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Use pure Swift to easily and securely communicate with XPC services and Mach services. A client-server model enables you to use your own Codable conforming types to send requests to routes you define and receive responses.

SecureXPC uses Swift concurrency on macOS 10.15 and later allowing clients to make non-blocking asynchronous requests to servers. A closure-based API is also available providing compatibility back to OS X 10.10.

This package can be used to communicate with any type of XPC service or Mach service, with customized support for:

It's built with security in mind, minimizing the opportunities for exploits. Security checks are performed against the actual calling process instead of relying on PIDs which are known to be insecure.

Usage

The envisioned pattern when using this package is to define routes in a shared file, create a server in one program (such as a helper tool) and register these routes, then from another program (such as an app) create a client and send requests to these routes.

Routes

In a file shared by the client and server define one or more routes:

let route = XPCRoute.named("bedazzle")
                    .withMessageType(String.self)
                    .withReplyType(Bool.self)

Server

In one program retrieve a server, register those routes, and then start the server:

    ...
    let server = <# server retrieval here #>
    server.registerRoute(route, handler: bedazzle)
    server.startAndBlock()
}

private func bedazzle(message: String) throws -> Bool {
     <# implementation here #>
}

On macOS 10.15 and later async functions and closures can also be registered as the handler for a route.

There are multiple types of servers which can be retrieved:

Client

In another program retrieve a client, then send a request to a registered route:

let client = <# client retrieval here #>
let reply = try await client.sendMessage("Get Schwifty", to: route)

Closure-based variants are available for macOS 10.14 and earlier:

let client = <# client retrieval here #>
client.sendMessage("Get Schwifty", to: route, withResponse: { result in
    switch result {
        case .success(let reply):
            <# use the reply #>
        case .failure(let error):
            <# handle the error #>
    }
})

There are three types of clients which can be retrieved:


Questions you may have

See the FAQ for answers to questions you may have or didn't even realize you wanted answered including topics such as using live file handles, sharing memory between processes, and working within sandbox restrictions.