70

Given the following:

- (void) someMethod
{
    dispatch_async(dispatch_get_main_queue(), ^{
        myTimer = [NSTimer scheduledTimerWithTimeInterval: 60
                                                           target: self
                                                         selector: @selector(doSomething)
                                                         userInfo: nil
                                                          repeats: NO];
    });
}

Where myTimer is declared in a private interface:

@interface MyClass()
{
    NSTimer * myTimer;
}
@end

How would one fix the following warning:

Block implicitly retains 'self'; explicitly mention 'self' to indicate this is intended behavior

From what I have found so far, most suggestions involve putting something such as:

- (void) someMethod
{
    __typeof__(self) __weak wself = self;
    dispatch_async(dispatch_get_main_queue(), ^{
        wself.myTimer = [NSTimer scheduledTimerWithTimeInterval: 60
                                                           target: self
                                                         selector: @selector(doSomething)
                                                         userInfo: nil
                                                          repeats: NO];
    });
}

Except, that myTimer is an ivar, meaning wself does not have access to any properties.

I guess my questions are:

  1. Do/should I care?
  2. Should I declare myTimer as a property?

I use ivars quite a bit through my code. I just added the -Weverything flag to my project to see if I can find any underlying issues and this is by far the most common warning. I have no problem going though and fixing it by making my ivars properties, but I want to make sure I get a better understanding before I do that.

4
  • "Except, that wself is an ivar, meaning wself does not have access to any properties." - wat?
    – user529758
    Feb 5, 2014 at 12:47
  • @H2CO3 sorry, that should have said 'except that myTimer is an ivar'.
    – Kyle
    Feb 5, 2014 at 13:05
  • I've started getting this warning after upgrading to Xcode 9.3 today, and following Xcode's own recommendation to update project settings. All out of nothing, I've got 300+ warning messages on the project. Mar 29, 2018 at 22:04
  • Is this a Swift induced warning? If so, why are still objected to memory management intricacies while we should be writing code.
    – Tjalsma
    Jul 25, 2019 at 17:51

5 Answers 5

79

Replacing myTimer by self->myTimer would fix your warning.

When you use an iVar _iVar in the code, the compiler will replace the code by self->_iVar, and if you use it inside a block, the block will capture self instead of the iVar itself. The warning is just to make sure that the developer understand this behaviour.

7
  • 5
    I am also getting this error, but I have a confusion will it cause any memory leak???? Apr 18, 2018 at 6:56
  • 2
    @Surbhi Garg On the contrary, a weak pointer means the retain count does not change. The only issue is that self will get released before it's used.
    – bauerMusic
    May 25, 2018 at 8:35
  • 1
    One thing though, as I understand, allocating a dispatch_async inside a method (rather then holding it strongly) will not create a retain cycle anyway. The block may retain self, but self does not retain the block. So I take it that these warning simply air on adopting 'good habits'?
    – bauerMusic
    May 25, 2018 at 8:39
  • Came across this warning recently and I was wondering if there's a better solution that doesn't require me to put self-> in front of each _iVar in my code: there are plenty in my block and it would be visually very messy.
    – Andrea
    Oct 22, 2018 at 12:17
  • 4
    You can also move all the block logic inside a method and call it inside the block.
    – bsarr007
    Oct 23, 2018 at 14:24
75

Details

Xcode: 9.2, 10.2, 11.0 (11A420a)

Warnings in Objective-C Pods

I have swift project. Warning Block implicitly retains 'self'; explicitly mention 'self' to indicate this is intended behavior appears when I use Objective-C pods:

  • Bolts
  • FBSDKCoreKit
  • FBSDKLoginKit

enter image description here

Solution 1 (manual)

CLANG_WARN_OBJC_IMPLICIT_RETAIN_SELF = NO

Solution 2 (automatic)

Add to the end of your Podfile:

post_install do |installer|
      installer.pods_project.targets.each do |target|
           target.build_configurations.each do |config|
                config.build_settings['CLANG_WARN_OBJC_IMPLICIT_RETAIN_SELF'] = 'NO'
           end
      end
 end

