278

Xcode 8 shows error that provisioning profile doesn't include signing certificate.

This issue is with Xcode-8 only with Xcode 7, same provisioning profile showing related identified certificate.

3
  • 3
    You need to a) update you provisioning profile with desired certificate or b) install the certificate (you may need to migrate it from other mac with private key as well, if it was not originally set up in your mac)
    – pedrouan
    Sep 19, 2016 at 7:57
  • 4
    a) update you provisioning profile with desired certific. - I already did that but not worked b) install the certificate - certificat is already installed, and was created in same machine so i dont need to export any key or something. And as i said there is not any issue with xcode 7 in same machine. that means there is not any issue with installation Sep 19, 2016 at 8:02
  • Check this, it quite fresh: stackoverflow.com/questions/39565906/…
    – pedrouan
    Sep 19, 2016 at 8:08

35 Answers 35

330

There are many ways to fix this, like enabling automatic signing etc. But if you want to understand the reason for this error you need to look at the error message.

It says that the provisioning profile you have selected in the "General tab", does not contain the signing certificate you selected in the "Build settings" -> "Code Signing Identity".

Usually this happens if a distribution certificate has been selected for the debug identity under "Build settings" -> "Code Signing Identity".

If this happens under "Signing (Debug)" it might also be that the "Signing Identity" -> "iOS Development" is not included in the provisioning profile.

8
  • 89
    You sir are a certified gangster.
    – J.beenie
    Sep 28, 2017 at 17:22
  • 4
    Wow! This is the actual answer to the question asked. Wondering why it is not the accepted answer. Thanks sir ! Jun 7, 2018 at 7:31
  • 1
    The clever way every clever dev should be. Jun 13, 2018 at 7:16
  • 1
    This should be marked as accepted answer, that explains the problem and solution and not random Xcode generation.
    – Andreas777
    Jun 22, 2018 at 9:27
  • This is how true concept fixes the problem. (3)
    – kamran
    Jan 18, 2019 at 21:49
202

Check your keychain for identities that are missing a private key. I had multiple distribution certificates installed for the same team, one of which was missing the private key. Xcode was only checking the first matching identity in the keychain and automatically using this as opposed to the one that did include the private key.

enter image description here

Removing the matching identity that didn't have a private key made Xcode detect the correct identity again.

10
  • Thank you! Exactly what was happening here Oct 22, 2016 at 1:06
  • 9
    Did not fix the problem for me. This is likely one of those issues that can occur from multiple root causes.
    – Ash
    Mar 9, 2017 at 9:44
  • 3
    All my certs have private keys, so definitely the cause can be different.
    – RAM237
    Apr 27, 2017 at 17:01
  • 10
    In my case was several Certs (=signing identities) in login keychain with the same name, but of different dates (note in System keychain I got only one which was with correct date). Removing all except correct one did the trick.
    – RAM237
    Apr 27, 2017 at 17:19
  • 5
    Similar to @RAM237, I've multiple certs with the same name that still have private keys attached. Removing all but the correct one helped.
    – junjie
    Jul 7, 2017 at 7:14
91

To fix this,

I just enable the "Automatic manage signing" at project settings general tab, Before enabling that i was afraid that it may have some side effects but once i enable that works for me.

enter image description here

10
  • Solve this issue but got this error, "<unknown>:0: error: Swift does not support the SDK 'iPhoneSimulator9.3.sdk' Command /Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Toolchains/XcodeDefault.xctoolchain/usr/bin/swiftc failed with exit code 1 " Sep 22, 2016 at 10:50
  • 1
    You should try by reboot your simulator and deleting derived data. Sep 22, 2016 at 11:18
  • I tried, but not worked. its basically showing due to Alamofire. I think swift 3 is not compatible with Alamofire 3.0 Sep 22, 2016 at 11:33
  • I did tried same but giving me this error * has conflicting provisioning settings. * is automatically signed for development, but a conflicting code signing identity iPhone Distribution has been manually specified. Set the code signing identity value to "iPhone Developer" in the build settings editor, or switch to manual signing in the project editor. Sep 27, 2016 at 14:09
  • 44
    Worst idea, you lose all your configs by letting xcode handle your cert. Lazy bastard Xcode will just generate new certs!
    – Silom
    Dec 12, 2016 at 15:03
81

For those who should keep using not auotamatic for some reason

Open keyChain Access to see whether there are two same Certifications ,If there's two or more,Just Delete to one and it will work :)

2
  • what type of certificates am I looking for?
    – user5306470
    Feb 10, 2022 at 3:28
  • this work for me...but why? I have 2 AppStore distribution profile from the same team, and the app has 2 configuration with 2 different bundle id and 2 different distribution profiles.
    – iGenio
    yesterday
38

I experienced this issue after recently updating Xcode to version 9.3 The issue was in code signing (under debug) certificate was set to distribution certificate instead of development certificate so this prevented me from installing the app on my devices.

