Network Extension

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Customize and extend the core networking features of iOS, iPad OS, and macOS using Network Extension.

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Clarification on content filter limitation
I am seeking clarification regarding the capabilities and limitations of deploying content filter profiles, such as web content filters, on unsupervised iOS devices through MDM solutions. Specifically, is per-app content filtering supported on unsupervised devices, or is it restricted to supervised devices only? If such restrictions exist, are there recognized workarounds? Additionally, I would like to understand if there are specific permissions or entitlements that enable apps to perform advanced filtering or monitoring functions on unsupervised devices. Any guidance or references to official documentation would be greatly appreciated.
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Aug ’25
NWEndpoint History and Advice
The path from Network Extension’s in-provider networking APIs to Network framework has been long and somewhat rocky. The most common cause of confusion is NWEndpoint, where the same name can refer to two completely different types. I’ve helped a bunch of folks with this over the years, and I’ve decided to create this post to collect together all of those titbits. If you have questions or comments, please put them in a new thread. Put it in the App & System Services > Networking subtopic and tag it with Network Extension. That way I’ll be sure to see it go by. Share and Enjoy — Quinn “The Eskimo!” @ Developer Technical Support @ Apple let myEmail = "eskimo" + "1" + "@" + "apple.com" NWEndpoint History and Advice A tale that spans three APIs, two languages, and ten years. The NWEndpoint type has a long and complex history, and if you’re not aware of that history you can bump into weird problems. The goal of this post is to explain the history and then offer advice on how to get around specific problems. IMPORTANT This post focuses on NWEndpoint, because that’s the type that causes the most problems, but there’s a similar situation with NWPath. The History In iOS 9 Apple introduced the Network Extension (NE) framework, which offers a convenient way for developers to create a custom VPN transport. Network Extension types all have the NE prefix. Note I’m gonna use iOS versions here, just to keep the text simple. If you’re targeting some other platform, use this handy conversion table: iOS | macOS | tvOS | watchOS | visionOS --- + ----- + ---- + ------- + -------- 9 | 10.11 | 9 | 2 | - 12 | 10.14 | 12 | 5 | - 18 | 15 | 18 | 11 | 2 At that time we also introduced in-provider networking APIs. The idea was that an NE provider could uses these Objective-C APIs to communicate with its VPN server, and thereby avoiding a bunch of ugly BSD Sockets code. The in-provider networking APIs were limited to NE providers. Specifically, the APIs to construct an in-provider connection were placed on types that were only usable within an NE provider. For example, a packet tunnel provider could create a NWTCPConnection object by calling -createTCPConnectionToEndpoint:enableTLS:TLSParameters:delegate:] and -createTCPConnectionThroughTunnelToEndpoint:enableTLS:TLSParameters:delegate:, which are both methods on NEPacketTunnelProvider. These in-provider networking APIs came with a number of ancillary types, including NWEndpoint and NWPath. At the time we thought that we might promote these in-provider networking APIs to general-purpose networking APIs. That’s why the APIs use the NW prefix. For example, it’s NWTCPConnection, not NETCPConnection. However, plans changed. In iOS 12 Apple shipped Network framework as our recommended general-purpose networking API. This actually includes two APIs: A Swift API that follows Swift conventions, for example, the connection type is called NWConnection A C API that follows C conventions, for example, the connection type is called nw_connection_t These APIs follow similar design patterns to the in-provider networking API, and thus have similar ancillary types. Specifically, there are an NWEndpoint and nw_endpoint_t types, both of which perform a similar role to the NWEndpoint type in the in-provider networking API. This was a source of some confusion in Swift, because the name NWEndpoint could refer to either the Network framework type or the Network Extension framework type, depending on what you’d included. Fortunately you could get around this by qualifying the type as either Network.NWEndpoint or NetworkExtension.NWEndpoint. The arrival of Network framework meant that it no longer made sense to promote the in-provider networking APIs to general-purposes networking APIs. The in-provider networking APIs were on the path to deprecation. However, deprecating these APIs was actually quite tricky. Network Extension framework uses these APIs in a number of interesting ways, and so deprecating them required adding replacements. In addition, we’d needed different replacements for Swift and Objective-C, because Network framework has separate APIs for Swift and C-based languages. In iOS 18 we tackled that problem head on. To continue the NWTCPConnection example above, we replaced: -createTCPConnectionToEndpoint:enableTLS:TLSParameters:delegate:] with nw_connection_t -createTCPConnectionThroughTunnelToEndpoint:enableTLS:TLSParameters:delegate: with nw_connection_t combined with a new virtualInterface property on NEPacketTunnelProvider Of course that’s the Objective-C side of things. In Swift, the replacement is NWConnection rather than nw_connection_t, and the type of the virtualInterface property is NWInterface rather than nw_interface_t. But that’s not the full story. For the two types that use the same name in both frameworks, NWEndpoint and NWPath, we decided to use this opportunity to sort out that confusion. To see how we did that, check out the <NetworkExtension/NetworkExtension.apinotes> file in the SDK. Focusing on NWEndpoint for the moment, you’ll find two entries: … - Name: NWEndpoint SwiftPrivate: true … SwiftVersions: - Version: 5.0 … - Name: NWEndpoint SwiftPrivate: false … The first entry applies when you’re building with the Swift 6 language mode. This marks the type as SwiftPrivate, which means that Swift imports it as __NWEndpoint. That frees up the NWEndpoint name to refer exclusively to the Network framework type. The second entry applies when you’re building with the Swift 5 language mode. It marks the type as not SwiftPrivate. This is a compatible measure to ensure that code written for Swift 5 continues to build. The Advice This sections discusses specific cases in this transition. NWEndpoint and NWPath In Swift 5 language mode, NWEndpoint and NWPath might refer to either framework, depending on what you’ve imported. Add a qualifier if there’s any ambiguity, for example, Network.NWEndpoint or NetworkExtension.NWEndpoint. In Swift 6 language mode, NWEndpoint and NWPath always refer to the Network framework type. Add a __ prefix to get to the Network Extension type. For example, use NWEndpoint for the Network framework type and __NWEndpoint for the Network Extension type. Direct and Through-Tunnel TCP Connections in Swift To create a connection directly, simply create an NWConnection. This support both TCP and UDP, with or without TLS. To create a connection through the tunnel, replace code like this: let c = self.createTCPConnectionThroughTunnel(…) with code like this: let params = NWParameters.tcp params.requiredInterface = self.virtualInterface let c = NWConnection(to: …, using: params) This is for TCP but the same basic process applies to UDP. UDP and App Proxies in Swift If you’re building an app proxy, transparent proxy, or DNS proxy in Swift and need to handle UDP flows using the new API, adopt the NEAppProxyUDPFlowHandling protocol. So, replace code like this: class AppProxyProvider: NEAppProxyProvider { … override func handleNewUDPFlow(_ flow: NEAppProxyUDPFlow, initialRemoteEndpoint remoteEndpoint: NWEndpoint) -> Bool { … } } with this: class AppProxyProvider: NEAppProxyProvider, NEAppProxyUDPFlowHandling { … func handleNewUDPFlow(_ flow: NEAppProxyUDPFlow, initialRemoteFlowEndpoint remoteEndpoint: NWEndpoint) -> Bool { … } } Creating a Network Rule To create an NWHostEndpoint, replace code like this: let ep = NWHostEndpoint(hostname: "1.2.3.4", port: "12345") let r = NENetworkRule(destinationHost: ep, protocol: .TCP) with this: let ep = NWEndpoint.hostPort(host: "1.2.3.4", port: 12345) let r = NENetworkRule(destinationHostEndpoint: ep, protocol: .TCP) Note how the first label of the initialiser has changed from destinationHost to destinationHostEndpoint.
