13

The following are the steps I would like to have:

  1. launch xcode
  2. open a specific xcodeproj file
  3. build and debug it
  4. quit xcode

The following is my first attempt to write AppleScript:

tell application "Xcode"
    tell project "iphone_manual_client"
        debug
    end tell
    close project "iphone_manual_client"
end tell

This only works when xcode has this project opened. I would like to have the project to be opened only when it is necessary to do so.

Can any AppleScript gurus out there points me to the right direction? Thanks.

-chuan-

4 Answers 4

13

I think I managed to solve it. The following is the AppleScript:

tell application "Xcode"
    open "Users:chuan:Desktop:iphone_manual_client:iphone_manual_client.xcodeproj"
    tell project "iphone_manual_client"
            clean
            build
            (* for some reasons, debug will hang even the debug process has completed. 
               The try block is created to suppress the AppleEvent timeout error 
             *)
            try
                debug
            end try
    end tell
    quit
end tell

The path has to be in format of ":" instead of "/". The only problem now is that after the debug console has done its job, AppleScript seems to "hang" as though waiting for something to happen. I need to do more research on AppleScript to know what is wrong with the script.

4
  • do you know how to check if debug is already running? I'm getting an issue on subsequent executions of my script: "Unable to debug executable since a debug session is in progress" Jan 6, 2011 at 12:41
  • Hi Aaron, I supposed another option is to force XCode to shutdown completely and launch XCode again before running your new set of tests? This might get around the problem you are facing.
    – chuan
    Jan 20, 2011 at 13:22
  • 3
    Unfortunately a lot of Xcode AppleScript functionality was broken with Xcode 4, including the run and debug features. It looks like the script above no longer works.
    – ThomasW
    Feb 6, 2012 at 9:41
  • You must remove project word in tell project command.
    – Velcro
    Jan 9, 2023 at 9:59
4

I'm not sure about AppleScript but you can compile it from command line, without opening xcode ide, like this:

xcodebuild -configuration Debug -target WhatATool -project WhatATool.xcodeproj

Where configuration is obvious option, target is the name in Target list of xcode and the project name at the end.

1
  • 2
    Hi stefan, thanks for your response. This will build the application. The reason why I need to use xcode is the uploading and remote debugging mechanism it has for iphone. There is no command line tool that I can use to let me upload my newly compiled iphone app to the real device easily apart from xcode.
    – chuan
    Jun 17, 2009 at 13:52
2

There's a command line utility called xcodebuild (man page here) which may work better for what you want to accomplish.

1
  • 1
    Hi pgb, xcodebuild will only build it for me. It does not help me to upload the app to iphone and debug it from there.
    – chuan
    Jun 17, 2009 at 13:53
2

Since debugging can take an arbitrary amount of time, you probably want a "with timeout of seconds" / "end timeout" block around the debug message.

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