问题
I'm finding many articles on the web where it is implied that you can view the .mobileprovision file contents in a text editor. For example, this Urban Airship post:
When push notifications are enabled for an app, the aps-environment key will appear in the .mobileprovision file specifying the provisioning profile:
<key>Entitlements</key>
<dict>
<key>application-identifier</key>
...
However the mobilprovision files I have (obtained within the last few days) contain 466 1/2 rows of 8 groups of 4 hex digits, (e.g. 4851 3842 4176 2845 0a09 01a2 404d 4382
). How can I view this type of file?
回答1:
You are using a text-editor that is a bit too clever for you :D.
Your editor finds out that the file actually is binary and shows it as a hex-dump - for example Sublime 2 does it that way. Open that same file using TextEdit. You will see a couple of lines of binary garbledegock and then some plain-text (XML) that should contain the information you are looking for.
However, do not edit that file using TextEdit, that will render it unusable!
回答2:
Provisioning Profiles are encoded. To decode them and examine the XML you can use this via command line:
security cms -D -i #{@profilePath}
where #{@profilePath}
is the filepath to your .mobileprovision file.
A fuller Ruby example is:
require 'plist'
profile = `security cms -D -i #{@profilePath}`
xml = Plist::parse_xml(profile)
appID = xml['Entitlements']['application-identifier']
回答3:
If you want Sublime Text 2 to be able to read .mobileprovision profiles this is the setting
"enable_hexadecimal_encoding": false,
回答4:
You can use openssl to output the contents of the signed profile.
openssl smime -in /path/to/your.mobileprovision -inform der -verify
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/10988998/did-apple-change-the-mobileprovision-file-format-and-how-can-i-view-the-curren