Processes & Concurrency

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Discover how the operating system manages multiple applications and processes simultaneously, ensuring smooth multitasking performance.

Concurrency Documentation

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Return the results of a Spotlight query synchronously from a Swift function
How can I return the results of a Spotlight query synchronously from a Swift function? I want to return a [String] that contains the items that match the query, one item per array element. I specifically want to find all data for Spotlight items in the /Applications folder that have a kMDItemAppStoreAdamID (if there is a better predicate than kMDItemAppStoreAdamID > 0, please let me know). The following should be the correct query: let query = NSMetadataQuery() query.predicate = NSPredicate(format: "kMDItemAppStoreAdamID > 0") query.searchScopes = ["/Applications"] I would like to do this for code that can run on macOS 10.13+, which precludes using Swift Concurrency. My project already uses the latest PromiseKit, so I assume that the solution should use that. A bonus solution using Swift Concurrency wouldn't hurt as I will probably switch over sometime in the future, but won't be able to switch soon. I have written code that can retrieve the Spotlight data as the [String], but I don't know how to return it synchronously from a function; whatever I tried, the query hangs, presumably because I've called various run loop functions at the wrong places. In case it matters, the app is a macOS command-line app using Swift 5.7 & Swift Argument Parser 1.5.0. The Spotlight data will be output only as text to stdout & stderr, not to any Apple UI elements.
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105
Apr ’25
Did GCD change in macOS 26
Some users of my Mac app are complaining of redrawing delays. Based on what I see in logs, my GCD timer event handlers are not being run in a timely manner although the runloop is still pumping events: sometimes 500ms pass before a 15ms timer runs. During this time, many keypresses are routed through -[NSApplication sendEvent:], which is how I know it's not locked up in synchronous code. This issue has not been reported in older versions of macOS. I start the timer like this: _gcdUpdateTimer = dispatch_source_create(DISPATCH_SOURCE_TYPE_TIMER, 0, 0, dispatch_get_main_queue()); dispatch_source_set_timer(_gcdUpdateTimer, dispatch_time(DISPATCH_TIME_NOW, period * NSEC_PER_SEC), period * NSEC_PER_SEC, 0.0005 * NSEC_PER_SEC); dispatch_source_set_event_handler(_gcdUpdateTimer, ^{ …redraw… });
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104
Sep ’25
How to get the full process name like Activity Monitor
I'm try to monitor all processes by ES client. But I found the process name is different from the Activity Monitor displayed. As shown in the picture below, there are ShareSheetUI(Pages) and ShareSheetUI(Finder) processes in Activity Monitor, but I can only get the same name ShareSheetUI, I thought of many ways to display the name in parentheses, but nothing worked, so there is a way to display the process name like Activity Monitor?
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461
Jan ’25
Expected behavior from apps when MacOS goes to sleep
Every time macOS goes to sleep the processes get suspended which is expected. But during the sleep period, all processes keep coming back and they all get a small execution window where they make some n/w requests. Regardless of what power settings i have. It also does not matter whether my app is a daemon or not Is there any way that i can disable this so that when system is in sleep, it stays in suspended, no intermittent execution window? I have tried disabling Wake for network access setting but processes still keep getting intermittent execution window. Is there any way that i can prevent my app from coming back while in sleep. I don't want my app to get execution window, perform some executions and then get suspended not knowing when it will get execution window again?
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112
Aug ’25
Will an app that monitors system processes (using psutil) be approved for notarization?
