I have git configured to use ~/bin/opendiff-git.sh as my external diff tool. That script looks like this:
opendiff $2 $5
When I try and do a gi
first the reason is xcode's installation path modified since 4.3, so must reselect xcode path
full guide is in below link: http://useyourloaf.com/blog/2012/2/17/updating-to-xcode-43.html
If you have two SDKs installed, and the latest (presumably beta) version doesn't have the System Tools installed, some tools like opendiff
can break. You can only have one set of System Tools installed at a time, so you have to choose which SDK/installation has it. I fixed this problem by using the path of opendiff
that is in the Developer folder that had the system tools installed.
In my case, I have the following Xcode installations:
Current stable release (with System Tools installed)
/Developer
Latest beta (without System Tools installed)
/Developer (iOS SDK XXX beta)
My ~/bin/opendiff-git.sh
script now looks like this:
"/Developer/usr/bin/opendiff" $2 $5
So AFTER I deleted the beta developer folder to try and solve this (couldn't get the fix to work with merge tool) I stumbled upon this in the command line:
Error: No developer directory found at /Developer Beta. Run /usr/bin/xcode-select to update the developer directory path.
Turns out you can set the developer path you need it to use:
Usage: xcode-select -print-path
or: xcode-select -switch <xcode_folder_path>
or: xcode-select -version
Arguments:
-print-path Prints the path of the current Xcode folder
-switch <xcode_folder_path> Sets the path for the current Xcode folder
-version
Looks like installing the beta had automatically set that path to beta. To fix it, run this:
sudo /usr/bin/xcode-select -switch /Developer
That fixed it for me.
Ying's comment below was important enough to include in the answer. From Xcode 4.3 on, the location of the folder has changed to inside the application package:
sudo /usr/bin/xcode-select -switch /Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/