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Explore the networking protocols and technologies used by the device to connect to Wi-Fi networks, Bluetooth devices, and cellular data services.

Networking Documentation

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Networking Resources
General: Forums subtopic: App & System Services > Networking TN3151 Choosing the right networking API Networking Overview document — Despite the fact that this is in the archive, this is still really useful. TLS for App Developers forums post Choosing a Network Debugging Tool documentation WWDC 2019 Session 712 Advances in Networking, Part 1 — This explains the concept of constrained networking, which is Apple’s preferred solution to questions like How do I check whether I’m on Wi-Fi? TN3135 Low-level networking on watchOS TN3179 Understanding local network privacy Adapt to changing network conditions tech talk Understanding Also-Ran Connections forums post Extra-ordinary Networking forums post Foundation networking: Forums tags: Foundation, CFNetwork URL Loading System documentation — NSURLSession, or URLSession in Swift, is the recommended API for HTTP[S] on Apple platforms. Moving to Fewer, Larger Transfers forums post Testing Background Session Code forums post Network framework: Forums tag: Network Network framework documentation — Network framework is the recommended API for TCP, UDP, and QUIC on Apple platforms. Building a custom peer-to-peer protocol sample code (aka TicTacToe) Implementing netcat with Network Framework sample code (aka nwcat) Configuring a Wi-Fi accessory to join a network sample code Moving from Multipeer Connectivity to Network Framework forums post NWEndpoint History and Advice forums post Network Extension (including Wi-Fi on iOS): See Network Extension Resources Wi-Fi Fundamentals TN3111 iOS Wi-Fi API overview Wi-Fi Aware framework documentation Wi-Fi on macOS: Forums tag: Core WLAN Core WLAN framework documentation Wi-Fi Fundamentals Secure networking: Forums tags: Security Apple Platform Security support document Preventing Insecure Network Connections documentation — This is all about App Transport Security (ATS). WWDC 2017 Session 701 Your Apps and Evolving Network Security Standards [1] — This is generally interesting, but the section starting at 17:40 is, AFAIK, the best information from Apple about how certificate revocation works on modern systems. Available trusted root certificates for Apple operating systems support article Requirements for trusted certificates in iOS 13 and macOS 10.15 support article About upcoming limits on trusted certificates support article Apple’s Certificate Transparency policy support article What’s new for enterprise in iOS 18 support article — This discusses new key usage requirements. Technote 2232 HTTPS Server Trust Evaluation Technote 2326 Creating Certificates for TLS Testing QA1948 HTTPS and Test Servers Miscellaneous: More network-related forums tags: 5G, QUIC, Bonjour On FTP forums post Using the Multicast Networking Additional Capability forums post Investigating Network Latency Problems forums post WirelessInsights framework documentation iOS Network Signal Strength forums post Share and Enjoy — Quinn “The Eskimo!” @ Developer Technical Support @ Apple let myEmail = "eskimo" + "1" + "@" + "apple.com" [1] This video is no longer available from Apple, but the URL should help you locate other sources of this info.
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4.0k
Jun ’22
BLE characteristic values swapped
Several of my users are reporting on at lest recent and current versions of iOS the value from one characteristic can be swapped with another. Originally I thought this was a library issue but it doesn't happen on Android and now a user with two iPhones using the exact same app and iOS 26.3 on both has the issue on one phone but not the other. I've gone into more detail here which also includes a little data dumping to prove the values between characteristics can be mixed up. https://github.com/dotintent/react-native-ble-plx/issues/1316 One user reported cycling Bluetooth on/off fixed the issue but the latest user says it does not. For the peripheral the services can only change if the device enters firmware update mode (in which case the service UUID is different). Otherwise the characteristics on a service never change. This would make it a strange one to be caching related since the cache should always be correct.
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NEPacketTunnelFlow: large UDP DNS responses (~893 bytes) silently dropped despite writePacketObjects() returning success
I'm using NEPacketTunnelProvider to intercept DNS queries, forward them upstream, and inject the responses back via writePacketObjects(). This works correctly for responses under ~500 bytes. For larger responses (~893 bytes, e.g. DNS CERT records), writePacketObjects() returns without error but mDNSResponder never receives the packet — it retries 3–4 times and then times out. What I have verified: IP and UDP checksums are correct UDP length and IP total length fields are correct Maximum packet size (MTU) set to 1500 in NEIPv4Settings/NEIPv6Settings Approaches tried: Injecting the full 921-byte packet — writePacketObjects() succeeds but the packet never reaches mDNSResponder IP-level fragmentation — fragments appear to be silently dropped Setting the TC (truncation) bit — mDNSResponder does not retry over TCP Truncating the response to ≤512 bytes — the packet arrives but the data is incomplete Questions: Is there a supported way to deliver a DNS response larger than 512 bytes through NEPacketTunnelFlow? Does NEPacketTunnelProvider impose an undocumented packet size limit below the configured MTU? Does mDNSResponder silently discard responses larger than 512 bytes when the original query had no EDNS0 OPT record? Is there a way to signal that larger responses are supported? Are IP-level fragments reliably delivered through writePacketObjects()? Tested on iOS 26.3, physical device.
