Wildcard App IDs for iPhone/iPod Touch Apps

后端 未结 5 1411
谎友^
谎友^ 2020-12-29 10:20

I\'m writing my third app, and I already have an app in the App Store, but I still don\'t get this App ID business.

I created the App IDs for my first two applicatio

相关标签:
5条回答
  • 2020-12-29 10:39

    Hey I just came by here, but (IMHO) I am a bit surprised that this is answered unclearly.

    In my understanding you can freely submitting apps with wild card app ID if you don't want to use In App Purchase or Push Notification services in your app. If you wish to use one of them, Apple mentioned that you should be specific with your app ID.

    However, additional there is another requirement, quoted from Provisioning portal:

    If you are creating a suite of applications that will share the same Keychain access (e.g. sharing passwords between applications) or have a set of applications with no Keychain Access requirements, create a single App ID for all applications utilizing a trailing asterisk as a wild-card character.

    Please refer to this page while you are logged into Developer Portal: iPhone Provisioning Portal - App ID How To

    Hope that helps.

    0 讨论(0)
  • 2020-12-29 10:51

    The key thing to understand is when you must use an Explicit App ID. From the iOS Team Administrator Guide:

    Use an explicit app ID if you want to use APNS, In-App Purchase, iCloud, and Game Center features.

    If you are comfortable not having access to those capabilities, you can use a wildcard App ID.

    0 讨论(0)
  • 2020-12-29 10:55
    1. Use wildcard App IDs for development because you only need 1 ID for all apps.
    2. Use Explicit App IDs on production if you need In App Purchase and Apple Push Notification service in your application.

    I would personally always use Explicit App IDs on production because you never know when you will need In-app-purchase or Push Notification in the future. Apple claims though that it is posible to upgrade from wildcard to Explicit App IDs but...

    The link is useful: http://developer.apple.com/library/ios/#qa/qa1713/_index.html

    0 讨论(0)
  • 2020-12-29 10:57

    Both are "proper", it's mostly a question of the tradeoff between ease of management and allowing more granular management of certificates.

    There two technical difference:

    1. Applications with IDs that are identical save from the top level (e.g. com.mycompany.aaa and com.mycompany.bbb) are able to access each others saved data. If you are writing a suite of applications then this could be extremely useful.

    2. You can only create a limited number of "AdHoc" certificates. If your apps have the same wildcard identifier then this limit would be imposed across all your applications.

    Personally for a small developer I would recommend using a wildcard ID. It results in a lot less to manage in several areas, and hence removes a lot of potential for mistakes. Remember that for each ID you'll probably have three individual certificates (dev/adhoc/appstore).

    Background:

    Every iPhone application must have a unique identifier and certificate. Developers can either create a certificate per application by using a complete name (e.g. com.mycompany.aaa), or they can create a wildcard certificate/ID (e.g. com.mycompany.*) in which case the app name in the .plist file is used to complete the identifier during the DRM process.

    0 讨论(0)
  • 2020-12-29 10:57

    When creating your app ID on the apple website use something like this in the second box:

    me.cbg.*
    

    Now in you apps Info.plist use bundle identifier like so:

    me.cbg.${PRODUCT_NAME:identifier}
    // or
    me.cbg.SomeAppName
    

    You can safely ignore the XXXXXXXXXX the preprends your app id.

    0 讨论(0)
提交回复
热议问题