I have searched a lot about this. But all the answers suggest that, it is possible to add new files into unity(xcode) project but vice versa is not possible. Actually, my target is to create sdk which will be used in a cordova plugin. What should I do?
To create an iOS sdk for unity you can create a library project in xCode and import the build to unity's Assets/Plugins/iOS folder. everything in here will automatically get included in xCode project generated by Unity.
And yes, it's very hard to include unity build in your own xcode project. There have been people begging for enlightenment to integrate Unity in another app but every time the threads are stranded beyond hope. Gibberish-gibberish... It's not possible.
It's extremely frustrating but it is possible. It requires a lot of changes to the build settings and compiler settings as well as customizing the launch of Unity components.
Best place to start is to import the Classes, Libraries, and Data folders (if applicable). Data as a folder reference and not a group. I'm also assuming your Unity project output is similar to what I've been given. We've modified our main.m file to be a C++ file (main.mm) and added in the Unity initialization code. We also updated the UnityAppController.mm file to not run startUnity on launch.
If this is still something you're working on please feel free to contact me on Twitter (#Ruprect) and I can help troubleshoot.
In this repo: https://github.com/jiulongw/swift-unity you can find how to integrate Unity Project into Xcode Swift Project.
Related
For implementing our unity3d project into iOS, we need to manually select/tune a long list of tweaks in xcode build menu every time we build the project to test it (mainly to use appodeal framework).
Is there an easy way this task can be automated?
for example, in android builds, I reuse the same manifest file for the project and everything works just fine. Is there a similar way for xcode?
This is Andrew from Appodeal support. In the last release of Unity plugin (0.4.9) we have post build function which can help to resolve this issue.
You can download it here: Download_link
Is there any way to find which SDK used to create the xcode project. Actually I have source code for the project but not aware which SDK used to create that project. The problem right now I am facing is using the latest SDK the xcode shows some reference error with an external library which is linked by the project. And these libraries are compiled at the time of the project created.
And I am thinking like, if I use the same SDK which is used to create the project at first time, the linking problem will not happen, and I can start working with the project. Please correct me if I am wrong.
Thanks and regards,
Haris
I have developed Unity iOS project. I am using some 3ds max model files in it with some animation. When I create project through Unity, it does creating it automatically and installing it on the iPad. Now, I want to include this unity based functionality into my existing iOS project. How can i separate this unity project and integrate into my existing iOS Xcode project? I see lot of dependancies in Unity created project. I don't know the steps how can we separate this and integrate into any existing iOS Xcode project?
Please advise!
Here's how we did it using Unity 5.2.2f1, Xcode 7.1 and Swift 2.1.
The steps outlined in the link below seem like a lot, but honestly, aside from the Import/Cleanup of some of the unity files, it takes < 5 min once you know the steps.
https://github.com/blitzagency/ios-unity5
Actually thats not THAT hard to do. But honestly i would recommend not to try to integrate the generated project into your own, but start with the generated project and integrate yours. Since usually your part of the project will have a lot less changes in the build settings and dependencies.
Once you done the integration, you can update from a new export by simply copying the Classes and Libraries Folder from the generated project to the integrated one.
I explain how we integrated Unity into our iOS App in more detail here: http://www.markuszancolo.at/2014/05/integrating-unity-into-a-native-ios-app
regards
I need your help where I want to export my game that is exported from Unity 3d now after making some changes in the xcode project, I want to export it again as Unity package that can be opened in Unity SDK.
Help and suggestions would be highly appreciated.
If you added some files to Xcode project than the simplest way will be to use Post Process pipeline. You can modify Xcode project with help of mod-pbxproj script. It is written in Python (yep, one more language to learn :). But it is quite simple and straightforward.
If you modified some Unity-generated Objective-C files then you are in trouble because no one can guarantee that Unity guys will not make some changes that will ruin your code. So you should be very careful there. But you still can automate this exciting process by using Makefiles. The main thing Unity does is generates Data and Library folders for Xcode. So you can create Xcode project, store it somewhere near Unity files and then write Makefile or some script that will do the following:
Export Unity project to Xcode by using Unity batch mode (you'll need Pro license to do it)
Copy Data and Library folders from exported project to your target project
Delete exported project
This all is not fun at all but it can solve your problems.
I have a C library whose code resides in say /repos1/clib. I build that from the command line using the latest iOS sdk to create clib.a (including a debug build for the simulator) which I copy to an iOS project say in /repos2/proj.
I have been using this setup for several years. The old C library very occasionally might require some debugging and I was pleased by the fact that Xcode simply stepped into the library code that was outside the project (inside repos1) without having to do any setup - it just worked.
But this was up until a few Xcode versions ago. I am not sure exactly when it changed - perhaps when they moved from gcc to llvm? - since I very seldom needed to debug the C code, but for a while now I only get dissasembly when I try to debug the C library from the iOS project (including at least references to the C file name & line number). For the few times I need to debug it is very inconvenient (I create a temp project that includes the C code).
So, any idea why it worked before and doesn't now? Where should I look? Could it be the way I build the C library, maybe there was a flag in gcc I was using that does not have an equivalent in llvm (I can find and post the old build command I was using if it is relevant)? Is the issue in Xcode and there is a way to tell it where to look for the sources?
Thanks!
Edit: To make it clear, I can add the C library either as the source or as a subproject in Xcode, however for reasons that are out of scope this is not helpful for this specific project. So, can it work like it used to with older Xcode versions? If not, it would still be interesting to know why not.
The recommended approach is to create a library project in Xcode, one for iOS (there is a template for it), then when you get that to build add that project to your app, make sure the lib is a dependency and gets linked. There are many tutorials on the web how to do this.
Then as iOS evolves and new architectures (armv7s) arrive you simply update both projects.
I was struggling with the same issue.
I tried resetting in library/application project all options related to symbol stripping and copy application project to same truecrypt drive as library project but it didn't help.
In my case it appeared it was an app project issue. Same library could be debugged in another app project with source code so that was a clue.
I had more than one version of the same library in app project and set only target membership to choose which should be used. Not sure if that could affect my app project somehow.
Nevertheless after deleting all libraries and copying them to app project again I was able to debug libraries with access to source code.