I want to install rtems on beaglebone black. First I am trying to create image for sd card. and I'm following this link [https://docs.rtems.org/branches/master/user/start/index.html#creating-a-workspace] but when I wrote ./source-builder/sb-checkthis step and it returned me ;
RTEMS Source Builder - Check, 5 (f07d2b6e9ad7)
error: exe: not found: (__xz) xz
Environment is not correctly set up
I am using macOS I have already developing IOS application so I have Xcode and comment line tools but It still doesn't work.
Also, I download HomeBrew packaging tool for MacOS. I doesn't change situation.
Then I download git clone https://git.tukaani.org/xz.git
But still doesn't work.
Can someone help me about it?
I will be very pleased?
After downloading and installing brew (/usr/bin/ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)") install xz with "brew install xz"
I am using Eclipse on a macOS machine. CMake is present on my machine at /usr/local/bin/cmake and has been installed using Homebrew. Eclipse is at the latest version (2018-09).
I have the following target in a Makefile, which has been set up and is visible from Eclipse:
all:
./configure
Rscript -e "Rcpp::compileAttributes()"
R CMD INSTALL --no-multiarch --with-keep.source .
Inside the configure file, there is this code:
cd src/build;cmake ..
However, when I double click the all target in Eclipse, I get the following message:
make all
./configure
./configure: line 1: cmake: command not found
make: *** [all] Error 127
I remember that some time ago this target worked out of the box on macOS. I can also launch CMake from a terminal without any trouble.
echo $PATH shows different behaviour:
If called from a standard macOS terminal, it yields /usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/sbin:/Library/TeX/texbin:/opt/X11/bin
If called from a TM Terminal inside Eclipse, it yields /usr/bin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/sbin
What is the most canonical way to have Eclipse detect my CMake installation ?
For macOS High Sierra 10.13.6, the solution provided here works. This must be performed to see the changes immediately.
I just upgraded from Yosemite to El Capitan (and replicated the problem upgrading from El Capitan to Sierra), and when I try to type for example git status inside a terminal, I get the following error:
xcrun: error: invalid active developer path
(/Library/Developer/CommandLineTools), missing xcrun at:
/Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/usr/bin/xcrun
I don't have Xcode installed, never did.
Anyone have a solution?
Found the fix for the problem here.
xcode-select --install
This will bring up a prompt to install the necessary command line tools.
If you have issues with the xcode-select --install command; e.g. I kept getting a network problem timeout, then try downloading the dmg at developer.apple.com/downloads (Command line tools OS X 10.11) for Xcode 7.1
In macOS 10.14 this issue may also occur if you have two or more versions installed. If you like xCode GUI you can do it by going into preferences - CMD + ,, selecting Locations tab and choosing version of Command Line Tools. Please refer to the attached print screen.
I tried the solution xcode-select --install but it don't help me, I update from Sierra to High and happened this, my solution:
sudo xcode-select --reset
Reassigning the path Xcode is configured with worked for me.
sudo xcode-select -switch /Applications/Xcode.app
You'll then likely be prompted (after trying a command) to agree to the license agreement.
I had the same issue after upgrading to macOS Catalina.
This didn't work for me:
xcode-select --install
Downloading and installing Command Line Tools for Xcode 12 did it!
For me, after I've removed Xcode, I have to switch active developer path as follows:
sudo xcode-select -s /
I just updated to High Sierra and I couldn't just run xcode-select --install. First, I had to actually install xcode from the app store. Then I ran xcode-select --install. Then I had to run sudo xcodebuild -license, agree to the terms, then I could finally run git commands again.
Updated to High Sierra 10.13.2
xcode-select --install ALONE did not work for me.
Download X-code from app store
$xcode-select --install
a. May need to update after install using softwareupdate in command line. $sudo softwareupdate -i "Command Line Tools (macOS High Sierra version 10.13) for Xcode-9.1"
$sudo xcodebuild -license
For Mojave
Uninstall Any old version of Command Line Tools:
sudo rm -rf /Library/Developer/CommandLineTools
Download and Install Command Line Tools 10.14 Mojave.