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Jul ’25
Using NEHotspotConfigurationManager applyConfiguration interface for network connection, prompts "Unable to join network" errors.
When using the NEHotspotConfigurationManager applyConfiguration interface for network connection, there is a certain probability of encountering the "Unable to join network" error. We captured the system logs when the issue occurred, some errors are due to the network not being scanned, while others are rejected by the system(console logs like:WCLScanManager scan is blocked by other system activity 32 or 9). If there are any methods to optimize or avoid these errors?
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Aug ’25
Deprecation of NENetworkRule and NE
Question: Best Practice for NEFilterRule and NENetworkRule Initializers with Deprecated NEHostEndpoint? Hi all, I'm looking for guidance on the right way to construct an NEFilterRule that takes a NENetworkRule parameter. Reading the latest documentation, it looks like: All initializers for NENetworkRule that accept an NEHostEndpoint are now deprecated, including initWithDestinationHost:protocol: and those using the various *Network:prefix: forms. NEHostEndpoint itself is also deprecated; Apple recommends using the nw_endpoint_t type from the Network framework instead. However, NEFilterRule still requires a NENetworkRule for its initializer (docs). With all NENetworkRule initializers that take NEHostEndpoint deprecated, it’s unclear what the recommended way is to create a NENetworkRule (and thus an NEFilterRule) that matches host/domain or network traffic. What’s the proper way to construct these objects now—should we create the endpoints using nw_endpoint_t and use new/undocumented initializers, or is there an updated approach that’s considered best practice? Helpful doc links for reference: NEFilterRule docs NENetworkRule docs NWHostEndpoint (now deprecated)
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Jul ’25
Custom VPN - Bind interface to Cellular
I'm creating a custom VPN app which should only work on Cellular. Apart from cellular interface binding VPN is working fine. Even though I specified cellular interface like let cellularParams = NWParameters.udp cellularParams.requiredInterfaceType = .cellular It is going via Wifi when it is ON. I know this is the default iOS behaviour. How can I prevent this and route through cellular only even when Wifi is enabled on device?
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Jul ’25
NEAppPushProvider blocked from local network access even when container app has permission
Hi everyone, I’m encountering what appears to be a system-level issue with NEAppPushProvider extensions being unable to communicate with other devices on the local network, even when the main app has already been granted Local Network permission by the user. Context The following problem occurs in an iPad app running iOS 18.5. The main app successfully requests and is granted Local Network access via NSLocalNetworkUsageDescription in its Info.plist configuration. It can connect to a WebSocket server hosted on the local network without any issues, resolving its address by name. The extension (NEAppPushProvider) uses the same networking code as the app, extended via target membership of a controller class. It attempts to connect to the same hostname and port but consistently fails to establish a connection. The system log shows it properly resolving DNS but being stopped due to "local network prohibited". An extract of the logs from the Unified Logging System: 12:34:10.086064+0200 PushProvider [C526 Hostname#fd7b1452:8443 initial parent-flow ((null))] event: path:start @0.000s 12:34:10.087363+0200 PushProvider [C526 Hostname#fd7b1452:8443 waiting parent-flow (satisfied (Path is satisfied), interface: en0[802.11], ipv4, dns, uses wifi)] event: path:satisfied @0.005s 12:34:10.090074+0200 PushProvider [C526 Hostname#fd7b1452:8443 in_progress parent-flow (satisfied (Path is satisfied), interface: en0[802.11], ipv4, dns, uses wifi)] event: flow:start_connect @0.006s 12:34:10.093190+0200 PushProvider [C526.1 Hostname#fd7b1452:8443 in_progress resolver (satisfied (Path is satisfied), interface: en0[802.11], ipv4, dns, uses wifi)] event: resolver:start_dns @0.009s 12:34:10.094403+0200 PushProvider [C526.1.1 IPv4#f261a0dc:8443 waiting path (unsatisfied (Local network prohibited), interface: en0[802.11], ipv4, uses wifi)] event: path:unsatisfied @0.010s 12:34:10.098370+0200 PushProvider [C526.1.1.1 IPv4#f261a0dc:8443 failed path (unsatisfied (Local network prohibited), interface: en0[802.11], ipv4, uses wifi)] event: null:null @0.014s 12:34:10.098716+0200 PushProvider [C526.1 Hostname#fd7b1452:8443 failed resolver (satisfied (Path is satisfied), interface: en0[802.11], ipv4, dns, uses wifi)] event: resolver:children_failed @0.015s 12:34:10.099297+0200 PushProvider [C526 Hostname#fd7b1452:8443 waiting parent-flow (satisfied (Path is satisfied), interface: en0[802.11], ipv4, dns, uses wifi)] event: flow:child_failed @0.016s What I’ve Confirmed: The extension works perfectly if the DNS is changed to resolve the name to a public IP instead of a local one. The extension always connects by hostname. Devices on the local network can resolve each other’s IP addresses correctly and respond to pings. What I’ve Tried Adding NSLocalNetworkUsageDescription to the main app’s Info.plist, as recommended. Clean building the project again. Removing and reinstalling the app to ensure permission prompts are triggered fresh. Restarting the iPad. Ensuring main app cannot access the local network until the permission is granted. Ensuring the main app has connected to the same hostname and port before the extension attempts a connection Toggling the permission manually in Settings. Apple’s documentation states (TN3179): “In general, app extensions share the Local Network privilege state of their container app.” It also notes that some background-running extension types may be denied access if the privilege is undetermined. But in my case, the main app clearly has Local Network access, and the extension never receives it, even after repeated successful connections by the main app. Question Is this a known limitation with NEAppPushProvider? Is there a recommended way to ensure the extension is able to use the local network permission once the user has granted it on the app? Any feedback, suggestions, or confirmation would be greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance.