Here is what I did to solve this issue.

Project -> Targets -> Select your app -> Build Settings -> Code Signing Identity -> Debug -> Double tap "iPhone Distribution" and change it to "iPhone Developer".

2
  • This was so simple yet struggled with this for a while. Thank you, kind sir.
    – JM-AGMS
    Apr 26, 2018 at 16:55
  • Great. It worked perfect. Why doesn't this accept as right answer? Mar 22, 2019 at 18:42
31

I unchecked and then checked the "Automatically manage signing" option. That fixed it for me.

6
  • A dialog box came up asking if I wanted to enable automatic signing. Even though I hit cancel, this still worked.
    – aepryus
    Jan 17, 2017 at 20:36
  • @JamesWierzba it's in General->Signing. Just as in Satish Maven's answer above.
    – Loke
    Feb 7, 2017 at 15:41
  • 3
    GREATEST ANSWER
    – bubibu
    Jun 22, 2017 at 4:38
  • Also, just flipping between different profiles will fix it. You might also have to clean up keys first per the previous answer.
    – MindWire
    Jul 21, 2017 at 18:27
  • Indeed! @bubibu Currently my favorite SO answer of all time.
    – WaltersGE1
    Mar 17, 2021 at 20:26
27

For what it's worth automatic signing failed every time until I just manually deleted local profiles in: ~/Library/MobileDevice/Provisioning Profiles

After that automatic signing worked perfectly and it got the right profiles from Apple's servers.

This was affecting only some builds, notably the ones for which I had manually created profiles for watch app.

6
  • 2
    For me, I didn't have duplicates, but after deleting and then re-downloading my provisioning profiles, it seemed to work properly.
    – Julian K
    Nov 30, 2016 at 0:13
  • 2
    I tried everything else and nothing worked until deleting the existing profiles and letting Xcode re-download them Dec 16, 2016 at 20:13
  • 1
    Sorry, how can I access this ~/Library/MobileDevice/Provisioning Profiles ? I search on my finder and couldn't find any "Library" folder. Mar 9, 2017 at 1:54
  • 2
    @ChenLiYong That's a hidden folder. Press CMD + Shift + . to show all hidden files.
    – tmuecksch
    Nov 23, 2017 at 9:20
  • @ChenLiYong Use "Go to Folder…" from the Go menu (in Finder) and paste in "~/Library/MobileDevice/Provisioning Profiles"
    – wuf810
    May 15, 2021 at 16:39
24

If you use manual signing (which I would definitely encourage), this error may occur because Xcode thinks that it should sign a release build with a developer certificate, which is obviously not included in a release provisioning profile.

There is a build setting that defines which certificate should be used for which build configuration. To change it, go to build settings and search for Code Signing Identity. When expanded, there should be separate rows for each build configuration (usually Debug and Release) with in the second column its selected identity (usually iOS Developer or iOS Distribution). Make sure that it's set to the correct identity for each build configuration.

In some cases, the build configurations can also be expanded. Make sure that also its subitems are set to the correct identities.

2
  • 2
    perfect answer,
    – Nasir
    Mar 10, 2019 at 5:20
  • 1
    Thanks! It was exactly what I needed. May 20, 2019 at 19:33
23

Had the same error. Profiles seems renewed, new certificates added, i even checked it when download. Also revoked former developer's certificates, excluded from provision profile. But Xcode still asking me about previous certificates with error:

No certificate for team 'MY_TEAM' matching 'iPhone Developer: FORMER_DEVELOPER' found

so, what I did to fix it:

  1. Go Build Settings -> Signing -> Code Signing Identity
  2. Find all 'FORMER_DEVELOPER' certificates and choose needed.

Hope it will help somebody.

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  • 2
    This one is the only real solution here.
    – Berk Kaya
    Sep 17, 2020 at 8:37
  • 1
    The only solution that worked for me after 4 hours of finding solutions on the internet.
    – Jongers
    Apr 2, 2021 at 1:25
  • 1
    This worked fine. Always check - Code Signing Identity
    – KamyFC
    Apr 30, 2021 at 14:54
21

For those who still struggle with this problem in Xcode8. For me was a duplicate Certificate problem, this is how I solved it:

I read the answer of Nick and then I began my investigation. I checked all the keys and Certificates in my particular case (inside ~/Library/Keychains/System.keychain).

When I opened the file, I found that I had two iPhone Distribution Certificates (that was the certificate that Xcode was requesting me), one with the iOS Distribution private key that I have been using since the beginning, and another iPhone Distribution Certificate which its private Key had a name (iOS Distribution:NAME) that wasn´t familiar for me. I deleted this last certificate, started Xcode again and the problem was gone. xCode wasn´t able to resolve that conflict and that´s why it was giving signing certificate error all the time.

