Research
Security News
Quasar RAT Disguised as an npm Package for Detecting Vulnerabilities in Ethereum Smart Contracts
Socket researchers uncover a malicious npm package posing as a tool for detecting vulnerabilities in Etherium smart contracts.
node-simctl
Advanced tools
The node-simctl package is a Node.js wrapper for simctl, a command-line utility used to control the iOS Simulator. It allows developers to manage iOS simulators programmatically, including creating, deleting, booting, and shutting down simulators, as well as installing and uninstalling apps.
Create a new simulator
This feature allows you to create a new iOS simulator with a specified name, device type, and iOS version. The code sample demonstrates how to create an iPhone 8 simulator running iOS 13.3.
const simctl = require('node-simctl');
async function createSimulator() {
const udid = await simctl.createDevice('My Simulator', 'iPhone 8', '13.3');
console.log('Created simulator with UDID:', udid);
}
createSimulator();
Boot a simulator
This feature allows you to boot an existing iOS simulator using its UDID. The code sample demonstrates how to boot a simulator by providing its UDID.
const simctl = require('node-simctl');
async function bootSimulator(udid) {
await simctl.bootDevice(udid);
console.log('Booted simulator with UDID:', udid);
}
bootSimulator('your-simulator-udid');
Install an app on a simulator
This feature allows you to install an app on a specified iOS simulator. The code sample demonstrates how to install an app by providing the simulator's UDID and the path to the app.
const simctl = require('node-simctl');
async function installApp(udid, appPath) {
await simctl.installApp(udid, appPath);
console.log('Installed app on simulator with UDID:', udid);
}
installApp('your-simulator-udid', '/path/to/your/app.app');
Shutdown a simulator
This feature allows you to shut down an existing iOS simulator using its UDID. The code sample demonstrates how to shut down a simulator by providing its UDID.
const simctl = require('node-simctl');
async function shutdownSimulator(udid) {
await simctl.shutdownDevice(udid);
console.log('Shutdown simulator with UDID:', udid);
}
shutdownSimulator('your-simulator-udid');
The ios-sim package is a command-line utility that launches an iOS application on the iOS Simulator. It provides functionalities to start the simulator, install apps, and launch apps. Compared to node-simctl, ios-sim is more focused on launching and managing apps on the simulator rather than managing the simulators themselves.
Appium is an open-source tool for automating mobile applications. It supports iOS and Android platforms and allows you to write tests using various programming languages. While Appium provides broader functionality for mobile automation, including interacting with simulators, node-simctl is more specialized in managing iOS simulators.
Detox is an end-to-end testing library for mobile apps. It supports both iOS and Android and allows you to write tests that run on simulators and real devices. Detox includes functionalities to manage simulators, but its primary focus is on testing and automation, whereas node-simctl is specifically designed for simulator management.
ES6/7 Node wrapper around Apple's simctl
binary, the "Command line utility to control the iOS Simulator". simctl
is run as a sub-command of xcrun
Install through npm.
npm install node-simctl
The module exports single class Simctl
. This class contains methods
which wrap the following simctl subcommands:
*
None
None
None
None
None
None
*
*
*
*
*
*
None
None
None
None
None
None
Methods marked with the star (*
) character do not require the udid
property to be set
on the Simctl
instance upon their invocation. All other methods will throw an error if the udid
property is unset while they are being invoked.
All public methods are supplied with docstrings that describe their arguments and returned values.
The Simctl
class constructor supports the following options:
xcrun
(Object): The xcrun properties. Currently only one property
is supported, which is path
and it by default contains null
, which enforces
the instance to automatically detect the full path to xcrun
tool and to throw
an exception if it cannot be detected. If the path is set upon instance creation
then it is going to be used by exec
and no autodetection will happen.execTimeout
(number[600000]): The maximum number of milliseconds
to wait for a single synchronous xcrun command.logErrors
(boolean[true]): Whether to write xcrun error messages
into the debug log before throwing them as errors.udid
(string[null]): The unique identifier of the current device, which is
going to be implicitly passed to all methods, which require it (see above). It can either be set
upon instance creation if it is already known or later when/if needed via the corresponding
setter.devicesSetPath
(string[null]): Full path to the set of devices that you want to manage.
By default this path usually equals to ~/Library/Developer/CoreSimulator/Devices. This option
has a getter and a setter which allows to switch between multiple device sets during the Simctl
instance life cycle.Any simctl subcommand could be called via exec
method, which accepts the subcommand itself
as the first argument and the set of options, which may contain additional command args,
environment variables, encoding, etc. For example:
import Simctl from 'node-simctl';
const simctl = new Simctl();
const name = 'My Device Name';
simctl.udid = await simctl.createDevice(name, 'iPhone X', '13.3');
await simctl.bootDevice();
await simctl.startBootMonitor({timeout: 120000});
await simctl.exec('pbsync');
console.log(`Pasteboard content: ${await simctl.getPasteboard()}`);
const {stdout} = await simctl.exec('status_bar', {
args: [simctl.udid, 'list']
});
console.log(output);
simctl.udid = void(await simctl.deleteDevice());
See specs for examples of usage.
It is possible to run multiple simulators using different Xcode SDKs on a single machine.
Simply set a proper value to DEVELOPER_DIR
environment variable for each process.
Read this MacOps article for more details.
FAQs
Wrapper around Apple's simctl binary
We found that node-simctl demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 7 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Research
Security News
Socket researchers uncover a malicious npm package posing as a tool for detecting vulnerabilities in Etherium smart contracts.
Security News
Research
A supply chain attack on Rspack's npm packages injected cryptomining malware, potentially impacting thousands of developers.
Research
Security News
Socket researchers discovered a malware campaign on npm delivering the Skuld infostealer via typosquatted packages, exposing sensitive data.