I'm trying to install the DevMate framework. I've followed every step on DevMates website, and i cant compile my app. I've added it into the link binary with libraries tab, and the copy files build phase tab. Everything is where it should be but I'm still getting this error:
ld: warning: directory not found for option '-F/Users/Saturn/Documents/Floating Lunch Box/Xcode/StatScreen/Users/Saturn/Documents/Floating Lunch Box/Xcode/StatScreen/StatScreen/DevMateKit/DevMateKit.framework/Frameworks'
ld: file not found: #rpath/DevMateIssuesReporter.framework/Versions/A/DevMateIssuesReporter for architecture x86_64
clang: error: linker command failed with exit code 1 (use -v to see invocation) Linker command failed with exit code 1 (use iv to see invocation)`
I'm sorry if this is some stupid fix but I'm new to programming and I just want to implement this framework without having so much trouble. Thanks for any help!
Xcode 6.4
Cocoa Apphttp://docs.devmate.com/v1.0/docs/integrate-devmate-kit
This was bugging me a lot lately. DevMakeKit contains a nested DevMateIssuesReporter framework and Xcode cannot find it without its path specified in FRAMEWORK_SEARCH_PATHS, that's kind of what Dmytro says.
But you can also tell Xcode to perform recursive search inside the specified framework path, by selecting recursive option in the popover dialogue.
The gotcha is to ensure EXCLUDED_RECURSIVE_SEARCH_PATH_SUBDIRECTORIES doesn't contain *.framework entry, otherwise Xcode ignores DevMateKit.framework/Frameworks. It seems you can do the same using INCLUDED_RECURSIVE_SEARCH_PATH_SUBDIRECTORIES, but I didn't have much success with that.
The problem described here is that linker could not find directory /Users/Saturn/Documents/Floating Lunch Box/Xcode/StatScreen/Users/Saturn/Documents/Floating Lunch Box/Xcode/StatScreen/StatScreen/DevMateKit/DevMateKit.framework/Frameworks where DevMateIssuesReporter.frameworks should be.
Are you sure this is the correct path to DevMateKit.framework? I think it should be /Users/Saturn/Documents/Floating Lunch Box/Xcode/StatScreen/StatScreen/DevMateKit/DevMateKit.framework/Frameworks. Try to correct it. You can also use Examples project at GitHub.
An Xcode beginner's question:
It is my first experience with Xcode 4.6.3.
I am trying to write a very simple console program, that searches for paired BT devices and prints them to an NSLog.
It builds with the following error:
Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64:
"_OBJC_CLASS_$_IOBluetoothDevice", referenced from:
objc-class-ref in main.o
ld: symbol(s) not found for architecture x86_64
clang: error: linker command failed with exit code 1 (use -v to see invocation)
I searched like crazy. The common problem should be a reference to a file, of which only the header files are imported and no implementation (*.m-file) is found by the linker. The IOBluetooth library is however, a standard Framework like the Foundation Framework.
What am I missing in my above statement?
I also have tried building it for a 32-bit machine (build fails again). It is clearly a linker error, however I have no idea, to what it relates, except that there is an issue with finding the implementation for IOBluetoothDevice, on both x86 and x64 architecture, while the header files are from a standard included Framework, called IOBluetooth?
For your information my main code "main.m" being:
#import <Foundation/Foundation.h>
#import <IOBluetooth/objc/IOBluetoothDevice.h> // Note the import for bluetooth
#import <IOBluetooth/objc/IOBluetoothDeviceInquiry.h> // Note the import for bluetooth
int main(int argc, const char * argv[])
{
#autoreleasepool {
IOBluetoothDevice *currentDevice;
NSArray *devices = [ IOBluetoothDevice pairedDevices];
for (id currentDevice in devices){
NSLog(#"%i : %#",[ currentDevice classOfDevice ], [ currentDevice name ]);
}
}
return 0;
}
Thanks for any help or pointers to the right direction.
It looks like you are missing including the IOBluetooth.framework in your project. You can add it by:
Clicking on your project in the upper left of the left pane (the blue icon).
In the middle pane, click on the Build Phases tab.
Under "Link Binary With Libraries", click on the plus button.
Find the IOBluetooth.framework from the list and hit Add.
