developer certificates work similar to HTTPS certificates.
you can obtain a certificate that has Apple has its root authority.
you can also sign an app with a self-signed certificate and let the user add
you to their local keychain.
2020/08/22 14:22、Chip Scheide via 4D_Tech
I am not 100% sure, but I think macOS GateKeeper (spctl) does not discriminate
between apps that all share the app ID.
in other words, if a recently downloaded copy of 4D is caught by the system and
deemed untrustworthy for any reason,
that indictment affects all installed copies of 4D on that
Ken,
generically speaking.
Apple has implemented a bunch of restriction in the OS.
these restrictions have been being implemented slowly, starting with 10.9
Apple's stated reason is safety and proaction for users, however, if I recall
correctly you can not sign/noterize an application without
No I did not. Why would that cause this problem I described below?
Thank you,
Ken
On 08/18/20 10:05 AM, Robert McKeever via 4D_Tech wrote:
Before you built the app, probably before you compiled the app, did you disable
the web server upon startup and the SQL server upon startup under
No, I put the built application into another folder. Should that make a
difference?
Thank you for your thoughts,
Ken
On 08/18/20 2:27 AM, Bernd Fröhlich via 4D_Tech wrote:
Ken Eyring:
I've compiled and built a standalone version of my 4D database (with
v17.3HF2), and every time that I
I did not code sign and notarize the application. I'm not familiar with
how to do that. Is there a list of instructions somewhere that explains
how to do this?
But... even though I do want to distribute the built app to a customer,
the problem occurred on my computer as well.
Thank you
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