Then, you can not sign using Developer ID Installer certificate.I would suggest installing Xcode 4.2 into separate folder and use only "producsign" from it, 4.2 is the latest version which running under 10.6.8
-- Sincerely, Rustam Muginov
On May 21, 2012, at 11:53 PM, Mitchell Laurren-Ring wrote: We have to build on 10.6/Xcode 3.x and productsign isn't available. /Mick Sent from my iPad On May 21, 2012, at 21:48, Prema Kumar < email@hidden> wrote:
Hi, We have phased the same issue when we used the “packagemaker” command to sign the installer. We used the following command to sign. This will solve the problem. productsign --sign regards Prema
Can the packagemaker command line tool still be used for signing installer packages?
I'm using --root to build my package and then using the --sign/--certificate options to sign it. The certificate I'm using is the "install" certificate I got from Apple.
The installer runs fine from my build machine, but after I download it from our website, Finder reports that it may be "damaged" and advises I unmount the disk image.
When I run pkgutil --check-signature:
Status: signed by a certificate trusted by Mac OS X
2. Developer ID Certification Authority
Running spctl -a -v --type install on the package gives me:
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