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12h
Push notifications not delivered over Wi-Fi with includeAllNetworks = true regardless of excludeAPNS setting
We have a VPN app that uses NEPacketTunnelProvider with includeAllNetworks = true. We've encountered an issue where push notifications are not delivered over Wi-Fi while the tunnel is active in a pre-MFA quarantine state (tunnel is up but traffic is blocked on server side), regardless of whether excludeAPNS is set to true or false. Observed behavior Wi-Fi excludeAPNS = true - Notifications not delivered Wi-Fi excludeAPNS = false - Notifications not delivered Cellular excludeAPNS = true - Notifications delivered Cellular excludeAPNS = false - Notifications not delivered On cellular, the behavior matches our expectations: setting excludeAPNS = true allows APNS traffic to bypass the tunnel and notifications arrive; setting it to false routes APNS through the tunnel and notifications are blocked (as expected for a non-forwarding tunnel). On Wi-Fi, notifications fail to deliver in both cases. Our question Is this expected behavior when includeAllNetworks is enabled on Wi-Fi, or is this a known issue / bug with APNS delivery? Is there something else in the Wi-Fi networking path that includeAllNetworks affects beyond routing, which could prevent APNS from functioning even when the traffic is excluded from the tunnel? Sample Project Below is the minimal code that reproduces this issue. The project has two targets: a main app and a Network Extension. The tunnel provider captures all IPv4 and IPv6 traffic via default routes but does not forward packets — simulating a pre-MFA quarantine state. The main app configures the tunnel with includeAllNetworks = true and provides a UI toggle for excludeAPNS. PacketTunnelProvider.swift (Network Extension target): import NetworkExtension class PacketTunnelProvider: NEPacketTunnelProvider { override func startTunnel(options: [String : NSObject]?, completionHandler: @escaping (Error?) -> Void) { let settings = NEPacketTunnelNetworkSettings(tunnelRemoteAddress: "127.0.0.1") let ipv4 = NEIPv4Settings(addresses: ["198.51.100.1"], subnetMasks: ["255.255.255.0"]) ipv4.includedRoutes = [NEIPv4Route.default()] settings.ipv4Settings = ipv4 let ipv6 = NEIPv6Settings(addresses: ["fd00::1"], networkPrefixLengths: [64]) ipv6.includedRoutes = [NEIPv6Route.default()] settings.ipv6Settings = ipv6 let dns = NEDNSSettings(servers: ["198.51.100.1"]) settings.dnsSettings = dns settings.mtu = 1400 setTunnelNetworkSettings(settings) { error in if let error = error { completionHandler(error) return } self.readPackets() completionHandler(nil) } } private func readPackets() { packetFlow.readPackets { [weak self] packets, protocols in self?.readPackets() } } override func stopTunnel(with reason: NEProviderStopReason, completionHandler: @escaping () -> Void) { completionHandler() } override func handleAppMessage(_ messageData: Data, completionHandler: ((Data?) -> Void)?) { if let handler = completionHandler { handler(messageData) } } override func sleep(completionHandler: @escaping () -> Void) { completionHandler() } override func wake() { } } ContentView.swift (Main app target) — trimmed to essentials: import SwiftUI import NetworkExtension struct ContentView: View { @State private var excludeAPNs = false @State private var manager: NETunnelProviderManager? var body: some View { VStack { Toggle("Exclude APNs", isOn: $excludeAPNs) .onChange(of: excludeAPNs) { Task { await saveAndReload() } } Button("Connect") { Task { await toggleVPN() } } } .padding() .task { await loadManager() } } private func loadManager() async { let managers = try? await NETunnelProviderManager.loadAllFromPreferences() if let existing = managers?.first { manager = existing } else { let m = NETunnelProviderManager() let proto = NETunnelProviderProtocol() proto.providerBundleIdentifier = "<your-extension-bundle-id>" proto.serverAddress = "127.0.0.1" proto.includeAllNetworks = true proto.excludeAPNs = excludeAPNs m.protocolConfiguration = proto m.localizedDescription = "TestVPN" m.isEnabled = true try? await m.saveToPreferences() try? await m.loadFromPreferences() manager = m } if let proto = manager?.protocolConfiguration as? NETunnelProviderProtocol { excludeAPNs = proto.excludeAPNs } } private func saveAndReload() async { guard let manager else { return } if let proto = manager.protocolConfiguration as? NETunnelProviderProtocol { proto.includeAllNetworks = true proto.excludeAPNs = excludeAPNs } manager.isEnabled = true try? await manager.saveToPreferences() try? await manager.loadFromPreferences() } private func toggleVPN() async { guard let manager else { return } if manager.connection.status == .connected { manager.connection.stopVPNTunnel() } else { await saveAndReload() try? manager.connection.startVPNTunnel() } } } Steps to reproduce Build and run the sample project with above code on a physical iOS device. Connect to a Wi-Fi network. Set excludeAPNS = true using the toggle and tap Connect. Send a push notification to the device to a test app with remote notification capability (e.g., via a test push service or the push notification console). Observe that the notification is not delivered. Disconnect. Switch to cellular. Reconnect with the same settings. Send the same push notification — observe that it is delivered. Environment iOS 26.2 Xcode 26.2 Physical device (iPhone 15 Pro)
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Get UDP/TCP Payload for NWConnections?
Is it somehow possible to get the transport layer (UDP and TCP) payload amounts for TLS or QUIC connections established via the Network framework? (From within the app itself that establishes the connections.) I am currently using the ntstat.h kernel socket calls, but I hope there is a simpler solution. With ntstat, I have not yet been able to observe a specific connection. I have to search for the connection I am looking in all (userspace) connections.
