> captain-10.9-libc++ isn’t going to work because we haven’t populated
> the 10.9-libcxx distribution yet.
> The way things are going for me right now, I don’t know if I’m ever going to
> have time to do that before El Capitan is released.
> Somebody else needs to step up.
>
> —Alexander
I have
> On Jul 15, 2015, at 10:10, John Lillibridge wrote:
>
> Alexander Hansen gmail.com> writes:
>
>> Oh, and as a side benefit, in principle we could start this new distribution
>> on github.
>> -
>
> Thanks Alexander. I
Alexander Hansen gmail.com> writes:
> Oh, and as a side benefit, in principle we could start this new distribution
> on github.
> -
Thanks Alexander. I wanted to relate my initial experiences trying to bootstrap
a 10.11v
> On Jun 9, 2015, at 18:43, Alexander Hansen
> wrote:
>
> We’ve accumulated a bunch of cruft, and I’d personally like to put 10.7 and
> 10.8 out to pasture after 10.11 is released.
>
> I’m proposing the name “10.9-libc++” to denote when we first started building
> with libc++. This would
We’ve accumulated a bunch of cruft, and I’d personally like to put 10.7 and
10.8 out to pasture after 10.11 is released.
I’m proposing the name “10.9-libc++” to denote when we first started building
with libc++. This would replace 10.7 as the real directory to which the
symlinks point on 10.