First off, I did a git pull Sunday on the latest gregorio (master branch). I am 
running OSX 10.10.5 with TexLive 2015. I had no issues compiling and installing 
it, though I, if memory serves me, I did use the added command to the build.sh 
line recommended earlier in this thread.

I also compiled and installed the fonts with a minor bobble. I had to change 
python2 to python2.7, the version I am running at the moment. I have the 
fontforge with python variant installed via MacPorts.

After compiling gregorio, the fonts and installing them, I ran the example case 
and it ran just fine. So kudos to those who greased the skids for us OSX users!

That all said, I suggest, Conor, you ditch MacPorts Tex and use TexLive for 
Mac.  TexLive for Mac is always up to date and on the ball. I cannot say the 
same for the compile on-your-inw flavors I've used on the Mac over the years. 
With the TexLive manager you get instant access to the latest updates. I 
usually update my TexLive on a weekly to monthly basis, depending on what I am 
doing at the time. It is not unusual to see 20-50 updates. My experience with 
other methods has them lagging on updates by a considerable time. Also, with 
TexLive, you do not need to wait through a very lengthy compile and all the 
libraries you need along with it.

I have never found a great reason to retain past TexLive versions, though you 
can if you want. When a new one comes out, I do retain last year's version 
until I am sure all is well with the new version, but after that, I delete it. 
Tex takes up quite a bit of room and having several versions takes up a lot of 
disk space and can confuse the issue when debugging.

Just my opinion.

Sent from my iPad

> On Sep 14, 2015, at 12:31, Br. Samuel Springuel <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> One can retain multiple versions of TeX on a Mac, you just have to make sure 
> that they all are aware of each other's texmf directories otherwise you end 
> up with your current problem where a package is installed for one 
> installation but not the others.
> 
> In this case it looks like Gregorio is being made available to TeXLive as it 
> would be installed by MacTeX, but not MacPorts.  You thus have a few options:
> 
> 1. Install TeXLive 2015 via MacTex. 
> 2. Make the MacPorts version of TeXLive aware of the texmf tree where the 
> GregorioTeX files are located (either through a symlink or by adding that 
> directory to your TEXMFLOCAL variable).
> 3. Install the GregorioTeX files to the texmf tree that MacPorts TeXLive 
> knows about. 
> 
> ✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝
> Br. Samuel, OSB
> (R. Padraic Springuel)
> PAX ☧ ΧΡΙΣΤΟΣ
> 
>> On Sep 14, 2015, at 8:05 AM, Conor Cook <[email protected]> wrote:
>> 
>> The results:
>> 
>>> /opt/local/bin/kpsewhich
>>> /usr/local/texlive/2014/bin/x86_64-darwin/kpsewhich
>>> /usr/local/texlive/2015/bin/x86_64-darwin/kpsewhich
>>> /Library/TeX/texbin/kpsewhich
>> 
>> I recall being told to retain the old versions of TeXLive.
>> 
>> ~Conor
>> 
>>> On Sep 14, 2015, at 2:00 AM, Élie Roux <[email protected]> 
>>> wrote:
>>> 
>>> Le 14/09/2015 05:00, Conor Cook a écrit :
>>>> I added a copy of system-setup.sh to my local contrib/ directory and ran 
>>>> it, and here is the result.
>>> 
>>> It seems you have many different versions of TeXLive, with possible
>>> conflicts...
>>> 
>>> Can you copy/paste the result of
>>> 
>>> which -a kpsewhich
>>> 
>>> ?
>>> 
>>> Thank you,
>>> -- 
>>> Elie
>> 
>> 
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>> [email protected]
>> https://mail.gna.org/listinfo/gregorio-users
> 
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