I've just upgraded to xcode 4.0 and I can no longer deploy to iPhone, I get a Apple Mach-O Linker Error, it still works for the simulator though.

    Ld /Users/yveswheeler/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData/iParcel-fkeqjcjcbbhjwhdssjptkdxzzzxh/Build/Intermediates/iParcel.build/Debug-iphoneos/iParcel.build/Objects-normal/armv7/iParcel normal armv7
    cd /Users/yveswheeler/iParcel
    setenv IPHONEOS_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET 3.2
    setenv PATH "/Developer/Platforms/iPhoneOS.platform/Developer/usr/bin:/Developer/usr/bin:/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/sbin"
    /Developer/Platforms/iPhoneOS.platform/Developer/usr/bin/g++-4.2 -arch armv7 -isysroot /Developer/Platforms/iPhoneOS.platform/Developer/SDKs/iPhoneOS4.3.sdk -L/Users/yveswheeler/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData/iParcel-fkeqjcjcbbhjwhdssjptkdxzzzxh/Build/Products/Debug-iphoneos -F/Users/yveswheeler/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData/iParcel-fkeqjcjcbbhjwhdssjptkdxzzzxh/Build/Products/Debug-iphoneos -filelist /Users/yveswheeler/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData/iParcel-fkeqjcjcbbhjwhdssjptkdxzzzxh/Build/Intermediates/iParcel.build/Debug-iphoneos/iParcel.build/Objects-normal/armv7/iParcel.LinkFileList -dead_strip -all_load -ObjC -lxml2 -miphoneos-version-min=3.2 -framework UIKit -framework CoreGraphics -framework QuartzCore /Users/yveswheeler/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData/iParcel-fkeqjcjcbbhjwhdssjptkdxzzzxh/Build/Products/Debug-iphoneos/libThree20.a /Users/yveswheeler/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData/iParcel-fkeqjcjcbbhjwhdssjptkdxzzzxh/Build/Products/Debug-iphoneos/libThree20Core.a /Users/yveswheeler/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData/iParcel-fkeqjcjcbbhjwhdssjptkdxzzzxh/Build/Products/Debug-iphoneos/libThree20Network.a /Users/yveswheeler/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData/iParcel-fkeqjcjcbbhjwhdssjptkdxzzzxh/Build/Products/Debug-iphoneos/libThree20Style.a /Users/yveswheeler/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData/iParcel-fkeqjcjcbbhjwhdssjptkdxzzzxh/Build/Products/Debug-iphoneos/libThree20UI.a /Users/yveswheeler/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData/iParcel-fkeqjcjcbbhjwhdssjptkdxzzzxh/Build/Products/Debug-iphoneos/libThree20UICommon.a /Users/yveswheeler/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData/iParcel-fkeqjcjcbbhjwhdssjptkdxzzzxh/Build/Products/Debug-iphoneos/libThree20UINavigator.a -framework AddressBook -lz.1.2.3 -framework Foundation -framework CFNetwork -framework MobileCoreServices -framework SystemConfiguration -framework MessageUI -framework AudioToolbox -o /Users/yveswheeler/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData/iParcel-fkeqjcjcbbhjwhdssjptkdxzzzxh/Build/Intermediates/iParcel.build/Debug-iphoneos/iParcel.build/Objects-normal/armv7/iParcel

arm-apple-darwin10-g++-4.2.1: /Users/yveswheeler/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData/iParcel-fkeqjcjcbbhjwhdssjptkdxzzzxh/Build/Products/Debug-iphoneos/libThree20.a: No such file or directory
arm-apple-darwin10-g++-4.2.1: /Users/yveswheeler/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData/iParcel-fkeqjcjcbbhjwhdssjptkdxzzzxh/Build/Products/Debug-iphoneos/libThree20Core.a: No such file or directory
arm-apple-darwin10-g++-4.2.1: /Users/yveswheeler/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData/iParcel-fkeqjcjcbbhjwhdssjptkdxzzzxh/Build/Products/Debug-iphoneos/libThree20Network.a: No such file or directory
arm-apple-darwin10-g++-4.2.1: /Users/yveswheeler/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData/iParcel-fkeqjcjcbbhjwhdssjptkdxzzzxh/Build/Products/Debug-iphoneos/libThree20Style.a: No such file or directory
arm-apple-darwin10-g++-4.2.1: /Users/yveswheeler/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData/iParcel-fkeqjcjcbbhjwhdssjptkdxzzzxh/Build/Products/Debug-iphoneos/libThree20UI.a: No such file or directory
arm-apple-darwin10-g++-4.2.1: /Users/yveswheeler/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData/iParcel-fkeqjcjcbbhjwhdssjptkdxzzzxh/Build/Products/Debug-iphoneos/libThree20UICommon.a: No such file or directory
arm-apple-darwin10-g++-4.2.1: /Users/yveswheeler/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData/iParcel-fkeqjcjcbbhjwhdssjptkdxzzzxh/Build/Products/Debug-iphoneos/libThree20UINavigator.a: No such file or directory
Command /Developer/Platforms/iPhoneOS.platform/Developer/usr/bin/g++-4.2 failed with exit code 1
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20 Answers

I had the same problem and the issue was that i accidently imported a .m file - hope it helps

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Just ran into the same issue.

The solution (for me) = check your frameworks.

In my case I had added classes related to CoreData without "CoreData.framework". Adding it solved the MACH_O complaining.

