Environment: Xcode 7 GM
I uploaded iOS app successfully using Xcode without error. This app is written in Objective-C and Swift.
However, immediately after successful upload, I got this email from Apple stating this error:
Invalid Swift Support - We have discovered one or more issues with your recent delivery for XXXXX(my app name). To process your delivery, the following issues must be corrected:
Invalid Swift Support - The SwiftSupport folder is empty. Rebuild your app using the current public (GM) version of Xcode and resubmit it.
Once these issues have been corrected, you can then redeliver the corrected binary.
Anybody has a solution against this issue?
I have already confirmed below issues.
"SwiftSupport/iphoneos/" libraries in archives(.xcarchive file) is equaly to "Products/Applications/myApp.ipa/Frameworks/"
My "Valid Architectures" setting is "$(ARCHS_STANDARD)" displaying "armv7k".
Provisioning profile is set to Dev and Release which has been created in iTunes connect, respectively.
And, in my "Edit scheme", Test target is unchecked at Archive.
important note: this only works for projects that do not use swift, see comment below
I just met the same issue and resolved it by making the following change -
If you used to have Swift files in your project but then removed them, you only need to set "Embedded Content Contains Swift Code" to NO in Build Options.
when try to export after "Xcode->Product->Archive"
you should choose "save for ios app store deployment" option
The same problem confused me a couple of days,
the above setting can solve this problem.
no matter "embedded content contains swift code" is yes or no.
There are many conflicting answers on this page.. what worked for me was the one mentioned here, which is simply select a save for iOS app store deployment option (I'm actually not interested in an app store release.. I want to simply push a release for testflight internal testing)..
that being said, I have a way to verify that your ipa will be approved or not before submitting it:
drag the .ipa file into a new folder (call it analysis)
right click the ipa file and rename it to .zip (confirm the dialog to use .zip)
double click the zip file
here if you get a folder (with the same name as the .ipa file) that has the following subfolders in it:
payload
swiftSupport
Symbols
then you are good to go, however if you only see the Payload folder within.. then you gotta try again
also a couple of pointers
I've tried setting "Embedded Content Contains Swift Code" to NO, it worked just once then stopped working after that
I've ensured that I had no cocoapod errors.. that didn't help either
I've tried manually adding the SwiftSupport folder inside the archive as suggested here.. but then i got all sorts of side effects.. didn't work
conclusion
I think this is due to some bug with xcode (writing this with Xcode 8.0 build (8A218a).. so keep on trying your luck until it works.. just don't expect some solid explanation for it
Five Step Solution:
Go to build settings and make flag Embedded Content Contains Swift Code -> YES, if your code contains partial swift code or entirely made in Swift
Archive your build using Xcode->Product->Archive
Export the Archive Build you will suddenly see the difference build size will be 40+ MBs this is because XCode has added SwiftSupport folder which was missing
Now upload this build using Application loader
If this does not work check that if you have multiple XCode on your system goto
Xcode->Preferences->Location->Command Lines Tools has the same latest or the same Xcode from drop down selected on which you have done the coding & vola it's done.
This is slightly a drawback as swift carries the baggage and has to be compatible with earlier version and Objective C code.
My many hours were wasted hope you will find this helpful ;)
This error can happen if you use xcodebuild to export the IPA without specifying the -exportOptionsPlist option
See xcodebuild -help for the available keys, but you probably want a plist with at least the method key set to "app-store", like this:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE plist PUBLIC "-//Apple//DTD PLIST 1.0//EN" "http://www.apple.com/DTDs/PropertyList-1.0.dtd">
<plist version="1.0">
<dict>
<key>method</key>
<string>app-store</string>
</dict>
</plist>
I spent almost an entire day on this issue, none of the above solutions worked. I got rid of this error by lowering my target tvOS back to 11 from 13; where it was originally. That restored the SwiftSupport folder. The question that remains to be answered is whether this is due to our Provision not allowing us to target tvOS 13 - or somehow the Apple Store folks not being aligned with the xCode folks because the app created by targeting tvOS 13 is 14mb and tvOS 11 is 44mb and different app folder structure.
