Troubleshooting -34018 Keychain Errors

This thread has been locked by a moderator; it no longer accepts new replies.

Recently I’ve had a couple of folks ping me about debugging reproducible -34018 errors when using the keychain. Pasted in below is my advice on that topic. If you have any feedback about this, or you are having this problem and can’t fix it using these instructions, please put the details in a new thread. Make sure to tag it with Security so that I see it.

Share and Enjoy

Quinn “The Eskimo!” @ Developer Technical Support @ Apple
let myEmail = "eskimo" + "1" + "@" + "apple.com"

Change history:

  • 11 Mar 2019 — First posted.

  • 13 Mar 2019 — Added a clarification about query dictionaries.

  • 23 Oct 2021 — Updated to fix the formatting and repair a broken link. Minor editorial changes.

  • 23 Oct 2021 — Added the Change in Query Behaviour section.


Troubleshooting -34018 Keychain Errors

Learn how to resolve -34018 errors from the keychain.

Error -34018 translates to errSecMissingEntitlement. This error means that your app is trying to use a keychain access group for which it does not have entitlements. See the Set Your App’s Access Groups section of Sharing Access to Keychain Items Among a Collection of Apps for information on how the system determines the list of keychain access groups that you have access to.

Note On macOS, the advice in this post only applies if you’re using the data protection keychain. If you’re using the traditional file-based keychain, you should never see error -34018.

There are two common scenarios for this error:

  • Reproducible. The problem happens every time you run the code, typically during development but possibly in other contexts, like after submitting your app to TestFlight, or during enterprise deployment.

  • Intermittent. The problems shows up very occasionally on user devices in the field but is otherwise hard to reproduce.

If you’re seeing this problem intermittently, read the suggestions in Error -34018 errSecMissingEntitlement. In contrast, if the problem is reproducible, read the rest of this post for advice on how to debug it.

Check Your Entitlements

The first step in troubleshooting this problem is to check your app’s entitlements. To start, use the codesign tool to dump the entitlements:

$ codesign -d --entitlements :- /path/to/your.app

IMPORTANT Dump the entitlements of your built app, not the .entitlements file you see in your Xcode project. The .entitlements file is an important input to Xcode’s code signing machinery, but it is not what the system uses to determine your app’s entitlements.

You should see something like this:

$ codesign -d --entitlements :- TestKeychain.app
…
<plist version="1.0">
<dict>
   <key>com.apple.developer.team-identifier</key>
   <string>SKMME9E2Y8</string>
   <key>application-identifier</key>
   <string>SKMME9E2Y8.com.example.apple-samplecode.testkeychain.app</string>
   <key>keychain-access-groups</key>
   <array>
       <string>SKMME9E2Y8.example.apple-samplecode.testkeychain.app</string>
       <string>SKMME9E2Y8.example.apple-samplecode.testkeychain.shared</string>
       …
   </array>
   <key>com.apple.security.application-groups</key>
   <array>
       <string>group.com.example.apple-samplecode.testkeychain</string>
       …
   </array>
   …
</dict>
</plist>

In this output you’ll see the following:

  • The com.apple.developer.team-identifier property is your Team ID.

  • The application-identifier (com.apple.application-identifier on macOS) is your App ID, that is, your App ID prefix (in most cases this is your Team ID) followed by your bundle ID.

  • keychain-access-groups, if present, starts with your App ID and then lists any other keychain access groups you use.

  • com.apple.security.application-groups, if present, lists the shared app groups you use (this is only relevant on iOS-based platforms; shared app groups can’t be used as keychain access groups on macOS).

As discussed in the Set Your App’s Access Groups section of Sharing Access to Keychain Items Among a Collection of Apps, the system uses the last three entitlements to form of list of keychain access groups that you’re app is entitled to use. Your keychain access group must appear in one of these entitlements. If it’s not there, read Technote 2415 Entitlements Troubleshooting for advice on how to fix that.

Check Your Keychain Calls

Once you’ve confirmed that your app has the entitlements to access the expected keychain access group, the next step is to confirm that you’re passing the correct access group to the keychain API. To do this, set a breakpoint on your keychain calls. For example, in the following code snippet you would set a breakpoint on the last line:

let query: NSDictionary = [
    kSecClass: kSecClassGenericPassword,
    kSecAttrService: "myService",
    kSecAttrAccount: username,
    kSecAttrAccessGroup: "SKMME9E2Y8.example.apple-samplecode.testkeychain.shared",
    kSecMatchLimit: kSecMatchLimitAll,
    kSecReturnData: true,
]
var copyResult: CFTypeRef? = nil
let err = SecItemCopyMatching(query, &copyResult)

Note See Change in Query Behaviour (below) for an interesting edge case here.

When you hit the breakpoint, use the debugger to print the query dictionary:

(lldb) p query 
(NSDictionary) $R4 = 0x0000600000fedb00 6 key/value pairs {
  …
  [5] = {
    key = 0x0000000111838958 "agrp"
    value = "SKMME9E2Y8.example.apple-samplecode.testkeychain.shared"
  }
}

Here the agrp attribute holds the keychain access group being searched (agrp is the value of kSecAttrAccessGroup). It must either be not present, in which case you get the default behaviour discussed below, or included in the list of entitlements as determined by the previous section. If it’s some other value, trace the origin of that bad value and correct it.

If the kSecAttrAccessGroup attribute is missing, you will see one of three behaviours:

  • For query dictionaries, like the one passed to SecItemCopyMatching, the system interprets a missing value as a wildcard, that is, the query will match an item in any access group that you have access to.

  • For SecItemAdd, the system will use your app’s default keychain access group, that is, the first entry in the list of entitlements as determined by the previous section.

  • For the second parameter of SecItemUpdate, a missing value indicates that it should not change the keychain access group attribute.

Change in Query Behaviour

In the example above I used SecItemCopyMatching to illustrate how to check the access group used by a call. This brings up an interesting change in behaviour when you pass in an access group that you’re not entitled to access:

  • In iOS 13 and later, the call will fail with errSecMissingEntitlement.

  • In earlier systems, the call will simply cause the query to not match.

The current behaviour is better because it makes is very likely that you’ll catch this mistake early.

Boost
Troubleshooting -34018 Keychain Errors
 
 
Q