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DriverKit target built as dependency, header not found
I have an Xcode project with a main app target, and a dext target which builds a DriverKit driver which is embedded in the main app. That all works, if I build the DriverKit target first, then switch to the app target and build that. The app and the driver work. If I make the Driver target a dependency of the App target, building the Driver fails because a header is not found, thus building the app fails. This doesn't make much sense - why does building a target as a consequence of dependence on another target produce a different result from building the same target manually? Has anyone else seen behavior like this? Have any hints on how to fix it? I've tried comparing the detailed build logs, but they don't shed much light - the lines are very long and the build steps appear to be executed in a different order. One strange thing I notice is that although I am building on an M1 Mac, with "build active architectures only" set to YES for both targets, in the Driver-target-only case, Driver.cpp is compiled for arm64, while in the failure case, Driver.cpp is compiled for x86_64. That doesn't make any sense to me either.
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283
Sep ’24
USB drive invisible to our app on supervised iPad
We have an iPad app which can write to user-specified locations on USB-connected storage devices. On unmanaged devices, this works just fine. However, when the device is under MDM, although the Files app can see the external USB storage device, it does not show up in the file browser in our own app. There's a restriction called "allowFilesUSBDriveAccess" which is set to true (the default), but there's no restriction called "allowOtherAppsUSBDriveAccess". Are MDM-managed iPads simply not allowed to access USB drives (except through the Files app)?
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421
Jul ’24
DriverKit IOUSBHostDevice Open returns kIOReturnNotOpen
I have a USBDriverKit driver which tries to send vendor-specific DeviceRequests to the IOUSBHostDevice. A few short months ago this worked, and as far as I know, the only change since it last worked is an update to macOS 14.5. The dext user client calls through to the driver, which wants to do this: ivars->mDevice->Open() ivars->mDevice->DeviceRequest() ivars->mDevice->Close() the problem is that the call to Open returns 0xe00002cde, which is kIOReturnNotOpen. If I don't call Open, but simply call DeviceRequest, I get the same result, kIOReturnNotOpen, which I would expect. I'm pretty sure that in macOS 14.4, the call to Open() did not return an error. I haven't seen any system logs that clue me in to why Open() is failing. It would be handy if the error gave me some reason why the device cannot be opened. Has anyone else seen this? I've searched high and low and I can't find any examples of dexts which actually do anything at all with a USB device.
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624
Jun ’24
Dynamic Library Install Name
I used to have a static library, I turned it into a dynamic library, which was more difficult than I expected. I already had a small project, containing a command line tool which loads a dynamic library. This was created direct from Xcode 15.3's macOS app and dynamic library templates. This is how I configured the Dynamic Library Install Name Base to @rpath. Note that there is nothing in the Dynamic Library Install Name target setting, but it resolves to @rpath/libCLI_library.dylib. If I click on it once, I can see the value I click on it again to see how this value is generated The expression it is generated from is $(LD_DYLIB_INSTALL_NAME_$(LLVM_TARGET_TRIPLE_VENDOR):default=$(EXECUTABLE_PATH)) Using a Run Script phase I can see the environment variables, which include LLVM_TARGET_TRIPLE_VENDOR = “apple”, and LD_DYLIB_INSTALL_NAME_apple = “@rpath/libCLI_.dylib” If I look at the environment variables in my other dylib project, which started life as a static library, although LLVM_TARGET_TRIPLE_VENDOR is set to "apple", there is no LD_DYLIB_INSTALL_NAME_apple variable at all, so even if I paste the expression above into the LD_DYLIB_INSTALL_NAME setting, it does me no good, because it evaluates to EXECUTABLE_PATH, which is libXXX.dylib, but I'd like @rpath/libXXX.dylib. So my question are, where does LD_DYLIB_INSTALL_NAME_apple come from? where does the magic invisible expression for Dynamic Library Install Name come from? the quick help for Dynamic Library Install Name mentions "if this option is not specified, the -o path will be used" - what build setting is that?