This will make sure that the IOBluetooth.framework definitions are found by the linker. You can see that the framework is a member of your target by clicking on the framework in the left pane and seeing the framework's target membership in the right pane (note I've moved the framework under the Frameworks group for organization purposes):
UPD
Apple requires to use arm64 architecture. Do not use x32 libraries in your project
So the answer below is not correct anymore!
Old answer
The new Xcode 5.1 sets the architecture armv7,armv7s,and arm64 as default.
And sometimes the error "build failure “Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64”" may be caused by this. Because, some libs (not Apple's) were compiled for x32 originally and doesn't support x64.
So what you need, is to change the "Architectures" for your project target like this
NB. If you're using Cocoapods - you should do the same for "Pods" target.
Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64: "_OBJC_CLASS_$_xxx",
referenced from:
objc-class-ref in yyy.o
This generally means, you are calling "xxx" (it may be a framework or class) from the class "yyy". The compiler can not locate the "xxx" so this error occurs.
You need to add the missing files(in this case "xxx") by right click on your project folder in navigator window and tap on "Add files to "YourProjectName"" option.
A popup window will open your project files in Finder. There, you can see the missing files and just add them to your project. Don't forget to check the "Copy items if needed" box. Good luck!!
I have also seen this error on Xcode 7.2 when the derived data becomes corrupted (in my case I interrupted a build and suspect that was the root cause).
So if the other solutions (notably Chris's and BraveS's which I suspect are more likely) do not fit your problem try deleting derived data (Select: Window / Projects / Derived Data -> Delete) and re-building.
(Added for reference by others - I know the original question has been answered correctly).
Under Xcode 9.0b5 you may encounter this because Xcode 9.0b5 has a bug in it where when you add source code, it does not honor the target settings. You must go in and set each file's target manually afterwords:
In my Case , it was not a library, it was some classes ..
Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64:
"_OBJC_CLASS_$_ClassNmae", referenced from: objc-class-ref in
SomeClassName" . . .
d: symbol(s) not found for architecture x86_64
clang: error: linker command failed with exit code 1 (use -v to see
invocation)
Solution
I had several targets in Xcode with several schemas ( Production , Dev etc ) .. some of my newly added implementation ( Class.m ) were missing in
Xcode->Targets->Build Phases->Compile Sources
So I had to add them manually.
then I could compile & build successfully.
I also encountered the same problem , the above methods will not work . I accidentally deleted the files in the following directory on it .
Or
~/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData/
I tried just about everything here but my problem turned out to be the remnants of a previous cocoapods build. What worked for me was:
rm -Rf Pods; pod install
Delete Derived Data (Window/Projects... select your target. click Delete Button)
Rebuild
I have faced this issue many times. This usually comes when you delete your build folder.
The easy solution is to de-integrate and install the pod files again.
pod deintegrate
pod install
When updating to Xcode 7.1, you might see this type of error, and it can't be resolved by any of the above answers. One of the symptoms in my case was that the app runs on the device not in the simulator. You'll probably see a huge number of errors related to pretty much all of the frameworks you're using.
The fix is actually quite simple. You just need to delete an entry from the "Framework Search Paths" setting, found in your TARGETS > Build Settings > Search Paths section (make sure the "All" tab is selected)
If you see another entry here (besides $(inherited)) for your main target(s) or your test target, just delete the faulty path from all targets and rebuild.
I have found this can also occur if you drag a folder with Objective-C files into your project. If that folder appears blue I think it indicates its not properly linked. You can verify this (if you use version control) because whenever you add new files the pbxproj file should update with links to those new files. However you may find that after you added a folder that the pbxproj file did not change (and hence there is a linking error). So you will get auto-complete working and it will find the classes you imported, but when it goes to actually build the image it fails with this error code.
The solution is to not add the folder but rather add the files. Do this and you should see the pbxproj file update and it should fix this error.
This also assumes you've done what was suggested above and have properly linked all the right frameworks.
I know it's an old question but today got the same error and non of the above solutions worked.
Have fixed it however by setting option:
Project -> Architecture -> Build Active Architecture Only
to Yes
and project compiles and builds properly
I had the same error, because instead of deleting a file I simply removed references to it. Locating the file in Finder and removing it helped.
In my case, I built a custom framework with Deployment target set to 9.1, but the Deployment target of my app was lower, which supports 8.1. Minimize the custom framework Deployment target solved my problem.
