444

I've been doing iOS development for a couple of months now and just learned of the promising CocoaPods library for dependency management.

I tried it out on a personal project: added a dependency to Kiwi to my Podfile, ran pod install CocoaPodsTest.xcodeproj, and voila, it worked great.

The only thing I'm left wondering is: what do I check in, and what do I ignore for version control? It seems obvious that I want to check in the Podfile itself, and probably the .xcworkspace file as well; but do I ignore the Pods/ directory? Are there other files that will be generated down the road (when I add other dependencies) that I should also add to my .gitignore?

20 Answers 20

442

I commit my Pods directory. I don't agree that the Pods directory is a build artefact. In fact I'd say it most definitely isn't. It's part of your application source: it won't build without it!

It's easier to think of CocoaPods as a developer tool rather than a build tool. It doesn't build your project, it simply clones and installs your dependencies for you. It shouldn't be necessary to have CocoaPods installed to be able to simply build your project.

By making CocoaPods a dependency of your build, you now need to make sure it's available everywhere you might need to build your project...a team admin needs it, your CI server needs it. You should, as a rule, always be able to clone your source repository and build without any further effort.

Not committing your Pods directory also creates a massive headache if you frequently switch branches. Now you need to run pod install every time you switch branches to make sure your dependencies are correct. This might be less hassle as your dependencies stabilise but early in a project this is a massive time sink.

So, what do I ignore? Nothing. Podfile, the lock file and the Pods directory all get committed. Trust me, it will save you a lot of hassle. What are the cons? A slightly bigger repo? Not the end of the world.

16
  • 37
    This is definitely the way to use CocoaPods. Not only is it a part of your source because you can't build without it, but your "core application" is also often highly coupled to code in CocoaPods. Very important for versioning to know exactly what version of a pod is being used, and just using Lockfile doesn't cut it. Mar 12, 2014 at 11:32
  • 42
    Easier when switching branch and when going back in time… This is a massive argument. Mar 12, 2014 at 12:50
  • 5
    Yes, I could have elaborated on this further, but to me a commit in your repo represents a snapshot of your source in time and if you don't commit your Pods directory, a big part of that snapshot is missing. You can mitigate this by being very specific your Pod versions but also consider this...if you update one of your Pods, if your Pods are in your repo, then that update will be captured in a commit and will be fully diffable. If updating a Pod causes a bug, you can much more easily see why as the underlying change is captured in your own repo. Mar 12, 2014 at 13:05
  • 6
    I think it's clear it's a matter of personal taste now. People like Seamus are now polarising the debate... it's really not fair to say that not including the Pods directory will cause you pain, when checking it in also comes with its own bundle of problems. e.g. a developer bumps a version of a dependency in a Podfile without remembering to check in the updated sources in Pods. Murphy's law. pod install every time you switch branch costs you precious ... TENS of seconds — but it eliminates that class of problems altogether.
    – fatuhoku
    Mar 23, 2014 at 9:29
  • 45
    It won't build without it! You might as well commit XCode too
    – Sourabh
    Jul 12, 2017 at 8:31
305

Personally I do not check in the Pods directory & contents. I can't say I spent long ages considering the implications but my reasoning is something like:

The Podfile refers to a specific tag or or commit of each dependency so the Pods themselves can be generated from the podfile, ergo they are more like an intermediate build product than a source and, hence, don't need version control in my project.

