I have iOS Developer Program membership for which i paid $99. I have installed that certificate in one system, and I'm able to run my application on my real device.
Is it possible to install this certificate on my another system, such that I can run my application on another real device? When I try to install the same certificate on another system, I'm not able to get it working.
Read Submitting iPhone Apps To The Apple App Store – A Step by Step Guide—in particular, the last paragraph, "Managing Your Digital Identities":
Also read: iOS Development Workflow Guide: Managing Devices and Digital Identities
You can definitely install the certificate on other systems. Please tell us the error message(s) you are getting.
Please make sure that you are exporting your certificates correctly and importing them on other system with the correct password.
Hope this helps,
Thanks,
Madhup
You have two ways to install the App in to device.
One is: you can add the new device UDID to the provisioning profile and you can run through your system
If you want to run from other system then follow the 2nd one
2nd is: You have to create a .p12 certificate from you systems keychain.
Goto -> Application -> Utilities -> KeyChains.
right click on your certificate and click export, enter some password(for security reasons). Then it will create a .p12 certificate.
You have to install this certificate in the other system by giving the specific password that you have give while creating. Then those will be installed in the other system.
Thats it. Then follow the first step, and enjoy by installing app into other device.
Regards,
Satya
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This question already has answers here:
How can I develop for iPhone using a Windows development machine?
(42 answers)
Closed 9 years ago.
I am new to mobile development and I have a question concerning developing an app for iPhone. Is there a way to develop an app for iPhone using Windows?
No. xcode, which you need to develop iphone apps, only runs on mac. There are ways to get a mac program running on windows probably, but developing for ios on windows just isn't worth the trouble.
Yes it is possible but tricky. One way to do it is to use forge. The following is extracted from an article showing how to use forge to create iOS apps:
Developing iOS apps on Windows
Forge allows the development of iOS apps on Windows without the use of an OS X machine. To do this you will need a development-enabled physical iOS device and an iOS developer account. In order to sign your application (which is required to install it onto the device, even for testing), we provide a remote signing service, which your app will be sent to, signed and returned as part of the forge run ios and forge package ios command.
Note: Your iOS device must be enabled for development before our Windows tools can view logging output. This means attaching it to an OS X machine and selecting "Enable for development" in the Xcode organizer. If you're not able to do this, you can still install apps onto the device, and use the iPhone Configuration Utility to view log output (http://support.apple.com/downloads/#iphone)
Setting up Forge to run iOS apps
Requirements:
Apple iOS developer account.
iTunes or iPhone Configuration Utility installed on the machine you are going to develop on
An iOS device connected via USB to the machine you wish to develop on
In order to sign your application you need to provide us with the following:
A signing certificate and password
A provisioning profile
Both of these can be created and managed from the Apple iOS provisioning portal, which should be accessible from the iOS developer center: https://developer.apple.com/ios/. The instructions on that site are for OS X, more detailed instructions for creating a developer certificate on Windows are included below.
Once these are setup you should be able to use forge run ios to install the app on your device and see log output in the terminal on your computer.
Creating a signing certificate
To create a certificate you need to generate a certificate signing request, in Windows this can be done by following these steps:
Create a file request.txt with the following content, replacing Connor Dunn with the name registered to your Apple Developer account:
Run the following command in the same directory as request.txt: certreq -new request.txt
On the iOS provisioning portal site choose to create a new certificate and upload the file you just created
Your certificate request should be approved shortly: when it is, download and open the certificate file. Windows should prompt you to install the certificate.
Once installed, run the command certmgr.msc: this should open a certificate management tool. In this tool browse to Personal certificates, you should see the iPhone Developer certificate you just installed.
You should be able to right click on the certificate and choose All tasks -> Export. Make sure you export the private key as part of the certificate when following the wizard. The password you supply will be the one you need to provide to Forge, and prevents unauthorized users from using the certificate if they were to come into possession of the certificate file.
You should now be able to configure the developer certificate and developer certificate password in your Tools config.
See configuration for the tools for more information on the Tools config.
Creating a provisioning profile
Once you have created a certificate you need to create a provisioning profile, this is also done via the iOS provisioning portal website:
First make sure your device has been added to the provisioning portal, to do this you will need the device identifier (UDID), this can be found by clicking on the device's serial number in iTunes.
Next create an app id, for development entering * as a Bundle Identifier is recommended, as it means multiple apps can be signed with a single provisioning profile.
Finally create a development provisioning profile, making sure you choose the correct app id and enable any devices you wish to be able to test with.
You can now download and configure the location of your provisioning profile in your Tools config.
Note: Provisioning profiles must be recreated if certificates or devices are changed.