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Network issues in macOS 26.4 (25E5218f)
Since updating to macOS 26.4 developerbeta 2 I've been getting full loss of dns resolution. I am not running a VPN or any network extensions that I am aware of. I'm not sure how to report this in the feedback utility as I cannot find an appropriate category for it. Happy to file it if someone can give an appropriate suggestion - the closest I could see was Wi-Fi but that wanted Wi-Fi logs for the issue, which I do not believe to be needed as this is not a Wi-Fi connectivity issue. Running dig example.com +short nslookup example.com ping example.com Gives the following output 104.18.27.120 104.18.26.120 Server: 10.0.1.1 Address: 10.0.1.1#53 \ Non-authoritative answer: Name: example.com Address: 104.18.26.120 Name: example.com Address: 104.18.27.120 \ ping: cannot resolve example.com: Unknown host This shows it's not an issue with my local network and that core networking is working, but something in the mDNSResponder/dns stack of macOS is failing. This causes all apps/browsers that do not implement their own DNS lookups to fail (Chrome still works). Sometimes the issue clears after running the following commands (for a period), sometimes it does not. A restart always resolves the issue temporarily. sudo killall -9 mDNSResponder sudo killall -9 mDNSResponderHelper sudo dscacheutil -flushcache sudo ifconfig en0 down sudo ifconfig en0 up
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Random global network outage triggered by NEFilterDataProvider extension – only reboot helps, reinstall doesn't
I’m encountering a persistent issue with my Network Extension (specifically NEFilterDataProvider) and would really appreciate any insights. The extension generally works as expected, but after some time — especially after sleep/wake cycles or network changes — a global network outage occurs. During this state, no network traffic works: pings fail, browsers can’t load pages, etc. As soon as I stop the extension (by disabling it in System Preferences), the network immediately recovers. If I re-enable it, the outage returns instantly. I’ve also noticed that once this happens, the extension stops receiving callbacks like handleNewFlow(), and reinstalling the app or restarting the extension doesn’t help. The only thing that resolves the issue is rebooting the system. After reboot, the extension works fine again — until the problem reoccurs later. I asked AI about this behavior, and it suggested the possibility that the kernel might have marked the extension as untrusted, causing the system to intentionally block all network traffic as a safety mechanism. Has anyone experienced similar behavior with NEFilterDataProvider? Could there be a way to detect or prevent this state without rebooting? Is there any logging or diagnostic data I should collect when it happens again? Any guidance or pointers would be greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance!
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App Crashes on iOS 26 in Network.framework / boringssl – objc_release & memory corruption
Hello Apple Support Team, We are seeing a production crash on iOS 26 devices that appears to originate from Apple system frameworks rather than application code. 1. Crash Details OS Version: iOS 26.x App built with: Xcode 16 Devices: Multiple models (not device-specific) Exception Type: SIGSEGV SEGV_ACCERR Fault Address: 0x0000000000000100 Crashed Thread: 4 (network background queue) Crash trace summary: Last Exception : 0 libobjc.A.dylib _objc_release_x8 + 8 1 libboringssl.dylib _nw_protocol_boringssl_deallocate_options + 92 2 Network 0x000000019695207c 0x00000001968dc000 + 483452 3 libswiftCore.dylib __swift_release_dealloc + 56 4 libswiftCore.dylib bool swift::RefCounts<swift::RefCountBitsT<(swift::RefCountInlinedness)1> >::doDecrementSlow<(swift::PerformDeinit)1>(swift::RefCountBitsT<(swift::RefCountInlinedness)1>, unsigned int) + 152 5 Network 0x0000000196951f6c 0x00000001968dc000 + 483180 6 Network 0x0000000196952000 0x00000001968dc000 + 483328 7 libswiftCore.dylib __swift_release_dealloc + 56 8 libswiftCore.dylib bool swift::RefCounts<swift::RefCountBitsT<(swift::RefCountInlinedness)1> >::doDecrementSlow<(swift::PerformDeinit)1>(swift::RefCountBitsT<(swift::RefCountInlinedness)1>, unsigned int) + 152 9 libswiftCore.dylib void multiPayloadEnumFN<&handleRefCountsDestroy>(swift::TargetMetadata<swift::InProcess> const*, swift::LayoutStringReader1&, unsigned long&, unsigned char*) + 248 10 libswiftCore.dylib swift::swift_cvw_arrayDestroy(swift::OpaqueValue*, unsigned long, unsigned long, swift::TargetMetadata<swift::InProcess> const*) + 1172 11 libswiftCore.dylib _$sSp12deinitialize5countSvSi_tF + 40 12 CollectionsInternal ___swift_instantiateGenericMetadata + 1236 13 CollectionsInternal ___swift_instantiateGenericMetadata + 388 14 CollectionsInternal ___swift_instantiateGenericMetadata + 1044 15 libswiftCore.dylib __swift_release_dealloc + 56 16 libswiftCore.dylib bool swift::RefCounts<swift::RefCountBitsT<(swift::RefCountInlinedness)1> >::doDecrementSlow<(swift::PerformDeinit)1>(swift::RefCountBitsT<(swift::RefCountInlinedness)1>, unsigned int) + 152 17 Network 0x000000019695f9fc 0x00000001968dc000 + 539132 18 Network 0x000000019695f9bc 0x00000001968dc000 + 539068 19 libswiftCore.dylib __swift_release_dealloc + 56 20 libswiftCore.dylib bool swift::RefCounts<swift::RefCountBitsT<(swift::RefCountInlinedness)1> >::doDecrementSlow<(swift::PerformDeinit)1>(swift::RefCountBitsT<(swift::RefCountInlinedness)1>, unsigned int) + 152 21 libswiftCore.dylib swift_cvw_destroyImpl(swift::OpaqueValue*, swift::TargetMetadata<swift::InProcess> const*) + 212 22 Network 0x0000000196def5d8 0x00000001968dc000 + 5322200 23 Network 0x0000000196ded130 0x00000001968dc000 + 5312816 24 libswiftCore.dylib __swift_release_dealloc + 56 25 libswiftCore.dylib bool swift::RefCounts<swift::RefCountBitsT<(swift::RefCountInlinedness)1> >::doDecrementSlow<(swift::PerformDeinit)1>(swift::RefCountBitsT<(swift::RefCountInlinedness)1>, unsigned int) + 152 26 Network 0x000000019695fde0 0x00000001968dc000 + 540128 27 libobjc.A.dylib object_cxxDestructFromClass(objc_object*, objc_class*) + 116 28 libobjc.A.dylib objc_destructInstance_nonnull_realized(objc_object*) + 76 29 libobjc.A.dylib __objc_rootDealloc + 72 30 Network 0x000000019695f99c 0x00000001968dc000 + 539036 31 Network 0x000000019695fae4 0x00000001968dc000 + 539364 32 Network 0x0000000196b078b8 0x00000001968dc000 + 2275512 33 libobjc.A.dylib object_cxxDestructFromClass(objc_object*, objc_class*) + 116 34 libobjc.A.dylib objc_destructInstance_nonnull_realized(objc_object*) + 76 35 libobjc.A.dylib __objc_rootDealloc + 72 36 Network 0x0000000196b07658 0x00000001968dc000 + 2274904 37 Network 0x00000001968e51d4 nw_queue_context_async_if_needed + 92 38 Network 0x0000000197686ea0 0x00000001968dc000 + 14331552 39 libswiftCore.dylib swift::swift_cvw_arrayDestroy(swift::OpaqueValue*, unsigned long, unsigned long, swift::TargetMetadata<swift::InProcess> const*) + 436 40 libswiftCore.dylib _$sSp12deinitialize5countSvSi_tF + 40 41 CollectionsInternal ___swift_instantiateGenericMetadata + 1236 42 CollectionsInternal ___swift_instantiateGenericMetadata + 388 43 CollectionsInternal ___swift_instantiateGenericMetadata + 1044 44 libswiftCore.dylib __swift_release_dealloc + 56 45 libswiftCore.dylib bool swift::RefCounts<swift::RefCountBitsT<(swift::RefCountInlinedness)1> >::doDecrementSlow<(swift::PerformDeinit)1>(swift::RefCountBitsT<(swift::RefCountInlinedness)1>, unsigned int) + 152 46 Network 0x000000019694a010 0x00000001968dc000 + 450576 47 libobjc.A.dylib object_cxxDestructFromClass(objc_object*, objc_class*) + 116 48 libobjc.A.dylib objc_destructInstance_nonnull_realized(objc_object*) + 76 49 libobjc.A.dylib __objc_rootDealloc + 72 50 Network 0x0000000196a330e0 0x00000001968dc000 + 1405152 51 Network 0x00000001974378e0 0x00000001968dc000 + 11909344 52 Network 0x0000000196a17178 0x00000001968dc000 + 1290616 53 libdispatch.dylib __dispatch_call_block_and_release + 32 54 libdispatch.dylib __dispatch_client_callout + 16 55 libdispatch.dylib _dispatch_workloop_invoke.cold.4 + 32 56 libdispatch.dylib __dispatch_workloop_invoke + 1980 57 libdispatch.dylib __dispatch_root_queue_drain_deferred_wlh + 292 58 libdispatch.dylib __dispatch_workloop_worker_thread + 692 59 libsystem_pthread.dylib __pthread_wqthread + 292 ------ Exception Type: SIGSEGV SEGV_ACCERR Exception Codes: fault addr: 0x0000000000000100 Crashed Thread: 4 2. Behavior & Context The crash occurs during normal HTTPS networking using standard URLSession (no direct usage of Network.framework nor boringssl APIs). It appears to be triggered during QUIC connection establishment or TLS fallback. The stack trace contains no application code frames — all symbols are from system libraries. The crash strongly indicates double-free, over-release, or dangling pointer inside nw_protocol_boringssl_options deallocation. 3. Questions for Apple Is this a known issue in iOS 26 within Network.framework / boringssl related to nw_protocol_boringssl_deallocate_options? What is the root cause of the over‑release / invalid objc_release in this path? Is there a workaround we can implement from the app side (e.g., disabling QUIC, adjusting TLS settings, or queue configuration)? Do you have a target iOS version or patch where this issue will be fixed? We can provide full crash logs and additional metrics upon request. 4. Additional Information Developed using Swift 5, with a deployment target of iOS 12+. Thank you for your support.
