118

I am in the early stages of creating an app where I would like to save, sync and backup data. The app will not store any files just data in a database. It is going to be iOS 8 and up so I am able to use CloudKit. I did some research and still not clear on how Core Data, iCloud and CloudKit work together.

As far as understand CloudKit is just a way of getting and retrieving data to/from the cloud. Is CloudKit just a different way of syncing data with iCloud?

My questions are:

  1. If I do use CloudKit, do I still need to create local core data database?

    • If yes will it be automatically synced with iCloud or I would have to call methods to store to both places?
  2. If the data is only stored in the cloud will user be able to access it when iOS device is not connected to the internet. I read that CloudKit will have only limited caching.

  3. How will that work if iCloud account is not enabled.

If someone can kind of break down what each technology does in the process of saving and syncing core data database offline and online.

My current understanding is:

  • Core Data is used to store data locally

  • iCloud syncs the data and stores in the cloud

  • CloudKit gives the ability to store and manage data in the cloud??

I hope I provided enough info for this question not to get closed.

2
  • 2
    Even i didn't did that much research on it, But as much i understood its don't store in local. Its something like normal server client service. Thats why without internet you can't access your DB. and as per Doc if user didn't enabled icloud account at that time u can only read the data from public container
    – Sachin
    Jun 27, 2014 at 6:18
  • @Yan can we do like this please suggest, stackoverflow.com/questions/25600556/…
    – Nikunj
    Sep 1, 2014 at 7:17

2 Answers 2

192

It's like this:

  • Core Data on its own, is completely local and does not automatically work with any of Apple's cloud services.
  • Core Data with iCloud enabled turns on syncing via iCloud. Any changes you save in Core Data are propagated to the cloud, and any changes made in the cloud are automatically downloaded. The data is stored both in iCloud and in a local persistent store file, so it's available even when the device is offline. You don't have to write any cloud-specific code, you just need to add listening for incoming changes (which is a lot like changes made on a different managed object context).
  • CloudKit is not related to Core Data. It's not a sync system, it's a transfer system. Meaning that any time you want to read/write cloud data, you need to make explicit CloudKit API calls to do so. Nothing happens automatically. CloudKit does not store data on the device, so the data is not available if the device is offline. CloudKit also adds some features not available to Core Data with iCloud-- like public shared data and the ability to download only part of the data set instead of the whole thing.

If you wanted to use CloudKit with Core Data, you'd have to write your own custom code to translate between managed objects and CloudKit records. It's not impossible, but it's more code to write. It might be more reliable but it's too soon to say for sure.

I wrote a blog post describing CloudKit from the perspective of someone who's used Core Data and iCloud in the past.

Update, June 2016: As of the most recent documentation for NSPersistentStoreCoordinator, everything related to Core Data with iCloud is marked as deprecated. As a result it should probably be avoided for new development.

20
  • 1
    In the past I've had trouble with corruption when using Core Data with iCloud, but I haven't used it much since iOS 7 came out. It's supposed to be much better. With CloudKit it's too soon to say, since it's still not officially released. Jun 30, 2014 at 21:42
  • 3
    @Tom Harrington - Could you try Core Data with iCloud for iOS 8 and let us know your impression? I've experienced lots of corruption in iOS 7 too, and the Apple support confirmed many bugs. I'm in hope that iOS 8 brings its reliability to an acceptable level, but would love to hear from you, the expert ;)
    – hyouuu
    Sep 10, 2014 at 19:06
  • 1
    Check out CKSIncrementalStore. github.com/CloudKitSpace/CKSIncrementalStore Jun 21, 2015 at 23:01
  • 3
    "You don't have to write any cloud-specific code, you just need to add listening for incoming changes (which is a lot like changes made on a different managed object context)." -- have you got a code sample/example on this comment? There are no solid examples that I can find :(
    – Ernest
    Jan 16, 2016 at 22:00
  • 1
    @TomHarrington with that sort of feedback why even have stackoverflow if all we need to do is check documentation :(
    – Ernest
    Jan 16, 2016 at 23:35
27

With iOS 13, Apple announced new features in Core Data to better work with CloudKit. The main addition is NSPersistentCloudKitContainer which basically manages syncing between Core Data and CloudKit for you.

You can learn more in the WWDC session Using Core Data with CloudKit.

Apple also released a nice collection of docs for this very usage: Mirroring a Core Data store with CloudKit.

1
  • I just want to mention here that I'm hearing about many developers who are unsatisfied with CloudKit these times. There are many unreliability problems that directly impact their business and customers, and Apple is slow to fix them. I'd advise anyone interested in this tech stack to investigate these issues and take them into account in their decision before going any further. Mar 23, 2022 at 8:22

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service, privacy policy and cookie policy

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.