SSKeychain 1.4.1

SSKeychain 1.4.1

TestsTested
LangLanguage Obj-CObjective C
License MIT
ReleasedLast Release Jul 2016

Maintained by Sam Soffes.



  • By
  • Sam Soffes

SSKeychain is a simple wrapper for accessing accounts, getting passwords, setting passwords, and deleting passwords using the system Keychain on Mac OS X and iOS.

Adding to Your Project

Simply add the following to your Podfile if you're using CocoaPods:

pod 'SSKeychain'

To manually add to your project:

  1. Add Security.framework to your target
  2. Add SSKeychain.h, SSKeychain.m, SSKeychainQuery.h, and SSKeychainQuery.m to your project.

SSKeychain requires ARC.

Note: Currently SSKeychain does not support Mac OS 10.6.

Working with the Keychain

SSKeychain has the following class methods for working with the system keychain:

+ (NSArray *)allAccounts;
+ (NSArray *)accountsForService:(NSString *)serviceName;
+ (NSString *)passwordForService:(NSString *)serviceName account:(NSString *)account;
+ (BOOL)deletePasswordForService:(NSString *)serviceName account:(NSString *)account;
+ (void)setAccessibilityType:(CFTypeRef)accessibilityType;
+ (BOOL)setPassword:(NSString *)password forService:(NSString *)serviceName account:(NSString *)account;

Easy as that. (See SSKeychain.h and SSKeychainQuery.h for all of the methods.)

Documentation

Use prepared documentation

Read the online documentation.

Debugging

If your saving to the keychain fails, use the NSError object to handle it. You can invoke [error code] to get the numeric error code. A few values are defined in SSKeychain.h, and the rest in SecBase.h.

NSError *error = nil;
SSKeychainQuery *query = [[SSKeychainQuery alloc] init];
query.service = @"MyService";
query.account = @"soffes";
[query fetch:&error];

if ([error code] == errSecItemNotFound) {
    NSLog(@"Password not found");
} else if (error != nil) {
    NSLog(@"Some other error occurred: %@", [error localizedDescription]);
}

Obviously, you should do something more sophisticated. You can just call [error localizedDescription] if all you need is the error message.

Disclaimer

Working with the keychain is pretty sucky. You should really check for errors and failures. This library doesn't make it any more stable, it just wraps up all of the annoying C APIs.

You also really should not use the default but set the accessibilityType. kSecAttrAccessibleWhenUnlocked should work for most applications. See Apple Documentation for other options.

Thanks

This was originally inspired by EMKeychain and SDKeychain (both of which are now gone). Thanks to the authors. SSKeychain has since switched to a simpler implementation that was abstracted from SSToolkit.

A huge thanks to Caleb Davenport for leading the way on version 1.0 of SSKeychain.