There's a similar question that works on Objective-C, but I tried the same code in Swift and it never executes, neither in the main app, nor in the action extension.
My situation is similar to the one in the question above, that is, when running from the main app I want to use UIApplication.shared.open to open a link in Safari, but I want to ignore this part of the code on the App Extension.
The problem isn't finding out whether the app is running from an App Extension or not, but ignoring the code when building for the App Extension, so that the compiler does not give me the following error on build:
You could introduce a new Custom Flag (similar to the DEBUG flag) for the extension target. In your Build Settings look for the Custom Flags and add a new one (e.g. "EXTENSION"). Like here in the screenshot, but also do it for release.
In your Code you could then do something like
#if EXTENSION
// here goes code that is only compiled in the extension
#else
// here goes code that is only compiled outside the extension
#endif
Update: Please read the Apple provided documentation on App Extensions:
Some APIs Are Unavailable to App Extensions
Because of its focused role in the system, an app extension is ineligible to participate in certain activities. An app extension cannot:
Access a Application.shared object, and so cannot use any of the methods on that object
- Apple, App Extension Programming Guide
To programmatically find if the it the running extension via code it's really simple, just do this:
let bundleUrl: URL = Bundle.main.bundleURL
let bundlePathExtension: String = bundleUrl.pathExtension
let isAppex: Bool = bundlePathExtension == "appex"
// `true` when invoked inside the `Extension process`
// `false` when invoked inside the `Main process`
Im implementing new iOS10 extension to use rich notifications. Im trying to test it on push notifications but is not working, I just receive a simple notification and is not going through the extension.
I did all that it's specified in the official sites and some other places:
I have my app up and running with push notifications and the right provisioning profile
I added a new target to my app, a Notification Service Extension
Implemented my own code (it doesn't matter really because is not even entering to the new class)
Also I had to set a provisioning profile for this extension, I just use one with a wildcard, I don't see any documentation specifying if the extension target has to enable push notifications capability, in that case I would need a specific provisioning for this one, at the moment I just use a wildcard prov, anyway it matches (it must match) the profile I use in the app target, and push notifications capability is enabled for the app target only.
I added UNNotificationExtensionCategory and NSExtensionPointIdentifier. Also Im sending the category as part of the push payload from the server.
As I said, I get the notification but never goes through the extension. I see how the OS tries to load the extension but then throws an error with no relevant description to identify the problem:
Dec 31 21:00:00 iPhone SpringBoard(libextension.dylib)[51] <Notice>: calling plugIn beginUsing:
Dec 31 21:00:57 iPhone pkd[86] <Notice>: assigning plug-in com.test.app.NotificationWithAttachmentExtension(1.0) to plugin sandbox
Dec 31 21:03:57 iPhone pkd[86] <Notice>: enabling pid=51 for plug-in com.test.app.NotificationWithAttachmentExtension(1.0) 38BB5FF1-2597-42E0-B950-169DBFA80573 /private/var/containers/Bundle/Application/A8C47706-C0EC-4FB1-ABA7-0118372F6900/testapp.app/PlugIns/NotificationWithAttachmentExtension.appex
Dec 31 21:00:53 iPhone SpringBoard(PlugInKit)[51] <Notice>: plugin com.test.app.NotificationWithAttachmentExtension interrupted
Dec 31 21:03:56 iPhone SpringBoard(PlugInKit)[51] <Notice>: Hub connection error Error Domain=NSCocoaErrorDomain Code=4097 "connection to service named com.test.app.NotificationWithAttachmentExtension" UserInfo={NSDebugDescription=connection to service named com.test.app.NotificationWithAttachmentExtension}
Jun 29 13:33:36 iPhone SpringBoard(libextension.dylib)[51] <Notice>: PlugInKit error in beginUsing:
Jun 17 23:33:04 iPhone SpringBoard(libextension.dylib)[51] <Notice>: killing invalid plugIn
Dec 31 21:00:00 iPhone SpringBoard(UserNotificationsServer)[51] <Error>: Extension error whilst trying to modify push notification F502-9B36: Error Domain=NSCocoaErrorDomain Code=4097 "connection to service named com.test.app.NotificationWithAttachmentExtension" UserInfo={NSDebugDescription=connection to service named com.test.app.NotificationWithAttachmentExtension}
Dec 31 21:00:00 iPhone SpringBoard(UserNotificationsServer)[51] <Notice>: [com.test.app] Saving notification F502-9B36
Dec 31 21:00:00 iPhone SpringBoard(libextension.dylib)[51] <Notice>: completed calling plugIn beginUsing: for pid: 0
Relevant extension .plist:
<dict>
<key>NSExtensionAttributes</key>
<dict>
<key>UNNotificationExtensionCategory</key>
<string>attachmentCategory</string>
<key>UNNotificationExtensionInitialContentSizeRatio</key>
<real>1</real>
</dict>
<key>NSExtensionPointIdentifier</key>
<string>com.apple.usernotifications.service</string>
<key>NSExtensionPrincipalClass</key>
<string>$(PRODUCT_MODULE_NAME).NotificationService</string>
</dict>
What's wrong or missing?
