On Nov 24, 2016, at 1:55 AM, Giacomo Tufano wrote: Il giorno 24 nov 2016, alle ore 04:25, Alex Zavatone < email@hidden> ha scritto:
I'm still shipping our VOIP iOS apps under Xcode 7.3.x and I just found after upgrading OS X Server to MacOs Server that 7.3.1 is "too old" to use with Xcode server. I'm just trying to find out just how screwed I am from the build automation and deployment perspective because of this. If it's even possible to find a version of Mac OS X Xcode server that will run with Xcode 7.3.1 and which version of Mac OS I have to revert my remote boxes to.
Not to be that person, but I think the faster path you have is to compile the current application (with voip key in UIBackgroundModes) with Xcode 8 and send it to approval… your question will be irrefutably answered in a few days.
gt
Well, I'm glad that you are that guy, BUT all I have to do is put the app in the background and our QA team validated what I saw in that VOIP connections don't happen.
What i want to know is WHY THE HELL, if this functionality is not only deprecated, but REMOVED, that the docs for How to Make a VOIP App TELL YOU TO USE VOIP AS A VALUE FOR THE BACKGROUND MODE SO THAT YOUR VOIP APP WORKS IN THE BACKGROUND.
The online docs (guidelines in fact) tell you in TWO PLACES that this is WHAT YOU ARE SUPPOSED TO DO to make a VOIP app that works in the background.
I checked these guideline docs regularly since the beginning of last year to see if the functionality was not only supported, but was the recommended manner to create a VOIP app on iOS.
And they never changed to indicate otherwise.
If they had, I would have notified executive staff that we need to allocate time and resources to respond to this drastic change (for us).
If this info is not only no longer accurate, but downright misleading, then it needs to be removed and replaced with the correct information.
Also, there is is a menu item in Server called "Provide Server Feedback…"
Guess what?
This an automated message from the Apple group mailer system.
Sweet mother of suck. Seriously?
Words escape me. This is just so bad. How does this even get past QA, let alone get released?
Thanks Giacomo. Alex Zavatone
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