Hi everyone, I’m Jaswanth. My friends and I are students working on a project where we’ve developed a website and a companion app. Here’s the key functionality: When two users enter a virtual room, one of them is prompted to download a desktop app. The app is built with Python and uses psutil to check for certain running processes. It does not send any data over the internet. It has a GUI that clearly shows the system is being monitored , it’s not hidden or running in the background silently. We want to sign and notarize the app to make sure it runs on macOS without warning users. However, we’re concerned that since the app accesses system process information, it might be flagged as malicious. Before we pay for the Apple Developer Program, we wanted to ask: Will an app like this (which only reads running processes and does not exfiltrate or hide activity) be eligible for notarization? Thanks in advance for any insights. We'd appreciate any clarity before moving forward. Best, Jaswanth
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72
Apr ’25
C program posix_spawn diskutil fails with error -69877
Hello, I am programming a CLI tool to partition USB disks. I am calling diskutil to do the work, but I am hitting issues with permissions, it seems. Here is a trial run of the same command running diskutil directly on the terminal vs running from my code: Calling diskutil directly (works as expected) % /usr/sbin/diskutil partitionDisk /dev/disk2 MBR Free\ Space gap 2048S fat32 f-fix 100353S Free\ Space tail 0 Started partitioning on disk2 Unmounting disk Creating the partition map Waiting for partitions to activate Formatting disk2s1 as MS-DOS (FAT32) with name f-fix 512 bytes per physical sector /dev/rdisk2s1: 98784 sectors in 98784 FAT32 clusters (512 bytes/cluster) bps=512 spc=1 res=32 nft=2 mid=0xf8 spt=32 hds=16 hid=2079 drv=0x80 bsec=100360 bspf=772 rdcl=2 infs=1 bkbs=6 Mounting disk Finished partitioning on disk2 /dev/disk2 (disk image): #: TYPE NAME SIZE IDENTIFIER 0: FDisk_partition_scheme +104.9 MB disk2 1: DOS_FAT_32 F-FIX 51.4 MB disk2s1 Calling diskutil programmatically (error -69877) % sudo ./f-fix DEBUG: /usr/sbin/diskutil partitionDisk /dev/disk2 MBR Free Space gap 2048S fat32 f-fix 100353S Free Space tail 0 Started partitioning on disk2 Unmounting disk Error: -69877: Couldn't open device (Is a disk in use by a storage system such as AppleRAID, CoreStorage, or APFS?) Failed to fix drive `/dev/disk2' Source Code The relevant code from my program is this: char *args[16]; int n = 0; args[n++] = "/usr/sbin/diskutil"; args[n++] = "partitionDisk"; args[n++] = (char *)disk; args[n++] = (char *)scheme; (...) args[n++] = NULL; char **parent_env = *_NSGetEnviron(); if (posix_spawnp(&pid, args[0], NULL, NULL, args, parent_env) != 0) return 1; if (waitpid(pid, &status, 0) < 0) return 1; return 0; Question Are there any system protections against running it like so? What could I be missing? Is this a Disk Arbitration issue?
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113
May ’25
dispatch_main and main thread local variables
Hello, We're seeing some strange crashes and noticed the following. It's unclear if related or not. The contract for xpc_main, which internally calls dispatch_main, is This function never returns. and they are appropriately peppered with __attribute__((__noreturn__)). Documentation states: This function “parks” the main thread and waits for blocks to be submitted to the main queue. However, internally, dispatch_main calls pthread_exit. pthread_exit's documentation states that: After a thread has terminated, the result of access to local (auto) variables of the thread is undefined. Thus, references to local variables of the exiting thread should not be used for the pthread_exit() value_ptr parameter value. I'd say the two contracts of This function never returns. and thread exiting with its storage released are diametrically opposed and can create nuanced issues. Consider the following code: struct asd { int a; }; struct asd* ptr; void fff(void* ctx) { while(true) { printf("%d\n", ptr->a); ptr->a = (ptr->a + 1); usleep(100000); } } int main(int argc, const char * argv[]) { struct asd zxc; zxc.a = 1; ptr = &zxc; dispatch_async_f(dispatch_get_global_queue(DISPATCH_QUEUE_PRIORITY_HIGH, 0), NULL, fff); dispatch_main(); return 0; } This is a gross over-simplification of the code we have, but in the same "spirit". We have a C++ object that is created on the stack and exposes one of its members as a global pointer, with the assumption that it would never release. What I understand from This function never returns is that the calling thread remains dormant and its stack remains alive. What I understand from pthread_exit is that the thread is killed (this is verified with a debugger attached) and its stack storage is released. Another thing that is throwing me off is that no sanitizer that is provided by clang/Xcode catches this issue. I don't see any special handling of the internal pthread_t in libdispatch to keep the stack storage alive. Our code is more complex, but can be solved by allocating the initial object on the heap, rather than on the stack. But still I would like to understand if this is the expected behavior. Perhaps my preconception of __attribute__((__noreturn__)) is wrong, and accessing stack variables post call to a __attribute__((__noreturn__)) function is UB? Thanks
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122
Jul ’25
Issue with Developer App Crashing on iPad Upon Launch
Recently, after updating the Developer app to the latest version, my iPad has been unable to open this app as it crashes immediately upon launch. Prior to the update, the app functioned normally. My device is an 11-inch iPad Pro from 2021, running iPadOS 17.3. I have tried troubleshooting steps such as reinstalling the app and restarting the device, but these actions have not resolved the issue. However, I need to use this specific version of the system, iPadOS 17.3, for software testing purposes and cannot upgrade the system. Other apps on my device work normally without any issues. Is there a solution to this problem? I have attempted to contact the developer support team in China, but they were also unable to provide a resolution. This issue is reproducible 100% of the time on my iPad.
