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Siri announces GenericHandle Value instead of custom caller Name
Hello fellow developers, I’ve been working with the CallKit framework in iOS, specifically handling incoming calls. One issue I’ve encountered is that Siri when "read caller name" is enabled announces the caller name/surname set via localizedCallerName and then reads the generic handle value (usually alphanumeric) too! Has anyone encountered a similar situation or if there’s a solution to prioritize the localizedCallerName over the generic handle value without using CXHandleType.emailAddress? Alternatively, any insights or workarounds you know would be greatly appreciated. TLDR: even when I correctly configure the localizedCallerName property, Siri persists in reading the CXHandleType.generic. The original Implementation with CXHandleType.generic: The issue arises when using CXHandleType.generic for alphanumeric IDs (or even URLs as stated by documentation https://developer.apple.com/documentation/callkit/cxhandle). Despite correctly setting the localizedCallerName, Siri continues to announce the generic handle value. Expected Behavior: Siri should read only the localizedCallerName when set and ignore the generic handle value when announcing incoming calls. Workaround: Currently, the only workaround is to use CXHandleType.emailAddress for alphanumeric IDs. However, this is not ideal since it repurposes an email-related handle type for a different purpose. Steps to Reproduce: Create a CallKit app that handles incoming calls (example app from documentation can be used too). On incoming call create CXCallUpdate object Create a CXHandle with CXHandleType.generic and an alphanumeric value (e.g., “ABC123”). Pass the CXHandle to the CXCallUpdate objects' remoteHandle. Set the localizedCallerName property of the CXCallUpdate object with a custom caller name/surname. Report the call with reportNewIncomingCallWithUUID Observe that Siri reads both the localizedCallerName and the generic handle value during call announcements. While we are here a Feature Request: Developers should be able to provide a user-friendly caller name without resorting to workarounds like using CXHandleType.emailAddress. I kindly request that Apple consider enhancing Siri’s behavior in the following ways: Allow developers to suppress the reading of generic handle values while still using the correct handle type. Introduce additional type options for call announcements that don't read the generic value. Both of the above. Thank you for your help! 🙌
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May ’24
AVAudioPlayer initWithContentsOfURL stuck in GetSampleTableBox on 594 bytes audio file
Hello developers, we have an issue with opening an Apple MPEG-4 audio file that apparently has a correct header but then no actual audio data. This file is 594 bytes and freezes completely the app's main thread and never returns from either of these calls: NSURL *fileURL = [NSURL fileURLWithPath:filePath]; NSError *error; AVAudioPlayer *audioPlayer = [[AVAudioPlayer alloc] initWithContentsOfURL:fileURL error:&error]; // freez (call stack below) AVAudioFile *audioFile = [[AVAudioFile alloc] initForReading:fileURL error:&error]; // freez AudioFileID audioFileID; OSStatus result = AudioFileOpenURL((__bridge CFURLRef)fileURL, kAudioFileReadPermission, 0, &audioFileID); // freez Putting the debugger in pause reveals where it is stuck: #0 0x00007ff81b7683f9 in MP4BoxParser_Track::GetSampleTableBox() () #1 0x00007ff81b76785a in MP4BoxParser_Track::GetInfoFromTrackSubBoxes() () #2 0x00007ff81b93fde5 in MP4AudioFile::UseAudioTrack(void*, unsigned int, unsigned int) () #3 0x00007ff81b93ab2c in MP4AudioFile::OpenFromDataSource() () #4 0x00007ff81b72ee85 in AudioFileObject::Open(__CFURL const*, signed char, int) () #5 0x00007ff81b72ed9d in AudioFileObject::DoOpen(__CFURL const*, signed char, int) () #6 0x00007ff81b72e1f0 in AudioFileOpenURL () #7 0x00007ffa382e8183 in -[AVAudioPlayer initWithContentsOfURL:fileTypeHint:error:] () With either of 3 calls the call stack is a little bit different but all in the end get stuck forever in MP4BoxParser_Track::GetSampleTableBox() I'm attaching the incriminated audio file to the post (just rename it back to .m4a): Audio_21072023_10462282.crash How can we avoid this and verify that an audio file is openable and playable. Before, we were checking if a file that we belive be an audio contains data inside, if true then we create AVAudioPlayer with it and see if it return no errors and if the duration is >0. This bug breaks this fondamental logic and now we added a hotfix hack to check if the data is at least 600 bytes long. How do we correctly solve this if none of the methods above return any error but instead ALL hang?
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Jul ’23