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Aug ’25
Cellular only VPN app
I have a requirement to create a VPN app which only works on Cellular. But I'm facing an issue like when wifi is ON, OS is using wifi interface to route the traffic instead of cellular. I tried some ways like let cellularParams = NWParameters.udp cellularParams.requiredInterfaceType = .cellular But this is not working properly as expected. How can I manually bind to cellular interface in iOS?
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Jul ’25
Need help on MDM Profile for Transparent Proxy
We have an application which is written in Swift, which activates Transparent Proxy network extension. We want to use MDM deployment for this network system extension. Our Transparent Proxy module is a system extension, which is exposing an app proxy provider interface (We are using NETransparentProxyProvider class and in extension’s Info.plist we use com.apple.networkextension.app-proxy key.) We don’t have any remote server setup to forward the traffic, instead we open a connection with a certain localhost:port (127.0.0.1:3128) to redirect the traffic which is received in our transparent proxy. We have another module that listens to the particular localhost:port to process the traffic further. As per https://developer.apple.com/documentation/devicemanagement/vpn/transparentproxy documentation, we noticed that we can use the VPN payload with app-proxy as Provider Type for Transparent Proxy. By referring this document, we created the profile. If we provide "127.0.0.1" as RemoteAddress field, we were able to install the profile and also while installing our product, the Transparent Proxy gets mapped with the one which is installed via profile. However after that the network is broken and hence unable to browse anything. We are suspecting the remote server(RemoteAddress) filed is causing this. What value should be provided in the RemoteAddress field?
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Jul ’25
Parsing DNS replies in DNS proxy network extension
Context I'm working on a DNS proxy network extension and would like to be able to parse replies from the upstream DNS server for extracting the TTL for caching purposes. I already have a working DNS proxy network extension, but at the moment I am not handling the responses and just forward all queries to an upstream DNS server. My understanding is that I have to take care of result caching myself because I cannot use the system resolver in the DNS proxy network extension. Question What is the best way to parse DNS replies in Swift to extract e.g. the TTL? I found an old thread (https://forums.swift.org/t/parse-dns-packet-requests-and-responses/41797/5) describing a way to achieve this using dns_util. The solution described there works - but dns_parse_packet in dns_util have been marked deprecated since iOS 16. So, I am wondering if there is a better way to achieve the parser. I tried to utilize the dnssd framework but was unable to figure out how to achieve only parsing of the raw DNS reply. If that is possible it would be great to get some pointers.
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Jul ’25
Intercept local connections with NETransparentProxyProvider
I am trying to intercept localhost connections within NETransparentProxyProvider system extension. As per NENetworkRule documentation If the address is a wildcard address (0.0.0.0 or ::) then the rule will match all destinations except for loopback (127.0.0.1 or ::1). To match loopback traffic set the address to the loopback address. I tried to add NWHostEndpoint *localhostv4 = [NWHostEndpoint endpointWithHostname:@"127.0.0.1" port:@""]; NENetworkRule *localhostv4Rule = [[NENetworkRule alloc] initWithDestinationNetwork:localhostv4 prefix:32 protocol:NENetworkRuleProtocolAny]; in the include network rules. I tried several variations of this rule like port 0, prefix 0 and some others. But the provider disregards the rule and the never receives any traffic going to localhost on any port. Is there any other configuration required to receive localhost traffic in NETransparentProxyProvider?
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Jul ’25
Mechanism to Identify Source App for TLS Inspection in Packet Tunnel Provider on iOS
We are a Layer 3 VPN provider offering a comprehensive SASE (Secure Access Service Edge) solution that includes TLS inspection, threat protection, granular access control, and secure access to private resources. One of the key challenges we face involves TLS inspection. Many mobile applications, especially on iOS, implement certificate pinning, which causes them to fail when TLS inspection is applied. These apps expect connections to be secured with a specific certificate or trusted certificate authority, and inspection disrupts this trust model. On iOS, the current limitation is that the Packet Tunnel Provider extension does not provide visibility into the originating application (i.e., there is no API to obtain the app’s bundle ID or package name associated with a given network connection). Due to this, we are unable to dynamically determine whether TLS inspection should be bypassed for a particular app. While Apple’s Per-App VPN is one possible solution, it introduces a significant drawback: any applications that are excluded from the VPN configuration are entirely outside the VPN tunnel. This means they do not benefit from any of our SASE features — including secure access to internal resources, DNS/web content filtering, or threat detection. This limits the effectiveness of our solution in environments where both inspection and secure access are critical. We would like to understand whether iOS has any current or planned capabilities to associate a network flow (e.g., a 5-tuple: source IP, destination IP, source port, destination port, and protocol) with the originating app. Such a capability would allow us to programmatically identify certificate-pinned apps and selectively disable TLS inspection without excluding them entirely from the VPN, thereby preserving the full set of SASE protections. Is there any guidance or roadmap update from Apple that addresses this use case?
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Jul ’25
System Network Extension XPC with LaunchAgent
I've discovered that a system network extension can communicate with a LaunchDaemon (loaded using SMAppService) over XPC, provided that the XPC service name begins with the team ID. If I move the launchd daemon plist to Contents/Library/LaunchAgents and swap the SMAppService.daemon calls to SMAppService.agent calls, and remove the .privileged option to NSXPCConnection, the system extension receives "Couldn't communicate with a helper application" as an error when trying to reach the LaunchAgent advertised service. Is this limitation by design? I imagine it is, but wanted to check before I spent any more time on it.
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Jul ’25
can control filter extension make outbound UDP Connections?