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Question Regarding peekOutboundBytes Limit in NEFilterDataProvider When Using SMB
Dear Apple Developer Technical Support, I am currently developing a macOS network filtering solution using NetworkExtension with NEFilterDataProvider. During implementation of the handleOutboundData logic, we are using the following verdict: NEFilterNewFlowVerdict.filterDataVerdict( withFilterInbound: true, peekInboundBytes: InboundPeekBytes, filterOutbound: true, peekOutboundBytes: OutboundPeekBytes ) However, we have encountered an issue when SMB traffic is involved. When SMB protocol communication occurs, the network connection occasionally becomes unresponsive or appears to stall when peekOutboundBytes is set to a large value. Through testing, we observed the following behavior: On some systems, reducing the peekOutboundBytes value allows SMB communication to proceed normally. On other systems, even relatively small values can still cause the SMB connection to stall. This behavior appears inconsistent across different macOS environments. Because of this, we would like to clarify the following: Is there a documented or recommended maximum value for peekOutboundBytes when using NEFilterNewFlowVerdict.filterDataVerdict? Are there any internal limits or constraints within NetworkExtension that could cause SMB traffic to stall when the peek buffer size is too large? Are there best practices for selecting appropriate peekInboundBytes / peekOutboundBytes values when filtering high-throughput protocols such as SMB? If necessary, we can provide additional information such as macOS version, test environment details, and logs. Thank you for your assistance. Best regards, sangho
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`sysextd` rejects new `NEFilterDataProvider` activation with "no policy" on macOS 26 — despite valid Developer ID + notarization
I'm building a macOS network monitor using NEFilterDataProvider as a system extension, distributed with Developer ID signing. On macOS 26.3 (Tahoe), sysextd consistently rejects the activation request with "no policy, cannot allow apps outside /Applications" — despite the app being in /Applications and passing every verification check. I'm aware of the known Xcode NE signing bug (r. 108838909) and have followed the manual signing process from Exporting a Developer ID Network Extension. I've also tried both xcodebuild build and xcodebuild archive workflows — identical failure. Environment macOS 26.3 (25D125), SIP enabled Xcode 26.3 (17C529) Hardware Apple M2 Pro Certificate Developer ID Application (issued Jan 30, 2026 — 27 days old) MDM/Profiles None installed Signing & Verification (all pass) $ spctl -a -vv /Applications/Chakshu.app /Applications/Chakshu.app: accepted source=Notarized Developer ID origin=Developer ID Application: ROBIN SHARMA (R65679C4F3) $ codesign --verify --deep --strict -vv /Applications/Chakshu.app /Applications/Chakshu.app: valid on disk /Applications/Chakshu.app: satisfies its Designated Requirement $ xcrun stapler validate /Applications/Chakshu.app The validate action worked! App signing: Authority=Developer ID Application: ROBIN SHARMA (R65679C4F3) Authority=Developer ID Certification Authority Authority=Apple Root CA TeamIdentifier=R65679C4F3 Runtime Version=26.2.0 Notarization Ticket=stapled App entitlements: com.apple.application-identifier = R65679C4F3.dev.indrasvat.chakshu com.apple.developer.team-identifier = R65679C4F3 com.apple.developer.system-extension.install = true com.apple.developer.networking.networkextension = [content-filter-provider-systemextension] keychain-access-groups = [R65679C4F3.*] Extension signing: Same Developer ID authority, same team, same timestamp. Extension entitlements match (minus system-extension.install). Developer ID provisioning profiles are embedded in both app and extension. What sysextd logs Captured Feb 26, 2026 from log stream --predicate 'process == "sysextd"': sysextd [com.apple.sx:XPC] client activation request for dev.indrasvat.chakshu.filter sysextd attempting to realize extension with identifier dev.indrasvat.chakshu.filter sysextd (Security) SecKeyVerifySignature ← pass (×2) sysextd (Security) SecTrustEvaluateIfNecessary ← pass (×2) sysextd [com.apple.xpc:connection] activating connection: name=com.apple.CodeSigningHelper sysextd [com.apple.xpc:connection] invalidated after the last release sysextd no policy, cannot allow apps outside /Applications sysextd [com.apple.sx:XPC] client connection invalidated Signature and trust evaluation pass. CodeSigningHelper completes. Then the policy check fails. The app receives OSSystemExtensionError code 4 (extensionNotFound). What I've tried and ruled out Build process: Approach Result xcodebuild build -configuration Release + manual re-sign Same failure xcodebuild archive + export from archive + manual re-sign (per thread/737894) Same failure Minimal hand-crafted Xcode project (no xcodegen, trivial code) Same failure Both workflows follow Quinn's process exactly: build with Apple Development → copy app → embed Developer ID provisioning profiles → re-sign inside-out (extension first, then app) with -systemextension suffix entitlements → notarize → staple → install to /Applications. System-level checks: Rebooting — no change Killing sysextd — no change Removing com.apple.quarantine xattr — no change chown root:wheel on app bundle — no change lsregister -r (reset Launch Services) — no change Waiting 27 days for certificate propagation — no change Reinstalling via Finder drag-to-Applications — no change No MDM or configuration profiles installed /Library/SystemExtensions/db.plist shows extensionPolicies: [] (empty) Key observation Pre-existing network extensions activated before macOS 26 work fine on this machine. For example, Tailscale's NEPacketTunnelProvider shows state: activated_enabled in the system extensions database — it was activated on a prior macOS version and is still running. Only new system extension activations fail. I've seen similar Tahoe-specific reports from LuLu (same NEFilterDataProvider type, Developer ID distribution): LuLu #825 LuLu #831 Questions Is this a known regression in macOS 26's sysextd policy evaluation for new Developer ID system extension activations? sysextd's policy check fails after all signature and trust evaluation succeeds. Is there a separate trust/policy path that sysextd consults beyond what spctl, codesign, and CodeSigningHelper verify? Is there anything else I should be checking? I have a sysdiagnose captured immediately after the failure, a minimal reproducer project, and full raw sysextd logs available on request.
