I installed ADALiOS using pods, and I changed the library search path as per the documentation but I still get file not found when I try the following include
#import <ADALiOS/ADAuthenticationSettings.h>
my search path are as follows
$(SRCROOT)/Pods/ADALiOS/**
I can see the file under the Pods folder/ADALiOS as well but I just cannot link it for some reason
Why is not being picked up?
EDIT --
if I drag and drop the header onto the file it gives me this include path and that works?
#import </Users/mdouhan/Documents/dev/NWMobileTill/Pods/ADALiOS/ADALiOS/ADALiOS/ADAL.h>
I don't understand why its repeated so many times?
My Swift / iOS9 framework 'viewer_protocol' uses another and external Objective-C framework (CocoaAsyncSocket). I'm using Carthage to build CocoaAsyncSocket. So far everything works fine: In have an example App inside my framework Xcode Project using my framework without any problems.
Now I want to use my Framework in a different Xcode Project - although using Carthage. I include only my Framework as a dependency and Carthage automatically resolves the dependencies to CocoaAsyncSocket. I embedded both frameworks into this new Xcode Project and build my App: Everything works fine here - except one warning I can't rid off:
/Users/John/Repositories/my_project/<module-includes>:1:1:
Umbrella header for module 'my_project' does not include header 'GCDAsyncSocket.h'
This is my framework header:
#import <UIKit/UIKit.h>
//! Project version number for my_project.
FOUNDATION_EXPORT double my_projectVersionNumber;
//! Project version string for my_project.
FOUNDATION_EXPORT const unsigned char my_projectVersionString[];
// In this header, you should import all the public headers of your framework
using statements like #import <my_project/PublicHeader.h>
#import <CocoaAsyncSocket/CocoaAsyncSocket.h>
As you can see CocoaAsyncSocket.h is imported. Furthermore inside my framework the CocoaAsyncSocket.h file is included:
What I am missing here? I'm using several others external frameworks inside my framework, there're no warnings for them - all of these external frameworks are written in Swift - CocoaAsyncSocket is pure Objective-C.
This is my frameworks module.modulemap:
framework module my_project {
umbrella header "my_project.h"
export *
module * { export * }
}
module viewer_protocol.Swift {
header "my_project-Swift.h"
}
Update
I found a solution: Changing the import statement in my framework header from
#import <CocoaAsyncSocket/CocoaAsyncSocket.h>
to
#import "CocoaAsyncSocket/CocoaAsyncSocket.h"
Now Xcode finds the header file and the warning disappears.
I recently ran into same issue. Apparently I had header file set as public in target membership, but it was not exposed in umbrella header. Fixed issue by making header file with project access instead of public.
I had the same issue. Seemed to be related to old build files.
The standard Xcode problem fixer worked for me:
Clean project (Product > Clean Build Folder)
Deleted derived data
Restart Xcode
I had the same issue today
Umbrella header for module 'HockeySDK' does not include header 'BITHockeyBaseViewController.h'
and the solution was
1.build and run project and go-to Report Navigator
2.look at the warning, click to expand details
it will so you the file name where you need to make change
as you can seen in below screen shot
So i just updated my import statement in AppDelegate.m file
New
#import "HockeySDK/HockeySDK.h"
Old
#import <HockeySDK/HockeySDK.h>
and issue gone..
hope this will help someone. who are coming here for solution.
For me the solution was as follows:
1) Each Objective C framework has 1 header file that contains all the:
#import ...
#import ...
#import ...
2) Make sure that this file imports the missing header.
3) Build the project again, it should remove the warning.
Alternatively, you may have exposed files within the Public area of your framework's build phases that should actually be moved back to the Project area.
If you don't want those files to be within your framework's umbrella header so they're publicly accessible, you can revert this.
Goto Framework -> Target -> Build Phases and drag to move the unnecessary header files from Public to Project.
Just for completeness if your header is set to public in :
Build Phases > Headers
You should either
Include the import in your main header as others have mentioned
OR
Move that header to "private" if it doesn't need to be exposed
We got this recently and it was due to corruption in DerivedData. Deleting that folder fixed the problem.
