I'm using GIT and am trying to push my code and getting the following error when using the Terminal. I don't use XCode, I'm using Android Studio.
The command I tried using was:
git branch Networking
Error:
xcrun: error: invalid active developer path (/Library/Developer/CommandLineTools), missing xcrun at: /Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/usr/bin/xcrun`
I am running on El Capitan Beta 4 update if that helps in any way.
Update: This also happens for IntelliJ users, and for MacOS Catalina update
I ran into the same problem, however with svn
. I found that by installing El Capitan, Xcode was "uninstalled". I reinstalled Xcode from the App Store and then reinstalled Xcode Command Line Tools via Terminal with
xcode-select --install
After installation, my /Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/usr/bin
directory reappeared and svn
started working again.
Instead of installing xcode you can install git from here and change the path in android studio to /usr/local/git/bin/git
as shown in the image below.
https://i.stack.imgur.com/Re4cH.png
This way you save time and memory.
/usr/local/bin/git
Use /usr/local/git/bin/git as a path
In my case, Git did not work after upgrading Mac OS X High Sierra.
Fortunately, the answer provided by @Rob still works for High Sierra, so there was no need for me to actually change the xcrun developer path and no need to install all of XCode
I lost Git after upgrading to macOS Mojave.
The solution of re-installing XCode CLI still works fine.
In Terminal, type:
xcode-select --install
... and click "Install" on the prompt.
Success story sharing
git
andxcrun
is distributed as part of Xcode Command Line Tools (which is where it appears yourgit
is currently configured to be executed from). If you installedgit
on your own (e.g.,/usr/local/bin
), perhaps youralias
needs to be reconfigured forgit
to point to your installation instead of the default.xcode-select --install
to install Xcode Command Line Tools fixedgit
for me. No need to install the whole Xcode.