I'm new to Control Filter Extensions and have a question about their network capabilities. I'm building an app that processes network data and need to send some results to a remote server. My main questions: Are Control Filter Extensions officially permitted to make outbound UDP connections? I want to confirm this is a supported capability before implementing the network export functionality. What specific entitlements are required for outbound network access? Currently using content-filter-provider - do I need additional network-related entitlements? Are there any restrictions or considerations for UDP data export in production vs development builds? I want to ensure I'm following Apple's guidelines and using the correct entitlements for this type of data export from a Control Filter Extension. Any guidance on the official network capabilities and required setup would be greatly appreciated!
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Jul ’25
On demand rule in NEVPNManager
Our app uses NEVPNManager with IPsec to create VPN. It uses certificate authentication(.p12) and VPN connectivity is working as expected. Now I am trying to apply On demand rules to manage this VPN. let onDemandRule = NEOnDemandRuleConnect() onDemandRule.interfaceTypeMatch = .wiFi onDemandRule.ssidMatch = ["DNET"] NEOnDemandRuleConnect with interfaceTypeMatch and ssidMatch is starting VPN when the rule matches. When I add onDemandRule.dnsSearchDomainMatch = ["pa.test2.com"], it is not switching ON the VPN when I browse the "pa.test2.com" in the safari. I also tried *.test2.com and *.com. None of these domains switching ON the VPN. Can you please help me if I am missing anything?
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Jul ’25
System extension does not prompt for permission when accessing keychains
Hi, I run a PacketTunnelProvider embedded within a system extension. We have been having success using this; however we have problems with accessing certificates/private keys manually imported in the file-based keychain. As per this, we are explicitly targeting the file-based keychain. However when attempting to access the certificate and private key we get the following error: System error using certificate key from keychain: Error Domain=NSOSStatusErrorDomain Code=-25308 "CSSM Exception: -2147415840 CSSMERR_CSP_NO_USER_INTERACTION" (errKCInteractionNotAllowed / errSecInteractionNotAllowed: / Interaction is not allowed As per the online documentation, I would expect to be prompted for the access to the application: When an app attempts to access a keychain item for a particular purpose—like using a private key to sign a document—the system looks for an entry in the item’s ACL containing the operation. If there’s no entry that lists the operation, then the system denies access and it’s up to the calling app to try something else or to notify the user. If there is an entry that lists the operation, the system checks whether the calling app is among the entry’s trusted apps. If so, the system grants access. Otherwise, the system prompts the user for confirmation. The user may choose to Deny, Allow, or Always Allow the access. In the latter case, the system adds the app to the list of trusted apps for that entry, enabling the app to gain access in the future without prompting the user again But I do not see that prompt, and I only see the permission denied error in my program. I can work around this one of two ways Change the access control of the keychain item to Allow all applications to access this item. This is not preferable, as it essentially disables any ACLs for this item. Embed the certificate in a configuration profile that is pushed down to the device via MDM or something similar. This works at a larger scale, but if I'm trying to manually test out a certificate, I don't always want to have to set this up. Is there another way that I go about adding my application to the ACL of the keychain item? Thanks!
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Jul ’25
Crash when deallocating NEAppProxyFlow
Hello, I'm working on a Transparent Proxy and when the proxy is being stopped, I'm stopping all the flows by calling flow.closeWriteWithError(POSIXError(.ECANCELED)) flow.closeReadWithError(POSIXError(.ECANCELED)) Then all the flows are deallocated. When deallocating the flow the crash occurs: OS Version: macOS 14.1.2 (23B92) Exception Type: EXC_BREAKPOINT (SIGTRAP) Exception Codes: 0x0000000000000001, 0x000000018c2ef704 Termination Reason: Namespace SIGNAL, Code 5 Trace/BPT trap: 5 Terminating Process: exc handler [553] Thread 32 Crashed:: Dispatch queue: <my dispatch queue> 0 CoreFoundation 0x18c2ef704 CF_IS_OBJC + 76 1 CoreFoundation 0x18c23f61c CFErrorGetDomain + 32 2 libnetworkextension.dylib 0x19fe56a00 flow_error_to_errno + 28 3 libnetworkextension.dylib 0x19fe56920 flow_handle_pending_write_requests + 216 4 libnetworkextension.dylib 0x19fe5667c __NEFlowDeallocate + 380 5 CoreFoundation 0x18c2efe28 _CFRelease + 292 6 NetworkExtension 0x19d208390 -[NEAppProxyFlow dealloc] + 36 Is there any way to debug what is happening and if it's related to closing the flow with POSIXError? Thank you
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Jul ’25
When the iPhone App made a network request, an error occurred, and the error message read: "The operation failed to be completed." There is no remaining space on the equipment
I have checked the storage space of my phone. There is still over a hundred gigabytes of space left. An error occurred when the app was checking the network interface status. The error message is as follows:Error : Error Domain=NSPOSIXErrorDomain Code=28 "No space left on device" UserInfo={_NSURLErrorFailingURLSessionTaskErrorKey=LocalDataTask <7DB1CBFD-B9BE-422D-9C9A-78D8FC04DC1B>.<76>, _kCFStreamErrorDomainKey=1, _kCFStreamErrorCodeKey=28, _NSURLErrorRelatedURLSessionTaskErrorKey=( "LocalDataTask <7DB1CBFD-B9BE-422D-9C9A-78D8FC04DC1B>.<76>" ), _NSURLErrorNWPathKey=satisfied (Path is satisfied), interface: pdp_ip0[lte], ipv4, ipv6, dns, expensive, estimated upload: 65536Bps, uses cell}
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Jul ’25
Unable to understand Flow of Network extension for iOS
For a past few days, I have been exploring control Filter and data filter. I am unable to understand how control moves from various functions of data filter to control Filter. One thing that I am unable to figure out is that when I pass verdict as .allow in dataFilter's handleNewFlow and mark .shouldReport as true, I get inBytes and outbytes in the flow report of handle() in controlFilter. But when I pass verdict as needRules and wait till the handle is called in controlFilter when the report.event == .flowClosed, I don't get inBytes and outBytes. I am unable to understand this complete flow of network extension from the apple documentation. Can someone provide me with some flow chart or some pictorial representation or detailed explanation of network extension for iOS? Also is there some way to imitate the ..statisticsReportFrequency for iOS as it is not available for iOS?
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Aug ’25
Clarification on content filter limitation
I am seeking clarification regarding the capabilities and limitations of deploying content filter profiles, such as web content filters, on unsupervised iOS devices through MDM solutions. Specifically, is per-app content filtering supported on unsupervised devices, or is it restricted to supervised devices only? If such restrictions exist, are there recognized workarounds? Additionally, I would like to understand if there are specific permissions or entitlements that enable apps to perform advanced filtering or monitoring functions on unsupervised devices. Any guidance or references to official documentation would be greatly appreciated.
