Free, open-source Sidecar/Duet alternative — use your iPhone or iPad as a true second monitor for your Mac over USB or WiFi. Low latency H.264, Retina HiDPI, touch input.

OpenDisplay
Turn your spare Apple devices into second monitors for your Mac — free, open source, no subscription.
iPhone and iPad today, spare MacBooks on the roadmap. A self-hosted alternative to Apple Sidecar, Duet Display, and Luna Display: true extended display (not just mirroring), Retina-sharp, over USB or WiFi, with touch and scroll input.
Website · Quick start · How it works · FAQ · Contributing
Why OpenDisplay exists
Turning an iPhone or iPad into an external display for a Mac is a solved problem — but every existing option has a catch:
- Apple Sidecar is free but requires both devices on the same Apple ID,
- Duet Display moved to a subscription.
- Luna Display requires a hardware dongle.
Features
- 🖥️ True display extension — macOS treats the device as a real second
- 🔌 USB-wired for lowest latency — streams over the Lightning/USB-C
usbmuxd; plug in and go, no network, no
WiFi jitter, no helper tools.
- 📶 WiFi with zero config — the iPhone advertises itself via Bonjour;
- 🔍 Retina / HiDPI — the virtual display matches the device panel
- 👆 Touch input built in — your iPhone becomes a touchscreen for macOS:
- 🔄 Portrait or landscape — rotate the device and the virtual display
- ⚡ Low-latency pipeline — hardware H.264 encode (VideoToolbox,
AVSampleBufferDisplayLayer.
- 🔒 Self-hosted & private — your screen never touches anyone's server.
How it works
MAC (sender) iPHONE / iPAD (receiver)
CGVirtualDisplay ← macOS believes a monitor is attached
→ ScreenCaptureKit (capture the virtual display)
→ VideoToolbox H.264 (hardware, real-time)
→ TCP [4-byte length][Annex B frame] ═══════→ NWListener :9000
→ AVSampleBufferDisplayLayer
← JSON control messages (hello, touch, scroll) ═══
→ CGEvent injection (click / drag / scroll)
The phone listens and the Mac connects — that ordering is what makes the exact same code work over USB (via the usbmuxd daemon built into every macOS install) and WiFi. The phone announces its native panel size; the Mac creates a CGVirtualDisplay at exactly half that in points (@2x HiDPI) and streams the pixels back.
CGVirtualDisplay is a private CoreGraphics API (the same one used by BetterDisplay and DeskPad) — which is precisely why this project can't ship on the App Store and lives on GitHub instead.
Install
You need two apps: a Mac app (captures and sends) and an iOS app (receives and displays).
Prebuilt downloads (Mac)
Grab OpenDisplay.dmg from the latest release. The app is signed with a Developer ID certificate and notarized by Apple, so it opens with a plain double-click on macOS 14+ — no Gatekeeper warning. Open the .dmg and drag the app to Applications.
iPhone app
- TestFlight (recommended): join the public beta at
- Build from source: open the project in Xcode, select your free Apple ID
Quick start (from source)
Prerequisites
brew install xcodegen # project generation
Xcode 15+ and a free or paid Apple developer account (to sideload the iOS app onto your device).
Build
git clone https://github.com/peetzweg/opendisplay.git
cd opendisplay
echo "DEVELOPMENT_TEAM=YOURTEAMID" > .env # your Apple team ID, for signing
./generate.sh # runs xcodegen with your .env
xcodebuild -project OpenSidecar.xcodeproj -scheme OpenSidecarMac \
-configuration Debug -derivedDataPath build build
xcodebuild -project OpenSidecar.xcodeproj -scheme OpenSidecariOS \
-configuration Debug -destination 'generic/platform=iOS' \
-derivedDataPath build -allowProvisioningUpdates build
(Or open OpenSidecar.xcodeproj in Xcode and hit Run on each target. Your team ID is shown at developer.apple.com/account under Membership, or just pick your team in Xcode's Signing pane.)
Run (USB — recommended)
- Install + open OpenDisplay on the iPhone (it listens on port 9000).
- On the Mac, run
./run.sh(or just open the app) — it talks to macOS's
usbmuxd directly and auto-connects over the cable. No tunnel
tools needed.
- Grant Screen Recording (for capture) and Accessibility (for touch)
- Drag a window onto your new display. Done.
Run (WiFi)
Open the iPhone app, then pick "iPhone (WiFi)" from the Connection menu in the Mac app. Discovery is automatic via Bonjour. USB has lower latency; WiFi has no cable.
Permissions checklist
macOS and iOS gate several things this app needs — most prompt on first use, but some fail silently if denied or missed. The Mac app shows a live permission status panel; the iPhone app has a settings screen (shake the phone, or tap Settings & Help when idle).
| Where | Permission | Needed for | If missing | |---|---|---|---| | Mac | Screen Recording | capturing the display | black screen on the phone | | Mac | Accessibility | touch/scroll input | taps do nothing | | Mac | Local Network | WiFi discovery | no device in the Connection menu | | iPhone | Local Network | WiFi discovery | Mac can't find the phone |
All live under Privacy & Security in System Settings (Mac) / Settings (iPhone). The Local Network ones are only needed for WiFi mode — USB works without them. If the prompt never appeared, toggle the entry manually or force-quit and reopen the app.
