20
votes

Yesterday I've downloaded Xcode 6 and now I have got a problem I can't solve. In my member center I've got valid certificate and ad-hoc provisioning (distribution). Till yesterday, in Xcode 5 if I wanted to add my .ipa to TestFlight I was using Archive and selecting my valid ad-hoc profile. I wasn't even logged in in my developer account in Xcode.

Now - in Xcode 6 - nothing is working at all. Ok, I've logged in preferences, Xcode downloaded all my provisionings on Mac, but whenever I choose Export it says that I don't have matching provisioning profile and it's creating new provisioning profile with XC: prefix - which I don't want to use, because it contains all devices I have in member center - even those I don't want to include in my app!

I was trying everything from this threads:

Xcode 6 - How to pick signing certificate/provisioning profile for Ad-Hoc distribution?

Xcode 6 GM creating archive

but nothing is working for me. Maybe I don't understand correctly how it works and there is a trick I have to do but I would like to use provisioning profile defined by me. I was trying to create new provisioning profile, rename the old one, remove all from Mac, drag provisioing profile from desktop to Xcode icon, select correct Provisioning Profile in Build Setting all over again but I'm stuck.

Screenshots here:

enter image description here

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My Ad-hoc profile is distribution profile.

10
Having this issue too. Deleted and remade all my certificates, including the "XC" certificate that Xcode magically creates for you. Xcode still automatically recreates and chooses the XC certificate for IPA ad hoc distribution. No idea what's going on, and all the other solutions don't seem to work either. I'm downgrading back to Xcode 5.1.1 until this gets resolved.Chun
Remove everything on your keychain, licenses on developer.apple and follow these steps: stackoverflow.com/questions/25567481/…E-Riddie
This is mighty annoying. I've witnessed that too. Is there any developer documentation that explains this whole thing? Basically, it means that there's no point in creating your own AdHoc provision profiles, if XCode will create one anyway. Additionally, I can see that whenever I export archive for AdHoc, it picks a relatively random XC* provision. sometimes it's related to the project vendor, sometimes it's just * wildcard. What the heck?rattkin
Why Apple, Why?? This aint VB6, I can do the profiles myself...Alex Nolasco
@rattkin Correct; there is no point in making your own AdHoc provisioning profiles. The selection that Xcode makes isn't random. If your application uses any capabilities that require a non-wildcard app id, then it will use a profile with a specific app id. Otherwise, it will use a profile with a wildcard app id.clarkcox3

10 Answers

4
votes

I have a workaround for this that works for me.

I have both Xcode 6 and Xcode 5.1.1 installed, Xcode 6 is in Applications and Xcode 5.1.1 is in another directory. When I want to do a build I use Xcode 6 to create the Archive. But you can also see the created Archive in Xcode 5.1.1 so I use Xcode 5.1.1 to distribute the Ad Hoc .ipa using the provisioning profile that I want to use. So build using Xcode 6 but distribute using Xcode 5.1.1. It works for me.

5
votes

There is no way to get Xcode 6.x to use an ad-hoc profile that doesn't contain all of the devices on your team; this is by design.

3
votes

Xcode6 will now always create a new AdHoc provisioning profile prefixed with 'XC' when you export an archive for testing (e.g. Hockey App). In order to do this you must always have the latest App Store Distribution certificate and private key in your keychain.

NOTE: You do not have to have this latest distribution certificate selected in your provisioning profile you built the archive with. Also keep in mind you do not need to have an AdHoc provisioning profile to export an AdHoc ipa.

When you export the first time you will probably receive an error saying that you do not have an AdHoc provisioning profile with the following devices/people in it. Just hit 'Try Again' and it will work.

Something else to keep in mind is that when exporting an ipa you are forced to test push notifications through their distribution/production servers as it is using the new self generated 'Distribution XC: AdHoc' provisioning profile.

If you are using Urban Airship like we are you can no longer use development keys for testing. If you look under 'Entitlements' once you get through the steps to export it will show you that 'aps-environment' is set to 'production'. If anyone finds an alternate solution for this let me know.

2
votes

I was facing similar issue with my distribution license, and the problem was there was "XC" provisioning profile which had the exact same bundle id.

My solution to his was to delete this XC: provisioning profile both from Apple Developer Portal and Xcode -> Preferences -> Apple ID -> View Details -> XC: provisioning profile -> right click Go To Finder -> delete

Hope this helps,

1
votes

I encountered the same issue. On one of the StackOverflow threads you linked to, a solution was recently added that worked for me.

After you have created the archive, you can export it with a specific provisioning profile from the command line:

xcodebuild -exportArchive -archivePath "~/Library/Developer/Xcode/Archives/{some-date}/{appname date, time.xcarchive" -exportPath {appname} -exportFormat ipa -exportProvisioningProfile "{provisioning profile name}"

Note that the provisioning profile name is just the name, without any path or file extension.

1
votes

I ran into this today as well.

I ended up removing the XC profile from the developer portal and recreating my other ad-hoc and app store profiles and downloading them again.

After I did this, when I built and tried to submit to app store, the correct App Store profile showed up AND when I went to export for ad-hoc, the correct ad-hoc profile showed up.

Yay ;)

0
votes

I hit a similar problem and discovered that even if you specify the correct profiles in Xcode the Xcode6 system wants you to have the latest (from member centre) provisioning profile (for each team your account is against). It seems to walk each one in turn before using the one you need and gets blocked if you are absent any provisioning profile for the teams you belong to.

0
votes

I ran into this.

No solution here worked.

I ended up moving to a command line build using nomad cli shenzen. Its another great open source project by mattt

Now I go into a shell and just type:

ipa build

DONE

They even have options to send the ipa to whatever Ad Hoc service you want. Awesome.

0
votes

In Xcode 6 (at least 6.1 I am using now)when you are doing the export for ad hoc, xcode 6 will automatically scan if there is any provisioning profile contains all devices registered in the developer account and at the same time match the bundle ID. If no, it will use XC provision profile. Therefore, if you want to use your own profile, for example, for the purpose of push notification, you will need to select all devices in your profile on apple developer portal. I guess that's the reason why some people recreate profile would work and some wouldn't.

0
votes

My way is much simpler:
I go to the developer - provisioning profiles and re-create my Ad Hoc profile by choosing 'Edit' then 'Generate', download it and install with double-click. When exporting .ipa the correct (mine) profile is chosen.
Apple only uses the last built provisioning profile, obviously.