Howdy! This is TeamDDM's App Deploy server code. It's an extremely simple website developed in PHP.
We use it on our internal network to make final / in-beta builds of our apps available to everybody in the company. It's intended as an extremely simple dashboard for company employees to have access to testing and demo apps.
If you need something more robust (i.e. user permissions, login, tracking, bug reporting), you should probably look at something more robust like TestFlight, which is awesome. But kinda complicated. (Please don't email me. We use TestFlight. It is awesome. But the level of effort it requires isn't sustainable for what we're doing with this. Thanks.)
Apache, PHP, mod_rewrite, .htaccess
(or access to your Apache config).
We do the oh-so-common pretty-url rewrite, so that's what we're doing with the .htaccess
file.
Currently it assumes that the app lives at the webroot. Need it to be smarter? Pull request, baby.
Install. Point Apache.
The server will look at all the directories within in the "bundles" directory. To make a bundle (and thus IPA file) available, you should place a directory with the following files inside the bundles
directory. So:
bundles/
MyAppBundle/
myBuiltApp.ipa
myBuiltApp.plist
icon-72.png
readme.md
myBuiltApp.ipa
: You can actually name this whatever you want, as long as it ends in.ipa
. This is the final app ipa that XCode builds, signed with your ad-hoc or enterprise deployment certificate and profile.myBuiltApp.plist
: This is the plist file that the organizer will offer to make for you if you choose "Enterprise Deployment". When you make this file, there are two values to use:IPA_URL
: Use this as a placeholder for the URL to the app file. The deploy server will replace this in your plist with the actual URL to your ipa file.ICON_72_URL
: Use this as a placeholder for the URL to your app icon. This is optional, but if you provide it, then the iOS device will display this icon while the app is downloading and installing.
icon-72.png
: If you provide an icon-72, its URL will be provided to the plist via the ICON_72_URL placeholder. This file will also be used on the front-end of the site to display the icon of the app. If this is missing, the website will use a placeholder instead.readme.md
: If provided, anInfo
button will be placed next to your app's listing. This provides a standalone page for the app, so that you can detail any special instructions, credits, FAQ's that you want for the app.deployment.json
: If prodivded, should contain a dictionary which has the following keys: type, URL, server, username, password. type can be "http" or "ftp". URL is only used for http type deployments. server, username and password define the FTP server, username and password.active.txt
: If provided, contains a string which represents the active version. This file is written to by the server when the user changes the active version number.
- Login. If you use this for enterprise deployment, make sure you put a login in front of it somehow, unless you are restricting access in some other way. At TeamDDM, we only have this server accessible from our internal network (presently, at least), so we aren't building a login system just yet.
- Tracking. There's no tracking or information of any kind detailing who ipa's are getting distributed to or when. It just isn't needed yet (although it's something we're definitely thinking about).
- Twitter Bootstrap - We use Bootstrap to provide the theme and layout here. Simple. Responsive. Bland, because I haven't bothered to customize it yet.
- jQuery - Aside from this getting used by Bootstrap, this is also used to set the href of the install button on the modal. Might be a little overkill for that, but hey, it works.
- holder.js - This is really nice. Just adds a little holder image, for when you don't provide an icon for an app. Love it.
- PHP Markdown and Markdown Classic - Who doesn't love Markdown? I'm using it RIGHT NOW.