What also might do the trick is check your deployment target for the extension. Mine was set at 10.2 while the device I was testing on was (still) using 10.1
After altering the deployment target to 10.0 the UNNotificationServiceExtension instance was called perfectly
And if you've done everything correctly, don't forget to attach it to the process.
After running the app that contains the extension:
Set your breakpoint in the extension
Select Debug / Attach to Process by PID or name
Enter the name of the extension target
Trigger the push notification
Finally I have this working correctly, and this is what I remember from this issue.
1) Do not use devices with iOS10 beta version, because one of the problems I had was because I was using a beta version.
2) only the app requres APNS entitlements, this is not required for the privisoning used for the extension.
3) I was using a provisioning profile matching the id of the extension (not wildcard), anyway I cannot confirm if it works fine or not with wildcard.
4) NSExtensionAttributes are not required, just use NSExtensionPointIdentifier and NSExtensionPrincipalClass for the extension .plist. Unless you are using your own layout
5) This is working even using iOS 9 token registration methods.
6) don't forget mutable-content value in the payload coming in the push notification, this is the only mandatory value you need from the server to go through the extension.
I think this covers all the problems I had
If you are using Firebase, then try changing the payload as:
{
“aps” : {
“category” : “SECRET”,
“mutable_content” : true,
“alert” : {
“title” : “Secret Message!”,
“body” : “(Encrypted)”
},
},
“ENCRYPTED_DATA” : “Salted__·öîQÊ$UDì_¶Ù∞è Ω^¬%gq∞NÿÒQùw”
}
The mutable_content field maps to the mutable-content field on APNs.
For more details, go through this link.
Swift 5 Easy way
this is very easy way just do it like this
You must set the deployment target to be the same on all your targets. I wonder why this is not done automatically by XCode :/ .. Apple loves to waste the developers' time smh...
Came here the second time. The first time, this answer helped me, the second time, it didn't. After a lot of (internal) swearing I found out that I had somehow accidentally removed the extension from Embedded Binaries in my main app target. When I added the extension back, my extension would be called again.
So check this:
Click on your app project to the left.
Click on your main app target.
Choose General.
Under Embedded Binaries, make sure your extension is listed, if not, add it.
Had the same problem, what solved it for me was removing the extension from Embedded Binaries and adding it again.
It seems like your plist is mixing 2 plists.
There are 2 extensions in play:
Notification Content Extension - responsible for displaying the content via a view controller
Notification Service Extension - responsible for fetching content in the background before notification is displayed
Here is the plist for Notification Content Extension target:
Here is the plist for Notification Service Extension target:
After trying many of the possible fixes already given without success, it dawned on me that a framework had been mistakenly added to our extension target rather than the unit test target.
Removing the framework and targeting 10.2 allowed my extension to be called once again.
If you are curious as to which framework for whatever reason you can find it here: https://github.com/plu/JPSimulatorHacks
For anyone looking to just trigger a breakpoint in your app’s notification extension, the process is pretty simple in Xcode 11.3:
Select the scheme of the extension (not the parent app scheme).
