xcode no suitable image found - swift

I'm running into following error
The bundle “Project-name” couldn’t be loaded because it is damaged or missing necessary resources. Try reinstalling the bundle.
Reason: no suitable image found. Did find:
/Users/name/Documents/proj-name: required code signature missing for '/Users/name/Documents/proj-name/Frameworks/Project.framework/Project'
)
Program ended with exit code: 82
I've a dependency which itself a custom Framework file (library) and added this to current project but running into problem when I run a test.
Project compiles and builds fine, error appears when running tests.
Swift 3.0, XCode 8.0

Related

Swift Vapor project not compiling due to strange errors in swift-nio

I can't get my Swift Vapor project to compile (which was running fine before), because nio produces strange errors all of a sudden:
Also, swift package update produces this:
.build/checkouts/swift-nio: error: Couldn’t check out revision ‘546610d52b19be3e19935e0880bb06b9c03f5cef’
I already cleaned, deleted derived data and rebuilt....any ideas?
Besides cleaning & re-building the project, you can try deleting the following files / directories:
/.build
/.swiftpm
/Package.resolved
Then, run swift package update and try to build the project again.

Oprofile not finding libraries

I'm trying to use OProfile on Eclipse (3.8). The Juno version of oprofile didn't work, so I installed the Luna one. This one at least starts up, but can never find the libraries.
Here is the error:
ns3-dev-lena-profiling-debug: error while loading shared libraries: libns3-dev-lte- debug.so: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
profiled app exited with the following status: 127
I know that that means I need to add the library path. So I went to Profiling Tools Configurations, and specified the path under environmental variables as:
name: LD_LIBRARY_PATH
value: {workspace_loc:ns3dev2}/build (appended)
I manually checked and the library is located in the build folder. Furthermore, this library path works fine if I debug the same project instead (or run it...).
I've deleted the configuration and remade it, but it's the same error.
I also tried adding the same path to PATH instead of LD_LIBRARY_PATH, but that doesn't make any difference. (Just tried it for the hell of it).
Any thoughts?
Edit, I get the same problem on Eclipse 4.4 (Luna). I found the logs for the errors and the error is:
!ENTRY org.eclipse.linuxtools.oprofile.core 4 0 2014-10-27 12:33:07.200
!MESSAGE opreport process error output: warning: /no-vmlinux could not be found.

MacOS Swift Framework testing fail

I have a framework written in obj-c and swift.
Now i try to run a related unit test target, but I get this error:
2014-07-10 07:45:54.064 xctest[4908:303] The test bundle at /Users/steve/Temporary/Build/Products/Debug/SOGraphDB-Mac Tests.xctest could not be loaded because an unanticipated error occurred: Error Domain=NSCocoaErrorDomain Code=3587 "The bundle “SOGraphDB-Mac Tests” couldn’t be loaded because it is damaged or missing necessary resources." (dlopen_preflight(/Users/steve/Temporary/Build/Products/Debug/SOGraphDB-Mac Tests.xctest/Contents/MacOS/SOGraphDB-Mac Tests): Library not loaded: #rpath/libswiftAppKit.dylib
Referenced from: /Users/steve/Temporary/Build/Products/Debug/SOGraphDB.framework/Versions/A/SOGraphDB
Reason: image not found) UserInfo=0x10011c640 {NSLocalizedFailureReason=The bundle is damaged or missing necessary resources., NSLocalizedRecoverySuggestion=Try reinstalling the bundle., NSFilePath=/Users/steve/Temporary/Build/Products/Debug/SOGraphDB-Mac Tests.xctest/Contents/MacOS/SOGraphDB-Mac Tests, NSDebugDescription=dlopen_preflight(/Users/steve/Temporary/Build/Products/Debug/SOGraphDB-Mac Tests.xctest/Contents/MacOS/SOGraphDB-Mac Tests): Library not loaded: #rpath/libswiftAppKit.dylib
Referenced from: /Users/steve/Temporary/Build/Products/Debug/SOGraphDB.framework/Versions/A/SOGraphDB
Reason: image not found, NSBundlePath=/Users/steve/Temporary/Build/Products/Debug/SOGraphDB-Mac Tests.xctest, NSLocalizedDescription=The bundle “SOGraphDB-Mac Tests” couldn’t be loaded because it is damaged or missing necessary resources.}
Any idea what the root cause can be?
The error seems realated to "Library not loaded: #rpath/libswiftAppKit.dylib"
Both (framework and test bundle) compile without any error or warning (in Beta2)
I had a similar problem, though mine was an iOS test target, linking to a Swift framework, that failed to run on Xcode 6 GM. The test target had run successfully on an early beta of Xcode 6, but the final version reported the runtime error: Library not loaded: #rpath/libswiftCore.dylib
I noticed that a newer project did not have the failure, so I compared the build settings and test code. I was able to resolve the problem with three steps:
The test target needs the "Embedded Target Contains Swift Code" setting to be YES. This tells the linker to add the Swift runtime libraries to the executable.
The test target needs an explicit value for the "Runpath Search Paths" build setting. This tells the loader where to find the Swift runtime libaries. I copied the following setting from a fresh new test target:
LD_RUNPATH_SEARCH_PATHS = $(inherited) #executable_path/../Frameworks #loader_path/../Frameworks
The test cases need to explicitly import any modules that are used by the linked framework. In my project, the framework used UIKit but the test cases only used my framework. When I added an explicit import UIKit to the test cases, the link problem went away.
Since I keep running into this issue whenever I mess with build settings, here's the cleanest answer I can provide as of Xcode 8b5:
If unit tests don't run on iOS, make sure you have:
Runpath Search Paths: #loader_path/Frameworks
If unit tests don't run on macOS, make sure you have:
Runpath Search Paths: #loader_path/../Frameworks
This will show up as LD_RUNPATH_SEARCH_PATHS in your pbxproj file. You can also add $(inherited) to make sure project-wide paths are added as well, but those are probably empty.
Lastly, I didn't need the executable_path/... settings, doesn't make a difference for me whether they're there or not for unit tests.
I had the same problem.
Ended up copying libswiftAppKit.dylib out of the Xcode application directory (I am using beta 3), into a directory that I could reference (not part of an application bundle), then adding the library to the "Link binary with libraries" setting for the test bundle. My tests then started working.
FYI, the path for the dylib was at '/Applications/Xcode6-Beta3.app/Contents/Developer/Toolchains/XcodeDefault.xctoolchain/usr/lib/swift/macosx/libswiftAppKit.dylib'
Probably not a good final solution, but it works for the interim.
My solution was to add a single file to my test target, AppKitTests.swift (or AppKitSpec.swift in my case), and all the file contains is:
// While I don't know why, The.framework is built linked to libswiftAppKit.
// Frameworks do not embed the Swift libraries themselves, it's up to the host
// app to include the necessary libraries. So here we are, including AppKit on
// behalf of The.framework so that the tests can run.
import AppKit
Oh, I also added AppKit to the test target's set of frameworks.
I had this occur to me in Beta 4 and it turned out that I had done it to myself without realizing it.
I had a Framework project called Fnord. My FnordTests target contained a couple of unit test classes that had import Fnord at the top of each file. For some reason Xcode was complaining about those imports and so I commented them out. This is when I started getting the same symptoms while trying to run my unit tests.
I noticed that the settings for my FnordTests target were such that the target would be linked with Fnord.framework, and I realized that it might not be able to do that with the aforementioned import Fnord statements diked-out.
So I put them back in, and everything went back to normal. Curiously, Xcode no longer showed those import statements as being problematic, but this is beta so I can forgive that.
I hope this helps someone.
I ran into the same issue, adding
import AppKit
in the Swift file fixed it

