From galeharness-cli
Build and test iOS apps on simulator using XcodeBuildMCP. Use after making iOS code changes, before creating a PR, or when verifying app behavior and checking for crashes on simulator.
npx claudepluginhub wangrenzhu-ola/galeharnesscodingcli --plugin galeharness-cliThis skill uses the workspace's default tool permissions.
Build, install, and test iOS apps on the simulator using XcodeBuildMCP. Captures screenshots, logs, and verifies app behavior.
Creates isolated Git worktrees for feature branches with prioritized directory selection, gitignore safety checks, auto project setup for Node/Python/Rust/Go, and baseline verification.
Executes implementation plans in current session by dispatching fresh subagents per independent task, with two-stage reviews: spec compliance then code quality.
Dispatches parallel agents to independently tackle 2+ tasks like separate test failures or subsystems without shared state or dependencies.
Build, install, and test iOS apps on the simulator using XcodeBuildMCP. Captures screenshots, logs, and verifies app behavior.
Check that the XcodeBuildMCP MCP server is connected by calling its list_simulators tool.
MCP tool names vary by platform:
mcp__xcodebuildmcp__list_simulatorsXcodeBuildMCP server's list_simulators methodIf the tool is not found or errors, inform the user they need to add the XcodeBuildMCP MCP server:
XcodeBuildMCP not installed
Install via Homebrew:
brew tap getsentry/xcodebuildmcp && brew install xcodebuildmcp
Or via npx (no global install needed):
npx -y xcodebuildmcp@latest mcp
Then add "XcodeBuildMCP" as an MCP server in your agent configuration
and restart your agent.
Do NOT proceed until XcodeBuildMCP is confirmed working.
Call XcodeBuildMCP's discover_projs tool to find available projects, then list_schemes with the project path to get available schemes.
If an argument was provided, use that scheme name. If "current", use the default/last-used scheme.
Call list_simulators to find available simulators. Boot the preferred simulator (iPhone 15 Pro recommended) using boot_simulator with the simulator's UUID.
Wait for the simulator to be ready before proceeding.
Call build_ios_sim_app with the project path and scheme name.
On failure:
On success:
install_app_on_simulator with the built app path and simulator UUIDlaunch_app_on_simulator with the bundle ID and simulator UUIDcapture_sim_logs with the simulator UUID and bundle ID to start log captureFor each key screen in the app:
Take screenshot:
Call take_screenshot with the simulator UUID and a descriptive filename (e.g., screen-home.png).
Review screenshot for:
Check logs for errors:
Call get_sim_logs with the simulator UUID. Look for:
Known automation limitation — SwiftUI Text links:
Simulated taps (via XcodeBuildMCP or any simulator automation tool) do not trigger gesture recognizers on SwiftUI Text views with inline AttributedString links. Taps report success but have no effect. This is a platform limitation — inline links are not exposed as separate elements in the accessibility tree. When a tap on a Text link has no visible effect, prompt the user to tap manually in the simulator. If the target URL is known, xcrun simctl openurl <device> <URL> can open it directly as a fallback.
Pause for human input when testing touches flows that require device interaction.
| Flow Type | What to Ask |
|---|---|
| Sign in with Apple | "Please complete Sign in with Apple on the simulator" |
| Push notifications | "Send a test push and confirm it appears" |
| In-app purchases | "Complete a sandbox purchase" |
| Camera/Photos | "Grant permissions and verify camera works" |
| Location | "Allow location access and verify map updates" |
| SwiftUI Text links | "Please tap on [element description] manually — automated taps cannot trigger inline text links" |
Ask the user (using the platform's question tool — e.g., AskUserQuestion in Claude Code, request_user_input in Codex, ask_user in Gemini, ask_user in Pi (requires the pi-ask-user extension) — or present numbered options and wait):
Human Verification Needed
This test requires [flow type]. Please:
1. [Action to take on simulator]
2. [What to verify]
Did it work correctly?
1. Yes - continue testing
2. No - describe the issue
When a test fails:
Document the failure:
Ask the user how to proceed:
Test Failed: [screen/feature]
Issue: [description]
Logs: [relevant error messages]
How to proceed?
1. Fix now - debug, propose a fix, rebuild and retest
2. Skip - continue testing other screens
If "Fix now": investigate, propose a fix, rebuild and retest
If "Skip": log as skipped, continue
After all tests complete, present a summary:
## Xcode Test Results
**Project:** [project name]
**Scheme:** [scheme name]
**Simulator:** [simulator name]
### Build: Success / Failed
### Screens Tested: [count]
| Screen | Status | Notes |
|--------|--------|-------|
| Launch | Pass | |
| Home | Pass | |
| Settings | Fail | Crash on tap |
| Profile | Skip | Requires login |
### Console Errors: [count]
- [List any errors found]
### Human Verifications: [count]
- Sign in with Apple: Confirmed
- Push notifications: Confirmed
### Failures: [count]
- Settings screen - crash on navigation
### Result: [PASS / FAIL / PARTIAL]
After testing:
stop_log_capture with the simulator UUIDshutdown_simulator with the simulator UUID# Test with default scheme
/test-xcode
# Test specific scheme
/test-xcode MyApp-Debug
# Test after making changes
/test-xcode current
When reviewing PRs that touch iOS code, the gh:review workflow can spawn an agent to run this skill, build on the simulator, test key screens, and check for crashes.