![cannot open emulator on mac because unidentified developer cannot open emulator on mac because unidentified developer](https://i.stack.imgur.com/x3TJ4.png)
When you export your app for ad hoc testing, you choose the development or the production environment. To register multiple test devices, read Registering Devices Using Member Center. Ad hoc distribution uses the same pool of devices that you register for development, so the number of devices you can register is limited. Before exporting your app using an ad hoc provisioning profile, register all the devices you want to use for testing in your developer account.
![cannot open emulator on mac because unidentified developer cannot open emulator on mac because unidentified developer](https://cdn.osxdaily.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/app-cant-be-opened-unidentified-developer.jpg)
Distribute Your App Using Ad Hoc Provisioning (iOS, tvOS)Īd hoc provisioning allows you to run your app on test devices without needed Xcode.
![cannot open emulator on mac because unidentified developer cannot open emulator on mac because unidentified developer](https://i.imgur.com/NfcPkVp.png)
To learn more about distributing your app using TestFlight, read Distributing Your App Using TestFlight (iOS, tvOS, watchOS) in App Distribution Guide. Note that apps distributed via TestFlight or the store can’t use the development environment.
#CANNOT OPEN EMULATOR ON MAC BECAUSE UNIDENTIFIED DEVELOPER DOWNLOAD#
Testers download your iOS or tvOS app using the TestFlight app. Using iTunes Connect, invite internal testers (your team’s iTunes Connect users) or invite external testers (users specifying only their email addresses) to test your app. Later upload your iOS or tvOS app to iTunes Connect and test your app using the production environment. Initially, test your CloudKit app in the development or production environment on designated test devices. Give your CloudKit app a real-world test with multiple simultaneous users by running it on multiple devices using different iCloud accounts.