If you're getting this error when trying to link to a C file, first double check the function names for typos. Next double check that you are not trying to call a C function from a C++ / Objective-C++ environment without using the extern C {} construct. I was tearing my hair out because I had a class that was in a .mm file which was trying to call C functions. It doesn't work because in C++, the symbols are mangled. You can actually see the concrete symbols generated using the nm tool. Terminal to the path of the .o files, and run nm -g on the file that is calling the symbol and the one that should have the symbol, and you should see if they match up or not, which can provide clues for the error.
nm -g file.o
You can inspect the C++ symbols demangled with this:
nm -gC file.o
I got it solved by adding "-lc++" in Other Linker Flags in Build Settings.
In my case problem was compiled framework architecture.
I'm running Xcode 11 and using Swift 5.1
I had 3 target like:
MyApp
MyAppTests
MyAppFrameWork
I was tried to run tests but MyAppFrameWork product was compiled for Generic iOS Devices and the Test target needed an arm x86-64, So I rebuilt Framework for iOS Simulators and test cases successfuly start running.
This is also happend with apple M1 chip.
Here is my solution just check Open using Rosetta
Steps:
Go to application > right click xcode > get info > check Open using Rosetta
Restart the system.
I am late to the party but thought of sharing one more scenario where this could happen.
I was working on a framework and was distributing it over cocoapods.
The framework had both objective c and swift classes and protocols and it was building successfully.
While using pod in another framework or project it was giving this error as I forgot to include .m files in podspec.
Please include .swtift,.h and .m files in your podspec sources as below:
s.source_files = "Projectname/Projectname/**/*.{swift,h,m}"
I hope it saves someone else's time.
in my case I had to add
target 'SomeTargetTests' do
inherit! :search_paths
end
to my podfile and then delete the /Pods directory and run `pod install`
(Xcode 10.1)
This might help somebody. It took me days to finally figure it out. I am working in OBJ-C and I went to:
Project -> Build Phases -> Compile sources and added the new VC.m file I had just added.
I am working with legacy code and I am usually a swifty, new to OBJ-C so I didn't even think to import my .m files into a sources library.
EDIT:
Ran into this problem a second time and it was something else. This answer saved me after 5 hours of debugging. Tried all of the options on this thread and more. https://stackoverflow.com/a/13625967/7842175 Please give him credit if this helps you, but basically you might need to set your file to its target in file inspector.
All in all, this is a very vague Error code that could be caused for a lot of reasons, so keep on trying different options.
What helped me was adding s.static_framework = true to my /podspec in the project that was throwing the error.
For me, this started to happen after merge conflict.
I tried to clean and remove build folder, but none of it helped. This issue kept happening regardless. Then I relinked the reference by deleting the groups that was problematic and re-added to the project and it worked.
Could also be an #include <windows.h> in the .c file that you're trying to compile.
Sometime, I forget to copy library from Release-universal and mistakenly copy from Release-iphoneos. Usually Release-iphoneos contains .a file which has been pruned for X86. and so it gives the error.
in my case, removing selection of target membership and then select again fix the issue.
Check William Cerniuk answer with the attachment photo.
Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64
I have run on this issue when used CocoaPods with some dependency which did not have specific version, that is why after pod update it downloaded the latest version which included some breaking changes
Upgrade dependencies and code for using them
Set specific version of pod
Remove Derived Data[About] folder
In my case I was getting this error: Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64: "_OBJC_CLASS _ $ _ RCTImageLoader"
And I was able to fix it by adding the following line in my Podfile file:
pod 'React-RCTImage', :path => '../node_modules/react-native/Libraries/Image'
Reference
It happens when you are using architecture arm6, arm7 in your current project but any 3rd party framework which you are trying to consume in your project is built over x86_64.
For e.g If you are using Cocoa Pods in your project, then you need to add following script to make sure all 3rd party frameworks ensure arm6, arm7. i.e
Sample podfile with script to be add at end
target 'XYZ_ProjectTarget' do
# Comment the next line if you don't want to use dynamic frameworks
use_frameworks!
