EuControl Software Package Version 3.1.2 for Mac OS X. Software installer that provides significant performance improvements. Intel Macs running OSX 10.8 and higher. EuControl Software Package Version 3.1.2 for Windows 64-bit only. Software installer that provides significant performance improvements. 2 When download is complete, locate the EuControl installer on your computer and double-click it to mount it (DMG on Mac) or uncompress it (ZIP for Windows). 3 In the resulting folder, locate and double-click the InstallEuControl file. 4 Follow the on-screen instructions to. How to create a macOS DMG installer.It’s really simple(does anyone read descriptions anymore?). Download Mac OS X 64-bit/32-bit installer; Python 3.2.4 - April 6, 2013. Download Mac OS X 32-bit i386/PPC installer; Download Mac OS X 64-bit/32-bit installer.

Quickstart

  1. Install Xcode and the Xcode Command Line Tools
  2. Agree to Xcode license in Terminal: sudo xcodebuild -license
  3. Install MacPorts for your version of the Mac operating system:

Installing MacPorts

MacPorts version 2.7.0 is available in various formats for download and installation (note, if you are upgrading to a new major release of macOS, see the migration info page):

  • “pkg” installers for Big Sur, Catalina, and Mojave, for use with the macOS Installer. This is the simplest installation procedure that most users should follow after meeting the requirements listed below. Installers for legacy platforms High Sierra, Sierra, El Capitan, Yosemite, Mavericks, Mountain Lion, Lion, Snow Leopard, Leopard and Tiger are also available.
  • In source form as either a tar.bz2 package or a tar.gz one for manual compilation, if you intend to customize your installation in any way.
  • Git clone of the unpackaged sources, if you wish to follow MacPorts development.
  • The selfupdate target of the port(1) command, for users who already have MacPorts installed and wish to upgrade to a newer release.

Checksums for our packaged downloads are contained in the corresponding checksums file.

The public key to verify the detached GPG signatures can be found under the attachments section on jmr's wiki page. (Direct Link).

Please note that in order to install and run MacPorts on macOS, your system must have installations of the following components:

Eucontrol 3.2 Installer Mac Dmg File

  1. Apple's Xcode Developer Tools (version 12.2 or later for Big Sur, 11.3 or later for Catalina, 10.0 or later for Mojave, 9.0 or later for High Sierra, 8.0 or later for Sierra, 7.0 or later for El Capitan, 6.1 or later for Yosemite, 5.0.1 or later for Mavericks, 4.4 or later for Mountain Lion, 4.1 or later for Lion, 3.2 or later for Snow Leopard, or 3.1 or later for Leopard), found at the Apple Developer site, on your Mac operating system installation CDs/DVD, or in the Mac App Store. Using the latest available version that will run on your OS is highly recommended, except for Snow Leopard where the last free version, 3.2.6, is recommended.

    With Xcode 4 and later, users need to accept the Xcode EULA by either launching Xcode or running:

  2. Apple's Command Line Developer Tools, which can be installed on recent OS versions by running this command in the Terminal:

    Older versions are found at the Apple Developer site, or they can be installed from within Xcode back to version 4. Users of Xcode 3 or earlier can install them by ensuring that the appropriate option(s) are selected at the time of Xcode's install ('UNIX Development', 'System Tools', 'Command Line Tools', or 'Command Line Support').

  3. (Optional) The X11 windowing environment, for ports that depend on the functionality it provides to run. You have multiple choices for an X11 server:
    • Install the xorg-server port from MacPorts (recommended).
    • The XQuartz Project provides a complete X11 release for macOS including server and client libraries and applications.
    • Apple's X11.app is provided by the “X11 User” package on older OS versions. It is always installed on Lion, and is an optional installation on your system CDs/DVD with previous OS versions.

macOS Package (.pkg) Installer

The easiest way to install MacPorts on a Mac is by downloading the pkg or dmg for Big Sur, Catalina, Mojave, High Sierra, Sierra, El Capitan, Yosemite, Mavericks, Mountain Lion, Lion, Snow Leopard, Leopard or Tiger and running the system's Installer by double-clicking on the pkg contained therein, following the on-screen instructions until completion.

This procedure will place a fully-functional and default MacPorts installation on your host system, ready for usage. If needed your shell configuration files will be adapted by the installer to include the necessary settings to run MacPorts and the programs it installs, but you may need to open a new shell for these changes to take effect.