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86
Activity
Aug ’25
NWEndpoint History and Advice
The path from Network Extension’s in-provider networking APIs to Network framework has been long and somewhat rocky. The most common cause of confusion is NWEndpoint, where the same name can refer to two completely different types. I’ve helped a bunch of folks with this over the years, and I’ve decided to create this post to collect together all of those titbits. If you have questions or comments, please put them in a new thread. Put it in the App & System Services > Networking subtopic and tag it with Network Extension. That way I’ll be sure to see it go by. Share and Enjoy — Quinn “The Eskimo!” @ Developer Technical Support @ Apple let myEmail = "eskimo" + "1" + "@" + "apple.com" NWEndpoint History and Advice A tale that spans three APIs, two languages, and ten years. The NWEndpoint type has a long and complex history, and if you’re not aware of that history you can bump into weird problems. The goal of this post is to explain the history and then offer advice on how to get around specific problems. IMPORTANT This post focuses on NWEndpoint, because that’s the type that causes the most problems, but there’s a similar situation with NWPath. The History In iOS 9 Apple introduced the Network Extension (NE) framework, which offers a convenient way for developers to create a custom VPN transport. Network Extension types all have the NE prefix. Note I’m gonna use iOS versions here, just to keep the text simple. If you’re targeting some other platform, use this handy conversion table: iOS | macOS | tvOS | watchOS | visionOS --- + ----- + ---- + ------- + -------- 9 | 10.11 | 9 | 2 | - 12 | 10.14 | 12 | 5 | - 18 | 15 | 18 | 11 | 2 At that time we also introduced in-provider networking APIs. The idea was that an NE provider could uses these Objective-C APIs to communicate with its VPN server, and thereby avoiding a bunch of ugly BSD Sockets code. The in-provider networking APIs were limited to NE providers. Specifically, the APIs to construct an in-provider connection were placed on types that were only usable within an NE provider. For example, a packet tunnel provider could create a NWTCPConnection object by calling -createTCPConnectionToEndpoint:enableTLS:TLSParameters:delegate:] and -createTCPConnectionThroughTunnelToEndpoint:enableTLS:TLSParameters:delegate:, which are both methods on NEPacketTunnelProvider. These in-provider networking APIs came with a number of ancillary types, including NWEndpoint and NWPath. At the time we thought that we might promote these in-provider networking APIs to general-purpose networking APIs. That’s why the APIs use the NW prefix. For example, it’s NWTCPConnection, not NETCPConnection. However, plans changed. In iOS 12 Apple shipped Network framework as our recommended general-purpose networking API. This actually includes two APIs: A Swift API that follows Swift conventions, for example, the connection type is called NWConnection A C API that follows C conventions, for example, the connection type is called nw_connection_t These APIs follow similar design patterns to the in-provider networking API, and thus have similar ancillary types. Specifically, there are an NWEndpoint and nw_endpoint_t types, both of which perform a similar role to the NWEndpoint type in the in-provider networking API. This was a source of some confusion in Swift, because the name NWEndpoint could refer to either the Network framework type or the Network Extension framework type, depending on what you’d included. Fortunately you could get around this by qualifying the type as either Network.NWEndpoint or NetworkExtension.NWEndpoint. The arrival of Network framework meant that it no longer made sense to promote the in-provider networking APIs to general-purposes networking APIs. The in-provider networking APIs were on the path to deprecation. However, deprecating these APIs was actually quite tricky. Network Extension framework uses these APIs in a number of interesting ways, and so deprecating them required adding replacements. In addition, we’d needed different replacements for Swift and Objective-C, because Network framework has separate APIs for Swift and C-based languages. In iOS 18 we tackled that problem head on. To continue the NWTCPConnection example above, we replaced: -createTCPConnectionToEndpoint:enableTLS:TLSParameters:delegate:] with nw_connection_t -createTCPConnectionThroughTunnelToEndpoint:enableTLS:TLSParameters:delegate: with nw_connection_t combined with a new virtualInterface property on NEPacketTunnelProvider Of course that’s the Objective-C side of things. In Swift, the replacement is NWConnection rather than nw_connection_t, and the type of the virtualInterface property is NWInterface rather than nw_interface_t. But that’s not the full story. For the two types that use the same name in both frameworks, NWEndpoint and NWPath, we decided to use this opportunity to sort out that confusion. To see how we did that, check out the <NetworkExtension/NetworkExtension.apinotes> file in the SDK. Focusing on NWEndpoint for the moment, you’ll find two entries: … - Name: NWEndpoint SwiftPrivate: true … SwiftVersions: - Version: 5.0 … - Name: NWEndpoint SwiftPrivate: false … The first entry applies when you’re building with the Swift 6 language mode. This marks the type as SwiftPrivate, which means that Swift imports it as __NWEndpoint. That frees up the NWEndpoint name to refer exclusively to the Network framework type. The second entry applies when you’re building with the Swift 5 language mode. It marks the type as not SwiftPrivate. This is a compatible measure to ensure that code written for Swift 5 continues to build. The Advice This sections discusses specific cases in this transition. NWEndpoint and NWPath In Swift 5 language mode, NWEndpoint and NWPath might refer to either framework, depending on what you’ve imported. Add a qualifier if there’s any ambiguity, for example, Network.NWEndpoint or NetworkExtension.NWEndpoint. In Swift 6 language mode, NWEndpoint and NWPath always refer to the Network framework type. Add a __ prefix to get to the Network Extension type. For example, use NWEndpoint for the Network framework type and __NWEndpoint for the Network Extension type. Direct and Through-Tunnel TCP Connections in Swift To create a connection directly, simply create an NWConnection. This support both TCP and UDP, with or without TLS. To create a connection through the tunnel, replace code like this: let c = self.createTCPConnectionThroughTunnel(…) with code like this: let params = NWParameters.tcp params.requiredInterface = self.virtualInterface let c = NWConnection(to: …, using: params) This is for TCP but the same basic process applies to UDP. UDP and App Proxies in Swift If you’re building an app proxy, transparent proxy, or DNS proxy in Swift and need to handle UDP flows using the new API, adopt the NEAppProxyUDPFlowHandling protocol. So, replace code like this: class AppProxyProvider: NEAppProxyProvider { … override func handleNewUDPFlow(_ flow: NEAppProxyUDPFlow, initialRemoteEndpoint remoteEndpoint: NWEndpoint) -> Bool { … } } with this: class AppProxyProvider: NEAppProxyProvider, NEAppProxyUDPFlowHandling { … func handleNewUDPFlow(_ flow: NEAppProxyUDPFlow, initialRemoteFlowEndpoint remoteEndpoint: NWEndpoint) -> Bool { … } } Creating a Network Rule To create an NWHostEndpoint, replace code like this: let ep = NWHostEndpoint(hostname: "1.2.3.4", port: "12345") let r = NENetworkRule(destinationHost: ep, protocol: .TCP) with this: let ep = NWEndpoint.hostPort(host: "1.2.3.4", port: 12345) let r = NENetworkRule(destinationHostEndpoint: ep, protocol: .TCP) Note how the first label of the initialiser has changed from destinationHost to destinationHostEndpoint.
