I'm running an app in the emulator and am somehow getting the generic error message "Error - Try Again" shown below.
In order to debug this, I would like to locate the UIView corresponding to the "Error" button. Previously, I've worked on the backend for a React Native app and there was the Inspector (cf. https://facebook.github.io/react-native/docs/debugging) with which you could locate React elements in the code.
As far as I can tell from the Help -> Simulator Help menu (see below), there is no such functionality for iOS, or am I missing something?
The feature you're looking for is not officially supported by apple, but there's an awesome tool named Sherlock that enables such functionality on iOS simulator.
It injects itself into the iOS Simulator so that it can monitor views and adjust them in real time and lets you jump into the file related to the view you want to from the simulator.
You can inspect any app in the simulator, including system apps and dynamically change their UI elements!
Yesterday morning as I started working on a Xamarin iOS application when my debugger stopped working. I can place breakpoints but as soon as the application starts the breakpoints become hollow like a red donut. I've rebuilt/cleaned project multiple times, I've also wiped obj/bin folders and nothing seems to work. I can't hit breakpoints.
This doesn't happen to all my classes, it looks like it applies to classes where an async function is used however this isn't always the case.
I also get a message in my debugger window which may have only started showing since this bug.
Xamarin.iOS: Successfully received USB connection from the IDE on port 10000, fd: 7
Xamarin.iOS: Processing: 'start profiler: no'
Xamarin.iOS: Profiler not loaded (disabled)
I'm using Xamarin Studio 6.0.1 Build 9 Indie
I have found solution related to this issue: https://stackoverflow.com/a/34211506/4627978.
Also be sure, that you set Debug configuration in Xamarin Studio (not Release, AppStore, etc.) and enable debugging in Project Options > Build > iOS Debug > Enable debugging
After all this don't forget Clean/Rebuild.
I had this same problem and I got it working after changing the iOS project property Linker Behavior to Don't Link.
Make sure you have the iOS SDK updated to what you have in Xamarin.
Here you go with the solution for Visual Studio:
Right-click your project -> Properties
iOS Debug
Enable debugging (and perhaps also Debugging over WiFi)
I'm usually not a Mac/Xcode user, please forgive me for incorrect terms or understandings.
I have a 2D Unity game which I can successfully build and run on Android and Windows Phone devices/emulators. When building for iOS, I can successfully create the Xcode project, open it and build the app in there. The only change in the iOS-specific player settings I made was to set SDK Version to Simulator SDK.
However, when trying to run it inside the simulator, the splash screen appears, then Xcode pauses on something that looks like an assemby file with an error message: Thread 1: EXC_BAD_ACCESS (code=1, address=0x4).
As I had no idea on what to do, I started stripping down my project (in Unity) until I had no more gameObjects but the camera left on the start scene. Also, I removed all other scenes from the build. The only thing that changed was that above error message now seems to appear on another assembly file.
What could be the issue here? How should I investigate further?
Update
This is the stacktrace:
Update 2
I've created a new blank Unity project, and I get the exactly same error there. The problem seems to be related to Unity or my machine, not the app itself.
Workaround
After days of researching, I still couldn't resolve the issue and finally built for a real devices instead of the simulator. Since I don't own one, I "blindly" submitted the result to the app store, and it got accepted.
For me, that's the proof that the issue is solely related to the combination of Unity and the iOS simulator, i.e. that those two don't work together reliably.
On the other hand, it seems relatively safe to assume that an app will work on iOS if it's been successfully tested on Android, Windows Phone and the default player. Of course, unless iOS-specific features are implemented.
I only know one reason, that leads to this behaviour (device builds work, but simulator builds won't).
=> This could happen, when using native iOS code / plugins
To fix that, you'll have to modify the <path-to-xcode-project>/Libraries/RegisterMonoModules.cpp file, cause somehow Unity does not register those classes/methods for the simulator.
Just look for #if !(TARGET_IPHONE_SIMULATOR) defines and shift them to have all your plugins included, also in the simulator. There will be some move mono_dl_register_symbol() that you'll need.