Check your keychains, maybe you have a duplicate certificate.

3
  • Exactly what happened to me.
    – funct7
    May 23, 2017 at 0:43
  • This is exactly the issue in my case, I had a confusion when setting up Fastlane Match and ended up having 3 duplicate keys in my Keychain
    – Minh Thai
    Sep 7, 2019 at 3:56
  • that's right answer, actually when Its my first time and when I was creating the certificates I did not know which should I import it in Xcode and doing this I make duplicates and because of that I was getting error, I delete the duplicate and it worked Dec 19, 2022 at 14:27
13

You may also solve code signing issues with great Fastlane toolkit. Authors put a lot of effort to effectively automate building, signing iOS apps (and more).

So in the mentioned suite, there is tool sigh which magically resolves any signing issues, hence the name :) Nice thing here is, that this tool encapsulates a knowledge about common signing issues and can detect and resolve most of them.

Fastlane is installed as Ruby gem:

gem install fastlane

And then simply invoked:

fastlane sigh --development

Answer two questions, and voila:

[11:56:55]: No existing profiles found, that match the certificates you have installed locally! Creating a new provisioning profile for you
[11:57:01]: Creating new provisioning profile for 'com.myapp' with name 'com.myapp Development'
[11:57:06]: Downloading provisioning profile...
[11:57:09]: Successfully downloaded provisioning profile...
[11:57:09]: Installing provisioning profile...

Finally, go to Build Settings -> Signing, and switch to newly created provisioning profile, whose name you just saw in the command output.

This example is for development code signing problem (running on the device). Check sigh documentation for all other options.

1
  • After reading the Build Settings part I realise I can choose what certificate the profiling is using. Thanks. Aug 1, 2018 at 14:45
12

In my case, in keychain i had two certificates with same name, i removed one of the certificate which is duplicate then it solved the problem.

1
  • 1
    Can confirm, was the problem in my case too.
    – atereshkov
    Nov 29, 2018 at 10:38
6

I had remaining private keys from certificates I had revoked, certificates were gone but not the private keys. Deleting them solved the problem.

To find them:

  1. Open Keychain access
  2. Click "Keys" under category on the side left menu
  3. Look for iOS Developer: ..." keys that do not have a certificate tied to them
  4. I deleted them and problem went away

The highlighted key in the picture is a sample private key without a certificate.

The highlighted item was one key causing issues, deleting it solved issue

5

"Enable automatic signing" and then selecting a team from the drop-down menu helped me with this exact problem.

0
5

Because I haven't seen this specific answer:

My issue was I needed manual signing. So my mistake was that In Build Settings -> Code Signing -> Code Signing Identity

I had my debug (Automatic signing style, and Apple Development Certificate), Staging and Release (Manual and Apple Distribution (adHoc) variants set correctly.

What I DIDNT have set correctly (due to some flawed logic in my understanding) was the "ANY IOS SDK" value. Once I set it to the same manual Apple Distribution cert, the error went away.

Initially i had it set to an Automatic value "iOS Distribution" because I figured it would better handled automatically since I didnt know what it meant. still dont. oh well hope it helps

4
  1. Delete the developer certificate that does not have a private key.
  2. Delete the provisioning profile from your machine using go to folder (~/Library/MobileDevice/Provisioning Profiles)
  3. Then first check then uncheck the Automatically manage signing option in the project settings with selecting team.
  4. Sing in Apple developer account and edit the provisioning profile selecting all available developer certificates then download and add to XCODE.
  5. Select the provisioning profile and code signing identity in project build settings
0
4

Xcode 11

This is the error I got

Provisioning profile "XXX" doesn't include signing certificate "Apple Development: XXX (XXX)".```

Now Xcode 11 automatically created a certificate "Apple Development: XXX" which is valid for all platforms

https://developer.apple.com/account/resources/certificates/list

You just need to

  1. Go to https://developer.apple.com
  2. Go to your provisioning profile
  3. Check if this certificate is selected
3

The issue seems to start happening in Xcode 11.

  • Go to Apple Developer
  • Find the right provision profile
  • Press Edit in the right upper corner
  • Choose the (Distribution) option in Certificates. (I think it's a new option/certificate type that apple introduced though I couldn't find any documentation)
  • Optional: Delete all you provision profiles in (~/Library/MobileDevice/Provisioning Profiles/)
    go to Xcode ->Preferences->Accounts->Download Manual Profiles

enter image description here

0
3

I have the same problem. I changed the mac. And when I downloaded the Xcode certificate, I received an error message: "The error is that the security profile does not include the certificate signature."