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360
Jan ’25
BGTaskScheduler fails to match unique identifiers to a registered wildcard handler for BGContinuedProcessingTask
Testing Environment: iOS Version: 26.0 Beta 7 Xcode Version: 17.0 Beta 6 Device: iPhone 16 Pro Description: We are implementing the new BGContinuedProcessingTask API and are using the wildcard identifier notation as described in the official documentation. Our Info.plist is correctly configured with a permitted identifier pattern, such as com.our-bundle.export.*. We then register a single launch handler for this exact wildcard pattern. We are performing this registration within a UIViewController, which is a supported pattern as BGContinuedProcessingTask is explicitly exempt from the "register before applicationDidFinishLaunching" requirement, according to the BGTaskScheduler.h header file. The register method correctly returns true, indicating the registration was successful. However, when we then try to submit a task with a unique identifier that matches this pattern (e.g., com.our-bundle.export.UUID), the BGTaskScheduler.shared.submit() call throws an NSInternalInconsistencyException and terminates the app. The error reason is: 'No launch handler registered for task with identifier com.our-bundle.export.UUID'. This indicates that the system is not correctly matching the specific, unique identifier from the submit call to the registered wildcard pattern handler. This behavior contradicts the official documentation. Steps to Reproduce: Create a new Xcode project. In Signing & Capabilities, add "Background Modes" (with "Background processing" checked) and "Background GPU Access". Add a permitted identifier (e.g., "com.company.test.*") to BGTaskSchedulerPermittedIdentifiers in Info.plist. In a UIViewController's viewDidLoad, register a handler for the wildcard pattern. Check that the register method returns true. Immediately after, try to submit a BGContinuedProcessingTaskRequest with a unique identifier that matches the pattern. Expected Results: The submit call should succeed without crashing, and the task should be scheduled. Actual Results: The app crashes immediately upon calling submit(). The console shows an uncaught NSInternalInconsistencyException with the reason: 'No launch handler registered for task with identifier com.company.test.UUID'. Workaround: The issue can be bypassed if we register a new handler for each unique identifier immediately before submitting a request with that same unique identifier. This strongly suggests the bug is in the system's wildcard pattern-matching logic.
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128
Sep ’25
LLDB Cannot Load ODBC Driver Due to Sandbox Restrictions - How to Debug
I'm developing a macOS console application that uses ODBC to connect to PostgreSQL. The application works fine when run normally, but fails to load the ODBC driver when debugging with LLDB(under root works fine as well). Error Details When running the application through LLDB, I get this sandbox denial in the system log (via log stream): Error 0x0 0 0 kernel: (Sandbox) Sandbox: logd_helper(587) deny(1) file-read-data /opt/homebrew/lib/psqlodbcw.so The application cannot access the PostgreSQL ODBC driver located at /opt/homebrew/lib/psqlodbcw.so(also tried copy to /usr/local/lib/...). Environment macOS Version: Latest Sequoia LLDB: Using LLDB from Xcode 16.3 (/Applications/Xcode16.3.app/Contents/Developer/usr/bin/lldb) ODBC Driver: PostgreSQL ODBC driver installed via Homebrew Code Signing: Application is signed with Apple Development certificate What is the recommended approach for debugging applications that need to load dynamic libraries? Are there specific entitlements or configurations that would allow LLDB to access ODBC drivers during debugging sessions? Any guidance would be greatly appreciated. Thank you for any assistance!
