NB: This is related to this question on project structure, but I have decided to a vastly the use-case to better abstract the problem.
How d
Update:
As Rhythmic Fistman mentioned the original answer's method gets overwritten when doing a new pod install.
Aelam provided the following method in this Github issue:
Add this to your podfile. remember to replace the target name
post_install do |installer_representation|
installer_representation.project.targets.each do |target|
if target.name == "Pods-YOU_EXTENSION_TARGET-AFNetworking"
target.build_configurations.each do |config|
config.build_settings['GCC_PREPROCESSOR_DEFINITIONS'] ||= ['$(inherited)', 'AF_APP_EXTENSIONS=1']
end
end
end
end
Obsolete answer:
1) Be sure that pod 'AFNetworking'
is included for both targets (your container app and extension) in your podfile.
Example in my case:
target 'ContainerAppTarget', :exclusive => true do
pod "SDKThatInternallyUsesAFNetworking"
end
target 'ExtensionTarget', :exclusive => true do
pod 'AFNetworking'
end
2) In XCode, click on Pods on the hierarchy view to bring its build options. Then on the build options, select the target for which you are looking at the build options in the dropdown. There select Pods-{Extension Target Name}-AFNetworking
(it should have been created automatically by pod install. Then select Build Settings. Then under Apple LLVM 6.0 - Language, verify that Prefix header has a filename. That filename on my case was Target Support Files/Pods-{Extension Target Name}-AFNetworking/Pods-{Extension Target Name}-AFNetworking-prefix.pch
. If it doesn't have such a filename or similar then add it.
3) Go to that prefix header file that was named there or you added there. It'll be almost empty, then add the following line at the end:
#define AF_APP_EXTENSIONS
That should allow your container app to point to a version of AFNetworking built normally and your extension app to another built with the flag set. So only one version of the library but built in two different ways, each on one of the targets.
For newcomers to this post, things have changed a little.
I spent a fair amount of time hitting my head against a wall, hopefully this will spare some of you from that same fate.
Cocoapods changed so that it now only generates one library per pod, so in order to properly set the AF_APP_EXTENSIONS
macro, it actually needs to be set in the AFNetworking target, not your extension's target.
For example (with some pretty log statements):
post_install do |installer_representation|
installer_representation.pods_project.targets.each do |target|
puts "=== #{target.name}"
if target.name == "AFNetworking"
puts "Setting AFNetworking Macro AF_APP_EXTENSIONS so that it doesn't use UIApplication in extension."
target.build_configurations.each do |config|
puts "Setting AF_APP_EXTENSIONS macro in config: #{config}"
config.build_settings['GCC_PREPROCESSOR_DEFINITIONS'] ||= ['$(inherited)', 'AF_APP_EXTENSIONS=1']
end
end
end
end
Also worth noting the pods_project
in installer_representation.pods_project.targets.each do |target|
Cocoapods has deprecated project
and it has been changed to pods_project
The one somewhat downside to this is that AFNetworking won't use any UIApplication APIs in the container app either, but that was a non-issue in my project.
Hope this helps.
Updating your pod to at least version 2.6 can solve this. See the requirements table at: https://github.com/AFNetworking/AFNetworking