I received this same email after uploading an .ipa file to App Store Connect through the Transporter app. The following is where I went wrong: I distributed the app using ad hoc.
The following steps are the solution for my error:
Archive app
Distribute on TestFlight and the App Store
Export
Open ExportOptions.plist in the newly created folder from the export.
Make sure the method property has the value app-store if you are uploading to App Store Connect/TestFlight like me.
Drag and drop the exported .ipa file to Transporter.
Deliver your app to upload it.
And that's it!
I grappled with this for several hours and here is what worked for me.
In the Archive, Xcode did not copy swift libs into SwiftSupport/iphoneos even though my project had "Embedded Content Contains Swift Code" set to yes for all targets. Nor did it copy swift libs into "AppName.app/Frameworks". So I had to do that manually in the Archive before submitting:
copy "/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Toolchains/XcodeDefault.xctoolchain/usr/lib/swift/iphoneos/lib*" to "Archive_folder/Products/Applications/AppName.app/Frameworks" and "SwiftSupport/iphoneos"
If your app also has a watch app
copy
"/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Toolchains/XcodeDefault.xctoolchain/usr/lib/swift/watchos" into "Archive_folder/SwiftSupport/watchos" and "Archive_folder/Products/Applications/AppName.app/Watch/AppName WatchKit App.app/Frameworks"
Then submit the app.
App Store build submission Issue:
Invalid Swift Support - The SwiftSupport folder is missing. Rebuild your app using the current public (GM) version of Xcode and resubmit it.
Solution:
In most cases we found this issue due to submitting application via App Loader and our usual practice to make ipa as Organizer > App Archive > Show In Finder > Show Package Content > Products > Applications> OurProjectName.app in copying this app to Payload folder and zip it and making ipa file to submit on App Store using App Loader. That is work fine for submitting only objective c files contained projects.
But there is some changes if your project contains any swift classes and usage of it. If your project contains swift classes with Objective C project, IPA content structure changed slightly different as attached screenshot.
To fix this issue, submit app directly from Xcode [ OR ] if you want to submit application via App Loader than first Export ipa using Export option from Xcode organizer and submit those ipa file to app store via App Loader.
See the reference screenshot as below:
Hurrey!!! Your issue will be fixed :) :) :)
My problem was that I was using an adhoc profile to submit to TestFlight (has to be a distribution provisioning profile). Great error messages Apple!
This happened to me after I changed project settings.
Go to "File" > "Project Settings..." (or in some cases "Workspace Settings...") and then select "Use Shared Setting" from the "Build System" dropdown.
Tried this solution with Xcode 11.6, in Aug 2020, and it works.
Select the archive > Show in Finder
Show Package Contents
Delete the folder SwiftSupport
Go back to the archive > Distribute App
Setting "Embedded Content Contains Swift Code" to $(inherited) worked for me.
The warning after executing the CocoaPods command pod install helped me to find this out.
[!] The `applewatch Extension [Debug]` target overrides the `EMBEDDED_CONTENT_CONTAINS_SWIFT` build setting defined in `Pods/Target Support Files/Pods-applewatch Extension/Pods-applewatch Extension.debug.xcconfig'. This can lead to problems with the CocoaPods installation
- Use the `$(inherited)` flag, or <--------------
- Remove the build settings from the target.
Using Save for iOS App Store Deployment instead of Save for Ad Hoc Deployment Xcode export option solved this issue for me. Counterintuitively, you should use the first option even for TestFlight builds.
You also get this error when you upload an ipa that has a plist with export_method set to ad-hoc instead of app-store to itunes ...
Here's what I am doing now to solve this issue since my method above stopped working. Keep in mind that my code's main app is Obj-C and my watch app is Swift.
