16

I am new on iOS development. I am implementing Universal Links in iOS App with ASP.net application.
I have define my associate domain in capabilities under Associated Domains: applinks:www.abcd.com
And also configure in App Ids on Apple Developer Account. I think app side work is all set .

But I think problem with apple-app-site-association file.

I have written json in a simple text file like below

{
  "applinks": {
    "apps": [],
    "details": [
    {
      "appID": "8T8932TY.com.AppName”,
      "paths": ["*"]
    }
    ]
  }
}

Now I am stuck here. My application targeting on iOS 9 and above. I am confused that what is the extension of this file with naming apple-app-site-association. If I need to signed in with new certificates or not. And how upload it on server side.

Please guys help me out. I am searching lot for this but not get satisfactory answer.

Thanks

1
  • Long story short, there is no file extension for apple-app-site-association file.
    – Keith OYS
    Sep 28, 2021 at 7:18

3 Answers 3

28

Your example JSON looks fine if substituted with real values for the AppID/AppName. You may want to be specific about what routes you handle but that's up to you - it's a better user experience to only try to handle routes that there's some chance you'll be able to handle, rather than opening your app for every link on your domain and kicking the user out to Safari again if that turns out not to be true.

The apple-app-site-association file should not have any file extension, and should be served from the root of your site, https://example.com/apple-app-site-association, and/or from https://example.com/.well-known/apple-app-site-association.

You say you're supporting iOS 9 and above - the change to check the .well-known route, which is checked first, came in iOS 9.3, so if you want to support below that OS, you're best off putting the file in both locations. See this answer for details.

It's also important that the file is served with the correct MIME-type, for Universal Links it can be served as application/json, and there's no need to sign/encrypt it. Getting it served with the correct MIME-type can be a little annoying if you're not familiar with configuration on your web server, as typically servers will determine the MIME-type from the file extension. You can't give it an extension, as iOS won't check the url with an extension and (IIRC) redirects are not allowed so you can't fake it by doing that either.

So that's a summary of what you're trying to accomplish, but how you do that depends on the web server you're using. For an ASP app that's likely to be IIS, in which case this question and its answers may help you configure your web server correctly. The details of how you upload a file to the root of that server will very much depend on how you've configured it as well.

5
  • Hello @Josh i have setup MIME type of apple-app-site-association file. All setup looks good. But when i click on link app not opening and that url is opening in safari. Please suggest any one possible bug Feb 22, 2017 at 7:29
  • There are a number of possible issues, it could be where you're opening the link from - e.g. links followed within Safari won't always kick you out to the app even if universal links are set up correctly. Try sending yourself an iMessage with a supported link and follow it from there.
    – Josh Heald
    Feb 22, 2017 at 11:22
  • This answer has details of a number of possible issues with actually following Universal links.
    – Josh Heald
    Feb 22, 2017 at 11:23
  • I have tried serving it from a dynamic route using ASP MVC (I guess that should work too). It didn't work so far, but I am not sure why... Safari understands it is an app link but it displays a standard app icon and it says: data- Zero KB. Go figure... As far as I know my association file is OK. Jun 13, 2017 at 9:05
  • you can enfore the mime with an htaccess file through <Files apple-app-site-association>ForceType application/json</Files>
    – cyptus
    Jul 17, 2018 at 17:41
7

There is no extension for this apple-app-site-association file. This is just a plain file. You have to host it on the top level of your domain meaning the file location will be https://www.abcd.com/apple-app-site-association Once you host it you can check/validate by using this link https://branch.io/resources/aasa-validator/

For detailed info please refer: https://blog.branch.io/how-to-setup-universal-links-to-deep-link-on-apple-ios-9/

2
  • I have checked with providing validator it is showing all well but showing one error www.abcxyz.com – This domain has some validation issues. Can you please help me out what is missing in here. Thanks for answer Feb 22, 2017 at 5:16
  • @DaveC If there are some validation issues, the validator provides the details right below where it says "... this domain has some validation issues"
    – Vasanth
    Feb 22, 2017 at 16:18
4

This worked for me.

  1. Created an empty .NET Core project and deployed it to the corresponding Azure web app service.
  2. Using, Advanced tools in Azure portal, nvaigated to the Kudu files of the deployed app service.
  3. Inside the folder "site/wwwroot/wwwroot" created a new folder named ".well-known".
  4. Inside the newly created folder, created a new file named "apple-app-site-association.json".
  5. Edited the newly created json file to hold the app details.
  6. Modifed the file "site/wwwroot/web.config" for the following reasons:

a) Since iOS always calls the URLs without file extension mentioned (https://webapp-sftpint-employeeapp-dev.azurewebsites.net/apple-app-site-association) we need to forcefully reqrite such URLs to have the file extension. Hence, added the rule in web.config

b) Since the response header should have "application/json" for the content returned from the static file "apple-app-site-association.json", we added the explicit mentioning of the mimeType as "application/json".

So, the web.config file looks somewhat like this. (only the 'rewrite' and 'staticContent' blocks needs to be added additionally)

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<configuration>
  <location path="." inheritInChildApplications="false">
    <system.webServer>
      <handlers>
        <add name="aspNetCore" path="*" verb="*" modules="AspNetCoreModuleV2" resourceType="Unspecified" />
      </handlers>
      <aspNetCore processPath="dotnet" arguments=".\yourproject.dll" stdoutLogEnabled="false" stdoutLogFile=\\?\%home%\LogFiles\stdout hostingModel="inprocess" />
      <rewrite>
          <rules>`enter code here`
              <rule name="apple_json_file">
                  <match url="^apple-app-site-association" />
                  <action type="Rewrite" url=".well-known/apple-app-site-association.json" />
              </rule>
          </rules>
      </rewrite>
      <staticContent>
          <mimeMap fileExtension=".json" mimeType="application/json" />
      </staticContent>      
    </system.webServer>
  </location>
</configuration>

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