Select Edit Scheme.
Select the Executable to be your parent app.
Uncheck Debug executable. By unchecking this, you are informing Xcode to debug the extension instead of the parent app. This is key to getting Xcode to stop within the extension’s breakpoints.
Select Automatically under the Launch option.
Run the scheme of the extension (not the parent app).
Send your device a notification. Profit.
Unless some other stuff triggers Xcode’s moodiness, the above settings should ensure that whenever you select and run the extension scheme, the breakpoints within the extension will be hit. You can go back and check Debug executable in step 4 if you want Xcode to stop at breakpoints within the parent app.
Pro-tip: Don’t forget to add "mutable-content": 1 within the notification JSON payload, otherwise you will have a major sad (iOS won’t invoke the extension without that key).
Here’s a picture of my scheme editor dialog for the notification extension:
In my case it was what I forget to select NotificationServiceExtension in Scheme as particular app instead of "my application" where I try to use it. So I've been running "my app" and waited for breakpoints in code of another app (NotificationServiceExtension) and and that's why they never showed up. I tried every suggestions before that.
My issue was two fold. The first probably was that I had set the Info.plist property NSExtensionPrincipalClass to bundle.identifier.NotificationService instead of ProductModuleName.NotificationService. Module name is the default, but I had erroneously changed to the identifier when debugging some other things related to different schemes and different targets.
The second issue was that I tested by running the notification service target. For me it worked much better when running the app target. I saw some other people recommending to use the notification service target to enable debugging. But that works fine when running the app target as well. You'll have to attach the debugger to your notification service manually though.
The way I discovered the above was to create a new test project with minimal code. In hindsight I definitely recommend that approach instead of trying out all the different solutions found on stackoverflow etc
After struggling with this I finally made this work for me by just changing 2 things.
The bundleID of the NotificationServiceExtension target must be a different one. Preferred style com.companyname.appname.notificationservice(whatever). Setting the same bundleID of the app causes a failure in building to device.
The main thing is the deployment target. I was double checking this with app's target but we must also check the deployment target of the newly created NotificationServiceExtenion's target which is by default the latest version. Set that to the minimum iOS version you would like to support but greater than ios 10.
Note: Make sure you have "mutable-content" : 1 in remote payload.
Hope this helps someone.
The public func didReceiveNotificationRequest(request: UNNotificationRequest, withContentHandler contentHandler: (UNNotificationContent) -> Void) method in UNNotificationServiceExtension has changed between swift versions.
Some of the online examples are not up to date.
Make sure the method you're overriding in your custom subclass of UNNotificationServiceExtension
I had:
func didReceive(request: UNNotificationRequest, withContentHandler contentHandler:(UNNotificationContent) -> Void)
which didn't work until i changed to:
func didReceiveNotificationRequest(request: UNNotificationRequest, withContentHandler contentHandler: (UNNotificationContent) -> Void)
Be sure that you have 'None' configuration set. Look at the screenshot. With other parameters didReceive doesn't work.
Configuration
Other possibility is to check category name in plist file of UNNotificationContentExtension.
String value of "UNNotificationExtensionCategory" in plist and "category/click_action" of payload should be same.
I'm currently working on Xcode 12.3 and Swift 5.2, and when I backed off the Main Project Target and Notification Service Extension Target from iOS 14.2 to iOS 13.2, it worked!
The system executes your notification content app extension only when a remote notification’s payload contains the following information:
The payload must include the mutable-content key with a value of 1.
The payload must include an alert dictionary with title, subtitle, or
body information.
Specifying the remote notification payload:
{
“aps” : {
“category” : “SECRET”,
“mutable-content” : 1,
“alert” : {
“title” : “Secret Message!”,
“body” : “(Encrypted)”
},
},
“ENCRYPTED_DATA” : “Salted__·öîQÊ$UDì_¶Ù∞è Ω^¬%gq∞NÿÒQùw”
}
Thanks for all good suggestions, which helped me fixed my mismatch with deployment target and missing mutable-content. But for me I still had issues getting the NSE to be called. I found the solution in the source code from this blog, https://medium.com/gits-apps-insight/processing-notification-data-using-notification-service-extension-6a2b5ea2da17. I was missing Embed App Extensions that copied the extension to my app. Why this was missing, I'm not sure, I have not seen this as a required step in the different tutorials I have read.