The MacPorts “selfupdate” command will also be run for you by the installer to ensure you have our latest available release and the latest revisions to the “Portfiles” that contain the instructions employed in the building and installation of ports. After installation is done, it is recommended that you run this step manually on a regular basis to to keep your MacPorts system always current:

At this point you should be ready to enjoy MacPorts!

Type “man port” at the command line prompt and/or browse over to our Guide to find out more information about using MacPorts. Help is also available.

Source Installation

If on the other hand you decide to install MacPorts from source, there are still a couple of things you will need to do after downloading the tarball before you can start installing ports, namely compiling and installing MacPorts itself:

  1. cd” into the directory where you downloaded the package and run “tar xjvf MacPorts-2.7.0.tar.bz2” or “tar xzvf MacPorts-2.7.0.tar.gz”, depending on whether you downloaded the bz2 tarball or the gz one, respectively.
  2. Build and install the recently unpacked sources:
    • cd MacPorts-2.7.0
    • ./configure && make && sudo make install
    Optionally:
    • cd ../
    • rm -rf MacPorts-2.7.0*

These steps need to be perfomed from an administrator account, for which “sudo” will ask the password upon installation. This procedure will install a pristine MacPorts system and, if the optional steps are taken, remove the as of now unnecessary MacPorts-2.7.0 source directory and corresponding tarball.

To customize your installation you should read the output of “./configure --help | more” and pass the appropriate options for the settings you wish to tweak to the configuration script in the steps detailed above.

You will need to manually adapt your shell's environment to work with MacPorts and your chosen installation prefix (the value passed to configure's --prefix flag, defaulting to /opt/local):

  • Add ${prefix}/bin and ${prefix}/sbin to the start of your PATH environment variable so that MacPorts-installed programs take precedence over system-provided programs of the same name.
  • If a standard MANPATH environment variable already exists (that is, one that doesn't contain any empty components), add the ${prefix}/share/man path to it so that MacPorts-installed man pages are found by your shell.
  • For Tiger and earlier only, add an appropriate X11 DISPLAY environment variable to run X11-dependent programs, as Leopard takes care of this requirement on its own.

Lastly, you need to synchronize your installation with the MacPorts rsync server:

Upon completion MacPorts will be ready to install ports!

It is recommended to run the above command on a regular basis to keep your installation current. Type “man port” at the command line prompt and/or browse over to our Guide to find out more information about using MacPorts. Help is also available.

Git Sources

If you are developer or a user with a taste for the bleeding edge and wish for the latest changes and feature additions, you may acquire the MacPorts sources through git. See the Guide section on installing from git.

Purpose-specific branches are also available at the https://github.com/macports/macports-base/branches url.

Alternatively, if you'd simply like to view the git repository without checking it out, you can do so via the GitHub web interface.

Selfupdate

If you already have MacPorts installed and have no restrictions to use the rsync networking protocol (tcp port 873 by default), the easiest way to upgrade to our latest available release, 2.7.0, is by using the selfupdate target of the port(1) command. This will both update your ports tree (by performing a sync operation) and rebuild your current installation if it's outdated, preserving your customizations, if any.

Other Platforms

Running on platforms other than macOS is not the main focus of The MacPorts Project, so remaining cross-platform is not an actively-pursued development goal. Nevertheless, it is not an actively-discouraged goal either and as a result some experimental support does exist for other POSIX-compliant platforms such as *BSD and GNU/Linux.

The full list of requirements to run MacPorts on these other platforms is as follows (we assume you have the basics such as GCC and X11):

  • Tcl (8.4 or 8.5), with threads.
  • mtree for directory hierarchy.
  • rsync for syncing the ports.
  • cURL for downloading distfiles.
  • SQLite for the port registry.
  • GNUstep (Base), for Foundation (optional, can be disabled via configure args).
  • OpenSSL for signature verification, and optionally for checksums. libmd may be used instead for checksums.

Normally you must install from source or from an git checkout to run MacPorts on any of these platforms.

Help

Help on a wide variety of topics is also available in the project Guide and through our Trac portal should you run into any problems installing and/or using MacPorts. Of particular relevance are the installation & usage sections of the former and the FAQ section of the Wiki, where we keep track of questions frequently fielded on our mailing lists.