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Activity
Jul ’25
Using NEHotspotConfigurationManager applyConfiguration interface for network connection, prompts "Unable to join network" errors.
When using the NEHotspotConfigurationManager applyConfiguration interface for network connection, there is a certain probability of encountering the "Unable to join network" error. We captured the system logs when the issue occurred, some errors are due to the network not being scanned, while others are rejected by the system(console logs like:WCLScanManager scan is blocked by other system activity 32 or 9). If there are any methods to optimize or avoid these errors?
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2
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159
Activity
Aug ’25
Deprecation of NENetworkRule and NE
Question: Best Practice for NEFilterRule and NENetworkRule Initializers with Deprecated NEHostEndpoint? Hi all, I'm looking for guidance on the right way to construct an NEFilterRule that takes a NENetworkRule parameter. Reading the latest documentation, it looks like: All initializers for NENetworkRule that accept an NEHostEndpoint are now deprecated, including initWithDestinationHost:protocol: and those using the various *Network:prefix: forms. NEHostEndpoint itself is also deprecated; Apple recommends using the nw_endpoint_t type from the Network framework instead. However, NEFilterRule still requires a NENetworkRule for its initializer (docs). With all NENetworkRule initializers that take NEHostEndpoint deprecated, it’s unclear what the recommended way is to create a NENetworkRule (and thus an NEFilterRule) that matches host/domain or network traffic. What’s the proper way to construct these objects now—should we create the endpoints using nw_endpoint_t and use new/undocumented initializers, or is there an updated approach that’s considered best practice? Helpful doc links for reference: NEFilterRule docs NENetworkRule docs NWHostEndpoint (now deprecated)
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77
Activity
Jul ’25
Will URLSession work in Carrier constrained network?
I have few API's written with URLSession. Will they work in Carrier-constrained network / satellite mode ?
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83
Activity
Jul ’25
Custom VPN - Bind interface to Cellular
I'm creating a custom VPN app which should only work on Cellular. Apart from cellular interface binding VPN is working fine. Even though I specified cellular interface like let cellularParams = NWParameters.udp cellularParams.requiredInterfaceType = .cellular It is going via Wifi when it is ON. I know this is the default iOS behaviour. How can I prevent this and route through cellular only even when Wifi is enabled on device?
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115
Activity
Jul ’25
NEAppPushProvider blocked from local network access even when container app has permission
Hi everyone, I’m encountering what appears to be a system-level issue with NEAppPushProvider extensions being unable to communicate with other devices on the local network, even when the main app has already been granted Local Network permission by the user. Context The following problem occurs in an iPad app running iOS 18.5. The main app successfully requests and is granted Local Network access via NSLocalNetworkUsageDescription in its Info.plist configuration. It can connect to a WebSocket server hosted on the local network without any issues, resolving its address by name. The extension (NEAppPushProvider) uses the same networking code as the app, extended via target membership of a controller class. It attempts to connect to the same hostname and port but consistently fails to establish a connection. The system log shows it properly resolving DNS but being stopped due to "local network prohibited". An extract of the logs from the Unified Logging System: 12:34:10.086064+0200 PushProvider [C526 Hostname#fd7b1452:8443 initial parent-flow ((null))] event: path:start @0.000s 12:34:10.087363+0200 PushProvider [C526 Hostname#fd7b1452:8443 waiting parent-flow (satisfied (Path is satisfied), interface: en0[802.11], ipv4, dns, uses wifi)] event: path:satisfied @0.005s 12:34:10.090074+0200 PushProvider [C526 Hostname#fd7b1452:8443 in_progress parent-flow (satisfied (Path is satisfied), interface: en0[802.11], ipv4, dns, uses wifi)] event: flow:start_connect @0.006s 12:34:10.093190+0200 PushProvider [C526.1 Hostname#fd7b1452:8443 in_progress resolver (satisfied (Path is satisfied), interface: en0[802.11], ipv4, dns, uses wifi)] event: resolver:start_dns @0.009s 12:34:10.094403+0200 PushProvider [C526.1.1 IPv4#f261a0dc:8443 waiting path (unsatisfied (Local network prohibited), interface: en0[802.11], ipv4, uses wifi)] event: path:unsatisfied @0.010s 12:34:10.098370+0200 PushProvider [C526.1.1.1 IPv4#f261a0dc:8443 failed path (unsatisfied (Local network prohibited), interface: en0[802.11], ipv4, uses wifi)] event: null:null @0.014s 12:34:10.098716+0200 PushProvider [C526.1 Hostname#fd7b1452:8443 failed resolver (satisfied (Path is satisfied), interface: en0[802.11], ipv4, dns, uses wifi)] event: resolver:children_failed @0.015s 12:34:10.099297+0200 PushProvider [C526 Hostname#fd7b1452:8443 waiting parent-flow (satisfied (Path is satisfied), interface: en0[802.11], ipv4, dns, uses wifi)] event: flow:child_failed @0.016s What I’ve Confirmed: The extension works perfectly if the DNS is changed to resolve the name to a public IP instead of a local one. The extension always connects by hostname. Devices on the local network can resolve each other’s IP addresses correctly and respond to pings. What I’ve Tried Adding NSLocalNetworkUsageDescription to the main app’s Info.plist, as recommended. Clean building the project again. Removing and reinstalling the app to ensure permission prompts are triggered fresh. Restarting the iPad. Ensuring main app cannot access the local network until the permission is granted. Ensuring the main app has connected to the same hostname and port before the extension attempts a connection Toggling the permission manually in Settings. Apple’s documentation states (TN3179): “In general, app extensions share the Local Network privilege state of their container app.” It also notes that some background-running extension types may be denied access if the privilege is undetermined. But in my case, the main app clearly has Local Network access, and the extension never receives it, even after repeated successful connections by the main app. Question Is this a known limitation with NEAppPushProvider? Is there a recommended way to ensure the extension is able to use the local network permission once the user has granted it on the app? Any feedback, suggestions, or confirmation would be greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance.