Make sure the "embedded Content Contains Swift Code" is set to:
YES for app target
NO for WatchKit Extension
YES for Watchkit App
After Archiving my XCode will not create the "[archive folder]/SwiftSupport/iphoneos", but will create and fill the "[archive folder]/Products/Applications/[app name].app/Watch/\ WatchKit\ App.app/Frameworks" with the Swift dylibs. So I created the following soft link:
ln -s "[archive folder]/Products/Applications/.app/Watch/\ WatchKit\ App.app/Frameworks" "[archive folder]/SwiftSupport/iphoneos"
Then when I submit via XCode Organize it is accepted without error.
If you simply copy the files rather than linking them then you risk the watch app exceeding the 50MB limit.
Setting Always Embed Swift Standard Libraries to Yes is only necessary for Objective-C targets which link against your own frameworks which depend upon Swift. In cases where you are not linking against (i.e., using) an internal framework which depends upon Swift, Xcode will embed the Swift standard libraries in your archive as long as there is at least one occurrence of importing a Swift standard library in a Swift file which is part of the build target.
In other words, if your target has a Swift file which doesn't import any Swift standard libraries––via "import Foundation", for example––then Xcode will not copy the Swift Standard libraries into the archive.
The fix for this issue is to ensure that at least one of the Swift files in your target is importing a swift standard library (e.g., "import Foundation").
Daniel Jalkut has a very informative post about Swift dependencies which sheds light into this issue.
I grappled with this issue for a while and nothing above worked. In a last desperate attempt I just deleted the SwiftSupport folder from my archive.
To my surprise it uploaded and completed processing successfully. Hope this help someone.
I managed to fix this error by unchecking the option "Strip Swift symbols".
App Store Connect distribution options
To delete the SwiftSupport folder from the .ipa I used the following script
ipa_path="${DIR_ON_CI}/ipa_name.ipa"
zip -d "${ipa_path}" "SwiftSupport*"
You'll need to set proper ipa_path. Nothing else seems to work in my case and the app was built on a CI where I have access to the .ipa after the archive is exported.
I have an app which I want to distribute to the app store.
When I do >Product > Archive does the app automatically build in Release or Debug config? Do I have to set this manually or is it always Release?
You can define Release or Debug in the scheme by tapping on Edit Scheme and selecting the Build Configuration. Take a look at below screenshot:
EDIT: To get Production APNS token
Archive the build in release mode.
Ensure to sign it with an Ad Hoc Distribution Provisioning profile.
Ensure profile is correct by following below:
Verify that the entitlements in the provisioning-profile file are
correct. To do this, open the .mobileprovision file in a text editor.
The contents of the file are structured in XML. In the Entitlements
dictionary locate the aps-environment key. For a development
provisioning profile, the string value of this key should be
development; for a distribution provisioning profile, the string value
should be production.
You can define Release or Debug in the scheme by tapping on Edit Scheme and selecting the Build Configuration
Its better to cross check when you are uploading build to store.
When I create a new project in XCode 6.0.1, I got this error message: The file "exclude" doesn't exist
It seems to only impact the versioning of the files i.e. the generated stub files are not committed into github after the project is created.
What can cause this problem?
For me the issue was caused because I had previously created a project with the same name, and Xcode still had record of that.
To clear it out,
go to Window -> Organizer in the menu bar
Remove all of the repositories highlighted in red
To add your repository (if it's not being tracked for some reason),
Click the + (still in Window -> Organizer from the steps above)
Enter the path of your file
Make sure to change to Git from Subversion (if Xcode has Subversion set as default - it did for me.
I usually get this error if I initialize an Xcode project with a git repository, delete it and try to recreate it with the same name (casing doens't appear to make it sufficiently 'different'). Turns out, "Well I'll just start over" can leave some issues as well.
Hope this helps.
I had this issue as well, and I tracked it down to the .git-template folder included with Thoughtbot's dotfiles. Basically, Xcode expects its template folder to have info/exclude, and Thoughtbot's dotfiles don't. Creating that directory and file fixed the problem, as so (in the Terminal):
cd ~/.git_template
mkdir info
cd info
touch exclude
If you're getting this issue without Thoughtbot's dotfiles, you could probably look at ~/.gitconfig and use whatever templatedir is getting set as instead of ~/.git_template in the first command.