Results

enter image description here

3
  • Thx @Vasily Bodnarchuk, was able to solve the error in Xcode 9.2. Are there any other implication by changing the flag to no? Mar 19, 2018 at 16:09
  • 1
    I changed this flag in three Swift projects. I have no errors. Mar 19, 2018 at 16:35
  • 12
    @user1872384 Turning this flag on or off has zero affect on how your code compiles or how it operates. You'll just no longer receive this very useful warning where you have implicit references to self that might otherwise escape your attention. If you're stuck with third party library where you're getting tons of these warnings, I can understand wanting to turn this off. But I'd suggest keeping this warning turned on for your own code, and just replace implicit references to self with explicit ones, and making sure there are no strong reference cycles in those cases.
    – Rob
    Mar 31, 2018 at 3:07
15

For those of you getting these warnings because of Bolts/FBSDKCoreKit/FBSDKLoginKit, you should avoid Vasily's answer and instead silence the warnings for those specific dependencies.

Option 1

Mention each pods instead of just FacebookCore and add inhibit_warnings: true

pod 'FacebookCore', inhibit_warnings: true
pod 'Bolts', inhibit_warnings: true
pod 'FBSDKCoreKit', inhibit_warnings: true
pod 'FBSDKLoginKit', inhibit_warnings: true

Option 2

Or silence all pods, by adding to your Podfile this:

inhibit_all_warnings!

Conclusion

You'll still get warnings for your own code. Not getting those could be problematic at some point, that's why I believe it's a better solution.

Next time you update the Facebook sdk, see if you can remove the inhibit_warnings: true or inhibit_all_warnings!.

2
  • I don't see a problem in Vasily's answer. It applies only to Pods project, but not your whole project.
    – Starsky
    Apr 24, 2019 at 20:58
  • @Starsky it's an issue because it applies to all Pods, so it will hide warnings of other Pods
    – Arnaud
    Apr 25, 2019 at 10:11
5

This fixes my problem for Xcode 9.3

- (void) someMethod{

    __weak MyClass *wSelf = self;

    dispatch_async(dispatch_get_main_queue(), ^{

    MyClass *sSelf = wSelf;
    if(sSelf != nil){
        wself.myTimer = [NSTimer scheduledTimerWithTimeInterval: 60
                                                       target: self
                                                     selector:@selector(doSomething)
                                                     userInfo: nil
                                                      repeats: NO];
       }

   });
}
2

Recently I faced the same issue and @Vasily Bodnarchuk answer seems to be helpful.

However in Continuous integration environments its not possible to change the CLANG_WARN_OBJC_IMPLICIT_RETAIN_SELF flag to NO at run time. So in order to isolate the issue i tried by checking all the dependent GEMS installed by Cocoapods and figured out that gem XCODEPROJ version 1.5.7 sets the CLANG_WARN_OBJC_IMPLICIT_RETAIN_SELF to YES whenever pod install command is executed. The solution for this is reverting the XCODEPROJ to earlier version 1.5.1 by executing sudo gem install xcodeproj -v 1.5.1 Once reverted just execute pod install and the flag will be set to NO always.

3
  • It worked for me !!!. The answer should be accepted as correct. It saved my day. Thanks @bhuvan Mar 30, 2018 at 8:28
  • 2
    @PallavTrivedi - I do not think this should be the accepted answer. Don't get me wrong, this answer is correct insofar as it successfully silences the warning. But this warning is extremely useful. I would suggest making your self references explicit (where you can glance at your code and easily see candidates for strong reference cycle problems) rather than have not-so-obvious implicit reference to self escape one's attention. Apple added this useful warning for a reason.
    – Rob
    Mar 31, 2018 at 2:27
  • I agree, I was just downvoted for answering the same way. Do not silence the warning by removing it. Silence the warning by not incorrectly referencing self. It can create retain cycles.
    – Joel Teply
    Jun 18, 2019 at 19:27

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