1
votes

Apple sends the following email when submitting iOS app:

Missing Push Notification Entitlement - Your app appears to include API used to register with the Apple Push Notification service, but the app signature's entitlements do not include the "aps-environment" entitlement. If your app uses the Apple Push Notification service, make sure your App ID is enabled for Push Notification in the Provisioning Portal, and resubmit after signing your app with a Distribution provisioning profile that includes the "aps-environment" entitlement. See "Provisioning and Development" in the Local and Push Notification Programming Guide for more information. If your app does not use the Apple Push Notification service, no action is required. You may remove the API from future submissions to stop this warning. If you use a third-party framework, you may need to contact the developer for information on removing the API.

1
"Do I still need to register with Apple's Push Notification Service" No. And make sure you haven't enabled the remote notification background mode in the capabilities section of Xcode and that you are not calling registerForRemoteNotifications. - Gruntcakes
@Martin H where in Xcode would I find this: remote background mode? - George Asda
@GeorgeAsda: Is there anything else you may need to accept the answer below? - SwiftArchitect

1 Answers

1
votes

@GordonDove: Looks very plausible from where I'm sitting. registerUserNotificationSettings is producing false positives.

One way or another, your app is still invoking:

[[UIApplication sharedApplication] registerUserNotificationSettings:mySettings];

If you are absolutely positive you are not doing this, launch Terminal, cd to your project, and execute (do not forget the space dot trailing the grep command):

grep -r "registerUserNotificationSettings" .

It appears as so Apple does not discriminate between local and remote notifications.