For those also having issues with heroku command line tools after upgrading, I also had to do the following in my terminal:
xcode-select --install
brew install heroku/brew/heroku
brew link --overwrite heroku
It seems the upgrade to High Sierra messed with my symlinks in addition to forcing me to reinstall xcode tools. I kept getting 'not a directory' errors:
▸ stat /Users/mattymc/.local/share/heroku/client/bin/heroku: not a directory
▸ fork/exec /Users/mattmcinnis/.local/share/heroku/client/bin/heroku: not a directory
Hope that saves someone an hour :)
After update to macOS 10.13.3
After updating do macOS 10.13, I had to install
"Command Line Tools (macOS 10.13) for Xcode 9.3"
downloaded from https://developer.apple.com/download/more/
I upgraded mac os to macOS High Sierra - 10.13.3 and faced a similar issue while trying to install watchman (with command - brew install watchman).
ran the command: xcode-select --install, then ran "brew install watchman" - Everything works fine!
For the most recent version Mojave version 10.14.1, I use
solved by downloaded from https://developer.apple.com/download/more/ " login by apple id, and download
Command line tool newest stable version.dmg
That makes everything work
the old answer
xcode-select --install
doesn't work for me.
sudo xcode-select -s /Applications/Xcode-beta.app/Contents/Developer
Work for me.
Even if you do xcode-select --install it was not fixing that for me as it showed some network error. The problem was that it could not connect to the app store. I did the following to fix it.
Open keystore
Go to system root and select certificates.
Open digicert high assurance EV.
Expand the trust section, mark it as never trust.
Restart system now repeat step 1, 2, 3. and mark the trust policy as
back to use system defaults.
Your app store should work now and you should be able to run xcode-select --install
I have succeeded with installing numpy and now I am trying to install scipy on Mavericks. The requirement is GFortran but when I am trying to install it, I get a message:
"Unapproved caller.
SecurityAgent may only be invoked by Apple software."
Does anyone know how I can fix this issue?
Restarting the computer has fixed the issue.
I was able to get around this by using the installer command instead of the gui
## SETUP
# get pacakge
wget http://coudert.name/software/gfortran-4.9.0-Mavericks.dmg
# mount
hdiutil attach gfortran-4.9.0-Mavericks.dmg
# issue with clicking desktop icon then pkg icon
# "Unapproved caller. SecurityAgent may only be invoked by Apple software"
## INSTALL
sudo installer -pkg /Volumes/gfortran-4.9.0-Mavericks/gfortran.pkg -target /
## test install
which gfortran
/usr/local/bin/gfortran
Another solution might be to use the brew/fink/macports package. I'm using this package instead of e.g. brew install gcc because (when R is compiling fortran code), I'm getting:
FATAL:/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Toolchains/XcodeDefault.xctoolchain/usr/bin/../libexec/as/x86_64/as: I don't understand 'm' flag!
SOLVED. See at bottom.
Just upgraded to OSX Lion and trying to get my Perl install running again:
sudo /usr/bin/perl -MCPAN -e 'install "MODULENAME"'
with any value of MODULENAME that I tried (e.g. JSON) produces:
...
Checking if your kit is complete...
Looks good
Writing Makefile for JSON
make: *** No rule to make target `/System/Library/Perl/5.12/darwin-thread-multi-2level/CORE/config.h', needed by `Makefile'. Stop.
MAKAMAKA/JSON-2.53.tar.gz
/Developer/usr/bin/make -- NOT OK
I can't find anything resembling config.h anywhere, the directory exists though ...
Not even this works:
/usr/bin/cpan CPAN
SOLVED: Download and install latest version of XCode from AppStore. Note that just downloading XCode from AppStore does not install it (why, Apple, oh why?) but only dumps an installer into /Applications. Run the installer, which will fix this issue.
SOLVED: Download and install latest version of XCode from AppStore. Note that just downloading XCode from AppStore does not install it (why, Apple, oh why?) but only dumps an installer into /Applications. Run the installer, which will fix this issue.
I still had this problem after installing Xcode, because Xcode didn't automatically install the "Command Line Tools for Xcode" package. This is available from Xcode | Preferences | Downloads | Components and click 'Install' next to 'Command Line Tools'.
Now that this is a separate package, it's also possible to solve this problem without installing all of Xcode (ie. you can just install this package :-)