So I'm still reasonably new to iOS development and I'm finding myself quite regularly needing to delete either DerivedData, or the contents of the iPhone Simulator directory, to get things to actually execute from my code. Clean in Xcode doesn't do the same as emptying those directories, right? And if not, is there an easier way to do it than lugging Finder around to get to them, and clearing them?
5 Answers
66:99 and climbing:
Yes, there is a better way than going into every single simulator in town, and resetting contents and settings one at a time. Also much better than looking into your simulator's directory and yanking the cache from under its feet.
Quit iPhone Simulator, then run xcrun
in Terminal:
xcrun simctl erase all
Safe and effective.
See https://stackoverflow.com/a/26394597/218152 for single device
xcrun simctl erase [device ID]
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1Does this erase the simulators themselves, though? So that I’d need to re-add them in Xcode's Devices screen afterward?– LukeNov 20, 2015 at 9:19
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2Just the content. From the documentation (
xcrun simctl help
), erase: Erase a device's contents and settings., not to be confused with delete: Delete a device or all unavailable devices. Nov 20, 2015 at 9:38 -
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@lukech: Much appreciated. I stumbled into this solution while trying to save memory on my HD, and was looking for a
clean build folder
approach. And props to you for keeping this question active. Nov 24, 2015 at 16:56 -
this command takes forever to run, how to select target sim with uuid? Jun 1, 2018 at 16:32
In the iOS Simulator menu, there is an option called Reset Content and Settings...
This should do the trick.
EDIT:
To make this much quicker and easier, I added a shortcut key like this...
In System Preferences, choose Keyboard
Then choose the Shortcuts tab. And click App Shortcuts
Click the plus button to add another shortcut.
- Click theChoose Simulator from the Application: drop-down. If it's not there, scroll to the bottom of the application list and choose "Other...". Then type "simulator" into the search and add the Simulator from there.
- Type Erase All Content and Settings... into the Menu Title: text-box.
- Type your preferred shortcut key into the Keyboard Shortcut:. (I use command-period)
- Click the Add button.
Now, while in your iOS Simulator, you can simply use your new shortcut key to reset.
If the Simulator doesn't appear in the drop down list:
- In a Finder window, go to your Applications folder.
- Right-click Xcode and choose "Show Package Contents".
- Navigate to
Contents/Developer/Platforms/iPhoneSimulator.platform/Developer/Applications/
- You will see iPhone Simulator.app.
- Now, in the Settings app, instead of choosing iOS Simulator which is missing, you choose Other....
- This will cause a window to appear that has a list of Applications.
- Now, drag iPhone Simulator.app from your Finder window to the window that appeared when you clicked Other....
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The iOS Simulator no longer appears in the Application drop-down. Should I just choose "xCode.app"? I'm on OS 10.8.3 with iOS Simulator 6.0.– potenchApr 4, 2013 at 22:49
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8In a finder window, go to your Applications folder. Option-click Xcode and choose "Show Package Contents". Navigate to the
Contents/Developer/Platforms/iPhoneSimulator.platform/Developer/Applications/
folder. You will seeiPhone Simulator.app
. Now, in the Settings app, instead of choosingiOS Simulator
which is missing, you chooseOther...
. This will cause a window to appear that has a list of Applications. Now, dragiPhone Simulator.app
from your Finder window to the window that appeared when you clickedOther...
. Apr 4, 2013 at 23:07 -
1I came here looking for something else, but went through your steps just because your answer was so good. thanks! Aug 29, 2014 at 0:54
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1
Reset Content and Settings
will not clear client-side assets on a VPN. I was struggling this for a while wondering why my CSS animations worked everywhere except the simulator, only to find out that it was caching old files even when I had deleted content and settings. The only thing that ended up working for me was disconnecting from my VPN and restarting my VM then reconnecting (the framework I use versions all my assets for me) -- you can also version them manually if just testing stuff, but that's annoying. This is something Apple should fix; it only happens when testing for iOS for me. Oct 15, 2014 at 18:32 -
3If you can't find the simulator at the path
Contents/Developer/Platforms/iPhoneSimulator.platform/Developer/Applications/
as pointed out by @JeffWolski, You can search for it by the search termsimulator.app
Aug 24, 2015 at 5:38
For web development and testing on the iOS Simulator (Safari):
With both iOS Simulator and Safari open, go to Safari > Develop > iOS Simulator and select your page which will give you access to the Web Inspector tools.
Go to Safari > Develop > Empty Caches to clear the cache on iOS Safari.
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@AdrianFlorescu this is a solution for debugging web development on iOS Safari, but I think the question was pertaining to iOS app development.– RPLJan 6, 2016 at 6:04
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5Does not work on Safari 9.0.3 with remote debugger. "Disable caches" has no effect either.– GamadrilMar 16, 2016 at 8:22
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1This setting does nothing for me (does not actually clear cache on mobile safari) Apr 4, 2016 at 17:01
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Yeah. Looks like it doesn't clean the iOS cache anymore. I guess it did in the past...– YoshApr 13, 2016 at 15:58
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1this is the only solution that seems to be working stackoverflow.com/a/51421939/1055015– ExlordApr 13, 2019 at 9:01
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1
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Best solution! But I would add that the option is under
Network
, inside Safari's Develop tool inspector (Safari -> Develop -> Simulator-your-simulator-name -> your-website
). Aug 22, 2022 at 3:36