Here is the link to the site that has much more info on this matter. But all in all, I'll advice you to invest in an apple machine and save yourself tons of time and hassle.
https://trigger.io/docs/current/tools/ios-windows.html
I want to download my iPhone application into the device. For that i want to know the process to install the certificate (Provisional Profile). So, please give me the idea about the process for that. I can not install that certificate into my Apple PC. As a result application gives me the error of the certificate.
login to the following link
apple developer site
Then on the left tab , go to certificates and click the tab How To, there they explain step by step guide to install certificate and provision files.
I am developing an app for iPhone. How can I test this app on my device?
What are the procedures to follow? Please give information regarding this problem.
Deploying iPhone Apps to Real Devices
http://mobiforge.com/developing/story/deploying-iphone-apps-real-devices
In brief:
Sign up for the iPhone Developer Program
Obtain an iPhone Development Certificate
Generate a Certificate Signing Request
Generate, download and install your provisioning profile
Download and install your Development Certificate
Deploy your iPhone application.
Things you will need are
your private key.
your provisioning profile (with the UUID of your device added).
go to project settings and change code signing entity to your
distribution profile.
then you can build and run after connecting your device.
1) Open Xcode,
2) Go to Active SDK, and select the OS version running on your test device (viewable by going to Settings->General->About on the device).
3) With your project open, click on "Build and Run" (or press Command-R) to run the project, which will prompt you to allow access to your keychain.
4) Once deployed, the app will run automatically.
Distribution
First of all, to run the app on your phisical device you must enroll to the apple developer program.
Second, generate a developer certificate and download it. Then, import the certificate into Xcode and here you go.
There are some steps you need to follow to test your app on your personal iPhone. Below you can find all the steps:
Creat MAC certificate at first step.
Second step is to upload that certificate to developer account.
Now you should open developer account at
http://www.developer.apple.com
You can now find an option for device id in your developer account on
left side.
Now you should register your iphone device.
It is time to create your unique identifier on developer account
Download your certificate and install it on xcode organize
Now open your project embed your unique identifier in your project.
These steps can be beneficial for all software testing gusy involved in mobile application testing.
I have developed a number of apps using MonoTouch, and been using the emulator for the iPhone, now I need to deploy me application to my iPhone for further testing.
I have purchased the iPhone SDK from Apple, but I can't find how to deploy and activate the MonoTouch application to my iPhone.
Any pointers please?
As has been already stated you obviously need the paid version of MonoTouch and the iPhone SDK. Once you have those sorted you need to create a developer certificate in the iPhone developer portal, download it to your dev machine and add it into your keychain.
Once you have done that you must create a provisioning profile for your physical device, which again you do through the developer portal. Once you have the provisioning profile, download that to your machine, and add it to the iPhone via the Organiser app in XCode.
Then fire up MonoDevelop, and if it's all gone to plan then you should have the option of deploying the build to your iPhone. You can check that MonoDevelop has correctly detected your certs by opening up the Project Options window and under the Build section and under iPhone Bundle Signing, you should see your developer cert and provisioning profile.
Full details of the steps required on the Apple iPhone Dev Site
Here are the MonoTouch docs on building for distribution
http://monotouch.net/Documentation/Building_for_Distribution
It is my understanding that you have to have the Monotouch deployment license from Novell to deploy to a device.
According to your statement:
When I compile I get: "No Valid iPhone code signing keys found in
keychain.
This is actually a Xcode question more then a Monotouch one;
The message indicates that your keychain does not provide the signing keys used to generate the certificates and provisioning profiles.
If you follow apple's steps on generating certificate(request), followed by profiles they will also state you might want to export your private key (p13 file) and keep it somewhere safe.
If you move to another laptop for instance, you will need to import that key again to make the machine a valid one.
If something went wrong (ie: you accidentally removed your private key, ..) this message will be shown since there is no way for Xcode to verify that the profiles are being used on a valid machine.
Go to this instruction page (apple account credentials needed) to check if the steps have been followed and check in the Keychain access app on your mac if under My Certificates you see a developer certificate and - if you unfold it - you can see the private key as a child node.
I have created a new iPhone application.I have two mach machines. I have created the certificate for running application in iPhone in one mac. Can I use the other mac for running the application in iPhone. But when I try to do so I get an error "Codesign error:Code signing is required for product type "Application" in SDK Device iPhone OS 3.1.2. Please some one help me.
Regards,
krishnan.
Have you transferred your credentials to the second Mac? They are stored in your keychain.
You may need to read up on how Code-signing works: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Code_signing
Here's an overview:
Developer creates a Certificate via a Certificate Authority (CA)
This certificate is used to 'sign' the binary, providing 'proof' of who created it
Developer then uses the Certificate to sign the binary (this is the step you're missing on the second MAC)
This is handled via xcode, assuming you've followed the detailed steps on http://developer.apple.com/iphone
Clients using the binary can now verify the Certificate against a known CA to ensure the integrity of the build.
Also check that you are code signing on the target as well when you do the Archive build
Spent hours to figure this out. Actually you need to click on Project --> Build Settings --> click target --> code sign..
THIS IS not apparent