Just upgraded my computer to Mac OS X Lion and went to terminal and typed \"make\" but it says: -bash: make: command not found
Where did the \"make\" command go?
After upgrading to Mountain Lion
using the NDK
, I had the following error:
Cannot find 'make' program. Please install Cygwin make package or define the GNUMAKE variable to point to it
Error was fixed by downloading and using the latest NDK
You need to install Xcode from App Store.
Then start Xcode, go to Xcode->Preferences->Downloads
and install component named "Command Line Tools".
After that all the relevant tools will be placed in /usr/bin folder and you will be able to use it just as it was in 10.6.
Xcode 4.3.2 didn't install "Command Line Tools" by default. I had to open Xcode Preferences / Downloads / Components Tab. It had a list of optional components with an "Install" button beside each. This includes "Command Line Tools" and components to support developing for older versions of iOS.
Now "make" is available and you can check by opening terminal and typing:make -v
The result should look like:GNU Make 3.81
You may need "make" even if you don't need Xcode, such as a Perl developer installing Perl Modules using cpan -i on the commandline.
If you need only make and friends. Try installing the command-line-tools provided by Apple. (Assuming you are not doing any iOS development.)
Have you installed Xcode and the developer tools? I think make, along with gcc and friends, is installed with that and not before. Xcode 4.1 for Lion is free.
It appears you can install the command line tools without getting Xcode from Downloads for Apple Developers. It required me to login with my apple account.
Alternatively, once you install Xcode from the app store, you might notice the command line tools are not installed by default. Open Xcode, go to preferences, click to the "downloads" tab, and from there you can download and install command line tools.