17
  • 77
    It might be worth mentioning that the CocoaPods project ignores the Pods directory in the example. Jun 14, 2012 at 3:26
  • 41
    I would consider adding the Podfile.lock file, because then you record exactly what versions of libraries you used for a specific build, and can reproduce it exactly for other team members. Having to ask "what version of X are you using" can be very annoying. Here is a good discussion of the ruby Gemfile equivalent: yehudakatz.com/2010/12/16/… Mar 4, 2013 at 11:27
  • 17
    I don't understand why you'd commit the Podfile.lock, shouldn't you just be more specific in your Podfile about exactly what versions you depend on? What am I not understanding? Mar 7, 2013 at 0:57
  • 9
    Here's how I see it: If your Podfile specifies exact versions of every pod then the only way to get updates is to know the updates exist and manually specify them. This might be preferred for a popular or mission-critical app. For earlier development, important updates are much easier to come by if you just diff Podfile.lock when it gets updated and then decide if you want the updates, which you probably do most of the time. Apr 21, 2013 at 17:59
  • 49
    It's important to mention Podfile.lock: it's called out by Cocoapods as being recommended to be under version control.
    – cbowns
    Oct 11, 2013 at 1:35
173

I recommend to use the GitHub’s Objective-C gitignore. In detail, the best practices are:

  • The Podfile must always be under source control.
  • The Podfile.lock must always be under source control.
  • The Workspace generated by CocoaPods should be kept under source control.
  • Any Pod referenced with the :path option should be kept under source control.
  • The ./Pods folder can be kept under source control.

For more information you can refer to the official guide.

source: I’m a member of the CocoaPods core team, like @alloy


Although the Pods folder is a build artifact there are reasons that you might consider while deciding wether to keep it under source control:

  • CocoaPods is not a package manager so the original source of the library could be removed in future by the author.
  • If the Pods folder is included in source control, it is not necessary to install CocoaPods to run the project as the checkout would suffice.
  • CocoaPods is still work in progress and there are options which don’t always lead to the same result (for example the :head and the :git options currently are not using the commits stored in the Podfile.lock).
  • There are less points of failure if you might resume work on a project after a medium/long amount of time.
4
  • 6
    Why bother keeping the workspace file? It's generated by Cocoapods anyway.
    – fatuhoku
    Mar 23, 2014 at 9:22
  • 1
    @fatuhoku For Cocoapods-blind continuous-integration test servers, in my experience. I check it all in because I don't have access to the build script for my CI host (business rule) and treat CocoaPods as a developer tool, not a build system or package manager.
    – codepoet
    May 5, 2014 at 15:58
  • 2
    ./Pod folder should NOT be kept under source control (it is auto generated) by CocoaPods. Pods folder is an artefact of the build process. The workspace can also be removed from source control unless it has other projects not managed with CocoaPods.
    – Vlad
    Oct 19, 2015 at 3:03
  • 1
    I think it should be checked in because it's a pain to do a pod install everytime I do a pull.
    – mskw
    Dec 23, 2015 at 15:09
68

.gitignore file

No answer actually offers a .gitignore, so here are two flavors.


Checking in the Pods directory (Benefits)

Xcode/iOS friendly git ignore, skipping Mac OS system files, Xcode, builds, other repositories and backups.

.gitignore:

# Mac OS X Finder
.DS_Store

# Private Keys
*.pem

# Xcode legacy
*.mode1
*.mode1v3
*.mode2v3
*.perspective
*.perspectivev3
*.pbxuser

# Xcode
xcuserdata/
project.xcworkspace/
DerivedData/

# build products
build/
*.[oa]

# repositories
.hg
.svn
CVS

# automatic backup files
*~.nib
*.swp
*~
*(Autosaved).rtfd/
Backup[ ]of[ ]*.pages/
Backup[ ]of[ ]*.key/
Backup[ ]of[ ]*.numbers/

Ignoring the Pods directory (Benefits)

.gitignore: (append to previous list)

# Cocoapods
Pods/

Whether or not you check in the Pods directory, the Podfile and Podfile.lock should always be kept under version control.

If Pods are not checked-in, your Podfile should probably request explicit version numbers for each Cocoapod. Cocoapods.org discussion here.

1
  • Pods are a dependency. Adding the above # Cocoapods /n Pods/ This is the best answer. This will make it more like a package. The package holds a version. Set the version in the PodFile if you need to lock it down. Aug 21, 2021 at 10:02
39

I generally work on app’s of clients. In that case I add the Pods directory to the repo as well, to ensure that at any given time any developer could do a checkout and build and run.

