Greetngs and thanks! "Chun Tian (binghe)" <binghe.l...@gmail.com> writes:
> Greetings! > > The command 'xcodebuild' can show the current active Xcode version, e.g.: > > $ /usr/bin/xcodebuild -version > Xcode 15.2 > Build version 15C500b > I get: xcode-select: error: tool 'xcodebuild' requiers Xcode, but active developer directory '/Library/Developer/CommandLineTools' is a command line tools instance. ??? Take care, > And I don't think gprof is available in the MacPorts-installed GCC. > Perhaps that's why Kirill used --disable-gprof when calling "./configure". > > P.S. Very glad to hear the good news ("macports success")! I hope soon > the prebuilt GCL 2.7.0 binaries will be available to all MacPorts users > on various (recent) versions of macOS. (And I will use your debian > patches to build Axiom with external GCL.) > > --Chun > > On 02/02/24 04:18, Camm Maguire wrote: >> Greetings! >> >> "Chun Tian (binghe)" <binghe.l...@gmail.com> writes: >> >>> @Camm, according to a 3rd-party Xcode release web site [1], the latest >>> Xcode supported on macOS Catalina is Xcode 12.4. I think it won't hurt >>> your working macOS environment to install Xcode and its "command line >>> tools" if it prompts you to download and install on Xcode startup. (It's >>> the major and minor macOS version updates being dangerous.) In short >>> words, to make the GCC installation from MacPorts actually work, the >>> command "xcode-select --install" must be executed once with the required >>> software installed, otherwise even "stdio.h" is not available to GCC. >>> >> >> xcode-select --install >> >> yields approximately >> >> 'command line tools are already installed, use "Software Update" to >> install updates.' >> >> How does one check the installed version? What is "Software Update"? >> >> -lgcrt1.o (gprof, -pg) is missing from the MacPorts gcc13 package -- is it >> anywhere >> else? >> >> Take care, >> >> >> >>> [1] https://xcodereleases.com >>> >>> Chun >>> >>> On 31/01/24 06:19, Kirill A. Korinsky wrote: >>>> Greetings, >>>> >>>> On Tue, 30 Jan 2024 17:28:11 +0100, >>>> Camm Maguire wrote: >>>>> >>>>> I have an old mac virtualbox which I never use except at the last point >>>>> in gcl releases. Nonetheless I have fired it up, and run into the >>>>> problem that sed cannot put newlines into the replacement text. You >>>>> guys are surely past this point. I know next to nothing about macosx >>>>> versions and software installations -- perhaps you could point me to a >>>>> hopefully painless way to upgrade this virtualbox image to the latest >>>>> reasonable without destroying it. >>>> >>>> The simplest way is using image that you have without any upgrade. >>>> >>>> If you install MacPorts you may use my not published port to reproduce it. >>>> >>>> The simplest way after instalation (without switching MacPorts to git) is: >>>> >>>> 1. Replace content of >>>> >>>> /opt/local/var/macports/sources/rsync.macports.org/macports/release/tarballs/ports/lang/gcl/Portfile >>>> into >>>> >>>> https://raw.githubusercontent.com/catap/macports-ports/gcl-devel/lang/gcl/Portfile >>>> >>>> 2. Move to >>>> /opt/local/var/macports/sources/rsync.macports.org/macports/release/tarballs/port >>>> >>>> 3. Run portindex >>>> >>>> It adds gcl-devel port which you may build as `port build gcl-devel`. >>>> >>>> Portfile contains used gitcommit at line 78 and checksum at line 82. >>>> >>>> The simplest way to update it is: >>>> 1. Update git commit >>>> 2. Run `port bump gcl-devel` >>>> >>>> If you need access to a build folder you may find one as `port work >>>> gcl-devel`, >>>> and output log are available as `port logfile gcl-devel`. >>>> >>>> Keep in mind that after editing Portfile the work directory will be >>>> removed. >>>> >>>> -- >>>> wbr, Kirill >>>> >>> >> > -- Camm Maguire c...@maguirefamily.org ========================================================================== "The earth is but one country, and mankind its citizens." -- Baha'u'llah