Ronald Oussoren added the comment:

The obvious workaround w.r.t. dtrace not finding the preprocessor is to install 
the command-line tools for xcode, which you can do from Xcode's preferences.

something else to try (before installing the commandline tools): add $(dirname 
$(xcrun -find cpp)) to the search path of the shell:

bash$ PATH="${PATH}:$(dirname $(xcrun -find cpp))"

This adds the directory in the Xcode bundle that contains the command-line 
tools to the search path of the shell, and might make it possible for dtrace to 
find the preprocessor (depending on how dtrace is coded). If that works this 
trick could be added to the build process, we already do something similar to 
locate the compiler in the configure script.

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Python tracker <rep...@bugs.python.org>
<http://bugs.python.org/issue13405>
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