On 29.01.2014, at 22:54, Bernhard Spinnler <bernhard.spinn...@gmx.net> wrote:

> 
> On 27.01.2014, at 21:16, Bernhard Spinnler <bernhard.spinn...@gmx.net> wrote:
> 
>>> This worked for me in 10.9, using the same steps you provided, just without 
>>> sudo.
>>> 
>>> -dre
>>> 
> 
> Ok, I see a bit clearer now. Problem is still that CalendarServer-5.0 (and 
> 5.1 as well) does not build out of the box on a clean install of OS X 10.9.1.
> 
> Now I found this: 
> https://developer.apple.com/library/ios/technotes/tn2328/_index.html
> 
> It seems Apple have changed the way Python should be linked to in XCode 5.0. 
> XCode 5.0 does not contain Python.framework any longer in MacOSX10.9.sdk 
> while in MacOSX10.8.sdk it still does. Option -syslibroot 
> /Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/MacOSX.platform/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.9.sdk
>  forces the linker to look in …/MacOSX10.9.sdk. Thus linking postgresql-9.1.2 
> (at the very end of this post) fails.
> 
> So far I haven’t figured how to solve this. Does anyone know where the 
> -syslibroot option gets in? In CalendarServer’s build system? In 
> postgresql-9.1.2’s? In gcc itself? Any thoughts?
> 
> Andre, did you use XCode 5 when you reported that building on 10.9 worked?
> 
> Thanks,
>       Bernhard

It turned out that I was missing the command line tools. Since they are not 
available from within XCode I figured that they would be installed 
automatically. But no, found that they must be installed separately by running 
"xcode-select --install” from terminal. Now building and running the server 
works like a charm.

Sorry for the noise.

Cheers,
        Bernhard
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