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It happens also when you linked again a library that isn't present in the latest SDK release. Let's say you linked against libz.1.2.3 and the sdk includes 1.2.5. Check your frameworks is a really good suggestion! Thank you Dante! – SlowTree Jan 5 at 10:39
Thanks SlowTree, save suggestion solved my experience with this linker crash. libz.1.2.3 to libz.1.2.5; – Tom Pace Jan 13 at 4:20
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I had the same and managed to solve it.

In xcode preferences, location tab change value under build location to "Place build products in locations specified by targets".

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Thanks Wolfert, tried that but still have 1250 Apple Mach-O Linker Warnings and no progress. Did you do anything else to fix this? Cheers – RHD Mar 22 '11 at 22:14
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up vote 5 down vote accepted

The problem was that in XCode 4, the dependencies do not assume the architecture settings of the main project, as they previously did in XCode 3. I had to go through all of my dependencies setting them for the correct architecture.

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thank you! I was completed misled by the fact that the error message from the linker complains about "File not Found", not "File found, but I can't use it ...", and was wandering through the xcode settings looking for library search paths. But this worked for me. And if you hare having this problem, this other post is also related: stackoverflow.com/questions/2999844/three20-and-ios-4. Also, this nice summary blog: amirnaor.com/?p=112 – Rob Aug 28 '11 at 13:48
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Oh, lord. This is ridiculous Apple. – Fulvio Sep 12 '11 at 4:35
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I struggled with this for a little while, and in my case it ended up being the Build Setting under Search Paths called FRAMEWORK_SEARCH_PATHS. It helped that I selected the "Levels" button, which seemed to compare my project, target and "Resolved" settings. I saw that my target setting somehow overrode the default of "$(inherited)", and the overridden value was what XCode "resolved" the setting to be. When I removed the override, which in this case specified the 3.2 sdk, the linker errors went away -- as did some recently appeared warnings about any classes where I called post-4.0 methods.

About those warnings -- I never saw them before I added the MessageUI framework for a recent change. I suspect, but don't know for sure, that when I added that framework, XCode tried to do something clever by adding that override to my target. I didn't do it explicitly at any point. The warnings were,for example, about the URLByAppendingPathComponent method of NSURL, which did not appear until sdk 4.0. Prior to adding the MessageUI framework, I never got that warning. And since I removed the override, I no longer get them.

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I had this issue and importing QuartzCore fixed it.

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Check to make sure that you don't have a specific framework search path specified. if you go to the info on the target and just remove the framework search path entries it should use the defaults for your specified deployment version.

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I had the same issue: just accidentally deleted a .m file, while .h was in the project. The problem disappeared when I've restored the .m file.

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Not sure if it's related, but seeing that you're running some three20 libraries, you may want to check this post on their website: http://three20.info/article/2011-03-10-Xcode4-Support

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Bizarre error. For me, I just cleaned and restarted Xcode and the problem went away.

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Here is permanent solution.Generally overwriting project may cause this prolems.Try this method.

Go to your project profile

-> build settings

-> Open "Search path"

-> Open "Framework search path"

-> now,double click on path located

-> there are two paths like

(1) $(inherited)

(2) "$(SRCROOT)/../../../Data/myCodes/He/ed/Nav"

-> remove all data of first and second path..Thats it.

Note : It works only if above two options available in Framework Search Path

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You may need to update your build settings.

Verify the iOS target version and the processor architectures, as you may not have the old SDKs with XCode 4.

You may see «Missing SDK» on the build settings. Change that to whatever applies.

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That's pretty much the first thing I do whenever I upgrade xcode. This time it's not the problem. – CodeVomit Mar 16 '11 at 19:40
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One possibility: Turn on "Dead code stripping" in the Xcode 4 build settings.

Another possibility: It could be that you switched to using LLVM for some framework that was previously using GCC. Moving back to GCC (or LLVM GCC) may get rid of those warnings.

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I had the same problem, and I solved it. In my case, "architectures" setting caused the problem. In my project file, Build Settings tab, Architectures were set to armv6. I changed it to Standard(armv7), do clean and build. Then it worked!

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I just try to create a category class file and got this weird issue..and finally....

Wrong way to create category class that causes the issue:

New File -> Cocoa Touch -> Objective-C class, then I modified the name of files to Category Class like name.. (i.e. OriginalClass_CategoryName.h/m to OriginalClass+CategoryName.h/m, and also modified the contents in the file).

Right way here:

New File -> Cocoa Touch -> Objective-C category, and it'll auto generate files (OriginalClass+CategoryName.h/m).

Oh, how stupid I am!!

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In my case the problem was having different architectures specified under different targets. I was building my application target with armv6, armv7 and cocos2d with Standard (amrv7). Go into build settings and make sure your architectures agree for all targets.

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If you are using CoreData, and you use XCode to generate NSManagedObject subclasses for your entities, make sure you only generate one for each entity.

My problem was that it generated multiple NSManagedObject subclasses for the same entity (and put them in different folders).

I just deleted all of them and regenerated the NSManagedObject subclasses.

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To add onto the list of weird stuff that fixed this issue...

I had some const CGFloat variables in a global header file like so

const NSInteger  globalInteger1 = 2;
const NSInteger  globalInteger2 = 3;

The moment I removed these, all was fine :)

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I mistakenly defined a new constant with the same name as an existing constant in a different file and it caused this error for me using xCode 4.3.1. xCode didn't complain but the compiler doesn't like it.

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I was able to fix this error by editing "Library Search Paths"

It cropped up in the first place because I had moved a couple folders around, and that ended up giving my build settings two different search paths because they are are automatically added to your build settings when you link a library/framework, but they are not always removed.

So if you move a linked library/framework to a different directory and re-link it, you'll have to manually edit the search path.

You might be able to dodge this by removing the library/framework before moving it, but I haven't tested that.

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