Gentoo Archives: gentoo-alt

From: Peter Ansell <ansell.peter@×××××.com>
To: gentoo-alt@l.g.o
Subject: Re: [gentoo-alt] Xcode 4.3 no longer installs the command line tools by default
Date: Fri, 02 Mar 2012 09:07:53
Message-Id: CAGYFOCR=6p=_BDy7=OVLemLPncNk_sXhgqurP1t58raZ_+C1qg@mail.gmail.com
In Reply to: [gentoo-alt] Xcode 4.3 no longer installs the command line tools by default by Charles Davis
1 You can download the command line tools separately now, avoiding XCode
2 altogether apparently if you don't want to use it (or you don't want
3 anything to do with App Store). [1]
4
5 Peter
6
7 [1] http://kennethreitz.com/xcode-gcc-and-homebrew.html
8
9 On 2 March 2012 15:42, Charles Davis <cdavis@××××××××××××.edu> wrote:
10 > Hi,
11 >
12 > I've read the archives, and I've noticed that some of you who have upgraded to/started out with Xcode 4.3 are complaining about the lack of a /usr/include directory.
13 >
14 > This is because Xcode is now distributed on the App Store, and therefore has to be distributed as a self-contained bundle. For this reason, the command line tools aren't installed by default. If you want to install them, try these steps. In Xcode:
15 >
16 > 1. Open the Preferences window (App menu->Preferences, or Cmd-,).
17 > 2. Select the "Downloads" pane.
18 > 3. On this pane, select the "Components" tab.
19 > 4. In the list of components, you should see "Command Line Tools". Click its "Install" button on the right side.
20 >
21 > That should do it. (After Xcode finishes downloading the disk image, of course.)
22 >
23 > (For you early adopters out there, this also works with Xcode 4.4.)
24 >
25 > Chip
26 >
27 >