Macports stopped working after xcode 4.6 upgrade
Richard R. Cahilig
chr05210084 at gmail.com
Tue Feb 19 14:39:32 PST 2013
Sorry about the typo.
export PATH="/opt/local/bin:/opt/local/sbin:$PATH"
Best Regards,
Richard R. Cahilig
chr05210084 at gmail.com
On Feb 19, 2013, at 11:32 PM, Richard R. Cahilig <chr05210084 at gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi Jeremy,
>
> Thanks for your quick reply. Its working now. I didn't realized that.
> I just added the below in my ~/.bash_profile
>
> export PATH="/opt/local/bin:opt/local/sbin:$PATH"
>
> Thanks.
>
>
> Best Regards,
>
> Richard R. Cahilig
> chr05210084 at gmail.com
>
>
>
> On Feb 19, 2013, at 10:40 PM, Jeremy Lavergne <jeremy at lavergne.gotdns.org> wrote:
>
>>>> sh: port: command not found
>>>
>>> Any ideas to fix it? I'm using OSX Mountain Lion and I don't know the version of Macports but I downloaded it in December last year. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks.
>>
>> The error means `port` is no longer in your $PATH. You should be able to run `/opt/local/bin/port` in the meantime.
>>
>> Here's how to fix $PATH (from macports.org/install.php):
>>
>> You will need to manually adapt your shell's environment to work with MacPorts and your chosen installation prefix (the value passed to configure's --prefix flag, defaulting to /opt/local):
>>
>> • Add ${prefix}/bin and ${prefix}/sbin to the start of your PATH environment variable so that MacPorts-installed programs take precedence over system-provided programs of the same name.
>> • If a standard MANPATH environment variable already exists (that is, one that doesn't contain any empty components), add the ${prefix}/share/man path to it so that MacPorts-installed man pages are found by your shell.
>> • For Tiger and earlier only, add an appropriate X11 DISPLAY environment variable to run X11-dependent programs, as Leopard takes care of this requirement on its own.
>>
>>
>>
>
More information about the macports-users
mailing list