# Pods for XYZ_ProjectTarget
pod 'pod_name'
target 'XYZ_TargetTests' do
inherit! :search_paths
# Pods for testing
end
target 'XYZ_TargetUITests' do
# Pods for testing
end
end
post_install do |installer_representation|
installer_representation.project.targets.each do |target|
target.build_configurations.each do |config|
config.build_settings['ARCHS'] = 'armv7 armv7s'
end
end
end
Below is my scenario,
In my Application i had to make use of libopus library , i downloaded and install, compile --> install procedure is normal as its for any other open source library,
I linked libopus.a with my application, the way i did is , by default it will get installed in /usr/local/lib, so i drag from there and add it to my application,
Worked fine and no error on my machine,
On Another machine, i was expecting it to be run smoothly as i included this library statically, but its throwing error as
dyld: Library not loaded: /usr/local/lib/libopus.0.dylib
so i concluded, libopus.a somehow including libopus.0.dylib also dynamically,
Now i am able ot add a copy phase in my build setting , so it will get copied in ../Framework folder
if i do otool -L libpus.a then it shows following result
otool -L /usr/local/lib/libopus.a
Archive : /usr/local/lib/libopus.a
/usr/local/lib/libopus.a(bands.o):
/usr/local/lib/libopus.a(celt.o):
/usr/local/lib/libopus.a(cwrs.o):
/usr/local/lib/libopus.a(entcode.o):
/usr/local/lib/libopus.a(entdec.o):
/usr/local/lib/libopus.a(entenc.o):
/usr/local/lib/libopus.a(repacketizer.o):
It doesn't show as its depend upon the dylib library
Now my Question is
How to tell Application to look into this path first
I tried following option,
install_name_tool but it seems it will work on other machine , so the user need to run this script NOT DEVELOPER,
trying to set the some option in the xcode to set the RUNTIME Search path to locate that particular dylib but not getting succeed so far
install_name_tool is run by the developer during the build process, not by the user.
If you're building the library, you should use libtool(1) with the option -install_name #rpath; otherwise, you can use install_name_tool(1) with -id #rpath to do the same thing on the dylib. Then, when you're building your application, set the "Runpath search paths" to the path where you will install the library.
Apple has some good documentation on this in their Mach-O Programming Topics and Dynamic Library Programming Topics.
I have created an iPhone project that uses uses the ZXing bar code scanning library. I added ZXing using CocoaPods and it works perfectly when I compile it on my system (Mountain Lion with Xcode 4.5 (4G182)). But when I passed it on to the person in charge of producing the signed ipa for enterprise distribution, who from what I understand is also using the same version of Xcode, he is seeing the following parse error when compiling:
Parse Issue
Expected unqualified-id in file included from /The/Absolute/Path/to/Pods/ZXing/objc/src/ZXing/ZXBinarizer.mm
The line that is highlighted is:
#import <ZXing/ZXBinarizer.h>
^
I was able to look at his system via WebEx and I checked the header search paths and the values that were apparently configured via CocoaPods do resolve to the actual location of the files.
When I clicked on the "Parse Issue" line in the issue navigator, it showed only:
../../ZXing/objc/src/ZXing/ZXBinarizer.h
^
I've searched the web quite a bit for a solution and I see plenty references to 'Expected unqualified-id', but most of them are due to malformed code.
There are still quite a few things about Xcode that I do not understand, so I'm hoping that someone will tell me that I've overlooked something simple here.
Posting links to the exact code being compiled would help.
You can use clang -E to see what the code looks like after preprocessing (with all the #imports expanded), and then diff the preprocessed output on your system against the output of the same command on your colleague's system.
I do see in
http://code.google.com/p/zxing/source/browse/trunk/objc/src/ZXing/ZXBinarizer.h
that they're referring to NSObject without #importing <Foundation/Foundation.h> first. This is a bad idea, but it's probably not your actual problem. (I would expect a different error message if it were the culprit.)
Are you 100% sure that your colleague is compiling ZXBinarizer.mm as Objective-C++, not as regular C++?
Are you 100% sure that Xcode doesn't give you any specific file and line information for the error? If Xcode really is just pointing to an #import line, then can you post the 10 lines before and after that line, and also the first 10 lines of the file being #imported?
I ended up having to revert out of using CocoaPods for dependency management and just include the project manually. Since the problem was on someone else's machine, but worked fine on my own, I was unable to determine the real cause. After I just included ZXing directly in my project, he was able to compile it.
smcmahon, I've had a very similar issue with building an iOS project with CocoaPods and seeing those weird errors, and was able to figure out the problem. Make sure that the symlinks that CocoaPods has created (like ZXing/ZXBinarizer.h) are indeed symlinks, and not just regular text files with a filepath in them.
A bit more detailed explanation is in my blog: http://www.egeek.me/2013/01/26/note-about-building-cocoapods-powered-ios-projects/
Hope this will help.