If it were an app of our own, I would probably exclude the Pods directory until I won’t be working on it for a while.

Actually, I must conclude I might not be the best person to answer your question, versus views of pure users :) I’ll tweet about this question from https://twitter.com/CocoaPodsOrg.

3
  • I'd echo this as well. You can use CocoaPods without your other developers needing to use it (although they should) by checking in the Pods folder. Once CocoaPods becomes ubiquitous, pods will be similar to gems, you'd check them in in the same cases you'd "vendor" ruby gems. Feb 26, 2012 at 16:31
  • 2
    I think one have also to consider that sometime pods or pod utility(the good version) may not available. Even more, if two users with different pod utility version run the utility for exactly the same Podspec, the output might differ.
    – Adrian
    Mar 14, 2013 at 16:53
  • 1
    Checkout, build and run is the most important consideration. Why would you make your build, and ability to build dependent on any external factors? I check in all pods. You might save other developers (or your future self) hours of searching for the correct pods. I don't see any downsides to checking them in either.
    – n13
    Jun 23, 2015 at 7:16
21

The answer for this is given directly in Cocoapod docs. You may look at "http://guides.cocoapods.org/using/using-cocoapods.html#should-i-ignore-the-pods-directory-in-source-control"

Whether or not you check in your Pods folder is up to you, as workflows vary from project to project. We recommend that you keep the Pods directory under source control, and don't add it to your .gitignore. But ultimately this decision is up to you:

Benefits of checking in the Pods directory

  • After cloning the repo, the project can immediately build and run, even without having CocoaPods installed on the machine. There is no need to run pod install, and no Internet connection is necessary.
  • The Pod artifacts (code/libraries) are always available, even if the source of a Pod (e.g. GitHub) were to go down.
  • The Pod artifacts are guaranteed to be identical to those in the original installation after cloning the repo.

Benefits of ignoring the Pods directory

  • The source control repo will be smaller and take up less space.

  • As long as the sources (e.g. GitHub) for all Pods are available, CocoaPods is generally able to recreate the same installation. (Technically there is no guarantee that running pod install will fetch and recreate identical artifacts when not using a commit SHA in the Podfile. This is especially true when using zip files in the Podfile.)

  • There won't be any conflicts to deal with when performing source control operations, such as merging branches with different Pod versions.

Whether or not you check in the Pods directory, the Podfile and Podfile.lock should always be kept under version control.

20

I check in everything. (Pods/ and Podfile.lock.)

I want to be able to clone the repository and know that everything will just work as it did last time I used the app.

I'd rather vendor things in than risk having different results that could be caused by a different version of the gem, or someone rewriting history in the Pod's repository, etc.

2
  • 4
    The other nice thing about doing this is after an update, you can look at the diff before checking in and see exactly what files in the pods changed.
    – funroll
    Feb 13, 2014 at 22:05
  • 2
    Additionally, your project doesn't require all of your developers to have CocoaPods installed (which can be a good thing if you want to control who/how dependencies are added and updated). Mar 18, 2014 at 11:52
13

I'm in the camp of developers who do not check in libraries, assuming we have a good copy available in another location. So, in my .gitignore I include the following lines specific to CocoaPods:

Pods/
#Podfile.lock  # changed my mind on Podfile.lock

Then I make sure that we have a copy of the libraries in a safe location. Rather than (mis-)use a project's code repository to store dependencies (compiled or not) I think the best way to do this is to archive builds. If you use a CI server for your builds (such as Jenkins) you can permanently archive any builds that are important to you. If you do all your production builds in your local Xcode, make a habit of taking an archive of your project for any builds you need to keep. Something like: 1. Product --> Archive

  1. Distribute... Submit to the iOS App Store / Save for Enterprise or Ad-hoc Deployment / what have you

  2. Reveal your project folder in Finder

  3. Right click and Compress "WhateverProject"

This provides an as-built image of the entire project, including the complete project and workspace settings used to build the app as well as binary distributions (such as Sparkle, proprietary SDKs such as TestFlight, etc.) whether or not they use CocoaPods.

