari Technology Preview and can see some similarities but also differences. I would be grateful if anybody could provide me with information how to embed a self-built copy of WebKit into a macOS app. Unfortunately I didn't find any Mac open source browser using an embedded copy of WebKit to get some inspiration from.
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6
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1
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2.4k
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Feb ’22
Virtualization.framework - Request stop?
Hi! I'm trying to figure out what mechanism request stop sends to the guest to actually request a stop. It doesn't appear that Virtualization.framework implements any ACPI bits relating to power buttons, so unclear how a linux VM would detect that a request has been stopped. I don't see any documentation around what devices are implemented by Virtualization.framework either, in terms of things like realtime clock, etc. Thanks for any help!
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2
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1.6k
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Mar ’22
Your Friend the System Log
The unified system log on Apple platforms gets a lot of stick for being ‘too verbose’. I understand that perspective: If you’re used to a traditional Unix-y system log, you might expect to learn something about an issue by manually looking through the log, and the unified system log is way too chatty for that. However, that’s a small price to pay for all its other benefits. This post is my attempt to explain those benefits, broken up into a series of short bullets. Hopefully, by the end, you’ll understand why I’m best friends with the system log, and why you should be too! If you have questions or comments about this, start a new thread and tag it with OSLog so that I see it. Share and Enjoy — Quinn “The Eskimo!” @ Developer Technical Support @ Apple let myEmail = "eskimo" + "1" + "@" + "apple.com" Your Friend the System Log Apple’s unified system log is very powerful. If you’re writing code for any Apple platform, and especially if you’re working on low-level code, it pays to become friends with the system log! The Benefits of Having a Such Good Friend The public API for logging is fast and full-featured. And it’s particularly nice in Swift. Logging is fast enough to leave log points [1] enabled in your release build, which makes it easier to debug issues that only show up in the field. The system log is used extensively by the OS itself, allowing you to correlate your log entries with the internal state of the system. Log entries persist for a long time, allowing you to investigate an issue that originated well before you noticed it. Log entries are classified by subsystem, category, and type. Each type has a default disposition, which determines whether that log entry is enable and, if it is, whether it persists in the log store. You can customise this, based on the subsystem, category, and type, in four different ways: Install a configuration profile created by Apple (all platforms) [2]. Add an OSLogPreferences property to your app’s Info.plist (all platforms). Run the log tool with the config command (macOS only) Create and install a custom configuration profile with the com.apple.system.logging payload (macOS only). When you log a value, you may tag it as private. These values are omitted from the log by default but you can configure the system to include them. For information on how to do that, see Recording Private Data in the System Log. The Console app displays the system log. On the left, select either your local Mac or an attached iOS device. Console can open and work with log snapshots (.logarchive). It also supports surprisingly sophisticated searching. For instructions on how to set up your search, choose Help > Console Help. Console’s search field supports copy and paste. For example, to set up a search for the subsystem com.foo.bar, paste subsystem:com.foo.bar into the field. Console supports saved searches. Again, Console Help has the details. Console supports viewing log entries in a specific timeframe. By default it shows the last 5 minutes. To change this, select an item in the Showing popup menu in the pane divider (for a screenshot, see this post). If you have a specific time range of interest, select Custom, enter that range, and click Apply. Instruments has os_log and os_signpost instruments that record log entries in your trace. Use this to correlate the output of other instruments with log points in your code. Instruments can also import a log snapshot. Drop a .logarchive file on to Instruments and it’ll import the log into a trace document, then analyse the log with Instruments’ many cool features. The log command-line tool lets you do all of this and more from Terminal. The log stream subcommand supports multiple output formats. The default format includes column headers that describe the standard fields. The last column holds the log message prefixed by various fields. For