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594
Jun ’24
run command line tool with associated dylib
I've been given an Xcode project which produces a command line tool which links to a dylib. I have the dylib, but not its source code. I change the signing option for the command line tool target so it is signed automatically by my personal team. On an attempt to run the tool, it fails to load the dylib, because the dylib is signed with a different certificate. I manually codesign the dylib with the same certificate I am using for the command line app. Now, I can build the app, but not run it. If I try to do so, I see four dialogs telling me “libXXX.dylib” can’t be opened because Apple cannot check it for malicious software, then the console tells me "'/path/to/libXXX.dylib' not valid for use in process: library load disallowed by system policy)" I found an old document about Gatekeeper (https://developer.apple.com/library/archive/documentation/Security/Conceptual/CodeSigningGuide/Procedures/Procedures.html) which suggests that Gatekeeper just won't let me do this - I can't just put the dylib next to the executable, although the dynamic linker finds the dylib, Gatekeeper doesn't like it because the dylib isn't inside the app bundle (there is none), and isn't in one of the well-known places. I dealt with this by making a do-nothing app which I can sign with my personal certificate. Then I replace the signature on the dylib (and its dependent dylibs) with my own. I add the command line tool and all its dylib dependencies to the do-nothing app, then add those files into the Copy Bundle Resources phase of the do-nothing app. Now, the command line tool and its dylibs all live in do-nothing.app/Contents/Resources, and I can run the tool from there without Gatekeeper complaining. Is there an easier way (aside from asking my supplier for static libraries)? And if this is the only way, is Contents/Resources the right place to put command line tools and the dylibs they link to?
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1.1k
May ’24
AppleEvents entitlement - apparently not required?
We have a legacy app written in a mix of C, ObjC, C++ and ObjC++ with .xib files. It is not sandboxed. It sends an Apple Event to TV (the app of that name from Apple, not a physical TV) using /usr/bin/osascript, calling a compiled Apple Script which is in our app bundle's Resources directory with parameters which we generate in our app at runtime. The first time it does this on a fresh system, the OS puts up a dialog asking for permission to control TV, and after the user clicks Allow, our app appears under Security and Privacy in the Automation section. That's all fine, but what is unexpected is that the app has no Apple Events entitlement (com.apple.security.automation.apple-events), and it doesn't have a NSAppleEventsUsageDescription string either. The documentation at https://developer.apple.com/documentation/bundleresources/entitlements/com_apple_security_automation_apple-events says Your app doesn’t need the Apple Events Entitlement if it only sends Apple events to itself or to other processes signed with the same team ID. but we're not on the Apple team. When I filter the log for messages from tccd pertaining to our app, it does indeed complain : Prompting policy for hardened runtime; service: kTCCServiceAppleEvents requires entitlement com.apple.security.automation.apple-events but it is missing for accessing={TCCDProcess: identifier=<our bundle id>” But despite those complaints, everything works - I can send the event, and TV acts upon it. Is this working only by accident, and might fail in some minor future OS update? tccd also complains about the microphone Prompting policy for hardened runtime; service: kTCCServiceMicrophone requires entitlement com.apple.security.device.audio-input but it is missing for requesting={TCCDProcess: identifier=<our bundle ID> but we don't use the microphone tccd complains about this too <path-to-our-app> attempted to call TCCAccessRequest for kTCCServiceAccessibility without the recommended com.apple.private.tcc.manager.check-by-audit-token entitlement What does that mean, and should we be concerned?
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846
Apr ’24
Ambiguous "Apple Developer" certificate for macOS
I have an Xcode project (generated from Qt) which is signed by a post-processing script. It uses the invocation: codesign -o runtime --sign "$(CODE_SIGN_IDENTITY)" CODE_SIGN_IDENTITY is set to "Apple Development" in the Build Settings for the target. The signing step fails with this complaint Apple Development: ambiguous (matches "Apple Development: <my name> (an ID)" and "Apple Development: <my company email> (another ID)" in login.keychain-db) It is true, I do have two Apple Development certificates. I thought one is for personal development (when you pick the personal team) and the other for company development (when I pick the company team). I have other Xcode projects (built "by hand") which have CODE_SIGN_IDENTITY set to "Apple Development" and with Automatic signing turned on, and they build just fine, even though I have two certificates with common names beginning "Apple Development". However, when I look at the build log of those regular Xcode projects, which are signed by Xcode rather than in a post-processing script, the Signing step logs this: Signing Identity: Apple Development: (an ID) not simply "Apple Development". Xcode seems to have resolved the ambiguity all on its own before calling codesign. It then calls codesign using the hash of the certificate as its identifier. How can I emulate Xcode's behavior here? The postprocessing script runs on different developer's machines - they all have multiple "Apple Development" certificates, and they are all different from one another.