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Network extension caused network access to slow down or fail.
Hi, On macOS 26.4 Beta (25E5218f) (macOS Tahoe 26 Developer Beta ), the network filter causes network failures or slowdowns. This manifests as Chrome failing to access websites, while Safari can access the same websites without issue. The affected websites can be pinged locally. My situation is similar to this situation.The same question link is: https://github.com/objective-see/LuLu/issues/836 Have you been paying attention to this issue? Hopefully, it can be fixed in the official release. Thank you.
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iOS Mac OS Portal Detection over Wi-Fi: no DNS A Query
Hi Apple Network Team, Good day. Recently we are experiencing some issues that when iOS or iPad OS connected to a Wi-Fi with captive portal, iOS sometimes failed to launch the full captive portal website. Based on TCPDump and WLAN dump logs, when this failure happened, we only see web client on iOS queried AAAA and HTTPS DNS queries without A query. Not all the websites are supporting and being hosted on both IPv4 and IPv6 servers. Is there a know bug on iOS and iPad OS side including OS version >= 36.2.
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Request for Guidance on Approval Process for Network Extension Entitlement
Dear Apple Developer Support Team, I am writing to inquire about the process for obtaining approval for the following entitlement in my iOS/macOS app: <key>com.apple.developer.networking.networkextension</key> <array> <string>content-filter-provider</string> </array> Specifically, I would like guidance on: The steps required to submit a request for this entitlement. Any necessary documentation or justification that needs to be provided to Apple. Typical review timelines and approval criteria. Any restrictions or compliance requirements associated with this entitlement. Our app intends to implement a content filtering functionality to enhance network security and user safety. We want to ensure full compliance with Apple’s policies and guidelines. Could you please provide detailed instructions or point us to the relevant resources to initiate this approval process? Thank you for your assistance.
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localnetwork issue from local device.
We are currently experiencing an issue that occurs only on iPhone 17 models. In our app, after connecting to an external device, users can download multiple video files stored on the device. When downloading several videos consecutively, the device consistently stops receiving responses midway through the process. As a result, no response is returned, and the connection between the app and the device is eventually lost. This issue does not occur on any iPhone models prior to iPhone 17. It is reproducible across all iPhone 17 devices within our company. This is a critical issue, and we need urgent assistance. The main error logs show two patterns: • Connection loss • Timeout At the OS level, the only error codes we receive are: • -1005 (Network connection lost) • -1001 (Request timed out) Unfortunately, we are unable to obtain more detailed error information beyond these codes, which makes further debugging difficult. We have attached the relevant logs below. We would greatly appreciate any guidance on how to further investigate or resolve this issue. 310.0 / :: 81 % ::: 251.21481481481482 310.0 / :: 82 % ::: 254.23280423280423 310.0 / :: 83 % ::: 257.3820105820106 310.0 / :: 84 % ::: 260.4 KeepAlive SEND id=423F1336-6239-4B3B-9414-5A987D85D564 at=2026-02-24T12:56:43Z timeout=60.000000s current: D20-Q2-PLUS, ssid: D20-Q2-PLUS_136a63 KeepAlive SKIP (in-flight) tcp_output [C10.1.1:3] flags=[R.] seq=4017430266, ack=4146413113, win=2048 state=CLOSED rcv_nxt=4146413113, snd_una=4017429847 nw_read_request_report [C10] Receive failed with error "Operation timed out" nw_flow_add_write_request [C10 192.168.000.0:443 failed parent-flow (satisfied (Path is satisfied), interface: en0[802.11], ipv4, dns, uses wifi, LQM: good)] cannot accept write requests nw_write_request_report [C10] Send failed with error "Socket is not connected" Task <5BDBE621-329A-45E9-B236-9C173E92A41F>.<7> HTTP load failed, 361/0 bytes (error code: -1005 [4:-4]) Task <5BDBE621-329A-45E9-B236-9C173E92A41F>.