example: cloudd: (Network) [com.apple.network:connection] nw_flow_disconnected … In this context: cloudd is the source process. (Network) is the source library. If this isn’t present, the log came from the main executable. [com.apple.network:connection] is the subsystem and category. Not all log entries have these. nw_flow_disconnected … is the actual message. There’s a public API to read back existing log entries, albeit one with significant limitations on iOS (more on that below). Every sysdiagnose log includes a snapshot of the system log, which is ideal for debugging hard-to-reproduce problems. For more details on that, see Using a Sysdiagnose Log to Debug a Hard-to-Reproduce Problem. For general information about sysdiagnose logs, see Bug Reporting > Profiles and Logs. But you don’t have to use sysdiagnose logs. To create a quick snapshot of the system log, run the log tool with the collect subcommand. If you’re investigating recent events, use the --last argument to limit its scope. For example, the following creates a snapshot of log entries from the last 5 minutes: % sudo log collect --last 5m For more information, see: os > Logging OSLog log man page os_log man page (in section 3) os_log man page (in section 5) WWDC 2016 Session 721 Unified Logging and Activity Tracing [1] Well, most log points. If you’re logging thousands of entries per second, the very small overhead for these disabled log points add up. [2] These debug profiles can also help you focus on the right subsystems and categories. Imagine you’re investigating a CryptoTokenKit problem. If you download and dump the CryptoTokenKit debug profile, you’ll see this: % security cms -D -i "CTK_iOS_Logging.mobileconfig" | plutil -p - { … "PayloadContent" => [ 0 => { … "Subsystems" => { "com.apple.CryptoTokenKit" => {…} "com.apple.CryptoTokenKit.APDU" => {…} } } ] … } That’s a hint that log entries relevant to CryptoTokenKit have a subsystem of either com.apple.CryptoTokenKit and com.apple.CryptoTokenKit.APDU, so it’d make sense to focus on those. Foster Your Friendship Good friendships take some work on your part, and your friendship with the system log is no exception. Follow these suggestions for getting the most out of the system log. The system log has many friends, and it tries to love them all equally. Don’t abuse that by logging too much. One key benefit of the system log is that log entries persist for a long time, allowing you to debug issues with their roots in the distant past. But there’s a trade off here: The more you log, the shorter the log window, and the harder it is to debug such problems. Put some thought into your subsystem and category choices. One trick here is to use the same category across multiple subsystems, allowing you to track issues as they cross between subsystems in your product. Or use one subsystem with multiple categories, so you can search on the subsystem to see all your logging and then focus on specific categories when you need to. Don’t use too many unique subsystem and context pairs. As a rough guide: One is fine, ten is OK, 100 is too much. Choose your log types wisely. The documentation for each OSLogType value describes the default behaviour of that value; use that information to guide your choices. Remember that disabled log points have a very low cost. It’s fine to leave chatty logging in your product if it’s disabled by default. Some app extension types have access to extremely sensitive user data and thus run in a restricted sandbox, one that prevents them from exporting any data. For example, an iOS Network Extension content filter data provider runs in such a sandbox. While I’ve never investigated this for other app extension types, an iOS NE content filter data provider cannot record system log entries. This restriction only applies if the provider is distribution signed. A development-signed provider can record system log entries. Apple platforms have accumulated many different logging APIs over the years. All of these are effectively deprecated [1] in favour of the system log API discussed in this post. That includes: NSLog (documented here) CFShow (documented here) Apple System Log (see the asl man page) syslog (see the syslog man page) Most of these continue to work [2], simply calling through to the underlying system log. However, there are good reasons to move on to the system log API directly: It lets you control the subsystem and category, making it much easier to track down your log entries. It lets you control whether data is considered private or public. In Swift, the Logger API is type safe, avoiding the classic bug of mixing up your arguments and your format specifiers. [1] Some formally and some informally. [2] Although you might bump into new restrictions. For example, the macOS Tahoe 26 Release Notes describe such a change for NSLog. No Friend Is Perfect The system log API is hard to wrap. The system log is so efficient because it’s deeply integrated with the compiler. If you wrap the system log API, you undermine that efficiency. For example, a wrapper like this is very