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1k
Apr ’24
App Sandbox entitlement stripped from dext by Xcode?
I have a macOS app which contains a dext. I'd like to distribute it to external testers using TestFlight, so it has to pass Mac App Store review. It failed, because the App Sandbox entitlement was missing. I checked the app, it has the entitlement, but the dext does not. However, the .entitlements file used by the dext does contain App Sandbox set to true. I tried adding a "fake-entitlement" value to the .entitlements file, and that made it into the dext's code signature, but the App Sandbox entitlement appears to be stripped out by the build process? For a dext target, it isn't possible to add the App Sandbox capability in Xcode's Signing and Capability section. I have to add the entitlement manually in the .entitlement file (or it was put there by the Xcode driver template, I don't remember). I've tried clean building several times, I've tried Xcode 15.0.1, 15.2 and 15.3, but the result is always the same. I'm inspecting the entitlements using codesign -dvvv --entitlements - Does anyone know what I can do to put the App Sandbox entitlement into my dext's signature? Is this happening to anyone else?
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Mar ’24
unsatisfied entitlements macOS app
I recently built an update to one of our apps, which installs a driver extension. The new version won't launch on my Mac, Finder says it "can't be opened". I captured the logs, which say "no matching profile found": error 2024-01-10 14:36:03.306061 -0800 taskgated-helper <app-bundle-id>: Unsatisfied entitlements: com.apple.developer.system-extension.install, com.apple.developer.team-identifier info 2024-01-10 14:36:03.306279 -0800 amfid Requirements for restricted entitlements failed to validate, error -67671, requirements: '<private>' error 2024-01-10 14:36:03.306287 -0800 amfid Restricted entitlements not validated, bailing out. Error: Error Domain=AppleMobileFileIntegrityError Code=-413 "No matching profile found" UserInfo={NSURL=<private>, unsatisfiedEntitlements=<private>, NSLocalizedDescription=No matching profile found} default 2024-01-10 14:36:03.306432 -0800 amfid /Applications/<app-bundle-id>/Contents/MacOS/<app-name> not valid: Error Domain=AppleMobileFileIntegrityError Code=-413 "No matching profile found" UserInfo={NSURL=file:///Applications/C<escaped-app-name>/, unsatisfiedEntitlements=<CFArray 0x14f3041d0 [0x1dd7d39a0]>{type = immutable, count = 2, values = ( 0 : <CFString 0x14f3055a0 [0x1dd7d39a0]>{contents = "com.apple.developer.system-extension.install"} 1 : <CFString 0x14f304130 [0x1dd7d39a0]>{contents = "com.apple.developer.team-identifier"} )}, NSLocalizedDescription=No matching profile found} default 2024-01-10 14:36:03.306514 -0800 kernel AMFI: bailing out because of restricted entitlements. default 2024-01-10 14:36:03.306523 -0800 kernel mac_vnode_check_signature: /Applications/<app-bundle-id>/Contents/MacOS/<app-name>: code signature validation failed fatally: When validating /Applications/<app-bundle-id>/Contents/MacOS/<app-name>: Code has restricted entitlements, but the validation of its code signature failed. Unsatisfied Entitlements: com.apple.developer.system-extension.installcom.apple.developer.team-identifier The thing is, when I run this command codesign -v -vvv <path-to-app> the app is valid on disk and satisfies its Designated Requirement and these two commands: codesign --display --entitlements - security cms -D -i <path-to-app>/Contents/embedded.provisionprofile when run against the old app (which works) and the new app (which doesn't) have absolutely identical outputs. The certificates haven't expired yet. Where else should we be looking to figure out where we've messed up? We know we changed the signing and notarization flow; the working build was made by a person using Xcode, the new app was built, signed and notarized using the command line tools (xcodebuild and notarytool).
