I just downloaded RStudio and I am not able to start the application. I've tried moving it into applications and redownloading but I am getting the same error message. Here is the error message I received "[No error available]. It is also saying [No output emitted] and [No logs available]. I also tried downloading on another mac and it gave me the same error. I am using version RStudio 2022.12.0+353 "Elisbeth Gernaium" (7d165dcf,2022-12-03)(Rstudio version) and my mac is running High Sierra 10.13.6. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
I tried moving it into applications, deleting and then re downloading, and restarting my computer. I was hoping this would allow me to use R Studio but I am still getting the same message.
XCode always keeps asking for "install additional required components" in a loop, Has anyone faced this issue.
I am using MaC OX El capitan 10.11.1 and xcode 7.2 beta
Try this from a terminal window:
git status
or
sudo git status
If it asks you do install additional Xcode components, do so. It may ask you read and agree to an End User License Agreement (which I think you must do to proceed).
I am attempting to install Oracle SQL Developer Version 4.1.1. onto my MacBook Pro after installing OS X El Capitan. After I download the application and attempt to click on the icon to install it, the application's loading prompt appears and the "loading" bar moves about 5% to the part where it says "registering extensions" right above the loading bar. The application then crashes (no crash report, or anything appears afterwards).
After searching online I cannot find anyone else having this issue.
On a possibly related note - I attempted to install Oracle SQL Developer 4.1.1 on my Parallels Windows 8.1 Virtual Machine and had the same issue. Not sure if this stems from the same reason that my OS X install fails.
Help? suggestions? Im running out of ideas.
Run in terminal:
/Applications/SQLDeveloper.app/Contents/MacOS/sqldeveloper.sh
to view errors.
My error was
mkdir: /Users/gs/.sqldeveloper/4.1.0: Permission denied"
Solution:
sudo mv ~/.sqldeveloper ~/sqldeveloper.old
Open the contents of your /Applications/SQLDeveloper.app
Edit /Contents/MacOS/sqldeveloper.sh
Add export JAVA_HOME pointing to your latest Java 1.8 version.
export JAVA_HOME=/Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/jdk1.8.0_45.jdk/Contents/Home
This helped me.
Full sqldeveloper.sh file for SQL Developer 4.1.1.
#!/bin/bash
export JAVA_HOME=/Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/jdk1.8.0_45.jdk/Contents/Home
here="${0%/*}"
cd "${here}"
cd ../Resources/sqldeveloper/sqldeveloper/bin
bash ./sqldeveloper >>/dev/null
I had a similar problem, I had to download the JDK for the install to work. http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/downloads/jdk8-downloads-2133151.html
In my case it was an issue related to attached external monitor. I had moved my primary display to an external monitor and then disconnecting external displays allows me to start the app. Plugging the external display in and the application moves to the primary external monitor.
Got info after googling and read that posts from oracle community
Answering my own question for anyone else having this issue. (using the search terms i thought of because they didn't bring up the answers for me).
Trying to install and run middleman following the getting started guide on their website with Mac OS X 10.9.2. When trying to run bundle install getting errors about openSSL and event machine.
Gist of Errors.
Refrence to an answer that someone on IRC helped me find.
Aparently this is caused by a mismatch in expected versions with something called Clang which is part of the Xcode tools for mac. The update to Xcode tools causes this to fail. Using the command:
ARCHFLAGS=-Wno-error=unused-command-line-argument-hard-error-in-future bundle install
seems to work to resolve this issue.
I tried to install the command line tools on Mavericks following the steps in this very useful post
> xcode-select --install
but after a few short seconds I get the message
This seems wrong. Does anyone know how to solve this problem?
Whenever I navigate to the page that #Nikos M. is suggesting
I get this message
I followed #Rich's suggestion and I was able to download the package and install it which I wasn't able to do before, but I've found that I still don't have access to a lot of the commands that I should like arp or diskutil just to name two that I've encountered recently.
Install them from here. You must be a registered developer.
Other solution is: in xcode click Xcode>Open Developer Tool>More Developer Tools
This should then take you to a link which will require a developer Apple ID sign in. From there, you'll be redirected after authenticating to https://developer.apple.com/download/more/ where you can manually download and install the Command Line Tools.
The tools are still free, but xcode-select --install is no longer supported.
To install the latest command-line developer tools from https://developer.apple.com,
Applications -> App Store -> Search -> XCode -> Install ... install
XCode if you don't have it.
Open XCode and close any pop-ups
Go to the Xcode menu > Open Developer Tool > More Developer Tools... this opens the correct website.
Find the newest version, download the dmg and install the package. The filename you're looking for is similar to "Command Line Tools (OS X 10.9).pkg"
I had this problem for months and finally found the solution.
The problem was: I had installed it before and removed it manually.
(I had problems with the bundled git. It was not the smartest move to do this.)
What i didn't remove were the files
/var/db/receipts/com.apple.pkg.CLTools_Executables.bom
/var/db/receipts/com.apple.pkg.CLTools_Executables.plist
Delete them, run xcode-select --install -> no error anymore
At least it worked for me. Hope it is helpful for somebody.
I get that "Your Session has Expired" message when I try to download from within the Chrome browser. If I navigate to the site with Safari and sign in with my developer credentials then the Command Line Tools dmg downloads without a problem. I do not have a paid developer account either, btw.
You can download your Command Line Tools from daw.apple.com, but try it from Safari instead of Chrome.
I tried it with Chrome for a few hours and apple would not recognize my id/password (it is the same as your AppleID). It required me to change my password after each third try, which was challenging because it would not let you use any password you've used in the last three years.
Signing in via Safari gave me no problems.
The file you are going to look for is Command Line Tools (OS X Mavericks) for Xcode - Late October
If your terminal still says you need to install command line tools, it may be an issue with gcc-4.2. I was able to confirm that was the issue by following my terminal message after I ran "bundle install" on my rails app. If this is your issue, you will do the following follow Housen's solution here. Best of luck
I spent the day trying to solve this problem. I believe the error messages are just confused about installing Xcode. The real problem I had was a need to update gcc compiler. This happened to me because I skipped Mountain Lion, where that occurred. This blog post was very helpful.
I solved it by open XCode UI, then adding my apple account
Xcode -> Preference -> Add my APPLE ID account
Then repeat the xcode-select --install
Try to install the command line tools following
Error Message "Xcode alone is not sufficient on Sierra"
brew seems checks if the command line tools installed in this path:
/Library/Developer/CommandLineTools
My case is: I tried to install brew on my new mac. After I installed Xcode, there was nothing in the above path but the command line tools were somehow installed to another location. (xcode-select -p tell me it was /Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer)
The way in stackoverflow can install the command line tools to
/Library/Developer/CommandLineTools
Now I got brew working. But I am not sure if it is the best solution as there should be two copies of command line tools on my machine using this method.