Σωστά. Με τη βοήθεια του Cydia Impactor απο τον Μούσια που είχε αναφέρει κάποιες μέρες πριν με την ανάπτυξη του IPA.
Today, Pangu released their jailbreak, only officially in Chinese. This jailbreak requires downloading a tool from 25PP which is an App Store alternative filled with pirated copies of iOS applications. I can understand why people in China feel the need to do this sort of thing, and I don't particularly judge them from that perspective.
However, I'm not in China. As far as I'm concerned, it undermines the movement of jailbreaking (the wish for platforms to generally be open) to correlate with the behavior that most causes others to feel the need to close their systems: it makes arguing with any of Apple, third-party app developers, and the copyright office, harder.
As Pangu and I generally work well together (they even often give me SSH access to jailbroken devices so I can work on fixing things like Substrate long before it is ever even relevant), one would not be disappointed that we have been talking the last couple weeks about this jailbreak (hence the updated packages from me it included).
More recently, we started talking about the form of the jailbreak, and I asked if it was an app vector: and as you know, it is. The issue here is "how does one install this?", and the answers are often "have a Mac, install Xcode, do a bunch of complex stuff with multiple tools" at one end and "pay someone a subscription fee" on the other.
Last year, I had actually worked on a solution to this problem, as, in addition to another use case I never finished, I figured jailbreaks would one day come to this. This weekend, I worked on finishing it: a tool which fully automates the process of IPA sign and install on any platform, without sending any private data to any third party.
However, there are probably tons of things wrong with it on various peoples' computers. Note that it currently doesn't support IPA files with embedded frameworks and extensions (though I will probably work on that this week, as I may as well generalize this correctly). But the IPA file from Pangu doesn't/won't use those features.
The current interface for the tool is incredibly primitive and focussed on my Android-related use cases . Run the tool, plug in your phone, make sure it is selected in the device selection box at the top, and then drag an IPA file and drop it onto the tool. It will prompt you for your Apple ID and password, and then sign and install the file.
Unlike with many other tools that do IPA signature work in "the cloud" somewhere, your Apple ID and password are not sent by me to anyone but Apple. (Note: I am not claiming 25PP's tool does this, though it would not surprise me; I really have not used 25PP's tool, so I have no clue whether it is signing things in the cloud or locally.)
One big thing to understand: if the tool does not have ready access to the private key for your Apple developer certificate (which is only the case if you are running it on a Mac and the key is in your keychain), then it will automatically revoke and reissue your Apple developer certificate, which you might have to deal with later.
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