Extracting a semi-coherent answer from rather extensive comments…
Preamble
Very often, xcode-select --install
has been the correct solution, but it does not seem to help this time. Have you tried running the main Xcode GUI interface? It may install some extra software for you and clean up. I did that after installing Xcode 10.0, but a week or more ago, long before upgrading to Mojave.
I observe that if your GCC is installed in /usr/local/bin
, you probably aren't using the GCC from Xcode; that's normally installed in /usr/bin
.
I too have updated to macOS 10.14 Mojave and Xcode 10.0. However, both the system /usr/bin/gcc
and system /usr/bin/clang
are working for me (Apple LLVM version 10.0.0 (clang-1000.11.45.2) Target: x86_64-apple-darwin18.0.0
for both.) I have a problem with my home-built GCC 8.2.0 not finding headers in /usr/include
, which is parallel to your problem with /usr/local/bin/gcc
not finding headers either.
I've done a bit of comparison, and my Mojave machine has no /usr/include
at all, yet /usr/bin/clang
is able to compile OK. A header (_stdio.h
, with leading underscore) was in my old /usr/include
; it is missing now (hence my problem with GCC 8.2.0). I ran xcode-select --install
and it said "xcode-select: note: install requested for command line developer tools
" and then ran a GUI installer which showed me a licence which I agreed to, and it downloaded and installed the command line tools — or so it claimed.
I then ran Xcode GUI (command-space, Xcode, return) and it said it needed to install some more software, but still no /usr/include
. But I can compile with /usr/bin/clang
and /usr/bin/gcc
— and the -v
option suggests they're using
InstalledDir: /Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Toolchains/XcodeDefault.xctoolchain/usr/bin
Working solution
Then Maxxx noted:
I've found a way. If we are using Xcode 10, you will notice that if you navigate to the /usr
in the Finder, you will not see a folder called 'include' any more, which is why the terminal complains of the absence of the header files which is contained inside the 'include' folder. In the Xcode 10.0 Release Notes, it says there is a package:
/Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/Packages/macOS_SDK_headers_for_macOS_10.14.pkg
and you should install that package to have the /usr/include
folder installed. Then you should be good to go.
When all else fails, read the manual or, in this case, the release notes. I'm not dreadfully surprised to find Apple wanting to turn their backs on their Unix heritage, but I am disappointed. If they're careful, they could drive me away. Thank you for the information.
Having installed the package using the following command at the command line, I have /usr/include
again, and my GCC 8.2.0 works once more.
open /Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/Packages/macOS_SDK_headers_for_macOS_10.14.pkg
Downloading Command Line Tools
As Vesal points out in a valuable comment, you need to download the Command Line Tools package for Xcode 10.1 on Mojave 10.14, and you can do so from:
You need to login with an Apple ID to be able to get the download. When you've done the download, install the Command Line Tools package. Then install the headers as described in the section 'Working Solution'.
This worked for me on Mojave 10.14.1. I must have downloaded this before, but I'd forgotten by the time I was answering this question.
echo "#include <a.h>" | gcc -v -x c -
– Matt Sep 26 '18 at 3:52xocde-select --install
is the correct solution. Which o/s did you upgrade to? Mojave 10.14? Which XCode have you got installed? 10.0 or another version? – Jonathan Leffler Sep 26 '18 at 4:29open /Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/Packages/macOS_SDK_headers_for_macOS_10.14.pkg
at the command line), I have/usr/include
again, and my GCC 8.2.0 works once more. Thanks for the pointer; well done on finding it. I suggest you write up the answer as there'll probably be other people running into the problem. – Jonathan Leffler Sep 26 '18 at 15:05