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macOS Application Bundle

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An application bundle is the package format that is executed on macOS. It is a simple directory that includes everything your application requires for successful operation, including your app executable, resources, the Info.plist file and other files such as macOS frameworks.

To package your app as a macOS application bundle you can use the Tauri CLI and run the tauri build command in a Mac computer:

npm run tauri build -- --bundles app

File structure

The macOS app bundle is a directory with the following structure:

├── <productName>.app
│ ├── Contents
│ │ ├── Info.plist
│ │ ├── ...additional files from [`tauri.conf.json > bundle > macOS > files`]
│ ├── MacOS
│ │ ├── <app-name> (app executable)
│ ├── Resources
│ │ ├── icon.icns (app icon)
│ │ ├── ...resources from [`tauri.conf.json > bundle > resources`]
│ ├── _CodeSignature (codesign information generated by Apple)
│ ├── Frameworks
│ ├── PlugIns
│ ├── SharedSupport

See the official documentation for more information.

Native configuration

The app bundle is configured by the Info.plist file, which includes key-value pairs with your app identity and configuration values read by macOS.

Tauri automatically configures the most important properties such as your app binary name, version. bundle identifier, minimum system version and more.

To extend the configuration file, create an Info.plist file in the src-tauri folder and include the key-pairs you desire:

src-tauri/Info.plist
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE plist PUBLIC "-//Apple//DTD PLIST 1.0//EN" "http://www.apple.com/DTDs/PropertyList-1.0.dtd">
<plist version="1.0">
<dict>
<key>NSCameraUsageDescription</key>
<string>Request camera access for WebRTC</string>
<key>NSMicrophoneUsageDescription</key>
<string>Request microphone access for WebRTC</string>
</dict>
</plist>

This Info.plist file is merged with the values generated by the Tauri CLI. Be careful when overwriting default values such as application version as they might conflict with other configuration values and introduce unexpected behavior.

See the official Info.plist documentation for more information.

Info.plist localization

The Info.plist file by itself only supports a single language, typically English. If you want to support multiple languages, you can create InfoPlist.strings files for each additional language. Each file belongs in its own language specific lproj directory in the Resources directory in the application bundle.

To bundle these files automatically you can leverage Tauri’s resources feature. To do that, create a file structure in your project following this pattern:

├── src-tauri
│ ├── tauri.conf.json
│ ├── infoplist
│ │ ├── de.lproj
│ │ │ ├── InfoPlist.strings
│ │ ├── fr.lproj
│ │ │ ├── InfoPlist.strings

While the infoplist directory name can be chosen freely, as long as you update it in the resources config below, the lproj directories must follow the <lang-code>.lproj naming and the string catalogue files must be named InfoPlist.strings (capital i and p). For most cases the language code should be a two letter code following BCP 47.

For the Info.plist example shown above, the de.lproj > InfoPlist.strings file could look like this:

de.lproj/InfoPlist.strings
NSCameraUsageDescription = "Kamera Zugriff wird benötigt für WebRTC Funktionalität";
NSMicrophoneUsageDescription = "Mikrofon Zugriff wird benötigt für WebRTC Funktionalität";

Lastly, make Tauri pick up these files by using the resources feature mentioned above:

src-tauri/tauri.conf.json
{
"bundle": {
"resources": {
"infoplist/**": "./"
}
}
}

Entitlements

An entitlement is a special Apple configuration key-value pair that acts as a right or privilege that grants your app particular capabilities, such as act as the user’s default email client and using the App Sandbox feature.

Entitlements are applied when your application is signed. See the code signing documentation for more information.

To define the entitlements required by your application, you must create the entitlements file and configure Tauri to use it.

  1. Create a Entitlements.plist file in the src-tauri folder and configure the key-value pairs you app requires:
src-tauri/Entitlements.plist
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE plist PUBLIC "-//Apple//DTD PLIST 1.0//EN" "http://www.apple.com/DTDs/PropertyList-1.0.dtd">
<plist version="1.0">
<dict>
<key>com.apple.security.app-sandbox</key>
<true/>
</dict>
</plist>
  1. Configure Tauri to use the Entitlements.plist file:
tauri.conf.json
{
"bundle": {
"macOS": {
"entitlements": "./Entitlements.plist"
}
}
}

See the official documentation for more information.

Minimum system version

By default your Tauri application supports macOS 10.13 and above. If you are using an API that requires a newer macOS system and want to enforce that requirement in your app bundle, you can configure the tauri.conf.json > bundle > macOS > minimumSystemVersion value:

tauri.conf.json
{
"bundle": {
"macOS": {
"minimumSystemVersion": "12.0"
}
}
}

Including macOS frameworks

If your application requires additional macOS frameworks to run, you can list them in the tauri.conf.json > bundle > macOS > frameworks configuration. The frameworks list can include either system or custom frameworks and dylib files.

tauri.conf.json
{
"bundle": {
"macOS": {
"frameworks": [
"CoreAudio",
"./libs/libmsodbcsql.18.dylib",
"./frameworks/MyApp.framework"
]
}
}
}

Adding custom files

You can use the tauri.conf.json > bundle > macOS > files configuration to add custom files to your application bundle, which maps the destination path to its source relative to the tauri.conf.json file. The files are added to the <product-name>.app/Contents folder.

tauri.conf.json
{
"bundle": {
"macOS": {
"files": {
"embedded.provisionprofile": "./profile-name.provisionprofile",
"SharedSupport/docs.md": "./docs/index.md"
}
}
}
}

In the above example, the profile-name.provisionprofile file is copied to <product-name>.app/Contents/embedded.provisionprofile and the docs/index.md file is copied to <product-name>.app/Contents/SharedSupport/docs.md.


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