如果你的电脑中有几个xcode版本,比如一个xcode5.1.1,一个xcode6-beta, 当你打开工程的时候,通常会有一个默认配置,或者使用terminal命令行操作,需要选择使用xcode的不同版本,怎么更改这个配置呢? 请看下文:
It’s not uncommon developers to have multiple versions of Xcode installed. For example, I typically have the latest beta as well as the most current production release installed.
However, there are times when you may want various tools, such as xcodebuild, to point to a specific Xcode folder. To faciliate this, you can use xcode-select. A common use case is if you use scripts and/or makefiles to build your projects.
Once you set the Xcode folder, xcodebuild will be invoked from the folder you specified.
The command line options are below:
xcode-select [-help] xcode-select [-switch xcode_folder_path] xcode-select [-print-path] xcode-select [-version] |
Here is how to print the current Xcode path:
1 2 |
~$ xcode-select --print-path /Developer/Applications/Xcode.app |
Line number 2 shows the current version of Xcode that is ‘active.’ If you are accessing xcodebuild or other related tools from a script, –print-path is the preferred means to determine the current Xcode location.
Use the -switch option to change to another version of Xcode on your system:
$ sudo xcode-select -switch /Users/JOHN/Downloads/Xcode45-DP3.app |
This changes to the Xcode 4.5, Developer Preview 3 on my system. Note that root access is required to set the Xcode location, thus I have used sudo to execute the command as root.
Printing the path now looks as follows:
1 2 |
~$ xcode-select --print-path /Users/JOHN/Downloads/Xcode45-DP3.app/Contents/Developer |
To switch back to Xcode installed in the /Applications directory:
$ sudo xcode-select -switch /Applications/Xcode.app/ |
You can read more about xcode-select by view the man page from a terminal:
~$man xcode-select |