FAQ
Why do I see the purple screen-recording indicator in the menu bar? That's a macOS privacy indicator shown for any app that captures the screen — Duet, Luna, OBS, and Zoom trigger it too. Apple Sidecar doesn't, only because it's implemented inside the OS rather than on public capture APIs. It cannot (and shouldn't) be hidden by an app; it's how macOS tells you a capture is running.
The Mac app doesn't show my iPhone in the Connection menu (WiFi). Both sides need Local Network permission, and both fail silently without it: check Privacy & Security → Local Network on the Mac and on the iPhone, make sure both are on the same WiFi network, and keep the iPhone app open in the foreground. USB mode is unaffected.
Does it support iPad? The receiver app is universal (iPhone + iPad); iPad is the same codebase. iPad-specific polish (Pencil, pressure) is on the roadmap.
Why H.264 and not HEVC/AV1? Hardware H.264 encode/decode is universally fast and the latency is excellent. HEVC is a planned option for better quality-per-bit.
Is my screen content sent anywhere? No. One direct TCP connection between your Mac and your device, over your cable or your LAN. No servers, no accounts, no analytics. Full details — including what the apps store locally and the current WiFi-encryption caveat — on the privacy page.
What's the license? Can I fork it or use it commercially? GPL-3.0. Use, study, and adapt it freely — commercially too. If you distribute a modified version it must stay open source under the same license with the original attribution intact, so improvements flow back instead of into closed forks. (Releases up to v0.4.x were MIT-licensed and remain available under those terms.)
Will it break on a macOS update? Possibly — CGVirtualDisplay is private API. The same risk applies to every virtual-display product. The capture/streaming pipeline itself uses only public APIs.
Audio? Out of scope for now.
Comparison
| | OpenDisplay | Apple Sidecar | Duet Display | Luna Display | |---|---|---|---|---| | Price | Free, open source | Free | Subscription | $$$ + dongle | | iPhone as display | ✅ | ❌ (iPad only) | ✅ | ✅ | | Different Apple IDs | ✅ | ❌ | ✅ | ✅ | | Wired (USB) | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ | | True extension | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | | Touch input | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | | Self-hosted / auditable | ✅ | — | ❌ | ❌ |
Roadmap
Tracked as roadmap issues — pick one up if you'd like to contribute!
Connectivity & distribution
- #16 Encrypted WiFi transport with pairing code
- [ ] App Store release of the iOS app + notarized Mac downloads
- #4 Apple Pencil with pressure and tilt
- #5 Right-click and multi-touch gestures
- #6 Hardware keyboard passthrough
- #7 On-screen modifier key sidebar
- #9 Resolution & quality settings
- #10 HEVC encoding
- #12 Audio forwarding
- #17 macOS receiver — use another Mac as a display
Auto-update (macOS app)
The macOS app updates itself with Sparkle — an open-source framework, not a hosted service. Update checks hit only our own infrastructure:
- The app reads an appcast feed hosted on the landing-page site:
https://opendisplay.app/appcast.xml (SUFeedURL in project.yml).
- The release workflow (
.github/workflows/release.yml,build-macjob)
generate_appcast against the notarized OpenDisplay.dmg,
signs it with the EdDSA key, commits the result to public/appcast.xml,
and dispatches the Pages deploy — so the published feed points download
links at the GitHub Release assets.
- Sparkle verifies both the EdDSA signature and Apple's notarization before
SUEnableAutomaticChecks) and offers a manual "Check for Updates…"
button next to Quit in the menu-bar window.
Maintainer prerequisites (before auto-update goes live)
Auto-update is scaffolded but inert until the signing keys are in place. The private signing key is never committed — it lives only as a CI secret. To switch it on:
- Generate the key pair. Run Sparkle's
generate_keysonce (it ships
bin/generate_keys). It prints a public key and stores the
private key in your login keychain.
- Public key → paste it into
SUPublicEDKeyinproject.yml(replace
REPLACEWITHSUPUBLICEDKEYFROMgenerate_keys placeholder), then
re-run xcodegen generate and commit.
- Private key → add it as the
SPARKLEPRIVATEKEYGitHub Actions
generatekeys -x privatekey.pem if needed). The
appcast step in release.yml no-ops gracefully while this secret is
absent, so releases keep working until you're ready.
- The first appcast publishes on the next release after both keys are
https://opendisplay.app/appcast.xml resolves, then **test
the full update flow on a real signed/notarized build** (check → download
→ verify → relaunch) — this can't be validated in CI.
Contributing
Issues and PRs are very welcome — especially for the roadmap items above. The codebase is intentionally small: ~4 Swift files per platform, with Sparkle (SPM) as the macOS app's only runtime dependency, for auto-update. The How it works section above is the architecture doc; see Mac/CGVirtualDisplayPrivate.h for the private API surface.
Releases are automated with release-please: use Conventional Commits (feat:, fix:, docs:, …) and a release PR with a generated changelog appears automatically — merging it tags the release and attaches prebuilt artifacts.
License
GPL-3.0 — Copyright (c) 2026 Philip Poloczek.
Free to use, study, and adapt. If you distribute a modified version it must remain open source under the same license, with the original attribution intact — improvements flow back to everyone instead of into closed forks. (Versions up to v0.4.x were MIT-licensed; those releases remain available under MIT.)
*Keywords: iPhone second monitor Mac, iPad external display, free Sidecar alternative, Duet Display alternative, open source screen extension macOS, use iPhone as extra screen, virtual display Mac, USB second display.*