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1k
Jan ’24
USB DriverKit returning large asynchronous data
this is a repost with more appropriate tags. The original is here: https://developer.apple.com/forums/thread/744268 Can anyone advise, or give example of, communicating large (>128 byte) incoming buffers from a dext to a user-space app? My specific situation is interrupt reads from a USB device. These return reports which are too large to fit into the asyncData field of an AsyncCompletion call. Apple's CommunicatingBetweenADriverKitExtensionAndAClientApp sample shows examples of returning a "large" struct, but the example is synchronous. The asynchronous example returns data by copying into a IOUserClientAsyncArgumentsArray, which isn't very big. I can allocate a single buffer larger than 4K in user space, and communicate that buffer to my driver as an IOMemoryDescriptor when I set up my async callback. The driver retains the descriptor, maps it into its memory space and can thus write into it when the hardware returns interrupt data. The driver then calls AsyncCompletion, which will cause my user-side callback to be called, so the user side software knows that there's new data available in the previously allocated buffer. That's fine, it works, but there are data race problems - since USB interrupt reads complete whenever the hardware has provided data, incoming completions happen at unpredictable times, so the shared buffer contents could change while the user side code is examining them. Is there an example somewhere of how to deal with this? Can I allocate memory on the driver side on demand, create an IOMemoryDescriptor for it and return that descriptor packed inside the asyncData? If so, how does the driver know when it can relinquish that memory? I have a feeling there's something here I just don't understand...
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677
Jan ’24
USB DriverKit returning large asynchronous data
Can anyone advise, or give example of, communicating large (>128 byte) incoming buffers from a dext to a user-space app? My specific situation is interrupt reads from a USB device. These return reports which are too large to fit into the asyncData field of an AsyncCompletion call. Apple's CommunicatingBetweenADriverKitExtensionAndAClientApp sample shows examples of returning a "large" struct, but the example is synchronous. The asynchronous example returns data by copying into a IOUserClientAsyncArgumentsArray, which isn't very big. I can allocate a single buffer larger than 4K in user space, and communicate that buffer to my driver as an IOMemoryDescriptor when I set up my async callback. The driver retains the descriptor, maps it into its memory space and can thus write into it when the hardware returns interrupt data. The driver then calls AsyncCompletion, which will cause my user-side callback to be called, so the user side software knows that there's new data available in the previously allocated buffer. That's fine, it works, but there are data race problems - since USB interrupt reads complete whenever the hardware has provided data, incoming completions happen at unpredictable times, so the shared buffer contents could change while the user side code is examining them. Is there an example somewhere of how to deal with this? Can I allocate memory on the driver side on demand, create an IOMemoryDescriptor for it and return that descriptor packed inside the asyncData? If so, how does the driver know when it can relinquish that memory? I have a feeling there's something here I just don't understand...
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660
Jan ’24
dext - The code signature version is no longer supported.
I have a dext target in a project which fails to install on my iPad because "the code signature version is no longer supported". Indeed, when I look at the built dext (before or after is has been copied into the hosting app's System Extensions folder), codesign -dv tells me that it has CodeDirectory = 20200. The hosting app has CodeDirectory = 20400. Curiously, in the same workspace, I have another iOS app which hosts another version of the driver (using the same source code files). The other app is a minimal test app. It is signed with CodeDirectory = 20500 and the driver has CodeDirectory = 20400 inside this minimal app. In both the more complex target and the simple target, the codesign invocation has the same options. Only the provisioning profile and the name of the dext differs between the working and non-working version. Here are the options, on multiple lines to make them easier to read /usr/bin/codesign --force --sign D0...A0F (same for both) -o runtime --entitlements <path to driver>.dext.xcent --timestamp\=none --generate-entitlement-der <path to driver.dext> I've searched high and low for a solution to this problem, but found none. It has come up before, in particular here https://developer.apple.com/forums/thread/683214?answerId=679712022#679712022 I'm using Xcode 15 on macOS Sonoma 14.0. I've thrown away the Derived Data for the project, I've thrown away the ModuleCache.index and the SymbolCache.index I've restarted my Mac. I've restarted the iPad. There's no legacy code here. This is all new, newly built and signed by a new version of Xcode. But I don't seem to have any control over what version of signature Xcode chooses to use - what influences that? Obviously there's some difference, perhaps in the hosting app or target, between the environment where everything works and where nothing works. If it helps, the more complex app was already built, signed and deployed to the App Store without a driver. The driver is under development, and it is a new addition to the target, so the existing Identifier, Certificate and Profile for the app pre-date the addition of the embedded driver target. Any ideas. Anyone?