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176
Activity
Aug ’25
Cellular only VPN app
I have a requirement to create a VPN app which only works on Cellular. But I'm facing an issue like when wifi is ON, OS is using wifi interface to route the traffic instead of cellular. I tried some ways like let cellularParams = NWParameters.udp cellularParams.requiredInterfaceType = .cellular But this is not working properly as expected. How can I manually bind to cellular interface in iOS?
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120
Activity
Jul ’25
Need help on MDM Profile for Transparent Proxy
We have an application which is written in Swift, which activates Transparent Proxy network extension. We want to use MDM deployment for this network system extension. Our Transparent Proxy module is a system extension, which is exposing an app proxy provider interface (We are using NETransparentProxyProvider class and in extension’s Info.plist we use com.apple.networkextension.app-proxy key.) We don’t have any remote server setup to forward the traffic, instead we open a connection with a certain localhost:port (127.0.0.1:3128) to redirect the traffic which is received in our transparent proxy. We have another module that listens to the particular localhost:port to process the traffic further. As per https://developer.apple.com/documentation/devicemanagement/vpn/transparentproxy documentation, we noticed that we can use the VPN payload with app-proxy as Provider Type for Transparent Proxy. By referring this document, we created the profile. If we provide "127.0.0.1" as RemoteAddress field, we were able to install the profile and also while installing our product, the Transparent Proxy gets mapped with the one which is installed via profile. However after that the network is broken and hence unable to browse anything. We are suspecting the remote server(RemoteAddress) filed is causing this. What value should be provided in the RemoteAddress field?
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172
Activity
Jul ’25
Parsing DNS replies in DNS proxy network extension
Context I'm working on a DNS proxy network extension and would like to be able to parse replies from the upstream DNS server for extracting the TTL for caching purposes. I already have a working DNS proxy network extension, but at the moment I am not handling the responses and just forward all queries to an upstream DNS server. My understanding is that I have to take care of result caching myself because I cannot use the system resolver in the DNS proxy network extension. Question What is the best way to parse DNS replies in Swift to extract e.g. the TTL? I found an old thread (https://forums.swift.org/t/parse-dns-packet-requests-and-responses/41797/5) describing a way to achieve this using dns_util. The solution described there works - but dns_parse_packet in dns_util have been marked deprecated since iOS 16. So, I am wondering if there is a better way to achieve the parser. I tried to utilize the dnssd framework but was unable to figure out how to achieve only parsing of the raw DNS reply. If that is possible it would be great to get some pointers.
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145
Activity
Jul ’25
Intercept local connections with NETransparentProxyProvider
I am trying to intercept localhost connections within NETransparentProxyProvider system extension. As per NENetworkRule documentation If the address is a wildcard address (0.0.0.0 or ::) then the rule will match all destinations except for loopback (127.0.0.1 or ::1). To match loopback traffic set the address to the loopback address. I tried to add NWHostEndpoint *localhostv4 = [NWHostEndpoint endpointWithHostname:@"127.0.0.1" port:@""]; NENetworkRule *localhostv4Rule = [[NENetworkRule alloc] initWithDestinationNetwork:localhostv4 prefix:32 protocol:NENetworkRuleProtocolAny]; in the include network rules. I tried several variations of this rule like port 0, prefix 0 and some others. But the provider disregards the rule and the never receives any traffic going to localhost on any port. Is there any other configuration required to receive localhost traffic in NETransparentProxyProvider?
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195
Activity
Jul ’25
Mechanism to Identify Source App for TLS Inspection in Packet Tunnel Provider on iOS
We are a Layer 3 VPN provider offering a comprehensive SASE (Secure Access Service Edge) solution that includes TLS inspection, threat protection, granular access control, and secure access to private resources. One of the key challenges we face involves TLS inspection. Many mobile applications, especially on iOS, implement certificate pinning, which causes them to fail when TLS inspection is applied. These apps expect connections to be secured with a specific certificate or trusted certificate authority, and inspection disrupts this trust model. On iOS, the current limitation is that the Packet Tunnel Provider extension does not provide visibility into the originating application (i.e., there is no API to obtain the app’s bundle ID or package name associated with a given network connection). Due to this, we are unable to dynamically determine whether TLS inspection should be bypassed for a particular app. While Apple’s Per-App VPN is one possible solution, it introduces a significant drawback: any applications that are excluded from the VPN configuration are entirely outside the VPN tunnel. This means they do not benefit from any of our SASE features — including secure access to internal resources, DNS/web content filtering, or threat detection. This limits the effectiveness of our solution in environments where both inspection and secure access are critical. We would like to understand whether iOS has any current or planned capabilities to associate a network flow (e.g., a 5-tuple: source IP, destination IP, source port, destination port, and protocol) with the originating app. Such a capability would allow us to programmatically identify certificate-pinned apps and selectively disable TLS inspection without excluding them entirely from the VPN, thereby preserving the full set of SASE protections. Is there any guidance or roadmap update from Apple that addresses this use case?
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68
Activity
Jul ’25
System Network Extension XPC with LaunchAgent
I've discovered that a system network extension can communicate with a LaunchDaemon (loaded using SMAppService) over XPC, provided that the XPC service name begins with the team ID. If I move the launchd daemon plist to Contents/Library/LaunchAgents and swap the SMAppService.daemon calls to SMAppService.agent calls, and remove the .privileged option to NSXPCConnection, the system extension receives "Couldn't communicate with a helper application" as an error when trying to reach the LaunchAgent advertised service. Is this limitation by design? I imagine it is, but wanted to check before I spent any more time on it.
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296
Activity
Jul ’25
can control filter extension make outbound UDP Connections?
I'm new to Control Filter Extensions and have a question about their network capabilities. I'm building an app that processes network data and need to send some results to a remote server. My main questions: Are Control Filter Extensions officially permitted to make outbound UDP connections? I want to confirm this is a supported capability before implementing the network export functionality. What specific entitlements are required for outbound network access? Currently using content-filter-provider - do I need additional network-related entitlements? Are there any restrictions or considerations for UDP data export in production vs development builds? I want to ensure I'm following Apple's guidelines and using the correct entitlements for this type of data export from a Control Filter Extension. Any guidance on the official network capabilities and required setup would be greatly appreciated!
