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Real Device Configuration

Basic (automatic) configuration

The easiest way to get up-and-running with Appium's XCUITest support on iOS real devices is to use the automatic configuration strategy. There are two ways to do this:

  • Use the xcodeOrgId and xcodeSigningId capabilities:
        {
          "xcodeOrgId": "<Team ID>",
          "xcodeSigningId": "Apple Developer"
        }
    
  • Create a .xcconfig file somewhere on your file system and add the following to it:
        DEVELOPMENT_TEAM = <Team ID>
        CODE_SIGN_IDENTITY = Apple Developer
    
    In either case, the Team ID is a unique 10-character string generated by Apple that is assigned to your team. You can find your Team ID using your developer account. Sign in to developer.apple.com/account, and click Membership in the sidebar. Your Team ID appears in the Membership Information section under the team name. You can also find your team ID listed under the "Organizational Unit" field in your iPhone Developer certificate in your keychain.

Note that these are mutually exclusive strategies; use either the xcodeConfigFile capability or the combination of xcodeOrgId and xcodeSigningId.

xcodeSigningId is usually Apple Developer or iPhone Developer.

Once this configuration is done, it should just be a matter of starting your test specifying a real device in your udid desired capability.

If this has not worked it will usually manifest itself in the Appium server logs as some error followed by info XCUITest xcodebuild exited with code '65' and signal 'null'. This usually means that the necessary code signing is not set up correctly. Go on to the Basic (manual) configuration to fix.

If the WebDriverAgentRunner is successfully installed on the device, but in the Appium logs there is an error message something like:

2017-01-24 09:02:18.358 xcodebuild[30385:339674] Error Domain=com.apple.platform.iphoneos Code=-12 "Unable to launch com.apple.test.WebDriverAgentRunner-Runner" UserInfo={NSLocalizedDescription=Unable to launch com.apple.test.WebDriverAgentRunner-Runner, NSUnderlyingError=0x7fa839cadc60 {Error Domain=DTXMessage Code=1 "(null)" UserInfo={DTXExceptionKey=The operation couldn’t be completed. Unable to launch com.apple.test.WebDriverAgentRunner-Runner because it has an invalid code signature, inadequate entitlements or its profile has not been explicitly trusted by the user. : Failed to launch process with bundle identifier 'com.apple.test.WebDriverAgentRunner-Runner'}}}
2017-01-24 09:02:18.358 xcodebuild[30385:339674] Error Domain=IDETestOperationsObserverErrorDomain Code=5 "Early unexpected exit, operation never finished bootstrapping - no restart will be attempted" UserInfo={NSLocalizedDescription=Early unexpected exit, operation never finished bootstrapping - no restart will be attempted}

Testing failed:
    Test target WebDriverAgentRunner encountered an error (Early unexpected exit, operation never finished bootstrapping - no restart will be attempted)
The problem is that the developer is not trusted on the device. If you manually try to run the WebDriverAgentRunner app on the device, you will see a popup message:

Untrusted developer

You can go to Settings => General => Device Management on the device to trust the developer and allow the WebDriverAgentRunner app to be run (see Apple documentation for more information).

Basic (manual) configuration

There are many cases in which the basic automatic configuration is not enough. This usually has to do with code signing and the configuration of the project to be able to be run on the real device under test. Often this happens when the development account being used is a "Free" one, in which case it is not possible to create a wildcard provisioning profile, and will often not create one for the default application bundle.

This will manifest as something like an error that Xcode failed to create provisioning profile:

No provisioning profile

The easiest way around this is to create a provisioning profile by opening Xcode and creating a new project:

Create new project

The type does not matter, other than it being "iOS". "Single View Application" is the easiest:

Create single page

The important part is to use a unique "Product Name" and "Organization Name". Also, at this point, specify your "Team".

Setup bundle

You can confirm that the provisioning profile was created by looking at the "Project" tab:

Project pane

Or by going into your account preferences and seeing the provisioning profile:

Check provisioning profile

At this point you have a valid provisioning profile. Make note of the bundle id you associated with it, and add that in the updatedWDABundleId desired capability for your tests. Then follow the initial instructions for automatic configuration.

Full manual configuration

Alternatively, the provisioning profile can be manually associated with the project (keep in mind that this will have to be done each time the WebDriverAgent is updated, and is not recommended):

  • Read Finding WebDriverAgent project root on the local file system to locate where WebDriverAgent is installed. You could also see the full path to WebDriverAgent's folder in Appium server logs after a session has been started. Open a terminal and go to that location, then run the following to set the project up:
        mkdir -p Resources/WebDriverAgent.bundle
    
    If you build WebDriverAgent with a version before 2.32.0 (e.g. as part of an Appium release before 1.20.0) you also have to run
        ./Scripts/bootstrap.sh -d
    
  • Open WebDriverAgent.xcodeproj in Xcode. For both the WebDriverAgentLib and WebDriverAgentRunner targets, select "Automatically manage signing" in the "General" tab, and then select your Development Team. This should also auto select Signing Ceritificate. The outcome should look as shown below: WebDriverAgent in Xcode project

    • Xcode may fail to create a provisioning profile for the WebDriverAgentRunner target:

    Xcode provisioning fail

    • This necessitates manually changing the bundle id for the target by going into the "Build Settings" tab, and changing the "Product Bundle Identifier" from com.facebook.WebDriverAgentRunner to something that Xcode will accept:

    Xcode bundle id

    • Going back to the "General" tab for the WebDriverAgentRunner target, you should now see that it has created a provisioning profile and all is well:

    Xcode provisioning profile

  • Finally, you can verify that everything works. Build the project:

        xcodebuild build-for-testing test-without-building -project WebDriverAgent.xcodeproj -scheme WebDriverAgentRunner -destination 'id=<udid>'
    