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216
Sep ’25
iOS BGProcessingTask + Background Upload Not Executing Reliably on TestFlight (Works in Debug)
iOS BGProcessingTask + Background Upload Not Executing Reliably on TestFlight (Works in Debug) Description: We are facing an issue with BGTaskScheduler and BGProcessingTask when trying to perform a background audio-upload flow on iOS. The behavior is inconsistent between Debug builds and TestFlight (Release) builds. Summary of the Problem Our application records long audio files (up to 1 hour) and triggers a background upload using: BGTaskScheduler BGProcessingTaskRequest Background URLSession (background with identifier) URLSession background upload task + AppDelegate.handleEventsForBackgroundURLSession In Debug mode (Xcode → Run on device), everything works as expected: BGProcessingTask executes handleEventsForBackgroundURLSession fires Background URLSession continues uploads reliably Long audio files successfully upload even when the app is in background or terminated However, in TestFlight / Release mode, the system does not reliably launch the BGProcessingTask or Background URLSession events. Technical Details We explicitly register BGTaskScheduler: BGTaskScheduler.shared.register( forTaskWithIdentifier: "example.background.process", using: nil ) { task in self.handleBackgroundProcessing(task: task as! BGProcessingTask) } We schedule it using: let request = BGProcessingTaskRequest(identifier: "example.background.process") request.requiresNetworkConnectivity = true request.requiresExternalPower = false try BGTaskScheduler.shared.submit(request) We also use Background URLSession: let config = URLSessionConfiguration.background(withIdentifier: sessionId) config.sessionSendsLaunchEvents = true config.isDiscretionary = false AppDelegate.handleEventsForBackgroundURLSession is implemented correctly and works in Debug. Issue Observed (TestFlight Only) In TestFlight builds: BGProcessingTask rarely triggers, or the system marks it as NO LONGER RUNNING. Background upload tasks sometimes never start or complete. No logs appear from our BGProcessingTask handler. system logs show messages like: NO LONGER RUNNING bgProcessing-example.background.process Tasks running in group [com.apple.dasd.defaultNetwork] are 1! This occurs most frequently for large audio uploads (30–60 minutes), while small files behave normally. What We Have Verified Proper Info.plist values: Permitted background modes: processing, audio, fetch BGTaskSchedulerPermittedIdentifiers contains our identifier BGProcessingTask is being submitted successfully (no errors) App has microphone permission + background audio works Device plugged/unplugged doesn’t change outcome Key Question for Apple We need clarification on: Why BGProcessingTask behave differently between Debug and TestFlight builds? Are there additional restrictions or heuristics (related to file size, CPU usage, runtime, network load, or power constraints) that cause BGProcessingTask to be throttled or skipped in Release/TestFlight? How can we guarantee a background upload continues reliably for large files (100MB–500MB) on TestFlight and App Store builds? Is there an Apple-recommended pattern to combine BGProcessingTask + Background URLSession for long-running uploads? Expected Result Background uploads should continue reliably for long audio files (>30 minutes) when the app goes to background or is terminated, in the same way they currently function in Debug builds.
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4w
Running processing task for data upload together with state restoration
Hi All, In continuation of this thread https://developer.apple.com/forums/thread/804439 I want to perform data upload after getting it from the BLE device. As state restoration wake should not deal with data upload i though of using a processing task to perform the data upload. So the flow will be something like: Connect to device -> listen to notification -> go to background -> wake from notification -> handle data download from ble device -> register processing task for data upload -> hopefully get the data uploaded From reading about processing task i understand that the task execution is completely handled by the OS and depends on user behaviour and app usage. I even saw that if the user is not using the app for a while, the OS might not even perfoirm the task. So my quesiton is: does state restoration wakeup and perfroming data dowloads in the backgound considered app usage that will increase the likeluhood the task will get execution time? Can we rely on this for a scenario that the user opens the app for the first time, register, onboard for ble, connect to devie and then put it in the background for days or weeks and only relying on state restoration and processing tasks to do their thing? Sorry for the long read and appreciate your support! Shimon
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1w
Why is xpc_connection_set_peer_code_signing_requirement() closing the connection instead of returning XPC_ERROR_PEER_CODE_SIGNING_REQUIREMENT?
