I am using NSUbiquitousKeyValueStore
to sync some preference data to iCloud. I found that if the user disable "Document & Data" item of iCloud in "Setting App", NSUbiquitousKeyValueStore
can not synchronize its data to iCloud. So, I want to first check if this setting is switched on. I found this Code snippet:
NSURL *ubiq = [[NSFileManager defaultManager]
URLForUbiquityContainerIdentifier:nil];
NSLog(@"url=%@",ubiq);
if (!ubiq) {
UIAlertView *av = [[UIAlertView alloc] initWithTitle:nil message:@"Please enable iCloud in Setting app" delegate:self cancelButtonTitle:@"OK" otherButtonTitles:nil, nil];
[av show];
return;
}
What I want to know is whether this is the only way to detect, even if I just use NSUbiquitousKeyValueStore
(not iCloud document storage). Is there a better alternative?
I don't know if the docs have been updated, but Apple is now saying:
To determine if iCloud is available, especially at launch time, check the value of the ubiquityIdentityToken property instead
See NSFileManager for both ubiquityIdentityToken
and URLForUbiquityContainerIdentifier
.
Note also that Apple is saying that URLForUbiquityContainerIdentifier
can be relatively slow, and that checking ubiquityIdentityToken
is relatively fast.
This is for iOS6 and higher.
Basically, NSUbiquitousKeyValueStore
is always available, even if the user does not have an iCloud account (in this case, NSUbiquitousKeyValueStore
is just a simple local storage). So in general, you don't need to ask yourself or the user if there is a configured iCloud account.
If you really want to know for sure, in iOS 5, the only solution is the one you're mentioning.
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