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1.1k
Oct ’23
how to inhibit -fprofile-instr-generate passed to linker
I'm struggling to build a driver for iPadOS in a particular project configuration. If I put the driver code and dext target into the same Xcode project which contains the iPad app, all is well. This is the way the Xcode driver template does it. However, I'd like to build and debug the dext on macOS, while eventually deploying on iPadOS. So I put the dext into a different project, which has a macOS target, a minimal iPadOS target and a DriverKit target. I made a workspace which contains both projects. I dragged the macOS project into the iPadOS project so that I can refer to the products of the macOS project (specifically, its driver target) as a dependency of the iPadOS target. Note that the main iPad app target depends on the driver target. So the workspace organization looks like this: Workspace iPad project main iPad app target (depends on driver) test project reference test project test macOS/iPad app target DriverKit dext target When I build the iPadOS target, it builds the dependent driver target in the macOS project, but it fails to link because Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Toolchains/XcodeDefault.xctoolchain/usr/lib/clang/15.0.0/lib/darwin/libclang_rt.profile_driverkit.a is not found. If I just build the driver target directly in Xcode, there is no such complaint. I looked closely at the build logs, and I see for the failed link, there are these two linker flags set which are not set in the successful case -debug_variant -fprofile-instr-generate I can't seem to control the generation of this flag. I tried turning off the Profile switch in the Scheme editor for the driver, but is makes no difference. When I directly build the driver target, no -fprofile-instr-generate is set and it compiles and links. When i build the driver as a dependency of another target, -fprofile-instr-generate is passed to the linker, which fails. The obvious workaround is to put the driver source code into a separate driver target in the iPadOS project, but I'd rather have just one DriverKit driver for both platforms, with a few settings (such as bundle ID) controlled by a configuration file. Has anyone else encountered this problem, and know of a workaround?
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806
Oct ’23
NSView blurry in Sonoma, in app and Xcode 15
I have a non-shipping internal test app which is macOS only. It uses AppKit and .xib files to describe the UI. On Sonoma, the app renders with most of its UI quite blurry, as if a 10 pixel Gaussian blur were applied to it. The blur is applied to entire views, not just the text. It doesn't vary with screen resolution. I observed this behavior with one of the Sonoma betas but I think it went away when I re-launched the app - at any rate, I forgot about it. I've updated my dev machine to the shipping Sonoma and the problem is extant. I opened up the .xib file in Xcode and the blurriness is visible there too. I haven't applied any effect layers to my UI. Not all of the views in my UI are blurry. Has anyone else seen this?
3
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1.2k
Oct ’23
DriverKit target in iPad app, missing libclang_rt.profile_driverkit.a
I'm trying to build the DriverKit template driver target in an Xcode project which contains an app targeting iPadOS 17. I've made no modifications to the DriverKit template. When building, I get this link error ld: file cannot be open()ed, errno=2 path=/Applications/Xcode 15.app/Contents/Developer/Toolchains/XcodeDefault.xctoolchain/usr/lib/clang/15.0.0/lib/darwin/libclang_rt.profile_driverkit.a in '/Applications/Xcode 15.app/Contents/Developer/Toolchains/XcodeDefault.xctoolchain/usr/lib/clang/15.0.0/lib/darwin/libclang_rt.profile_driverkit.a' anyone know how to fix this? My search turned up something about building llvm from sources, which seems like overkill to put a DriverKit driver into an iPad app.
3
1
1.3k
Sep ’23