64

I've upgraded to El Capitan and since then I can't update my pods.

$ pod update
-bash: pod: command not found

So I've tried to reinstall CocoaPods and got this:

$ sudo gem install cocoapods
ERROR:  While executing gem ... (Errno::EPERM)
    Operation not permitted - /usr/bin/xcodeproj

I am the administrator on this computer. Why is this happening?

1

7 Answers 7

201

This is caused by the new System integrity protection feature introduced in El Capitan. It restricts even administrators from writing to /usr/bin.

Your best option would be to install gems without needing sudo. There is a good guide on how to do that:

export GEM_HOME=$HOME/.gem
export PATH=$GEM_HOME/bin:$PATH

gem install cocoapods
1
  • @Pavlo Shadov sudo gem uninstall cocoapods can uninstall the old CocoaPods with a option prompt. Thanks.
    – malajisi
    Mar 9, 2017 at 9:18
8

From CocoaPods issues 3736

  1. Uninstall all instances of cocopods (just to be safe and keep things clean) see fully uninstall Cocoapods

    sudo gem uninstall cocoapods
    

    or even better fully uninstall all components (and select All versions for each)

    gem list --local | grep cocoapods | awk '{print $1}' | xargs sudo gem uninstall
    
  2. Install again

    sudo gem install -n /usr/local/bin cocoapods
    
  3. Change access permission

    sudo chmod +rx /usr/local/bin/
    
0
7

This should work for you

sudo gem install -n /usr/local/bin cocoapods

Operation not permitted - /usr/bin/xcodeproj #3692

For whatever reason, the rootless stuff seems less restrictive when one simply upgrades the system. I could sudo gem install cocoapods just fine on a machine upgraded from 10.10 - however, binstubs are no longer installed into /usr/bin:

$ sudo gem install cocoapods
[...]
1 gem installed
$ export PATH=$PATH:/Library/Ruby/bin
$ pod --version
0.37.2

We have heard from some users that they receive this error when doing a system-wide installation:

ERROR: While executing gem ... (Errno::EPERM) Operation not permitted - /usr/bin/pod

We aren't sure why gem behaves differently on some systems, but this can be solved by passing -n /usr/local/bin to the install command, so that the pod executable gets installed there.

4

Regarding the original question/problem:

$ sudo gem install cocoapods
ERROR:  While executing gem ... (Errno::EPERM)
    Operation not permitted

I found I had the same problem with several GEMS, so I generalized the recognized answer (Keith Smiley) to update ALL local gems... (on El Capitan with rootless in force)

$ sudo gem install cocoapods -n /usr/local/bin/    # this command installs
$ sudo gem update -n /usr/local/bin/    # this command updates all local gems 

This works well and will spit out a verbose log of all updates and errors.

I saw many errors. They were all 'unable to convert' errors. Parsing many docs will encounter a "skipping" error... like this:

$ unable to convert "\xCF" from ASCII-8BIT to UTF-8 for lib/jazzy... skipping

I believe these skipping errors are not problems.

CocoaPods will be updated during this process, along with all the other local GEMS, depending on how current your local GEMS are. I believe this is the best way to handle the rootless issue (which is the cause of the problem).

2

Your best option for installing Pods for custom and standard installation Refer the Link :https://github.com/CocoaPods/CocoaPods/issues/3692

enter image description here

0

Did you install Xcode Command Line tools again ? That solved my problem. You need to select Command Line tool in Xcode preferences(Locations) and than install cocoa pods.

1
  • I have Xcode 7.0.1 selected for Command Line Tools. Should I install something else?
    – Luda
    Oct 12, 2015 at 13:26
0

For me it worked with: sudo gem install -n /usr/local/bin cocoapods --pre

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.