Alexey Tsvetkov
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4 years ago | |
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README.md | 4 years ago |
README.md
Signing and notarizing distributions for macOS
Apple requires all 3rd apps to be signed and notarized (checked by Apple) for running on recent versions of macOS.
What is covered
In this tutorial, we'll show you how to sign and notarize
native distributions of Compose apps (in dmg
or pkg
formats)
for distribution on macOS.
Prerequisites
- Xcode. The tutorial was checked with Xcode 12.3.
- JDK 15+. The tutorial was checked with OpenJDK 15.0.1.
Preparing a Developer ID certificate
You will need a Developer ID certificate for signing your app.
Checking existing Developer ID certificates
Open https://developer.apple.com/account/resources/certificates
Creating a new Developer ID certificate
- Create a certificate signing request:
- Open
Keychain Access
. - Open the menu dialog
Keychain Access > Certificate Assistant > Request a Certificate from a Certificate Authority
- Enter your Developer ID email and common name.
- Check
Save to disk
option.
- Open
- Create and install a new certificate using your Apple Developer account:
- Open https://developer.apple.com/account/resources/certificates/add
- Choose the
Developer ID Application
certificate type. - Upload your Certificate Signing Request from the previous step.
- Download and install the certificate (drag & drop the certificate into the
Keychain Access
application).
Viewing installed certificates
You can find all installed certificates and their keychains by running the following command:
/usr/bin/security find-certificate -c "Developer ID Application"
If you have multiple Developer ID Application
certificates installed,
you will need to specify the path to the keychain, containing
the certificate intended for signing.
Preparing an App ID
An App ID represents one or more applications in Apple's ecosystem.
Viewing existing App IDs
Open the page on Apple's developer portal.
Creating a new App ID
- Open the page on Apple's developer portal.
- Choose
App ID
option. - Choose
App
type. - Fill the
Bundle ID
field.- A bundle ID uniquely identifies an application in Apple's ecosystem.
- You can use an explicit bundle ID a wildcard, matching multiple bundle IDs.
- It is recommended to use the reverse DNS notation (e.g.
com.yoursitename.yourappname
).
Creating an app-specific password
To be able to upload an app for notarization, you will need an app-specific password associated with your Apple ID.
Follow these steps to generate a new password:
- Sign in to your Apple ID account page.
- In the Security section, click Generate Password below App-Specific Passwords.
See this Apple support page for more information on the app-specific passwords.
Adding an app-specific password to a keychain
To avoid remembering your one-time password, or writing it in scripts, you can add it to the keychain by running:
# Any name can be used instead of NOTARIZATION_PASSWORD
xcrun altool --store-password-in-keychain-item "NOTARIZATION_PASSWORD"
--username <apple_id>
--password <password>
Then you'll be able to refer to the password like @keychain:NOTARIZATION_PASSWORD
without the need to write the password itself.
Configuring Gradle
Gradle DSL
DSL properties should be specified in macOS
DSL block of Compose Desktop DSL:
import org.jetbrains.compose.compose
import org.jetbrains.compose.desktop.application.dsl.TargetFormat
plugins {
kotlin("jvm")
id("org.jetbrains.compose")
}
dependencies {
implementation(compose.desktop.currentOS)
}
compose.desktop {
application {
mainClass = "example.MainKt"
nativeDistributions {
targetFormats(TargetFormat.Dmg)
macOS {
// macOS DSL settings
}
}
}
}
Gradle properties
Some properties can also be specified using Gradle properties.
- Default Gradle properties (
compose.desktop.mac.*
) have lower priority, than DSL properties. - Gradle properties can be specified (the items are listed in order of ascending priority):
- In
gradle.properties
file in Gradle home; - In
gradle.properties
file in project's root; - In command-line
./gradlew packageDmg -Pcompose.desktop.mac.sign=true
- In
- Note, that
local.properties
is not a standard Gradle file, so it is not supported by default. You can load custom properties from it manually in a script, if you want.
Configuring bundle ID
macOS {
bundleID = "com.example-company.example-app"
}
A bundle ID uniquely identifies an application in Apple's ecosystem.
- A bundle ID must be specified using the
bundleID
DSL property. - Use only alphanumeric characters (
A-Z
,a-z
, and0-9
), hyphen (-
) and period (.
) characters. - Use the reverse DNS notation of your domain (e.g.
com.yoursitename.yourappname
). - The specified bundle ID must match one of your App IDs.
Configuring signing settings
macOS {
signing {
sign.set(true)
identity.set("John Doe")
// keychain.set("/path/to/keychain")
}
}
- Set the
sign
DSL property or totrue
.- Alternatively, the
compose.desktop.mac.sign
Gradle property can be used.
- Alternatively, the
- Set the
identity
DSL property to the certificate's name, e.g."John Doe"
.- Alternatively, the
compose.desktop.mac.signing.identity
Gradle property can be used.
- Alternatively, the
- Optionally, set the
keychain
DSL property to the path to the specific keychain, containing your certificate.- Alternatively, the
compose.desktop.mac.signing.keychain
Gradle property can be used. - This step is only necessary, if multiple
Developer ID Application
certificates are installed.
- Alternatively, the
The following Gradle properties can be used instead of DSL properties:
compose.desktop.mac.sign
enables or disables signing. Possible values:true
orfalse
.compose.desktop.mac.signing.identity
overrides theidentity
DSL property.compose.desktop.mac.signing.keychain
overrides thekeychain
DSL property.
Those properties could be stored in $HOME/.gradle/gradle.properties
to use across multiple applications.
Configuring notarization settings
macOS {
notarization {
appleID.set("john.doe@example.com")
password.set("@keychain:NOTARIZATION_PASSWORD")
}
}
- Set
appleID
to your Apple ID.- Alternatively, the
compose.desktop.mac.notarization.appleID
can be used.
- Alternatively, the
- Set
password
to the app-specific password created previously.- Alternatively, the
compose.desktop.mac.notarization.password
can be used. - Don't write raw password directly into a build script.
- If the password was added to the keychain, as described previously, it can be referenced as
@keychain:NOTARIZATION_PASSWORD
- Alternatively, the
Using Gradle
The following tasks are available:
- Use
createDistributable
orpackageDmg
to get a signed application (no separate step is required). - Use
notarize<PACKAGING_FORMAT>
(e.g.notarizeDmg
) to upload an application for notarization. Once the upload finishes, aRequestUUID
will be printed. The notarization process takes some time. Once the notarization process finishes, an email will be sent to you. Uploaded file is saved to<BUILD_DIR>/compose/notarization/main/<UPLOAD_DATE>-<PACKAGING_FORMAT>
- Use
checkNotarizationStatus
to check a status of last notarization requests. You can also use a command-line command to check any notarization request:
xcrun altool --notarization-info <RequestUUID>
--username <Apple_ID>
--password "@keychain:NOTARIZATION_PASSWORD"