I'm using libxpc in a C server and Swift client. I set up a code-signing requirement in the server using xpc_connection_set_peer_code_signing_requirement(). However, when the client doesn't meet the requirement, the server just closes the connection, and I get XPC_ERROR_CONNECTION_INTERRUPTED on the client side instead of XPC_ERROR_PEER_CODE_SIGNING_REQUIREMENT, making debugging harder. What I want: To receive XPC_ERROR_PEER_CODE_SIGNING_REQUIREMENT on the client when code-signing fails, for better debugging. What I’ve tried: Using xpc_connection_set_peer_code_signing_requirement(), but it causes the connection to be dropped immediately. Questions: Why does the server close the connection without sending the expected error? How can I receive the correct error on the client side? Are there any other methods for debugging code-signing failures with libxpc? Thanks for any insights!
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472
Feb ’25
Testing XPC Code With an Anonymous Listener using Low Level C APIs
I have implemented a XPC server using C APIs. I want to write unit tests for it. I came across the following links that use Swift APIs- Testing and Debugging XPC Code With an Anonymous Listener TN3113 I have tried to write anonymous listener code and the client code in the same file, using C APIs- #include <unistd.h> #include <syslog.h> #include <pthread.h> #include <stdio.h> #include <xpc/xpc.h> #include <xpc/connection.h> #include <CoreFoundation/CoreFoundation.h> static void Anon_Client_Connection_Handler(xpc_connection_t connection, xpc_object_t clientMessage) { const char *description = xpc_copy_description(clientMessage); printf("Event received - %s\n", description); free((void *)description); xpc_type_t type = xpc_get_type(clientMessage); if (type == XPC_TYPE_ERROR) { if (clientMessage == XPC_ERROR_CONNECTION_INVALID) printf("Client_Connection_Handler received invalid connection n"); else if (clientMessage == XPC_ERROR_TERMINATION_IMMINENT) printf("Client_Connection_Handler received termination notice n"); } else { const char *clientMsg = xpc_dictionary_get_string(clientMessage, "message"); printf("Received from client: %s ", clientMsg); } } static void Anon_Listener_Connection_Handler(xpc_connection_t connection) { printf("Anon_Listener_Connection_Handler called, setting up event handler \n"); xpc_connection_set_event_handler(connection, ^(xpc_object_t clientMessage) { printf("Processing the connection! \n"); Anon_Client_Connection_Handler(connection, clientMessage); }); xpc_connection_resume(connection); } int main(int argc, const char *argv[]) { xpc_connection_t anon_listener = xpc_connection_create(NULL, NULL); xpc_connection_set_event_handler(anon_listener, ^(xpc_object_t clientConnection) { printf("Client tried to connect \n"); Anon_Listener_Connection_Handler(clientConnection); }); xpc_connection_resume(anon_listener); printf("\nINFO Anonymous connection resumed"); xpc_object_t anon_endpoint = xpc_endpoint_create(anon_listener); xpc_connection_t clientConnection = xpc_connection_create_from_endpoint(anon_endpoint); xpc_object_t message = xpc_dictionary_create(NULL, NULL, 0); xpc_dictionary_set_string(message, "message", "client's message"); xpc_connection_send_message_with_reply(clientConnection, message, dispatch_get_main_queue(), ^(xpc_object_t event) { printf("\nINFO inside reply"); const char *description = xpc_copy_description(event); printf("\nINFO %s",description); free((void *)description); }); xpc_release(message); xpc_release(anon_listener); printf("\nINFO Releasing listener"); xpc_release(anon_endpoint); printf("\nINFO Releasing endpoint"); // dispatch_main(); return 0; } and this is the output I get INFO Anonymous connection resumed INFO Releasing listener INFO Releasing endpoint I am not able to connect to the client and exchange messages. Where am I going wrong?
