commit | 7cdecd6f12df4afe1c787f9a2ad6abf3795b20da | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Shazron Abdullah <shazron@apache.org> | Tue May 28 15:40:03 2013 -0700 |
committer | Shazron Abdullah <shazron@apache.org> | Tue May 28 15:40:03 2013 -0700 |
tree | 26ef880c716561f98887ca51dd1e5ef0c24d1f63 | |
parent | 87e5f9ee06b748679a1c61147387ad5f2ed349b6 [diff] |
Changed default compiler to gcc (since on Snow Leopard 10.6 gcc is the default) On a clean Snow Leopard system, and installing Xcode 4.2 (the last Xcode for SL), the default compiler is gcc (i686-apple-darwin10-llvm-gcc-4.2)
Install and debug iPhone apps without using Xcode. Designed to work on unjailbroken devices.
ios-deploy [-d] -b <app> [device_id]
-d
flag launches a remote GDB session after the app has been installed.<app>
must be an iPhone application bundle, not an IPA.device_id
; useful when you have more than one iPhone/iPad connected.make install
will install demo.app to the device.make debug
will install demo.app and launch a GDB session.Device Ids are the UDIDs of the iOS devices. From the command line, you can list device ids this way:
system_profiler SPUSBDataType | sed -n -e '/iPad/,/Serial/p' -e '/iPhone/,/Serial/p' | grep "Serial Number:" | awk -F ": " '{print $2}'