Xcode Crashing When Opening Project File

Sheehan Alam picture Sheehan Alam · Dec 16, 2010 · Viewed 31.9k times · Source

Xcode keeps crashing on me when I open my project file. I've been able to open it fine for weeks now. Not sure how to diagnose. It only crashes for a specific project.

Process:         Xcode [1293]
Path:            /Developer/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/MacOS/Xcode
Identifier:      com.apple.Xcode
Version:         3.2.5 (1760)
Build Info:      DevToolsIDE-17600000~5
Code Type:       X86-64 (Native)
Parent Process:  launchd [189]

Date/Time:       2010-12-15 16:05:24.659 -0700
OS Version:      Mac OS X 10.6.5 (10H574)
Report Version:  6

Interval Since Last Report:          201 sec
Crashes Since Last Report:           4
Per-App Interval Since Last Report:  80 sec
Per-App Crashes Since Last Report:   4
Anonymous UUID:                      2B7F7CFC-45EA-450C-8467-6BF1E356B6F6

Exception Type:  EXC_BAD_ACCESS (SIGSEGV)
Exception Codes: KERN_INVALID_ADDRESS at 0x0000000000025940
Crashed Thread:  10  Dispatch queue: com.apple.Xcode.index-access

Application Specific Information:
objc[1293]: garbage collection is ON

Answer

Kendall Helmstetter Gelner picture Kendall Helmstetter Gelner · Dec 16, 2010

The crash is generally a sign the project file has been corrupted. Here's a list of possible things you can do to try to fix it.

1. Fix a corrupted *.pbxproj file

Caused by a merge conflict

If you are using version control, it might be caused by a merge conflict that has not yet been resolved.

  1. Using Finder, open the directory that holds your project.
  2. Right click the project file YOUR_PROJECT_NAME.xcodeproj and Open With your preferred text editing tool such as Sublime Text.
  3. Look for merge conflicts which are usually marked using a series of ========= bars.
  4. Resolve the merge conflicts manually or remove the changes of one side.

Caused by unreadable XML

If that fails go into the file and quickly scroll through to see if anything seems out of place - it should generally be readable XML. You could even try an XML validator against it to see if anything amiss was found.

2. Reset your workspace

  1. Using Finder, open the directory that holds yor project.
  2. Right click the project file MyProject.xcodeproj and choose Show Package Contents.
  3. Delete the xcuserdata folder, which should contain a folder with your username on it.
  4. Repeats step 2 and 3 for your workspace file MyProject.workspace

As elaborated by KennyWinker and Paul R on the answers below.

3. Recreate your Xcode project

Note that this should be your last resort as it is quite tedious to do for large projects.

Lastly you could simply re-create it. That might seem like a big pain, but basically you could just create a new project and drag everything under the "Classes" folder into Xcode to start using it (don't forget to also add the frameworks you need).