If any of these resources do not answer your questions or if you need any kind of extended support, there are many ways to contact us!

This section of the guide refers to the installation of the IDE under Mac OS. These instructions should work for all versions of macOS. You may need to give the Administrator password when installing some programs, depending on your user settings.

1.3.1. CMake¶

So, we are now going to walk through the process of installing CMake on your computer. We use CMake to manage software project(s), and to instruct your compiler how to generate and link libraries.

Step 1: Download CMake

Download CMake from the CMake website.

Step 2: Launch Apple disk image

Once you have successfully downloaded the .dmg file, simply double-click on it.

Step 3: Install CMake application

To complete the installation, drag and drop CMake onto the Applications folder.

Step 4: Launch CMake

Launch CMake from Launchpad or Spotlight. The interface that pops up is only used to test whether CMake has been correctly installed, and to perform step 5 of this guide. You do not need to fill anything in.

Error

If you get the warning: “‘CMake’ can’t be opened because it is from an unidentified developer.”, please make sure to enable “Allow apps dowloaded from: Anywhere” under the “System Preferences” > “Security & Privacy”.

Step 5: Add CMake to path

From the “Tools” menu select “How to Install For Command Line Use”. From the dialog that pops up, note the cmake-guipath, this may be required later. Open a terminal by executing Cmd+Space, typing terminal and confirming with Enter. Type:

Hopefully no errors occured.

Error

If an error occurs, check whether the path /Applications/CMake.app/Contents/bin/cmake-gui corresponds to the cmake-guipath that you noted down earlier. If not, change the above command so that the two match.

Now, Verify that it has been correctly installed to PATH by executing:

Error

If cmake can’t be found, even after succesfully installing CMake for command-line use, you first need to verify that the symbolic links were properly made, execute:

You should see something like:

This means that /usr/local/bin is not added to the list of paths. Do this now manually by editing /etc/paths:

and adding /usr/local/bin on a new line. Exit (Cmd+X) and save (Y) your changes. Close the terminal and restart the terminal:

should now give you the desired result, showing some details on your CMake installation.

1.3.2. git¶

We are now going to walk through the process of installing git on your computer. We use git to download the software of the project(s) and to make sure that you can always be up-to-date on the latest modifications to the code.

Step 1: Download git

The install process for git is very similar to that for CMake: go to the git website to download the installer .dmg.

Step 2: Install git

Run the .dmg and open the enclosed .pkg to install git on your system. Step through the installation and provide you administrator password when prompted.

Eucontrol 3.2 installer mac dmg downloads

1.3.3. XCode¶

For the compilation of Tudat and its libraries, XCode (or the command-line tools for XCode) version 7.3 or newer is required. You can upgrade XCode through the AppStore or by downloading a new version, to replace the old one.

Step 1: Download XCode

Download XCode (command-line tools alone suffices) from the Apple developer downloads (ADC account and Apple ID required) or through the Mac App Store. Note installing only the “Command Line Tools OSX 10.XX for Xcode 7.X” offers a significant reduction in size (download size of 157MB vs 4.7GB).

Step 2: Install XCodeOpen the downloaded .dmg and execute the enclosed .pkg to start the installation. Complete the installation.

Eucontrol 3.2 Installer Mac Dmg Download

1.3.4. Qt Creator¶

Step 1: Download Qt Creator

Download QtCreator from the Qt website.

Step 2: Execute the installer

Open the downloaded .dmg and execute the enclosed installer.

Step 3: Skip account

You can safely skip logging into your Qt account. Press “Skip” and “Next”, the online installer will prepare the sources. Click continue. The installer will now prepare the installation (this will take a short while). You might be prompted by an Xcode warning, even though you have Xcode or the Xcode command-line tools installed. If you encounter this, click away the warning by pressing “Ok”, three times, the installation will continue as normal.

Step 4: Choose a location

Specify your preferred installation directory (or leave it at default).

Step 5: Select components

Click “Continue” until you get to the “Select Components” step. Here you get the option to select which parts of the Qt SDK you wish to install, shown below. Only QtCreator (default, can not be unchecked) from the Tools section is necessary. Finish the installation.

Step 6: Check Settings

Once Qt Creator is installed, you will need to verify that the various compilation settings have been defined correctly. Make sure to check QtCreatorKits on the Verify Build & Run options page.