The Embed App Extension is just a "Copy File Phase" that has been renamed, as explained here https://stackoverflow.com/a/71031519/3080858
This tutorial was also very helpful setting up the different App Ids, App Groups, Profiles etc:
https://blog.logrocket.com/implement-push-notifications-react-native-onesignal/
I want to use Crashlytics on my application. I followed every step but I'm stuck on "Verifying Installation..." step.
What is the problem ?
setDebugMode = YES
set below code before [Fabric with:#[ TwitterKit ]]; if applied for twitter kit. Or you can simply past below code in didFinishLaunchingWithOptions.
// Swift
Crashlytics().debugMode = true
Fabric.with([Crashlytics.self()])
// Objective-C
[[Crashlytics sharedInstance] setDebugMode:YES];
[Fabric with:#[[Crashlytics class]]];
Now build and run your app and check fabric UI window, it will move ahead to complete screen.
I resolved the problem.
I put my code in applicationDidFinishLaunching(application: UIApplication) instead of func application(application: UIApplication, didFinishLaunchingWithOptions launchOptions: [NSObject: AnyObject]?)
It seems silly but sometimes you need to make a code change (like a simple NSLog statement) to kick the verification.
If you're adding a new app you need to be an Admin of your organization but you may just be a User.
Just had the same issue on Mac.
In my case the guide shown in the Fabric application was completely missing a crucial step: there was nothing about adding the API key!
So make sure your API key is added to info.plist, otherwise the application gets stuck at verifying installation.
Simply login to Fabric and follow this manual installation guide to make sure everything gets done correctly. Once you complete the last step you can go straight to the dashboard.
I have occurred the same problem. I run the app on iPhone. After I deleted the app and pressed CMD + R on iPhone, the problem is solved.
If you have already installed twitter/Digits kit using fabric before, then you will find Fabric.with([Digits.self, Twitter.self]) in your "AppDelegate.swift" file . Replace it with the following code Fabric.with([Digits.self, Twitter.self, Crashlytics.self]) if you want to use all three. Now press Cmd + R to finish the installation.
Another possible solution is to run the app with connectivity on the device/simulator, as indicated in here.
It could be that the app was already added to your team's account and that all you needed was an access to it. Here's a thread about the same issue: https://twittercommunity.com/t/hmmm-seems-like-your-kit-isnt-activating/73601/9.
I am unable to use AFNetworking library in my app extension due to
that was trying to access the UIApplication class methods. Does any
one knows here any other better network library that does not access
UIApplication class?. Please suggest.
quote from Guard for unsupported features of iOS 8 extensions #2589
To fix this issue i had to put AF_APP_EXTENSIONS=1 as a preprocessor
macro for the Pods-hitta.se WatchKit Extension-AFNetworking target.
Adding #define AF_APP_EXTENSIONS to the prefix header didn't work,
neither did adding it as a preprocessor macro to the watch extension
target work.
So click on Pods project in Project Navigator, then select Pods-{your-app-name-extension}-AFNetworking. Next go to Build Settings and find Preproccessor Macros where you add new line with "AF_APP_EXTENSIONS=1"
Also wrap it with +#if !defined(AF_APP_EXTENSIONS) at beginning. And end it +#endif
full example of wrapping:
- (void)updateNetworkActivityIndicatorVisibility {
+#if !defined(AF_APP_EXTENSIONS)
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] setNetworkActivityIndicatorVisible:[self isNetworkActivityIndicatorVisible]];
+#endif
}
You can use AFNetworking with extension. You just need follow the instruction below.
When using AFNetworking in an App Extension, #define AF_APP_EXTENSIONS
to avoid using unavailable APIs.
https://github.com/AFNetworking/AFNetworking/issues/2119