<7> finished with error [-1005] Error Domain=NSURLErrorDomain Code=-1005 "The network connection was lost." UserInfo={_kCFStreamErrorCodeKey=-4, NSUnderlyingError=0x13e632160 {Error Domain=kCFErrorDomainCFNetwork Code=-1005 "(null)" UserInfo={NSErrorPeerAddressKey=<CFData 0x14cfe5a90 [0x201746068]>{length = 16, capacity = 16, bytes = 0x100201bbc0a86f010000000000000000}, _kCFStreamErrorCodeKey=-4, _kCFStreamErrorDomainKey=4}}, _NSURLErrorFailingURLSessionTaskErrorKey=LocalDataTask <5BDBE621-329A-45E9-B236-9C173E92A41F>.<7>, _NSURLErrorRelatedURLSessionTaskErrorKey=( "LocalDataTask <5BDBE621-329A-45E9-B236-9C173E92A41F>.<7>" ), NSLocalizedDescription=The network connection was lost., NSErrorFailingURLStringKey=https://192.168.000.0/keepalive, NSErrorFailingURLKey=https://192.168.000.0/keepalive, _kCFStreamErrorDomainKey=4} KeepAlive FAIL id=423F1336-6239-4B3B-9414-5A987D85D564 elapsed=29.203s status=-1 error=Optional(Alamofire.AFError.sessionTaskFailed(error: Error Domain=NSURLErrorDomain Code=-1005 "The network connection was lost." UserInfo={_kCFStreamErrorCodeKey=-4, NSUnderlyingError=0x13e632160 {Error Domain=kCFErrorDomainCFNetwork Code=-1005 "(null)" UserInfo={NSErrorPeerAddressKey=<CFData 0x14cfe5a90 [0x201746068]>{length = 16, capacity = 16, bytes = 0x100201bbc0a86f010000000000000000}, _kCFStreamErrorCodeKey=-4, _kCFStreamErrorDomainKey=4}}, ), NSLocalizedDescription=The network connection was lost., KeepAlive FAIL 1001 Log KeepAlive SEND id=FC433405-C1F7-47EF-AF9E-D12E67B071FA at=2026-02-24T12:22:38Z timeout=60.000000s current: D20-Q2-PLUS, ssid: VUEROID_D20-Q2-PLUS_136a63 KeepAlive FAIL id=FC433405-C1F7-47EF-AF9E-D12E67B071FA elapsed=7.834s status=-1 error=Optional(Alamofire.AFError.sessionTaskFailed(error: Error Domain=NSURLErrorDomain Code=-1001 "The request timed out." UserInfo={_kCFStreamErrorCodeKey=60, NSUnderlyingError=0x135e612f0 {Error Domain=kCFErrorDomainCFNetwork Code=-1001 "(null)" UserInfo={_NSURLErrorNWPathKey=satisfied (Path is satisfied), viable, interface: en0[802.11], ipv4, dns, uses wifi, LQM: good, _kCFStreamErrorCodeKey=60, _kCFStreamErrorDomainKey=1}}, ), NSLocalizedDescription=The request timed out., NSErrorFailingURLKey=https://192.168.000.0/keepalive, _kCFStreamErrorDomainKey=1})) KeepAlive FAIL ignored count=1 error=Server error : Optional(Alamofire.AFError.sessionTaskFailed(error: Error Domain=NSURLErrorDomain Code=-1001 "The request timed out." UserInfo={_kCFStreamErrorCodeKey=60, KeepAlive SEND id=A64AE4C0-28B4-41E3-AAC9-422C41D99D15 at=2026-02-24T12:22:58Z timeout=60.000000s KeepAlive FAIL id=110B96DA-4D88-45E0-B8F7-D0A9798593AE elapsed=43.605s status=-1 error=Optional(Alamofire.AFError.sessionTaskFailed(error: Error Domain=NSURLErrorDomain Code=-1005 "The network connection was lost." UserInfo={_kCFStreamErrorCodeKey=-4, NSUnderlyingError=0x135e60f60 {Error Domain=kCFErrorDomainCFNetwork Code=-1005 "(null)" UserInfo={NSErrorPeerAddressKey=<CFData 0x144dfee40 [0x201746068]>{length = 16, capacity = 16, bytes = 0x100201bbc0a86f010000000000000000}, _kCFStreamErrorCodeKey=-4, _kCFStreamErrorDomainKey=4}}, ), NSLocalizedDescription=The network connection was lost., NSErrorFailingURLStringKey=https://192.168.000.0/keepalive, NSErrorFailingURLKey=https://192.168.000.0/keepalive, _kCFStreamErrorDomainKey=4})) KeepAlive FAIL ignored count=2 error=Server error : Optional(Alamofire.AFError.sessionTaskFailed(error: Error Domain=NSURLErrorDomain Code=-1005 "The network connection was lost." UserInfo={_kCFStreamErrorCodeKey=-4, NSUnderlyingError=0x135e60f60 {Error Domain=kCFErrorDomainCFNetwork Code=-1005 "(null)" UserInfo={NSErrorPeerAddressKey=<CFData 0x144dfee40 [0x201746068]>{length = 16, capacity = 16, bytes = 0x100201bbc0a86f010000000000000000}, _kCFStreamErrorCodeKey=-4, _kCFStreamErrorDomainKey=4}}, Network type changed, hasWiFiInterface :false We are sending a keepalive request every 30 seconds to maintain the connection state with the device. Most of the issues occur during this keepalive process, and this is when the logs mentioned earlier are generated. Based on our debugging so far, the keepalive function itself is being called as expected. However, the execution appears to stall while waiting for a response from the device. After remaining in that state for some time, the session eventually ends with either a timeout or a connection loss error. We are use almofire 4.0.1. According to the firmware developer, when this issue occurs, there are no corresponding values or logs received on the device side. Therefore, we are currently investigating whether this might be related to a networking issue on the iPhone side. All other features are functioning normally. The problem occurs only when downloading VOD video files, and the reproduction rate is 100% under that condition.
