Reputation: 696
I have this error for the new iPhone X:
Could not locate device support files.
This iPhone X (Model A1865, A1901, A1902, A1903) is running iOS 11.1 (15B93), which may not be supported by this version of Xcode.
I'm running the latest version of Xcode (Beta 9.2 9C32c) which doesn't support the iPhone X (iOS 11.1). The problem is it's a brand new iPhone, and there are no older Configuration Files to do the switch talked in most of the solved posts.
Are there any other solution to this issue since downloading the latest version of Xcode is already what I'm running, and finding the Configuration Files to do the switch seems unlikely right now? Does anyone have those Configuration Files or know how to edit them to trick Xcode?
Upvotes: 50
Views: 46726
Reputation: 721
This error can be fixed with 2 ways.
1.You need to keep updated with latest Xcode versions.
2.You can fix it without updating to latest Xcode, in this you just need to update device support file,
To update device support file just follow the steps,
You can find the Device support file and update it with the below path details,
Path-
/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/iPhoneOS.platform/DeviceSupport/
You can download device support file from this links
Upvotes: 16
Reputation: 3314
You can download all iOS-DeviceSupport
iOS 13.0
iOS 12.3
iOS 12.2
iOS 12.1
How to add a file in xCode
Find the supported real machine test files in the following directory hierarchy:
Contents -> Developer -> Platforms -> iPhoneOS.platform -> DeviceSupport(/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/iPhoneOS.platform/DeviceSupport)
The above directory is the real version of iOS that Xcode supports real machine debugging, as shown below: Then copy the latest DeviceSupport file to this directory through other channels and restart XCode to debug with the latest iOS device.
Upvotes: 10
Reputation: 445
I'm uncomfortable downloading shards from 3rd parties; also, it sounds like the iOS 13.2 support file linked above is based on a beta, which now crashes.
I would recommend downloading Xcode directly from Apple, and install the new version side-by-side with the version of Xcode which you need to use (if you're pinned by a Swift binary framework, for example).
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 193
Download the file here: https://bitbucket.org/bneves/ios13_devicesupport_xcode_10.3/
Upvotes: -1
Reputation: 1966
In my case, device support files were already present but I was still facing the issue. The reason was that folder present at this path
/Applications/Xcode-9.2.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/iPhoneOS.platform/DeviceSupport
was having name 12.1 (16B91) but the xcode was giving error for 12.1 (16C101) so renaming the folder to 12.1 (16C101) did the trick
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 8124
Well, I found non of the answers logged out here aren't complete and sustainable. So here we go.
Step 1:
Following GitHub Repository seems to be up to date with all the required Support Files
which are helpful to resolve. And it seems like this repository gets updated quicker as possible. Check out it for yourself and you are halfway done.
Step 2:
Select and download the Support files which are missing for your Xcode, which you can get the clue out of the above alert message. In my case I was informed to download 11.4 (15FCA...something). So I went and downloaded the latest iOS Support files:
Which were under the path of iPhoneOSDeviceSupport/11.4 (15F5061c)/
DeveloperDiskImage.dmg
DeveloperDiskImage.dmg.signature
Step 3:
And then place them inside the DeviceSupport folder which is in a related path to your Xcode installation. In my case, I've installed Xcode 9.2 so my path to DeviceSupport looks like as follows:
/Applications/Xcode-9.2.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/iPhoneOS.platform/DeviceSupport
Step 4
Place the two files you downloaded in a folder named 11.4 (15F5061c)
.
Clue: In your case make sure to name it after the specific iOS version you downloaded the files.
Step 5:
Quit Xcode app if you had been already using it previously. Re-open it and try to run your app on your iPhone (or in iDevice of your previous attempt). Xcode will first warn you saying something like following:
Preparing debugger support for Randika's iPhone 6s
Soon after it's completed (probably after several attempts that you may have to try reconnecting your iPhone to Xcode), you would be able to successfully run your app on your preferred device.
How could you find this path? Go to your Applications folder, locate Xcode-x.x.app file, right click on the Xcode app and select "Show package contents" as follows:
And then navigate to the DeviceSupport folder within the Finder App as follows:
Hope this would be helpful to any of you!
Cheers!
Upvotes: 88
Reputation: 219
I was able to run it, by first using BuddyBuild.com to send me a tester app through email, that I downloaded successfully. After that, I was able to build the app.
Upvotes: -1
Reputation: 1271
I had the same issue with my iPhone 8, Xcode Beta 9.2 did not support my version of iOS 11.1.
However Xcode 9.1 does support my version of iOS 11.1
Upvotes: 18