- (void)viewDidLoad
{
NSLog(#"%s", __func__);
// ...
}
in viewDidLoad of an iOS 8 extension. the NSLog outputs nothing in Xcode. NSLog works as usual in the container app though.
How can I get output from debug messages from an extension?
Debugging works for app extensions.
It works on simulator too.
If your app ext crashes in the simulator, you may find it is not easy to restart your app ext. Restarting your simulator is a quick solution.
Steps to debug an app extension:
Run the container app. In this step, Xcode uploads the container app and app extension to the device or simulator.
Stop the container app. This step is important when you debug in simulator. If you don't do it, Xcode will tell you the simulator is in use.
In Xcode, press menu Debug -> Attach to Process -> By Process Identifer (PID) or Name..., input the app ext's identifier, e.g. com.abc.ContainerApp.MyExtension, to start debugging. Don't forget to set break points. (Update on Aug 25, 2014: you can input MyExtension(your extension's name) directly.)
In the device or simulator, open your app extension.
Updates on Aug 23, 2014:
I found the debugging steps above do not work well on Xcode 6 beta 6 with iOS 8 SDK beta 5 on the simulator.
Solution:
Run your extension in the simulator.
Xcode menu Debug -> Attach to Process -> Choose "MyExtension(your extension's name)" in System section in the menu.
The breakpoints work. But I don't know why logs do not show in the output window.
I'm having this problem too. It works for me if you go in your Simulator under the menu Debug -> Open System Log...
From here you can see all the logs of the iPhone Simulator (included your extension's logs).
NSLog is working perfectly.
You just don't see what is being logged in the debug area of Xcode because the Xcode debugger isn't attached to your extension. Extensions are nearly completely independent from their containing app. They have separate bundle identifiers, for example, and they also are separate processes on the OS.
I have had varied success in getting Xcode to attach to extensions. Supposedly it seems it would attach automatically, and it appears in the debug navigator as "Waiting to attach", but never attaches.
Sometimes, I am able to run my extension target in Xcode:
And then have the option to choose what application to run my extension in. In this case, I would choose its recommendation of "today", which is notification center.
And then it would sometimes attach the debugger to my extension. Note this method only works on physical devices, it seems.
If it doesn't attach you can use the manual attachment method in #VinceYaun's answer,
I have also had varied success using other methods of attachment. Most have been unsuccessful, and it seems they are just bugs that will be fixed at a later date.
To view your log messages you go to Window -> Devices in the top bar and select your device. You can bring up the device log from the bottom of that window. If you are testing on a simulator, you can use #BalestraPatrick's answer.
Some of the bugs have been fixed in Beta 2, and my guess is that eventually the debugger will attach automagically when launching the extension.
Update: In the iOS 8 Beta 4 release notes:
Extensions
Fixed in beta 4
Extensions sometimes fail to launch when debugging from Xcode.
When Extension with UI is killed, it relaunches and is not dismissed.
Sometimes your Sharing or Action extension can hang.
Redeploying an extension may disable it in Notification Center.
I'm having this problem too. Xcode never attaches my debugger to the extension or displays NSLog messages. If you attach your Xcode debugger manually to your extension process, at least breakpoints work like a charm:
Debug->Attach to process->Your extension name (mine was "com.example.MyExtensionApp.MyExtension")
Create scheme for your extension
Run scheme
In a dialog choose container app
Enjoy
It works for me :)
Xcode 8 is able to debug extensions:
Choose the extension scheme in the combo next to the stop button and run it.
Select the parent application in the dialog that appears.
Result: breakpoints and log work as usual.
What finally allowed me to see the log in the debugging area, based on Michael's suggestion and Apple's documentation, is:
Build & Run the app extension in the simulator and, when prompted for a host app, choose the specific app that you're going to call the extension from. In my case I was launching my Action extension from Safari by pulling up a share sheet on a PDF.
What wasn't working before was following other people's suggestions of using Today as the host but then leaving that app and going over to Safari to call my extension. I no longer even need to run my containing app first before running the extension.
From Apple's Documentation:
In your extension scheme’s Run phase, you specify a host app as the executable. Upon accessing the extension through that specified host’s UI, the Xcode debugger attaches to the extension.