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365
Mar ’25
Proper initialization - views, dependencies, laoder and viewcontroller
So i am pretty new to Xcode, but i have been using Python and other language for some while. But I am quite new to the game of view and view control. So it may be that i have over complicated this a bit - and it may be that I have some wrong understanding of the dependencies and appcontroller (that i thought would be a good idea). So here we have a main file we call it app.swift, we have a startupmanager.swift, a appcoordinator and a dependeciescontainer. But it may be that this is either a overkill - or that I am doing it wrong. So my thought was that i had a dependeciecontainer, a appcoordinator for the views and a startupmanager that controll the initialized fetching. I have controlled the memory when i run it - checking if it is higher, lower eg - but it was first when i did my 2 days profile i saw a lot of new errors, like this: Fikser(7291,0x204e516c0) malloc: xzm: failed to initialize deferred reclamation buffer (46). and i also get macro errors, probably from the @Query in my feedview. So my thought was that a depencecie manager and a startupmanager was a good idea together with a app coordinator. But maybe I am wrong - maybe this is not a good idea? Or maybe I am doing some things twice? I have added a lot of prints and debugs for checking. But it seems that it starts off to heavy? import SwiftUI import Combine @MainActor class AppCoordinator: ObservableObject { @Published var isLoggedIn: Bool = false private var authManager: AuthenticationManager = .shared private var cancellables = Set<AnyCancellable>() private let startupManager: StartupManager private let container: DependencyContainer @Published var path = NavigationPath() enum Screen: Hashable, Identifiable { case profile case activeJobs case offers case message var id: Self { self } } init(container: DependencyContainer) { self.container = container self.startupManager = container.makeStartupManager() setupObserving() startupManager.start() print("AppCoordinator initialized!") } private func setupObserving() { authManager.$isAuthenticated .receive(on: RunLoop.main) .sink { [weak self] isAuthenticated in self?.isLoggedIn = isAuthenticated } .store(in: &cancellables) } func userDidLogout() { authManager.logout() path.removeLast(path.count) } func showProfile() { path.append(Screen.profile) } func showActiveJobs() { path.append(Screen.activeJobs) } func showOffers() { path.append(Screen.offers) } func showMessage() { path.append(Screen.message) } @ViewBuilder func viewForDestination(_ destination: Screen) -> some View { switch destination { case .profile: ProfileView() case .activeJobs: ActiveJobsView() case .offers: OffersView() case .message: ChatView() } } @ViewBuilder func viewForJob(_ job: Job) -> some View { PostDetailView( job: job, jobUserDetailsRepository: container.makeJobUserDetailsRepository() ) } @ViewBuilder func viewForProfileSubview(_ destination: ProfileView.ProfileSubviews) -> some View { switch destination{ case .personalSettings: PersonalSettingView() case .historicData: HistoricDataView() case .transactions: TransactionView() case .helpCenter: HelpcenterView() case .helpContract: HelpContractView() } } enum HomeBarDestinations: Hashable, Identifiable { case postJob case jobPosting var id: Self { self } } @ViewBuilder func viewForHomeBar(_ destination: HomeBarView.HomeBarDestinations) -> some View { switch destination { case .postJob: PostJobView() } } } import Apollo import FikserAPI import SwiftData class DependencyContainer { static var shared: DependencyContainer! private let modelContainer: ModelContainer static func initialize(with modelContainer: ModelContainer) { shared = DependencyContainer(modelContainer: modelContainer) } private init(modelContainer: ModelContainer) { self.modelContainer = modelContainer print("DependencyContainer being initialized at ") } @MainActor private lazy var userData: UserData = { return UserData(apollo: Network.shared.apollo) }() @MainActor private lazy var userDetailsRepository: UserDetailsRepository = { return UserDetailsRepository(userData: makeUserData()) }() @MainActor private lazy var jobData: JobData = { return JobData(apollo: Network.shared.apollo) }() @MainActor private lazy var jobRepository: JobRepository = { return JobRepository(jobData: makeJobData(), modelContainer: modelContainer) }() @MainActor func makeUserData() -> UserData { return userData } @MainActor func makeUserDetailsRepository() -> UserDetailsRepository { return userDetailsRepository } @MainActor func makeStartupManager() -> StartupManager { return StartupManager( userDetailsRepository: makeUserDetailsRepository(), jobRepository: makeJobRepository(), authManager: AuthenticationManager.shared, lastUpdateRepository: makeLastUpdateRepository() ) } @MainActor func makeJobData() -> JobData { return jobData } @MainActor func makeJobRepository() -> any JobRepositoryProtocol { return jobRepository } @MainActor private lazy var jobUserData: JobUserData = { return JobUserData(apollo: Network.shared.apollo) }() @MainActor private lazy var jobUserDetailsRepository: JobUserDetailsRepository = { return JobUserDetailsRepository(jobUserData: makeJobUserData()) }() @MainActor func makeJobUserData() -> JobUserData { return jobUserData } @MainActor func makeJobUserDetailsRepository() -> JobUserDetailsRepository { return jobUserDetailsRepository } @MainActor private lazy var lastUpdateData: LastUpdateData = { return LastUpdateData(apollo: Network.shared.apollo) }() @MainActor private lazy var lastUpdateRepository: LastUpdateRepository = { return LastUpdateRepository(lastUpdateData: makeLastUpdateData()) }() @MainActor func makeLastUpdateData() -> LastUpdateData { return lastUpdateData } @MainActor func makeLastUpdateRepository() -> LastUpdateRepository { return lastUpdateRepository } }```
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339
Feb ’25
Background Refresh Stalls After Charging on watchOS 26
Hello everyone, I’m a new developer still learning as I go. I’m building a simple watchOS app that tracks Apple Watch battery consumption, records hourly usage data, and uses that information to predict battery life in hours. I’ve run into an issue where background refresh completely stalls after charging and never recovers, regardless of what I do. The only way to restore normal behavior is to restart the watch. Background refresh can work fine for days, but if the watch is charging and a scheduled background refresh tries to run during that period, it appears to be deferred—and then remains in that deferred state indefinitely. Even reopening the app or scheduling new refreshes doesn’t recover it. Has anyone else encountered this behavior? Is there a reliable workaround? I’ve seen a few reports suggesting that there may be a regression in scheduleBackgroundRefresh() on watchOS 26, where tasks are never delivered after certain states. Any insights or confirmations would be greatly appreciated. Thank you!
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176
Oct ’25
mac 开发 com.apple.security.application-groups 问题
我在开发 Mac应用完成 后 通过Xcode 上传二进制文件的过程中, 出现了错误, 错误提示: App里面用到的 com.apple.security.application-groups 权限里面 有 group.*** 和 开发者组ID.*** 导致校验失败, 当我单独使用 group.xxx的时候, 我的程序会崩溃 , 因为里面用到了 MachPortRende 进程间通信问题, 这里默认了 开发者组ID.*** 这个路径, 错误详情: 在尝试启动 QuickFox 应用时,程序因权限问题而崩溃。具体的错误信息 bootstrap_check_in 组ID.xxxx.MachPortRendezvousServer.82392: Permission denied (1100) 显示,应用在尝试使用 Mach 端口进行进程间通信时,没有获得足够的权限, 因此 我需要您们的帮助, 如果单独用开发者组ID.*** 我们又没有权限 将数据写入 组ID.xxx里面的文件
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101
Apr ’25
Is background processing even possible?
Hello, aspiring programmer here. I am developing a StepCounter APP, which keeps track of how many steps I have taken and sends to an MQTT server. I am trying to make this happen even while the app is not in focus, but so far I have not been able to get this working. First tried with silent background music, which seemed pretty inconsistent and inpractical, since I usually play youtube videoes while walking, making the app stop with its silent audio. Then tried GPS, which didnt really do anything (could be implementation problem). Has anyone made background processing work for their apps?
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111
Mar ’25
How to correctly access and handle background operations on IOS
Hello, aspiring programmer here. I am developing a StepCounter APP, which keeps track of how many steps I have taken and sends to an MQTT server. I am trying to make this happen even while the app is not in focus, but so far I have not been able to get this working. First tried with silent background music, which seemed pretty inconsistent and inpractical, since I usually play youtube videoes while walking, making the app stop with its silent audio. Then tried GPS, which didnt really do anything (could be implementation problem). Has anyone made background processing work for their apps?
1
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140
Mar ’25