Update: I've changed my mind on this and now do commit the Podfile.lock to source control. However, I still believe that the pods themselves are build artifacts and should be managed as such outside of source control, through another method such as your CI server or an archive process like I describe above.

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  • 24
    Cocoapods specifically recommends checking in Podfile.lock: docs.cocoapods.org/guides/working_with_teams.html
    – cbowns
    Oct 11, 2013 at 1:36
  • Interesting. Since Podfile.lock bakes in paths to local pods, I hadn't considered adding it to version control. However, now that I think about it, it's not different from the local changes I make in Podfile but never commit. Thanks for pointing this out.
    – Alex Nauda
    Oct 11, 2013 at 13:53
  • Has that working with teams link changed? It mentions nothing about the Podfile.lock file.
    – ingh.am
    Dec 12, 2013 at 17:26
  • 4
    @ing0 I think the new link is this one
    – phi
    Dec 13, 2013 at 3:50
  • The advantage of checking in Podfile.lock is that it's obvious if any of your pods or their dependencies have been upgraded.
    – Tim Potter
    Dec 17, 2013 at 23:44
11

I prefer committing Pods directory along with Podfile and Podfile.lock to make sure anyone in my team can checkout the source anytime and they don't have to worry about anything or do additional stuff to make it work.

This also helps in a scenario where you have fixed a bug inside one of the pods or modified some behaviour as per your needs but these changes will not be available on other machines if not committed.

And to ignore unnecessary directories:

xcuserdata/
10

I must say, I am a fan of committing Pods to the repository. Following a link already mentioned will give you a good .gitignore file to get up your Xcode projects for iOS to allow for Pods but also for you to easily exclude them if you so wish: https://github.com/github/gitignore/blob/master/Objective-C.gitignore

My reasoning for being a fan of adding Pods to the repository is for one fundamental reason which no one seems to be picking up on, what happens if a library which our project is so dependant upon is suddenly removed from the web?

  • Maybe the host decides they no longer want to keep their GitHub account open What happens if the library is say several years old (like older than 5 years for example) there is a high risk the project may no longer be available at source
  • Also another point, what happens if the URL to the repository changes? Lets say the person serving the Pod from their GitHub account, decides to represent themselves under a different handle - your Pods URLs are going to break.
  • Finally another point. Say if you're a developer like me who does a lot of coding when on a flight between countries. I do a quick pull on the 'master' branch, do a pod install on that branch, while sitting in the airport and have myself all set for the upcoming 8 hour flight. I get 3 hours into my flight, and realise I need to switch to another branch.... 'DOH' - missing Pod information which is only available on the 'master' branch.

NB... please note the 'master' branch for development is just for examples, obviously 'master' branches in version control systems, should be kept clean and deployable/buildable at any time

I think from these, snapshots in your code repositories are certainly better than being strict on repository size. And as already mentioned, the podfile.lock file - while version controlled will give you a good history of your Pod versions.

At the end of the day, if you have a pressing deadline, a tight budget, time is of the essence - we need to be as resourceful as possible and not waste time on strict ideologies, and instead harness a set of tools to work together - to make our lives easier more efficient.

