154
votes

I need to use gdb.

ps-MacBook-Air:AcoustoExport pi$ gdb
-bash: gdb: command not found

ps-MacBook-Air:AcoustoExport pi$ sudo find / -iname "*gdb*"
Password:
/usr/local/share/gdb
/usr/local/Cellar/isl/0.12.1/share/gdb
:

and:

ps-MacBook-Air:AcoustoExport pi$ ls -la /usr/local/share/gdb
lrwxr-xr-x   1 pi    admin   30 14 Jan 22:01 gdb -> ../Cellar/isl/0.12.1/share/gdb

Not quite sure what to make this, clearly it is something installed by homebrew. I don't know why it's there, I don't know whether I could use it instead. It isn't in the search path.

So I figure I need Xcode commandline tools.

Xcode is not currently available from the Software Update server

^ my current problem exactly. Comment on that question says "you can get this error if you have them already"

But how do I check whether I have them already?

8

8 Answers

261
votes
/usr/bin/xcodebuild -version

will give you the xcode version, run it via Terminal command

38
votes

I was able to find my version of Xcode on maxOS Sierra using this command:

pkgutil --pkg-info=com.apple.pkg.CLTools_Executables | grep version

as per this answer.

42
votes

if you want to know the install version of Xcode as well as Swift language current version:

Use below simple command by using Terminal:

1. To get install Xcode Version

 xcodebuild -version

2. To get install Swift language Version

swift --version
53
votes

First of all, be sure that you have downloaded it or not. Open up your terminal application, and enter $ gcc if you have not installed it you will get an alert. You can verify that you have installed it by

$ xcode-select -p
/Library/Developer/CommandLineTools

And to be sure then enter $ gcc --version

You can read more about the process here: Xcode command line tools for Mavericks

4
votes

If for some reason xcode is not installed under

/usr/bin/xcodebuild

execute the following command

which xcodebuild

and if it is installed, you'll be prompted with it's location.

14
votes

Thanks to the folks on Freenode's #macdev, here is some information:

In the old days before Xcode was on the app-store, it included commandline tools.

Now you get it from the store, and with this new mechanism it can't install extra things outside of the Xcode.app, so you have to manually do it yourself, by:

xcode-select --install

On Xcode 4.x you can check to see if they are installed from within the Xcode UI:

enter image description here

On Xcode 5.x it is now here:

enter image description here

My problem of finding gcc/gdb is that they have been superseded by clang/lldb: GDB missing in OS X v10.9 (Mavericks)

Also note that Xcode contains compiler and debugger, so one of the things installing commandline tools will do is symlink or modify $PATH. It also downloads certain things like git.

1
votes

You can open the Xcode app and go to preferences:

enter image description here

0
votes

For macOS catalina try this : open Xcode. if not existing. download from App store (about 11GB) then open Xcode>open developer tool>more developer tool and used my apple id to download a compatible command line tool. Then, after downloading, I opened Xcode>Preferences>Locations>Command Line Tool and selected the newly downloaded command line tool from downloads.