inefficient: -*-*-*-*-*- DO NOT DO THIS -*-*-*-*-*- void myLog(const char * format, ...) { va_list ap; va_start(ap, format); char * str = NULL; vasprintf(&str, format, ap); os_log_debug(sLog, "%s", str); free(str); va_end(ap); } -*-*-*-*-*- DO NOT DO THIS -*-*-*-*-*- This is mostly an issue with the C API, because the modern Swift API is nice enough that you rarely need to wrap it. If you do wrap the C API, use a macro and have that pass the arguments through to the underlying os_log_xyz macro. Note If you’re curious about why adding a wrapper is bad, see my explanation on this thread. iOS has very limited facilities for reading the system log. Currently, an iOS app can only read entries created by that specific process, using .currentProcessIdentifier scope. This is annoying if, say, the app crashed and you want to know what it was doing before the crash. What you need is a way to get all log entries written by your app (r. 57880434). There are two known bugs with the .currentProcessIdentifier scope. The first is that the .reverse option doesn’t work (r. 87622922). You always get log entries in forward order. The second is that the getEntries(with:at:matching:) method doesn’t honour its position argument (r. 87416514). You always get all available log entries. Xcode 15 has a shiny new console interface. For the details, watch WWDC 2023 Session 10226 Debug with structured logging. For some other notes about this change, search the Xcode 15 Release Notes for 109380695. In older versions of Xcode the console pane was not a system log client (r. 32863680). Rather, it just collected and displayed stdout and stderr from your process. This approach had a number of consequences: The system log does not, by default, log to stderr. Xcode enabled this by setting an environment variable, OS_ACTIVITY_DT_MODE. The existence and behaviour of this environment variable is an implementation detail and not something that you should rely on. Xcode sets this environment variable when you run your program from Xcode (Product > Run). It can’t set it when you attach to a running process (Debug > Attach to Process). Xcode’s Console pane does not support the sophisticated filtering you’d expect in a system log client. When I can’t use Xcode 15, I work around the last two by ignoring the console pane and instead running Console and viewing my log entries there. If you don’t see the expected log entries in Console, make sure that you have Action > Include Info Messages and Action > Include Debug Messages enabled. The system log interface is available within the kernel but it has some serious limitations. Here’s the ones that I’m aware of: Prior to macOS 14.4, there was no subsystem or category support (r. 28948441). There is no support for annotations like {public} and {private}. Adding such annotations causes the log entry to be dropped (r. 40636781). The system log interface is also available to DriverKit drivers. For more advice on that front, see this thread. Metal shaders can log using the interface described in section 6.19 of the Metal Shading Language Specification. Revision History 2026-05-11 Added a link to a post that has a screenshot of the Showing popup in the pane divider. 2025-09-18 Added a link to the macOS Tahoe 26 Release Notes discussion of NSLog. Remove the beta epithet when referring to Xcode 15. It’s been released for a while now (-: 2025-08-19 Added information about effectively deprecated logging APIs, like NSLog. 2025-08-11 Added information about the restricted sandbox applied to iOS Network Extension content filter data providers. 2025-07-21 Added a link to a thread that explains why wrapping the system log API is bad. 2025-05-30 Fixed a grammo. 2025-04-09 Added a note explaining how to use a debug profile to find relevant log subsystems and categories. 2025-02-20 Added some info about DriverKit. 2024-10-22 Added some notes on interpreting the output from log stream. 2024-09-17 The kernel now includes subsystem and category support. 2024-09-16 Added a link to the the Metal logging interface. 2023-10-20 Added some Instruments tidbits. 2023-10-13 Described a second known bug with the .currentProcessIdentifier scope. Added a link to Using a Sysdiagnose Log to Debug a Hard-to-Reproduce Problem. 2023-08-28 Described a known bug with the .reverse option in .currentProcessIdentifier scope. 2023-06-12 Added a call-out to the Xcode 15 Beta Release Notes. 2023-06-06 Updated to reference WWDC 2023 Session 10226. Added some notes about the kernel’s system log support. 2023-03-22 Made some minor editorial changes. 2023-03-13 Reworked the Xcode discussion to mention OS_ACTIVITY_DT_MODE. 2022-10-26 Called out the Showing popup in Console and the --last argument to log collect. 2022-10-06 Added a link WWDC 2016 Session 721 Unified Logging and Activity Tracing. 2022-08-19 Add a link to Recording Private Data in the System Log. 2022-08-11 Added a bunch of hints and tips. 2022-06-23 Added the Foster Your Friendship section. Made other editorial changes. 2022-05-12 First posted.
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