For others :
In my case I already move the headers I want to expose from my framework, from "project" to "public" (Build phases of the framework target)
Then Xcode gave my this warning.
Xcode is telling us that we also need to add #import "name of header in the warning> in the public header file that was created with framework, so the clients (of the framework) will know this header.
So The Fix:
1.go to the framework public header file.(the one what created by xcode when you created the framework) .
2. add #import "the-name-of-the-header-in-the-warning.h"
In my case (Obj-c framework):
Umbrella header for module 'opus' does not include header 'opus_multistream.h'
I needed to change:
#import opus.opus_defines;
into
#import opus;
(I don't have in #import "....h" or #import <....h> for frameworks)
Take a look at this post:
#import vs #import - iOS 7
It goes over the concepts of the new module importing.
I had my own custom framework and after adopting the new method to import objective-c framework
old:
#import <MyFramework/MyFramework.h>
new:
#import MyFramework;
it took care of the warning/
Deleting DerivedData did the trick for me. Try running the below command and see if it works.
rm -rf ~/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData
trying to fix a archive build error led me to this error and post
my solution was real simple but took forever for me to figure out.
when i ran $ pod install it generated a workspace for me in the same dir as my .xcodeproj file.
however i had already created a workspace to use as its parent directory.
so then i simply deleted my old workspace and went with the one that pods created
hope this helps someone!
glhf!
For me the fix was rather simple, commit all your changes and build again. The warning disappeared.
I want to use InAppSettings in my iOS project. So I copied the InAppSettings folder into my project folder.
When I type
#import "InAppSettings.h"
xcode auto completes the import correctly. But after that it shows me that the file was not found. I copied the InAppSettings folder into the root folder of my project.
The file structure:
I want to import it in FirstViewController.m
Any idea how to fix this?
Last time the problem was that i imported the classes into eachother which makes XCode give that error. Could that be it?
I'm attempting to use XML (Chapter 10 in Professional iPhone and iPad Database Application Programming), and I've run into a bit of trouble.
Under Header Search Paths in Build Settings I have this path:
/Developer/Platforms/iPhoneOS.platform/Developer/SDKs/iPhoneOS4.3.sdk/usr/include/libxml2/
That's all fine and well, but then:
#import <libxml/parser.h>
#import <libxml/tree.h>
error: libxml/parser.h: No such file or directory
If I flip the imports:
#import <libxml/tree.h>
#import <libxml/parser.h>
error: libxml/tree.h: No such file or directory
Weird.
For now I have this:
#import <libxml/catalog.h> // Dirty hack
#import <libxml/parser.h>
#import <libxml/tree.h>
error: libxml/catalog.h: No such file or directory
But that's no good for a production app.
Try changing your header search path to ${SDK_DIR}/usr/include/libxml2.
As it turns out, it was a trivial fix. I closed the project to work on another, and when I reopened it, the error was gone. Not exactly what I would have expected, but hey, it works now.
"When in doubt, reboot."
I have downloaded the Dropbox API for Objective-C/iOS devices, and I am able to successfully build and run the DBRoulette application.
When I follow the README directions for including the API in my project, I have an enormous number of build errors, all appearing to be related to missing the Foundation header. (Eg. Can't find the interface declaration for NSObject, NSString, etc.)
Many of their header files don't include any other headers at all. Don't all .h files need to import Foundation.h if they extend NSObject? This doesn't seem to be the case, as the example project (DBRoulette) builds and runs fine without the Foundation header declarations, but my own application fails miserably.
I must be missing some sort of project setting, but I can't determine what it is.
Screenshot of One Failing Class
In their example app, they have
#ifdef __OBJC__
#import <Foundation/Foundation.h>
#import <UIKit/UIKit.h>
#endif
in their prefix header file (DBRoulette_Prefix.pch). This file is automatically prefixed to all source files in the project, so the appropriate headers are found. You can either put the #import directives in the source files themselves, or do what they did and edit the .pch file for your project.