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nixpkgs/doc/languages-frameworks/ios.section.md
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iOS

This component is basically a wrapper/workaround that makes it possible to expose an Xcode installation as a Nix package by means of symlinking to the relevant executables on the host system.

Since Xcode can't be packaged with Nix, nor we can publish it as a Nix package (because of its license) this is basically the only integration strategy making it possible to do iOS application builds that integrate with other components of the Nix ecosystem

The primary objective of this project is to use the Nix expression language to specify how iOS apps can be built from source code, and to automatically spawn iOS simulator instances for testing.

This component also makes it possible to use Hydra, the Nix-based continuous integration server to regularly build iOS apps and to do wireless ad-hoc installations of enterprise IPAs on iOS devices through Hydra.

The Xcode build environment implements a number of features.

Deploying a proxy component wrapper exposing Xcode

The first use case is deploying a Nix package that provides symlinks to the Xcode installation on the host system. This package can be used as a build input to any build function implemented in the Nix expression language that requires Xcode.

let
  pkgs = import <nixpkgs> {};

  xcodeenv = import ./xcodeenv {
    inherit (pkgs) stdenv;
  };
in
xcodeenv.composeXcodeWrapper {
  version = "9.2";
  xcodeBaseDir = "/Applications/Xcode.app";
}

By deploying the above expression with nix-build and inspecting its content you will notice that several Xcode-related executables are exposed as a Nix package:

$ ls result/bin
lrwxr-xr-x  1 sander  staff  94  1 jan  1970 Simulator -> /Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Applications/Simulator.app/Contents/MacOS/Simulator
lrwxr-xr-x  1 sander  staff  17  1 jan  1970 codesign -> /usr/bin/codesign
lrwxr-xr-x  1 sander  staff  17  1 jan  1970 security -> /usr/bin/security
lrwxr-xr-x  1 sander  staff  21  1 jan  1970 xcode-select -> /usr/bin/xcode-select
lrwxr-xr-x  1 sander  staff  61  1 jan  1970 xcodebuild -> /Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/usr/bin/xcodebuild
lrwxr-xr-x  1 sander  staff  14  1 jan  1970 xcrun -> /usr/bin/xcrun

Building an iOS application

We can build an iOS app executable for the simulator, or an IPA/xcarchive file for release purposes, e.g. ad-hoc, enterprise or store installations, by executing the xcodeenv.buildApp {} function:

let
  pkgs = import <nixpkgs> {};

  xcodeenv = import ./xcodeenv {
    inherit (pkgs) stdenv;
  };
in
xcodeenv.buildApp {
  name = "MyApp";
  src = ./myappsources;
  sdkVersion = "11.2";

  target = null; # Corresponds to the name of the app by default
  configuration = null; # Release for release builds, Debug for debug builds
  scheme = null; # -scheme will correspond to the app name by default
  sdk = null; # null will set it to 'iphonesimulator` for simulator builds or `iphoneos` to real builds
  xcodeFlags = "";

  release = true;
  certificateFile = ./mycertificate.p12;
  certificatePassword = "secret";
  provisioningProfile = ./myprovisioning.profile;
  signMethod = "ad-hoc"; # 'enterprise' or 'store'
  generateIPA = true;
  generateXCArchive = false;

  enableWirelessDistribution = true;
  installURL = "/installipa.php";
  bundleId = "mycompany.myapp";
  appVersion = "1.0";

  # Supports all xcodewrapper parameters as well
  xcodeBaseDir = "/Applications/Xcode.app";
}

The above function takes a variety of parameters:

  • The name and src parameters are mandatory and specify the name of the app and the location where the source code resides
  • sdkVersion specifies which version of the iOS SDK to use.

It also possile to adjust the xcodebuild parameters. This is only needed in rare circumstances. In most cases the default values should suffice:

  • Specifies which xcodebuild target to build. By default it takes the target that has the same name as the app.
  • The configuration parameter can be overridden if desired. By default, it will do a debug build for the simulator and a release build for real devices.
  • The scheme parameter specifies which -scheme parameter to propagate to xcodebuild. By default, it corresponds to the app name.
  • The sdk parameter specifies which SDK to use. By default, it picks iphonesimulator for simulator builds and iphoneos for release builds.
  • The xcodeFlags parameter specifies arbitrary command line parameters that should be propagated to xcodebuild.

By default, builds are carried out for the iOS simulator. To do release builds (builds for real iOS devices), you must set the release parameter to true. In addition, you need to set the following parameters:

  • certificateFile refers to a P12 certificate file.
  • certificatePassword specifies the password of the P12 certificate.
  • provisioningProfile refers to the provision profile needed to sign the app
  • signMethod should refer to ad-hoc for signing the app with an ad-hoc certificate, enterprise for enterprise certificates and app-store for App store certificates.
  • generateIPA specifies that we want to produce an IPA file (this is probably what you want)
  • generateXCArchive specifies thet we want to produce an xcarchive file.

When building IPA files on Hydra and when it is desired to allow iOS devices to install IPAs by browsing to the Hydra build products page, you can enable the enableWirelessDistribution parameter.

When enabled, you need to configure the following options:

  • The installURL parameter refers to the URL of a PHP script that composes the itms-services:// URL allowing iOS devices to install the IPA file.
  • bundleId refers to the bundle ID value of the app
  • appVersion refers to the app's version number

To use wireless adhoc distributions, you must also install the corresponding PHP script on a web server (see section: 'Installing the PHP script for wireless ad hoc installations from Hydra' for more information).

In addition to the build parameters, you can also specify any parameters that the xcodeenv.composeXcodeWrapper {} function takes. For example, the xcodeBaseDir parameter can be overridden to refer to a different Xcode version.

Spawning simulator instances

In addition to building iOS apps, we can also automatically spawn simulator instances:

let
  pkgs = import <nixpkgs> {};

  xcodeenv = import ./xcodeenv {
    inherit (pkgs) stdenv;
  };
in
xcode.simulateApp {
  name = "simulate";

  # Supports all xcodewrapper parameters as well
  xcodeBaseDir = "/Applications/Xcode.app";
}

The above expression produces a script that starts the simulator from the provided Xcode installation. The script can be started as follows:

./result/bin/run-test-simulator

By default, the script will show an overview of UDID for all available simulator instances and asks you to pick one. You can also provide a UDID as a command-line parameter to launch an instance automatically:

./result/bin/run-test-simulator 5C93129D-CF39-4B1A-955F-15180C3BD4B8

You can also extend the simulator script to automatically deploy and launch an app in the requested simulator instance:

let
  pkgs = import <nixpkgs> {};

  xcodeenv = import ./xcodeenv {
    inherit (pkgs) stdenv;
  };
in
xcode.simulateApp {
  name = "simulate";
  bundleId = "mycompany.myapp";
  app = xcode.buildApp {
    # ...
  };

  # Supports all xcodewrapper parameters as well
  xcodeBaseDir = "/Applications/Xcode.app";
}

By providing the result of an xcode.buildApp {} function and configuring the app bundle id, the app gets deployed automatically and started.

Troubleshooting

In some rare cases, it may happen that after a failure, changes are not picked up. Most likely, this is caused by a derived data cache that Xcode maintains. To wipe it you can run:

$ rm -rf ~/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData