On 29 Aug 2019, at 16:38, Bjarne D Mathiesen wrote:
Bjarne D Mathiesen wrote:
---
Now, how do I switch this automatic process off ?
I really need to get my system into a working condition ;-)
I suppose I could "git clone macports-ports" and go back in time
untill
I get to a point, where the LibcxxOnOlderSystems instructions for
doing
this stuff manually works ;-)
I successfully re-ran the LibcxxOnOlderSystems procedure last weekend
and have what seems to be a working setup on an original Intel Core Duo
iMac running 10.6.8.
I ultimately ended up here:
# port installed clang* llvm* libcxx ld64*
The following ports are currently installed:
clang-3.4 @3.4.2_12 (active)
clang-5.0 @5.0.2_3+analyzer+defaultlibcxx+emulated_tls+libstdcxx
(active)
clang-8.0 @8.0.0_0+analyzer+defaultlibcxx+emulated_tls+libstdcxx
(active)
clang_select @2_0 (active)
ld64 @3_1 (active)
ld64-latest @274.2_2+llvm80 (active)
libcxx @5.0.1_4+emulated_tls+universal (active)
llvm-3.4 @3.4.2_12 (active)
llvm-5.0 @5.0.2_0 (active)
llvm-8.0 @8.0.0_0+emulated_tls (active)
llvm_select @2_0 (active)
I was able to remove clang-3.7 but apparently it is likely that I'll
need to bring it back someday. I have kept 3.4 because cmake requires
it, even after I've forcibly rebuilt cmake with 8.0. I had to build 5.0
because 8.0 is too picky for things I need on that machine.
--
Bill Cole
[email protected] or [email protected]
(AKA @grumpybozo and many *@billmail.scconsult.com addresses)
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