I actually got the logs to run quite simply in Xcode 6.3. Firstly, build and run the containing app. Once the containing app is running on the device, build and run the app extension by changing the scheme to the app extension.
Apple has documentation directly related to debugging, profiling and testing your app extension.
A trick which works for me (although it is quite an ugly one) is to place a dummy UILabel somewhere in the bottom corner of my extension. I usually call it logLabel. It is then possible to update the text of this label with any log statement that you want to get logged. Such approach is not very good if you need to log statements from instances of different classes. And, obviously, it clutters your UI.
However, if you have a fairly simple widget and you don't mind about slight cluttering of the UI this does the trick. I have tried all other solutions outlined in this discussion and, sadly, none of them worked for me.
The only way debugging works for me is by selecting Debug->Attach To Process By PID or Name
Then enter the PID not the extension name.
You can find the PID by running the extension on a device, go to Window->Devices. Find your device and viewing the console. When you see the name of your extension, its followed by 5 digit number. That is the PID
I also put a bunch of NSLog's in the extension in order to find the PID as well.
This is on xCode 7
Encounter the same problem about extension for NSLog, and break points. I have fought it with many days.
Device log can be found as following image. It is at XCode -> Window -> Devices and Simulators.
After enter the Open Console, there is a search field at the top-right of dialog. I can apply filter rule in there. For example, a process name contains Notification key word, or process name must equal to the name of extension target, ex: equal to MyNotificationServiceExtension process name.
Clearly something is broken in Xcode6-B5.
If I try to run a Photo extension on the Simulator I cannot see any Photos.app as an option for the extension attaching process.
The same, running on a real device, give me the correct behaviour.
In the first case any breakpoint is not honorated. In the latter case, breakpoints work like a charm.
You should know that the container app and extension are totally two difference process in iOS while the LLVM debugs only a thread a time, so when you are debugging, the console never log the extension and never stop at breakpoint.
You can solve most of the problems by #Vince Yuan's method.
However, my problem is that Xcode debugger hardly hook on my keyboard extension on both iOS Simulator and devices, like 1 time in 7-8 runs, It's totally a matter of probability. #Vince Yuan's method also work for just sometimes.
My little experience is that when you run you debug scheme, if the debug Session in the left panel showing that 'No Debug Session', there is no need to open your extension and test it, the debugger didn't hook on, just run again for lucky.
but when you see com.xxx.xxx.xxx is waiting to Attach, the extension can definitely get debugged.
This is a little trick for whom cannot debug iOS extension, especially keyboard extension.
As of Xcode 6 Beta 5, I've been able to use an actual device running iOS8 to debug my extension. Try running it on a device and select Safari to launch into
To overcome all the states caused by ever changing IDE, I'm using iOS Console by lemonjar.com – it displays a console window for any connected iOS device rendering syslog messages regardless the process ID. You can see both app and extension debug log messages at once here.
I could debug my extension with the way I describe below:
Xcode : Debug -> Attach to process by PID or Name. Your extension scheme name.
Then select your main app target and run.
I hope it also works for you guys.
I am developing an app in Xamarin Studio 4.0.4 and Xamarin.iOS 6.2.4.2 (Enterprise Edition). Until yesterday, I was developing and debugging fine. Today I have weird issues when debugging. I get a break points in files that I am not loading. For instance I load a View that is Called SplashScreen, but the debugger hits a point in InformationScreen (which is not loaded). When looking at the CallStack, It says that this point is in the LoginScreen which is again different.
Also, I am listening to the GPS Events and although I can see that the GPS is on and I am changing the Location on the Simulator, the debugger does not hit any breakpoint in the LocationDelegate, is this related?
Any help would be highly appreciated. I am debugging on physical iOS device that is running iOS 6.0
Xamarin.iOS 6.2.4.2
This is getting old now, unless you have a specific requirement, I'd recommend you upgrade to the latest stable version.
Your issue sounds like the debug information files (.mdb) have turned stale somehow - in this case the fix is to Clean & Rebuild your solution.