1
  • 2
    This is one of the best answers to the "Do I check my dependencies in to source control" ageless question. First, you explain an actual concrete, risk-based, business justification for your reasoning. Secondly, you remind everyone that at the end of the day, the best solution is whatever gets the job done and gets people working together. You remove the religion from the equation. Nice job!
    – Brandon
    Apr 23, 2015 at 0:51
9

It depends, personally:

Why pods should be part of the repo (under source control) and should not be ignored

  • The source is identical
  • You can build it right away as is (even without the cocoapods)
  • Even if a pod is deleted, we still have its copy (Yes, this can happen and it did. In an old project where you want just a small change you would need to implement a new library to be able to even build).
  • pods.xcodeproj settings are part of the source control as well. This means e.g. if you have the project in swift 4, but some pods must be in swift 3.2 because they are not updated yet, these settings will be saved. Otherwise the one who cloned the repo would end up with errors.
  • You can always delete pods from the project and run pod install, the opposite can not be done.
  • Even the authors of the Cocoapods recommend it.

Some cons: larger repository, confusing diffs (mainly for team members), potentially more conflicts.

8

At the end is up to you the approach you take.

This is what Cocoapods team thinks about it:

Whether or not you check in your Pods folder is up to you, as workflows vary from project to project. We recommend that you keep the Pods directory under source control, and don't add it to your .gitignore. But ultimately this decision is up to you.

Personally I'd like to keep Pods out, as node_modules if I were using Node or bower_components if I were using Bower. This apply for almost any Dependency Manager out there, and is the philosophy behind git submodules aswell.

However there are sometimes that you might want to be really sure about the state-of-art of a certain dependency, that way you are carry own the dependency within your project. Of-course there are several drawbacks that apply if you do that, but concerns do not only apply to Cocoapods, those applies to any Dependency Manager out there.

Below there is a good pros/cons list made by Cocoapods team, and the full text of the quote mentioned previously.

Cocoapods team: Should I check the Pods directory into source control?

8

Pros of not checking in Pods/ to version control (in subjective order of importance):

  1. Much easier to merge commits, and review code diffs. Merging is a common source of issues in a code base, and this allows you to focus only on things that are pertinent.
  2. It's impossible for some random contributor to edit the dependencies themselves and check the changes in, which they should never do (and again would be hard to identify if the diff is massive). Editing dependencies is very bad practice because a future pod install could occlude the changes.
  3. Discrepancies between the Podfile and the Pods/ directory are found quicker among teammates. If you check in Pods/ and, for example, update a version in the Podfile, but forget to run pod install or check in the changes to Pods/, you will have a much harder time noticing the source of the discrepancy. If Pods/ isn't checked in, you always need to run pod install anyway.
  4. Smaller repo size. Having a smaller byte-footprint is nice, but that doesn't matter much in the grand scheme. More importantly: having more things in the repo also increases your cognitive load. There is no reason to have things in the repo that you shouldn't be looking at. Refer to documentation (the abstraction) to know how something works, not at code (the implementation).
  5. Easier to discern how much someone contributes (since their lines of code contributed won't include dependencies they didn't write)
  6. JAR files, .venv/ (virtual environments), and node_modules/ are never included in version control. If we were completely agnostic about the question, not checking in Pods would be the default based on precedent.

Cons of not checking in the Pods/

  1. You must run pod install when switching branches, or reverting commits.
  2. You can't run a project just by cloning the repository. You must install the pod tool, then run pod install.
  3. You must have an internet connection to run pod install, and the source of the pods must be available.
  4. If the owner of a dependency removes their package, you can't use it (though you shouldn't be using a deprecated dependency in the first place - this just forces you to have dependency hygiene earlier).

In summary, not including the Pods directory is a guardrail against more bad practices. Including the Pods directory makes running the project easier. I prefer the former over the latter. You won't need to debrief every new person on a project about "what not to do" if there is not a possibility for making certain mistakes in the first place. I also like the idea of having a separate version control for the Pods which alleviates the Cons.

3

To me, the biggest concern is future proofing your source. If you plan to have your project last for a while and CocoaPods ever goes away or the source of one of the pods goes down, you're completely out of luck if trying to build fresh from an archive.

This could be mitigated with periodic full source archivals.

3

Check in the Pods.

