![]() ![]() I've submitted a bug report to Apple (radar://7408619). I've deleted the MS Office Package Receipts and examined the suhelperd (Software Update Helper Daemon?) it appears that suhelperd is crashing and that explains why it doesn't work. However, I did get diagnostic messages in the Console (below). I also tried Chealion's suggestion to delete "~/Library/Preferences/" and "/Library/Preferences/", Software Update still fails. I want to avoid that as my co-workers are generally not comfortable on the Mac. ![]() I'd rather use the Software Update menu item like I used to: it is much more convenient.ĮDIT Nov 19th, 2009, 10:09 EST: I have posted this question to the Apple Mac OS X Snow Leopard support forum.ĮDIT Nov 19th, 2009, 12:39 EST:Yes, the Terminal command "sudo softwareupdate -install -all" does work flawlessly. I can download the updates individually and install them without any issues, but the auto-update fails. It doesn't ask for authentication like it used to, the computer doesn't perform any download or installation (it does sometimes ask me to agree to license agreements for iTunes). ![]() What happens is that when I try to get the Mac to perform its Software Updates from the Apple menu, the normal window appears listing what has to be updated I am able to select what to update and click the "Update" button, but then nothing happens. However, there is a problem: the "Software Update" feature doesn't work. I have been given Administrative permission on my Mac and I am able to do most of what I used to be able to do in terms of authentication of software installations. Therefore, I switched the active developer path to latest Xcode App installed using: sudo xcode-select -switch /Applications/Xcode.appĪnd everything worked like a charm automatically.My company's IT department is mostly a Windows run operation and in order to become more secure, they are altering the way that the Macintosh computers login to our internal network so that they use Active Directory like their Windows counterparts. xcrun: error: active developer path ("/Applications/Xcode-beta.app/Contents/Developer") does not exist Active Developer path was still pointing to Old version of Xcode that I had already deleted. Then I tried to check the version of Clang using: clang -versionĪnd the response lead me to the real problem i.e. ![]() Therefore, when I tried installing CLion for C++ development and configuring it, CMake gave me error And Updating Command Line Tool didnt work for me: softwareupdate -i "Command Line Tools (macOS Mojave version 10.14.3) for Xcode-10.3"Īnd showed me this response in terminal Software Update ToolĬommand Line Tools (macOS Mojave version 10.14.3) for Xcode-10.3: No such update The real problem was, when I installed the Xcode 10.3, I deleted the " Xcode-beta.app" first and then installed the new version. I faced similar problem on MacOS Mojave version 10.14.3 with Xcode 10.3 installed. It seems that the problem was that the new version of the tools are installed to a different directory, and xcode-select -r is not clever enough to find the latest version. Now, sudo xcode-select -p returns /Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/. But xcode-select -install said the command line tools were already installed. sudo rm -rf /Applications/Xcode.appĭeleted version 8 of the tools. Xcode-select -p returned /Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer, and clang -version reported an installation directory under there. xcode-select -r and rebooting didn't solve this issue. But clang -version still gave 8.0.0 as the version number. The App Store didn't suggest this upgrade, and neither did softwareupdate -list. I wanted to upgrade the command line tools from version 8 to 9. Hopefully it'll help someone (and it'll surely help me next time I run into the same issue). I'm going to answer a slightly different question here, because this question came up when I searched for a solution to my problem. ![]()
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