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3
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165
Activity
Jul ’25
On demand rule in NEVPNManager
Our app uses NEVPNManager with IPsec to create VPN. It uses certificate authentication(.p12) and VPN connectivity is working as expected. Now I am trying to apply On demand rules to manage this VPN. let onDemandRule = NEOnDemandRuleConnect() onDemandRule.interfaceTypeMatch = .wiFi onDemandRule.ssidMatch = ["DNET"] NEOnDemandRuleConnect with interfaceTypeMatch and ssidMatch is starting VPN when the rule matches. When I add onDemandRule.dnsSearchDomainMatch = ["pa.test2.com"], it is not switching ON the VPN when I browse the "pa.test2.com" in the safari. I also tried *.test2.com and *.com. None of these domains switching ON the VPN. Can you please help me if I am missing anything?
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130
Activity
Jul ’25
System extension does not prompt for permission when accessing keychains
Hi, I run a PacketTunnelProvider embedded within a system extension. We have been having success using this; however we have problems with accessing certificates/private keys manually imported in the file-based keychain. As per this, we are explicitly targeting the file-based keychain. However when attempting to access the certificate and private key we get the following error: System error using certificate key from keychain: Error Domain=NSOSStatusErrorDomain Code=-25308 "CSSM Exception: -2147415840 CSSMERR_CSP_NO_USER_INTERACTION" (errKCInteractionNotAllowed / errSecInteractionNotAllowed: / Interaction is not allowed As per the online documentation, I would expect to be prompted for the access to the application: When an app attempts to access a keychain item for a particular purpose—like using a private key to sign a document—the system looks for an entry in the item’s ACL containing the operation. If there’s no entry that lists the operation, then the system denies access and it’s up to the calling app to try something else or to notify the user. If there is an entry that lists the operation, the system checks whether the calling app is among the entry’s trusted apps. If so, the system grants access. Otherwise, the system prompts the user for confirmation. The user may choose to Deny, Allow, or Always Allow the access. In the latter case, the system adds the app to the list of trusted apps for that entry, enabling the app to gain access in the future without prompting the user again But I do not see that prompt, and I only see the permission denied error in my program. I can work around this one of two ways Change the access control of the keychain item to Allow all applications to access this item. This is not preferable, as it essentially disables any ACLs for this item. Embed the certificate in a configuration profile that is pushed down to the device via MDM or something similar. This works at a larger scale, but if I'm trying to manually test out a certificate, I don't always want to have to set this up. Is there another way that I go about adding my application to the ACL of the keychain item? Thanks!
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Activity
Jul ’25
Crash when deallocating NEAppProxyFlow
Hello, I'm working on a Transparent Proxy and when the proxy is being stopped, I'm stopping all the flows by calling flow.closeWriteWithError(POSIXError(.ECANCELED)) flow.closeReadWithError(POSIXError(.ECANCELED)) Then all the flows are deallocated. When deallocating the flow the crash occurs: OS Version: macOS 14.1.2 (23B92) Exception Type: EXC_BREAKPOINT (SIGTRAP) Exception Codes: 0x0000000000000001, 0x000000018c2ef704 Termination Reason: Namespace SIGNAL, Code 5 Trace/BPT trap: 5 Terminating Process: exc handler [553] Thread 32 Crashed:: Dispatch queue: <my dispatch queue> 0 CoreFoundation 0x18c2ef704 CF_IS_OBJC + 76 1 CoreFoundation 0x18c23f61c CFErrorGetDomain + 32 2 libnetworkextension.dylib 0x19fe56a00 flow_error_to_errno + 28 3 libnetworkextension.dylib 0x19fe56920 flow_handle_pending_write_requests + 216 4 libnetworkextension.dylib 0x19fe5667c __NEFlowDeallocate + 380 5 CoreFoundation 0x18c2efe28 _CFRelease + 292 6 NetworkExtension 0x19d208390 -[NEAppProxyFlow dealloc] + 36 Is there any way to debug what is happening and if it's related to closing the flow with POSIXError? Thank you
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Activity
Jul ’25
When the iPhone App made a network request, an error occurred, and the error message read: "The operation failed to be completed." There is no remaining space on the equipment
I have checked the storage space of my phone. There is still over a hundred gigabytes of space left. An error occurred when the app was checking the network interface status. The error message is as follows:Error : Error Domain=NSPOSIXErrorDomain Code=28 "No space left on device" UserInfo={_NSURLErrorFailingURLSessionTaskErrorKey=LocalDataTask <7DB1CBFD-B9BE-422D-9C9A-78D8FC04DC1B>.<76>, _kCFStreamErrorDomainKey=1, _kCFStreamErrorCodeKey=28, _NSURLErrorRelatedURLSessionTaskErrorKey=( "LocalDataTask <7DB1CBFD-B9BE-422D-9C9A-78D8FC04DC1B>.<76>" ), _NSURLErrorNWPathKey=satisfied (Path is satisfied), interface: pdp_ip0[lte], ipv4, ipv6, dns, expensive, estimated upload: 65536Bps, uses cell}
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Activity
Jul ’25
Unable to understand Flow of Network extension for iOS
For a past few days, I have been exploring control Filter and data filter. I am unable to understand how control moves from various functions of data filter to control Filter. One thing that I am unable to figure out is that when I pass verdict as .allow in dataFilter's handleNewFlow and mark .shouldReport as true, I get inBytes and outbytes in the flow report of handle() in controlFilter. But when I pass verdict as needRules and wait till the handle is called in controlFilter when the report.event == .flowClosed, I don't get inBytes and outBytes. I am unable to understand this complete flow of network extension from the apple documentation. Can someone provide me with some flow chart or some pictorial representation or detailed explanation of network extension for iOS? Also is there some way to imitate the ..statisticsReportFrequency for iOS as it is not available for iOS?
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173
Activity
Aug ’25
Number of Network Extension Limitations of future macOS
I haven’t come across any official documentation regarding the limit on the number of Network Extensions macOS can run. However, I did see some discussions suggesting that Apple might restrict this to 5 extensions in macOS Tahoe. Is there any official confirmation on this?
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422
Activity
Mar ’26