1) Go to https://developer.apple.com/account/ios/profile/limited/edit Select the project => edit => Certificates => Select All => Create => Download

2) In Xcode: Project file => Signing (Debug) => Provisioning profile => Import profile => Select file with 1

0
2

For me, None of the above solutions worked. I was migrating from two older mac's to a new mac, trying to get release/debug profiles working on Xcode WITHOUT Xcode auto managing them.

The solution for me was that when I went and created the two new Certificates, i ALSO had to go into my provisioning profiles, and add (under both the distribution and dev) the new certificates to the provisioning profiles so recognized them. After doing this & downloading, xcode removed all errors and it is good to go.

Hope this helps someone!

2

I got one of these emails from Apple:

Dear John Doe,

The following certificate has either been revoked by a member of your development team or has expired:

Certificate: iOS Development

Team Name: Honey Team, LLC

This does not affect apps that you've submitted to the App Store or your ability to update your apps. If you're using provisioning profiles that contain this certificate, they must be recreated before they can be reused. For details, see the "App signing overview" section of Xcode Help.

Best regards,

Apple Developer Program Support


I created a new certificate which revoked the previous certificate (locally and on any other developer's mac). For it to work I must download the new provision profiles.

The solution is to:

  • login into Apple developer account
  • remove/revoke the previous certificates created in my name.
  • add the new certificate to the provision profile. You can identify the newer one by their expiry date
  • download them again from Xcode. Xcode >> Account >> Download All Profiles
  • restart Xcode

I personally didn't have such access. This access was only available to our team's admin, hence I don't have screenshots nor certain if these steps are 100% correct.

2

I haven't seen this mentioned yet but if you are still having issues after recreating your provisioning profiles, deleting the existing ones you have in your Provision Profiles folder, checking for dupes in your Keychain, etc (all other answers ITT), open your Target > Build Settings > Code Signing and make sure everything looks consistent in there. For example, I had changed the Code Signing Identify for Debug to a Distribution identity, which obviously wouldn't work as the Development Provisioning Profile doesn't have the Distribution certificate and was causing the error in the first place.

1
  • Thanks! - In my case, under Target > Build Settings > Code Signing Identity > Release was set to iOS Developer instead of iOS Distribution.
    – Fiach Reid
    Aug 5, 2018 at 20:59
2

If your trying to upload your app to iTunes Connect (your Provisioning Profiles are set to Distribution), Go to Project Settings -> Build Settings -> Code Signing. Make sure to set all of Debug and Release Options to your Distribution Provisioning Provisioning Profile.

2

This might help you

iOS Distribution profile

Scenario:

Another developer gave me a certificate.

I installed this simply

Error :

Xcode 8 shows error that provisioning profile doesn't include signing certificate

Which was not exactly correct error.

The error was the private key missing

Preference -> Accounts -> Double click team

enter image description here

Call the developer to send the private key.

and installed it into your locally

SECOND SOLUTION

  • Create a fresh certificate.

  • Edit your existing provisioning profile

  • Include fresh certificate

  • Save and download

1

It means you need to do either 1 of the below:

  1. You should have created a certificate at the Developer Center and then included that Certificate within the Provisioning Profile which you will Import into XCode.
  2. Else, If you are using a certificate created by someone else, then get them to share/export their certificate & private key (.p12 file) to you & you need to include this into your keychain. Refer here

A solution to #2 when you are not able to get the certificate & .p12 file from the creator would be to just check the 'Automatically manage signing' option.

1

Here are the steps solved for me (For those who face the same problem in XCode 9.2):

  1. Just manually deleted local profiles in ~/Library/MobileDevice/Provisioning Profiles.

  2. Deleted and created all the certificates and provisioning profile from developers account.

  3. Removed developers account from Xcode and re-added it.

Solved my problem! :-)

1

This happens because the provisioning profile can't find the file for the certificate it is linked to.

To fix:

  1. Check which certificate is linked to your provisioning profile by clicking edit on your provisioning profile in the Certificates, Identifiers & Profiles section of the Apple Developer dashboard
  2. Download the certificate from the dashboard
  3. Double click the file to install it in your keychain
  4. Drag the file into Xcode to be extra sure it is linked

The error should be gone now.

0

Clicking but then cancelling "Enable Automatic Signing" worked for me, although the actual change it made was:

ALWAYS_EMBED_SWIFT_STANDARD_LIBRARIES = YES;

or in Xcode it's called Always Embed Swift Standard Libraries

0

I had the same issue and reason was penny. Wrong profile and certificate was selected in build settings. I only had did this before few days. So, you do not need to enable "automatic" inside xcode. Check profiles inside your build settings before doing it.

0

Try downloading the certificates/profiles directly from the member centre rather than doing it from Xcode.

It worked for me when I manually downloaded them from the member centre.

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