    If this was successful, the output should end with something like:
        Test Suite 'All tests' started at 2017-01-23 15:49:12.585
        Test Suite 'WebDriverAgentRunner.xctest' started at 2017-01-23 15:49:12.586
        Test Suite 'UITestingUITests' started at 2017-01-23 15:49:12.587
        Test Case '-[UITestingUITests testRunner]' started.
            t =     0.00s     Start Test at 2017-01-23 15:49:12.588
            t =     0.00s     Set Up
    

  • To completely verify, you can try accessing the WebDriverAgent server status (note: you must be on the same network as the device, and know its IP address, from Settings => Wi-Fi => Current Network):
        export DEVICE_URL='http://<device IP>:8100'
        export JSON_HEADER='-H "Content-Type: application/json;charset=UTF-8, accept: application/json"'
        curl -X GET $JSON_HEADER $DEVICE_URL/status
    
    You ought to get back output something like this:
        {
          "value" : {
            "state" : "success",
            "os" : {
              "name" : "iOS",
              "version" : "10.2"
            },
            "ios" : {
              "simulatorVersion" : "10.2",
              "ip" : "192.168.0.7"
            },
            "build" : {
              "time" : "Jan 23 2017 14:59:57"
            }
          },
          "sessionId" : "8951A6DD-F3AD-410E-A5DB-D042F42F68A7",
          "status" : 0
        }
    

Build for Generic iOS/tvOS devices, run manually

Alternatively, you can build WebDriverAgentRunner for a generic iOS/tvOS device, and install the generated .app package to a real device. Building for a generic device means the package could be installed on any iOS or tvOS device depending on the chosen platform.

# iOS
$ xcodebuild clean build-for-testing -project WebDriverAgent.xcodeproj -derivedDataPath appium_wda_ios -scheme WebDriverAgentRunner -destination generic/platform=iOS CODE_SIGNING_ALLOWED=YES

# tvOS
$ xcodebuild clean build-for-testing -project WebDriverAgent.xcodeproj -derivedDataPath appium_wda_tvos -scheme WebDriverAgentRunner_tvOS -destination generic/platform=tvOS CODE_SIGNING_ALLOWED=YES

On successful completion the resulting package WebDriverAgentRunner-Runner.app should be located in Build/Products/Debug-iphoneos/ subfolder under WebDriverAgent sources root, or in the path provided as derivedDataPath argument.

Note Please make sure the WebDriverAgent.xcodeproj has codesigning properties configured properly according to the above description if the build action fails. For example, you may need to configure the bundle id for the provisioning profile properly.

The WebDriverAgentRunner-Runner.app can be installed to any real device allowed by the provisioning profile.

You can install the package with 3rd party tools and manage it separately as explained in How To Set Up And Customize WebDriverAgent Server. If the codesign is not correct, the installation will fail because of the package verification error by iOS.

As a more advanced method, you can generate the package with CODE_SIGNING_ALLOWED=NO and do codesign separately by yourself. This would make the device management more flexible, but you'd need to know about advanced codesign usage scenarios.

Note Generic builds with CODE_SIGNING_ALLOWED=NO are available for each version tag at https://github.com/appium/WebDriverAgent/releases. It is recommended to sign packages with a wildcard (*) provisioning profile. Such profiles require a paid Apple Developer account. In case of a free account, you may need to update bundle id properly before building the WebDriverAgent package.

Create an Offline Provisioning Profile

Apple requires a device to have a live internet connection to trust the code sign properly since iOS 16. An offline enabled provisiong profile allows you to avoid the limitation. Please read this issue regarding detailed configuration steps.

Finding WebDriverAgent project root on the local file system

WebDriverAgent Xcode project is bundled with appium-webdriveragent NPM module. This means as soon as you could find WDA location on the local file system as soon as you know where this npm module has been installed. The module is a direct dependency of appium-xcuitest-driver. The actual location of the module on the file system depends on major Appium version and on the way used to install Appium or XCUITest itself. All the below tutorials assume that you use NPM (Node Package Manager) to install Appium. We do not officially support other package managers, like yarn or brew, so the actual behavior might be different if you still use them.

Appium 1.x

XCUITest driver is the default dependency of Appium 1.x package, so WDA must be located under Appium's installation root. Depending on whether Appium has been installed globally or locally, the package could be find either in a local or a global node_modules root. Check Where does npm install packages? Find the install path article for more details. As soon as you find where appium package is located then simply run the lookup for WebDriverAgent.xcodeproj in it. For example, if Appium has been installed globally, then the following commands could be used:

npm i -g appium@1.22.3
echo "$(dirname "$(find "$(npm root -g)/appium/node_modules" -name WebDriverAgent.xcodeproj)")"

The resulting output will contain the full path to WDA's source folder.

Appium 2.x

In Appium 2.x the server and drivers are separated, so you won't find WDA sources in the same package where the server is installed. WDA sources only get fetched as soon as XCUITest driver is installed using the server CLI, e.g. appium driver install xcuitest. Appium server CLI by default installs the driver package using NPM and uses APPIUM_HOME folder as the root. By default, APPIUM_HOME points to $HOME/.appium. It could also be customized by providing the corresponding CLI argument. As soon as the driver installation is completed and default values were used the WDA path could be found in one of APPIUM_HOME subfolders:

appium driver install xcuitest
echo "$(dirname "$(find "$HOME/.appium" -name WebDriverAgent.xcodeproj)")"

The resulting output will contain the full path to WDA's source folder.

Since XCUITest driver v4.13.0 there is a possibility to open WebDriverAgent.xcodeproj in Xcode by simply executing appium driver run xcuitest open-wda command.