Install and debug iPhone apps without using Xcode. Designed to work on unjailbroken devices.
- Mac OS X. Tested on Lion and Snow Leopard only.
- You need to have a valid iPhone development certificate installed.
- Xcode must be installed, along with the SDK for your iOS version.
fruitstrap [-q/--quiet] [-t/--timeout timeout(seconds)] [-v/--verbose] <command> [<args>]
Commands available:
-
install [--id=device_id] --bundle=bundle.app [--debug] [--args=arguments]
: Install the specified app with optional arguments to the specified device, or all attached devices if none are specified. -
uninstall [--id=device_id] --bundle-id=<bundle id>
: Removed the specified bundle identifier (eg com.foo.MyApp) from the specified device, or all attached devices if none are specified. -
upload [--id=device_id] --bundle-id=<bundle id> --file=filename [--target=filename]
Uploads a file to the documents directory of the app specified with the bundle identifier (eg com.foo.MyApp) to the specified device, or all attached devices if none are specified. -
list-files [--id=device_id] --bundle-id=<bundle id>
Lists the the files in the app-specific sandbox specified with the bundle identifier (eg com.foo.MyApp) on the specified device, or all attached devices if none are specified. -
list-devices
: List all attached devices.
- The included demo.app represents the minimum required to get code running on iOS.
make install
will install demo.app to the device.make debug
will install demo.app and launch a GDB session.
- With some modifications, it may be possible to use this without Xcode installed; however, you would need a copy of the relevant DeveloperDiskImage.dmg (included with Xcode). GDB would also run slower as symbols would be downloaded from the device on-the-fly.
- If the app is not compiled for the right iOS version, fruitstrap will succeed but the app will not run (eg. if your app is iOS 5+ only and the device is running iOS 4, fruitstrap runs and seems to copy the app to the device, but it does not appear in Springboard)