5

I have just upgraded my Mac OS to 10.9.3 from a Mac OS to 10.6.8. I had a XCode 3.2.6 installed. For new developments, I needed to install XCode 4.5.2.

In a maven build, I invoke xcodebuild to build some C++ projects. The problem is I need xcodebuild 3.2.6 to build certain projects, and xcodebuidl 4.5.2 for some new ones.

I need to be able to choose on-the-fly the xcodebuild version to launch a build on a project. I saw xcode-select could help me doing this, but I get stuck on the way to use xcode-select to choose xcodebuild 3.2.6.

Considerong my XCode 4.5.2 is installed at /Applications/Xcode.app, using command

sudo xcode-select -switch /Applications/Xcode.app

does the job, as

xcodebuild -version

outputs

Xcode 4.5.2
Build version 4G2008a

Considering my XCode 3.2.6 is at /Developer/Applications/Xcode.app, my problem is, why does this command not work?

sudo xcode-select -switch /Developer/Applications/Xcode.app

It outputs

xcode-select: error: invalid developer directory '/Developer/Applications/Xcode.app'

The only workaround I could find is using the absolute path to use xcodebuild 3.2.6, but that's tricky:

/Developer/usr/bin/xcodebuild

Is there a clean way to select xcodebuild 3.2.6 with xcode-select?

6
  • Does Mavericks support Xcode 3?
    – trojanfoe
    Jun 26, 2014 at 8:26
  • Not officially, you're right. I am able to build with XCode 3 though, using GUI or absolute path. Jun 26, 2014 at 8:45
  • I expect, then, that it's xcode-select (which I think was only introduced in Xcode 4). So for command line Xcode 3 builds you might have to manually construct paths to the compiler etc. Why are you using Xcode 3/4 at all, however, and not Xcode 5 throughout?
    – trojanfoe
    Jun 26, 2014 at 8:49
  • I need building an InDesign plugin for a version that needs Mac OS 10.5 SDK support, what Xcode 3 is the only one to support. XCode 4 only supports 10.7+ SDK. I may use XCode 5 for later plugins... Jun 26, 2014 at 8:58
  • Could you not take the Mac OS 10.5 SDK out of Xcode 3 and put it into the latest version of Xcode? That way you can just specify what SDK you are compiling against in the GUI or command line? Jun 28, 2014 at 9:53

3 Answers 3

0

You have to point path to /Contents/Developer folder in Xcode.app bundle.

Try this:

$ sudo xcode-select -switch /Developer/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer
1
  • I don't think I have to. I found several articles telling I could point to XCode.app or to XCode.app/Contents/Developer (and it works for XCode 4). Furthermore, there is no Contents/Developer folder in XCode 3 Jun 26, 2014 at 11:42
0

It looks like xcode-select has not been developed to be compatible with Xcode 3... I used absolute path instead, there seems to be no other way.

-1

Doesn't Xcode 3 install the Developer directory to /Developer on your Startup Disk?

Could you install Xcode 3 and then try:

$ sudo xcode-select -switch /Developer
1
  • xcode-select: error: invalid developer directory '/Developer'. I tried it in the past too, thinking the same as you. But it seems it does not work. Furthermore, each time I see a xcode-select documentation, XCode 3 is not mentionned. Jun 27, 2014 at 13:17

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.