I did a
git clone https://github.com/MailCore/mailcore2.git
I open the
iOS UI Test.xcodeproj
I run the Build
I get the error
'MailCore/MailCore.h' file not found
I cannot understand why that is happening.
What should I do to get this to build?
Some other sources I have found and followed their instructions are below. None of which fixed this problem.
https://github.com/MailCore/mailcore2/issues/316
https://github.com/MailCore/MailCore/issues/19
https://github.com/MailCore/mailcore2/issues/276
I also was able to open the
mailcore2.xcodeproj
and successfully build each of the targets. Which is interesting that I can do that but cannot build the test project independently.
I also followed the video and read me instructions to add to an existing project and was able to build until I added the
#import <MailCore/MailCore.h>
to one of my files.
UPDATE:
The above process I initiated on my iMac.
On my MacBook Pro after I cloned mailcore2 I opened
mailcore2.xcodeproj
first then did the build on each of the targets.
Then I closed that project.
Opened the iOS UI Test.xcodeproj and did a build on that.
This was successful.
However, I still want to know what would cause the problem with the "file not found"
UPDATE 2:
I removed to trash all mailcore2 code from my iMac.
I created different locations in Finder for doing another clone of mailcore2.
I did the git clone.
I opened mailcore2.xcodeproj
I followed the exact same process of building each target like I did on my MacBook
I then opened the iOS UI Test.xcodeproj and did a build.
I get the same problem of
'MailCore/MailCore.h' file not found
Makes no sense to me how it works on macbook but not on iMac.
You can add in target dependency static mailcore ios(mailcore2).
and add the framework libmailcore-ios.a
Its working.
What I finally did was drop mailcore2 into an existing app I already had started.
To do this I did the following:
I removed all traces of mailcore2
I again followed the instructions in the README and the video help.
This time I followed some instructions from
https://github.com/MailCore/mailcore2/issues/276
The instructions in that link says to add the following to Library Search Path:
$(PROJECT_DIR)/mailcore2/Externals/ctemplate-ios/lib
$(PROJECT_DIR)/mailcore2/build-mac/build/Debug-iphonesimulator
And the Header Search Path to
$(PROJECT_DIR)/mailcore2/build-mac/build/Debug-iphonesimulator/include - recursively
But, that did not work for me. I had to add the HARD CODED PATH to each of those 3 folders.
After doing a clean and build I was then able to add the
#import <MailCore/MailCore.h>
Now it BUILDs completely without error for me.
I will go back and try to add proper relative paths to each of those Search Paths.
Hopefully this helps somebody else with same issue.
FWIW
Had same problem, spend hours trying - nothing worked, not ever hardcoding paths.
Then I stumbled on one issue:
if in XCode\Preferences\Locations I go to Derived Data - Advanced and set it to different locations it always reverts it to Unique, when I go back and check it.
Then I went in File\Project Setting to Derived Data - Advanced and there it was set to Unique. I changed it there to Default and now it does not have that issue anymore!
I delete Derived data, clean project and Start build (Ctrl+B) and I can see now how Build is being created in derived data w/o problems. And that what mailcore needs to function.
And, I checked - no need for hardcoded paths either!
Hope it helps somebody.
PS Another feature maybe useful too - XCode\Preferences\Continue building after error though it did not matter in my case
My friend send me Build & provision profile ok, 1st I install provision profile than I upload Build on my i pod device , I face this error. Entitlement are not valid?? could you please tell me how can i solve this problem
The standard Project template does not include the entitlements file. On your project, add a new file (File, New). Select Code Signing as the category under iOS, and pick "Entitlements" template. You can name the file Entitlements.plist.
Then, on your Target, go to Build Settings, and set your Code Signing Entitlements setting to the name of this new file.
You should be able to build and distribute it just fine now.