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I have a Xcode project, that includes a Static Library project, that uses another static library that does not support the iOS simulator architecture (Vuforia SDK: libQCAR.a).

Vuforia SDK documentation states:

Vuforia applications must be deployed to a device to run; they cannot be run in the iOS simulator.

This is my project structure:

  • MyApp.xcodeproj
    • Classes
    • MyStaticLibrary.xcodeproj
      • Classes that depends on libQCAR.a
    • Frameworks
      • libMyStaticLibrary.a
      • libQCAR.a

My problem is that MyApp.xcodeproj does not build for the iOS Simulator because libQCAR.a is not built for the i386 architecture.

Is there anyway to make MyApp.xcodeproj ignore the libQCAR.a library when building for i386? I would be able to disable all the code that depends on the library with #if !(TARGET_IPHONE_SIMULATOR)

3 Answers 3

6

You can use a conditional build settings to specify the library you want to link only on a given platform, instead of adding the library to your project in the usual ways. Specifically, you will need to specify:

 -lQCAR

in "Other Linker Flags".

Have a look at the attached image that should make things more clear (in the picture I am linking only for the simulator, you will want to select a device, I guess).

Also, do not forget to add the path to the directory containing the library to "Library Search Path" build setting (this does not need to be conditional; it would not do any harm on the simulator).

Other linker flags

2
  • I have removed the libQCAR.a file from "Build Phases" and the reference in the project and added -lQCAR for "Any iOS SDK" (just to test that it works on a iOS device). I have specified the Library search path, but the compiler fails when building for my iOS device: ld: library not found for -lQCAR.a.
    – ThomasCle
    Jun 25, 2014 at 8:35
  • I guess you need to add the path to the directory containing the library in "Library Search Paths"; you could also specify: -l/full/path/to/lib
    – sergio
    Jun 25, 2014 at 8:42
3

This issue seems very similar to: Xcode: Conditional Build Settings based on architecture (Device (ARM) vs Simulator (i386))

I believe sergio's solution is very close, but have you tried specifying the full path to the library under Other Linker Flags (potentially without "-l" - just the path)?

4
  • Finally! The part without "-l" did the trick. My settings ended like this: i.imgur.com/aHv97DD.jpg Thanks a lot.
    – ThomasCle
    Jun 25, 2014 at 9:02
  • @ThomasClemensen I don't understand; sergio's answer (the same sergio who answered the question linked in this answer) also mentions the use of the -l flag, and he answered something like 30 minutes before this answer.
    – trojanfoe
    Jun 25, 2014 at 9:06
  • @ThomasClemensen Yes; that's because sergio's answer demonstrated how to add, rather than remove, a library for the iPhone Simulator. You simply needed to reverse the condition for your own needs.
    – trojanfoe
    Jun 25, 2014 at 9:15
  • keep in mind that specifying an absolute path to a library is not a good practice, IMO -- try to use at least a relative path to the lib, if it works… or, find out why -l, which is the standard way of linking, does not work for you… :-)
    – sergio
    Jun 25, 2014 at 9:39
0

In my case, it should specify clearly which SDK uses which flags.

enter image description here

So in Any iOS Simulator SDK, you should not include the library.

In Any iOS SDK, you should include it. In my case, it's -lCloudReco.

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