Notarize your Electron apps seamlessly for macOS
npm install @electron/notarize --save-dev
From Apple's docs in XCode:
A notarized app is a macOS app that was uploaded to Apple for processing before it was distributed. When you export a notarized app from Xcode, it code signs the app with a Developer ID certificate and staples a ticket from Apple to the app. The ticket confirms that you previously uploaded the app to Apple.
On macOS 10.14 and later, the user can launch notarized apps when Gatekeeper is enabled. When the user first launches a notarized app, Gatekeeper looks for the app’s ticket online. If the user is offline, Gatekeeper looks for the ticket that was stapled to the app.
As macOS 10.15 (Catalina), Apple has made notarization a hard requirement for all applications distributed outside of the Mac App Store. App Store applications do not need to be notarized.
For notarization, you need the following things:
- Xcode 13 or later installed on your Mac.
- An Apple Developer account.
- An app-specific password for your ADC account’s Apple ID.
- Your app may need to be signed with
hardenedRuntime: true
option, with thecom.apple.security.cs.allow-jit
entitlement.
Note
If you are using Electron 11 or below, you must add the com.apple.security.cs.allow-unsigned-executable-memory
entitlement too.
When using version 12+, this entitlement should not be applied as it increases your app's attack surface.
@electron/notarize
exposes a single notarize
function that accepts the following parameters:
appPath
— the absolute path to your codesigned and packaged Electron application.notarytoolPath
- String (optional) - Path to a custom notarytool binary (more details)- additional options required for authenticating your Apple ID (see below)
The method returns a void Promise once app notarization is complete. Please note that notarization may take many minutes.
If the notarization process is unusually log for your application, see Apple Developer's docs to Avoid long notarization response times and size limits.
You can generate an app-specific password for your Apple ID to notarize your Electron applications.
This method also requires you to specify the Team ID of the Developer Team you want to notarize under. An Apple ID may be part of multiple Teams.
import { notarize } from '@electron/notarize';
await notarize({
appPath,
appleId, // Login name of your Apple Developer account
appleIdPassword, // App-specific password
teamId, // Team ID for your developer team
});
Important
Never hard code your app-specific password into your packaging scripts. Use an environment variable at a minimum.
Alternatively, you can also authenticate via JSON Web Token (JWT) with App Store Connect.
You can obtain an API key from App Store Connect. Create a Team Key (not an Individual Key) with App Manager access.
Note down the Issuer ID (UUID format) and Key ID (10-character alphanumeric string),
and download the .p8
API key file (AuthKey_<appleApiKeyId>.p8
).
For security purposes, the private key can only be downloaded once.
Provide the absolute path to your API key as the appleApiKey
argument.
import { notarize } from '@electron/notarize';
await notarize({
appPath,
appleApiKey, // Absolute path to API key (e.g. `/path/to/AuthKey_X0X0X0X0X0.p8`)
appleApiIssuer, // Issuer ID (e.g. `d5631714-a680-4b4b-8156-b4ed624c0845`)
});
As an alternative to passing authentication options, you can also store your authentication
credentials (for both API key and app-specific password strategies) in the macOS Keychain
via the xcrun notarytool
command-line utility.
This method has the advantage of validating your notarization credentials before submitting your application for notarization.
For example:
# App-specific password strategy
xcrun notarytool store-credentials "my-app-password-profile"
--apple-id "<AppleID>"
--team-id <DeveloperTeamID>
--password <app_specific_password>
# App Store Connect API key strategy
xcrun notarytool store-credentials "my-api-key-profile"
--key "<PathToAPIKey>"
--key-id <KeyID>
--issuer <IssuerID>
Successful storage of your credentials will look like this:
This process stores your credentials securely in the Keychain. You reference these credentials later using a profile name.
Validating your credentials...
Success. Credentials validated.
Credentials saved to Keychain.
To use them, specify `--keychain-profile "my-api-key-profile"`
After successfully storing your credentials, pass the keychain profile name into
the keychainProfile
parameter.
import { notarize } from '@electron/notarize';
await notarize({
appPath,
keychainProfile,
});
You can provide a path to a custom notarytool
. This module allows this option to enable unique edge cases - but this use case is explicitly unsupported.
debug
is used to display logs and messages.
Run your notarization scripts with the DEBUG=electron-notarize*
environment variable to log additional
debug information from this module.
When notarizing your application, you may run into issues with validating your notarization credentials.
Error: HTTP status code: 401. Invalid credentials. Username or password is incorrect.
Use the app-specific password generated at appleid.apple.com. Ensure that all authentication arguments are correct.
Storing your credentials in Keychain will validate your credentials before even GitHub.
To validate that notarization worked, you can use the stapler
command-line utility:
stapler validate path/to/notarized.app
Apple also provides additional debugging documentation on Resolving common notarization issues.