mpglib_interface.c 'interface.h' file not found

I an trying to compile the WunderRadio app source code available here http://dev.wunderground.com/support/wunderradio/wunderradio.1.9lgpl.zip. After making all the modifications to the project to compile on iOS5 i get the following error:
Lexical or Preprocessor Issue 'interface.h' file not found.
Of course i tried getting the interface.h from the lame library that i previously downloaded, and added it to the project with no luck. Apparently its not the right file.
What am i missing ?
I found this file at:
http://code.google.com/p/live-converter/source/browse/trunk/include/interface.h?r=13

Struggling with Xcode 4

I've recently downloaded Xcode 4 and now two of my projects that were working perfectly fine before have started giving me errors. Both errors are effectively to do with linking options, but I can't figure out how to change these options and get rid of the errors.
The first problem is with a project written in C++ using the SDL_ttf and SDL_image frameworks. The project builds correctly, but when I try to run, it gives me the following warnings on the console:
warning: Unable to read symbols for #executable_path/../Frameworks/SDL_ttf.framework/Versions/A/SDL_ttf (file not found).
warning: Unable to read symbols from "SDL_ttf" (not yet mapped into memory).
warning: Unable to read symbols for #executable_path/../Frameworks/SDL_image.framework/Versions/A/SDL_image (file not found).
warning: Unable to read symbols from "SDL_image" (not yet mapped into memory).
Since the files are not being found, the executable cannot load any images making it exit straight away when I try to load images. I think the issue here is that the frameworks are not in the directory above the executable, they are in /Library/Framework/ which worked fine before in Xcode 3.2. How do I resolve this?
The second problem comes when compiling an application I wrote for iOS. Along with giving me a bunch of warnings about depracated code on iOS 5, which I will deal with later, it fails to build due to a linker error which I have no clue how to resolve, it says:
ld: library not found for -lz.1.2.3
Command /Developer/Platforms/iPhoneSimulator.platform/Developer/usr/bin/clang failed with exit code 1
I can answer the second question.
-lz.1.2.3
should be
-lz
You might have accidentally added the zlib.1.2.3.dylib to the project's "link binary with libraries" build phase. You should use the standard zlib without any version in its filename, or simply add -lz to the Other Linker Flags under Build Settings and not add zlib in the "link binary with libraries" build phase.
As for the missing frameworks my best guess is that it has to do with the relative path, ie if you can get rid of the /../ part and instead provide an absolute path that might resolve the issue.