I think this should be a tenet of software development

  • All builds must be reproducible
  • The only way to ensure builds are reproducible is to be in control of all dependencies; checking in all dependencies is therefore a must.
  • A new developer starting from scratch shall be able to check out your project and start working.

Why?

CocoaPods or any other external libraries might change which might break things. Or they might move, or be renamed, or be removed altogether. You can't rely on the internet to store things for you. Your laptop might have died and there is a critical bug in production that needs to be fixed. The main developer might get hit by a bus and his replacement has to start up in a hurry. And I wish that last one was a theoretical example but it actually happened at a startup I was with. RIP.

Now, realistically, you can't really check in ALL dependencies. You can't check in an image of the machine you used to create builds; you can't check in the exact version of the compiler. And so on. There are realistic limits. But check in all you can - not doing so just makes your life harder. And we don't want that.

Final word: Pods are not build artifacts. Build artifacts are what gets generated from your builds. Your build uses Pods, not generate them. I'm not even sure why this has to be debated.

2

TL;DR: when you track the Pods/ folder, the project is easier to pick up from. When you don't track it, it's easier to improve on when you work in a team.

Although the Cocoapods organization encourage us to track the Pods/ directory, they say it's up to the devs to decide whether or not to do it based on these pros and cons: http://guides.cocoapods.org/using/using-cocoapods.html#should-i-check-the-pods-directory-into-source-control

Personally, I usually track the Pods/ folder just for projects that I won’t be working on anymore for a while. That way any developer can quickly pick up from it and continue the work using the proper version of the cocoapods.

On the other hand, I think the commit history gets cleaner and its easier to merge the code and review another person's code when you are not tracking the Pods/ folder. I usually set the cocoapod library's version when I install it to make sure anyone can install the project using the same versions as I.

Also, when the Pods/ directory is being tracked all the devs have to use the same version of Cocoapods to prevent it from changing dozens of files every time we run pod install to add/remove a pod.

Bottom line: when you track the Pods/ folder, the project is easier to pick up from. When you don't track it, it's easier to improve on.

1

In theory, you should check in the Pods directory. In practice, it is not always going to work. Many pods well exceed the size limit of github files so if you are using github you are going to have issues checking in the Pods directory.

0

Seems like a good way to structure this really would be to have the "Pods" directory as a git submodule / separate project, here's why.

  • Having pods in your project repo, when working with several developers, can cause VERY LARGE diffs in pull requests where it's nearly impossible to see the actual work that was changed by people (think several hundreds to thousands of files changed for libraries, and only a few changed in the actual project).

  • I see the issue of not committing anything to git, as the person owning the library could take it down at any time and you're essentially SOL, this also solves that.

0

Whether or not you check in your Pods folder is up to you, as workflows vary from project to project. We recommend that you keep the Pods directory under source control, and don't add it to your .gitignore. But ultimately this decision is up to you:

Benefits of checking in the Pods directory

  1. After cloning the repo, the project can immediately build and run, even without having CocoaPods installed on the machine. There is no need to run pod install, and no Internet connection is necessary.
  2. The Pod artifacts (code/libraries) are always available, even if the source of a Pod (e.g. GitHub) were to go down.
  3. The Pod artifacts are guaranteed to be identical to those in the original installation after cloning the repo.

Benefits of ignoring the Pods directory

  1. The source control repo will be smaller and take up less space. As long as the sources (e.g. GitHub) for all Pods are available, CocoaPods is generally able to recreate the same installation.(Technically there is no guarantee that running pod install will fetch and recreate identical artifacts when not using a commit SHA in the Podfile. This is especially true when using zip files in the Podfile.)
  2. There won't be any conflicts to deal with when performing source control operations, such as merging branches with different Pod versions. Whether or not you check in the Pods directory, the Podfile and Podfile.lock should always be kept under version control.
1
-1

You should remove pods from git and then gitignore will work..

git rm -rf --cached ios/Pods

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