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Known issues in .NET7
This document lists known issues in the SDKs.
- Use the following command to get a list of all the simulators:
$ /Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/usr/bin/simctl list
-
Choose one, and copy the corresponding UDID.
-
Set the
_DeviceName
property like this to select the simulator:
dotnet build -t:Run -p:_DeviceName=:v2:udid=<UDID>
Note that a simulator runtime identifier must be used (either set in the project file, or passed to the command above like this: /p:RuntimeIdentifier=iossimulator-x64
).
-
Open Xcode, then the menu
Window -> Devices and Simulators
. -
Choose a device on the left, and copy the
Identifier
from the device info section. -
Set the
_DeviceName
property like this to select the device:
dotnet build -t:Run -p:_DeviceName=<IDENTIFIER>
Note that a device runtime identifier must be used (either set in the project file, or passed to the command above like this: /p:RuntimeIdentifier=ios-arm64
).
Just dotnet run
should work just fine.
If something goes wrong (the app crashes, etc.), it's often useful to see stdout and stderr (Console.Out / Console.Error) from the app (this can even be useful as a debugging mechanism in certain cases). In order to see this output, it's necessary to execute the actual macOS executable directly from the terminal. The executable can be found inside the Contents/MacOS
directory of the app, which can be found in the output directory.
An example path for a Mac Catalyst app built for x86_64 (relative to the project directory):
$ ./bin/Debug/net6.0-maccatalyst/maccatalyst-x64/MySimpleApp.app/Contents/MacOS/MySimpleApp
[output]
If the app is a universal app (built for both x64
and arm64
), the path to the app won't contain the runtime identifier:
$ ./bin/Debug/net6.0-maccatalyst/MySimpleApp.app/Contents/MacOS/MySimpleApp
[output]
Ref: https://github.com/dotnet/xamarin/issues/26.
Mac Catalyst app signed with a provisioning profile with configuration "Mac Catalyst" crashes at launch.
A Mac Catalyst app with entitlements and signed with a macOS provisioning profile with configuration "Mac Catalyst" crashes at launch with "Security policy does not allow @ path expansion".
There are two known workarounds:
-
Add the following to the project file:
<PropertyGroup> <_LibMonoLinkMode>Static</_LibMonoLinkMode> <_LibXamarinLinkMode>Static</_LibXamarinLinkMode> </PropertyGroup>
Ref: https://github.com/xamarin/xamarin-macios/issues/14686#issuecomment-1106418177
-
Use a provisioning profile with configuration "Mac" instead of "Mac Catalyst"
See: https://github.com/xamarin/xamarin-macios/issues/14686#issuecomment-1109808007
Ref: https://github.com/xamarin/xamarin-macios/issues/14686
When:
- Building remotely from Visual Studio (on Windows).
- Building for the simulator.
- The remote mac is an ARM64 machine.
Visual Studio will build using the iossimulator-arm64
RuntimeIdentifier.
For some projects this may not work correctly (in particular projects that depend on third-party native libraries that don't provide an iossimulator-arm64
version of their library), and for those cases it's possible to make Visual Studio build using iossimulator-x64
instead, by setting the following property in the project file:
<PropertyGroup>
<ForceSimulatorX64ArchitectureInIDE>true</ForceSimulatorX64ArchitectureInIDE>
</PropertyGroup>
This is supported starting in Visual Studio 17.7 preview 3.
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