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Technical Support Request: SM-DP+ Integration and eSIM Profile Download Issue – MKSmart
Dear Apple Carrier Relations / Engineering Team, I am writing to you from MKSmart, a leading smart card and digital security solution provider. We have successfully deployed our SM-DP+ (Subscription Management Data Preparation+) system, which is fully compliant with GSMA standards. Furthermore, MKSmart has officially achieved the GSMA SAS-SM (Security Accreditation Scheme for Subscription Management) certification. Currently, we are facing technical difficulties when attempting to download eSIM profiles onto iPhone devices. The download process fails, and we believe our SM-DP+ server address (FQDN) or Root Certificates may not yet be whitelisted or recognized by Apple’s ecosystem. To ensure a seamless experience for our customers on iOS devices, we would like to request your guidance on the following: Onboarding Process: What are the formal steps for MKSmart to have our SM-DP+ server recognized and trusted by Apple devices? Whitelisting: How can we submit our SM-DP+ FQDN and Root Certificates for Apple’s review and inclusion in the trusted list? Carrier Bundle: Does MKSmart need to coordinate with specific carrier partners to update the Carrier Bundle, or is there a direct integration path for our infrastructure? We have attached our GSMA SAS-SM certification and technical specifications for your reference. We are ready to provide any additional documentation or perform interoperability testing as required. We look forward to your guidance and a successful collaboration. Best regards, Nguyen Do Khanh Software Engineer MKSmart Joint Stock Company https:\mksmart.com.vn
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New PushKit delegate in iOS 26.4
Starting in iOS 26.4, PushKit has introduced a new "didReceiveIncomingVoIPPushWithPayload" delegate, making it explicit whether or not an app is required to report a call for any given push. The new delegate passes in a PKVoIPPushMetadata object which includes a "mustReport" property. We have not documented the exact criteria that will cause a mustReport to return false, but those criteria currently include: The app being in the foreground at the point the push is received. The app being on an active call at the point the push is received. The system determines that delivery delays have made the call old enough that it may no longer be viable. When mustReport is false, apps should call the PushKit completion handler (as they previously have) but are otherwise not required to take any other action. __ Kevin Elliott DTS Engineer, CoreOS/Hardware
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Thread topology data: no API path for parent-child relationships
I'm building a HomeKit app that discovers Thread devices and visualizes the mesh topology. I can detect device roles (Router vs End Device via characteristic 0x0703) and identify Border Routers (via _meshcop._udp), but I cannot determine which Router is the parent of a given End Device. Any Thread device can act as a Router (a Nanoleaf bulb, an Eve plug, not just HomePods), and End Devices attach to these Routers as children. That parent-child relationship is what I'm trying to map, but there's no RLOC16, neighbor table, or parent identifier exposed through any available API. I've tested every path I can find. Here's what I've tried on a network with 44 Thread devices and 6 Border Routers: What works (partially) HAP Thread Management Service (0x0701) gives me the device role from characteristic 0x0703, the OpenThread version from 0x0706, and node capabilities from 0x0702. That's the complete set of characteristics on that service. None of them contain RLOC16, parent Router, or neighbor data. This service also only exists on HAP-native Thread devices. My 20 Matter-over-Thread devices (Aqara, Eve Door, SmartWings, Onvis S4) don't have it at all. MeshCoP Bonjour (_meshcop._udp) identifies Border Routers and the network name/Extended PAN ID. No topology data about other mesh nodes. What doesn't work ThreadNetwork framework (THClient) - retrieveAllCredentials() returns error Code 3 because the app can't access credentials stored by Apple Home. Even if it worked, THCredentials only contains network config (name, PAN ID, channel), not topology. Direct CoAP queries - Border Routers don't route traffic from WiFi to Thread management ports. Mesh-local addresses aren't reachable. No Thread NWInterface in Network.framework. Network.framework - No visibility into the Thread mesh from the WiFi side. The only remaining path I can see (but it's not practical) Matter cluster 0x0035 (Thread Network Diagnostics) appears to have exactly what I need: RLOC16, NeighborTable with isChild boolean, RouteTable. I haven't implemented this because it requires commissioning each device individually onto my app's own Matter fabric via Multi-Admin. That's 21 separate user-initiated pairing actions on my network. I can't ask end users to do that. The core issue Every Thread Router (whether it's a HomePod acting as a Border Router or a Nanoleaf bulb acting as a mesh Router) knows its own children and neighbors. The Border Routers also maintain route tables covering the mesh backbone. This data exists on the user's own devices but none of it is exposed to third-party apps. Even something minimal would help. HMAccessory already exposes matterNodeID as a cross-protocol identifier. Exposing RLOC16 the same way would be enough, since parent-child relationships are encoded in the address itself (ParentRLOC = ChildRLOC & 0xFC00). Has anyone found another approach I'm missing? Thanks in advance for any pointers.
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Unable to detect Network Extension configuration change while pushing MDM profile
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URL Filter Network Extension
Hello team, I am trying to find out a way to block urls in the chrome browser if it is found in local blocked list cache. I found URL Filter Network very much suitable for my requirement. But I see at multiple places that this solution is only for Enterprise level or MDM or supervised device. So can I run this for normal user ? as my targeting audience would be bank users. One more thing how can I test this in development environment if we need supervised devices and do we need special entitlement ? When trying to run sample project in the simulator then getting below error
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