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Reply to Lots of Killed: 9 compilation errors with an M1/Monterey
I tried resetting the binaries and it did fix the issue for me. To reset the binaries for the macOS M1 terminal, you can follow these steps: Open the Terminal application on your Mac. Type the following command and press Enter: echo $PATH. This will display the current path for the terminal. Copy the output of the command and save it in a text editor for reference. Type the following command and press Enter: echo $SHELL. This will display the current shell being used by the terminal. If the output of the command is /bin/bash, type the following command and press Enter: nano ~/.bash_profile. If the output is /bin/zsh, type the following command and press Enter: nano ~/.zshrc. This will open the shell configuration file in the nano text editor. Scroll down to the bottom of the file and add the following line: export PATH=/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/opt/X11/bin. This will reset the path to the default macOS path. Save the file by pressing Control+O, then press Enter to confirm, and then exit the editor by pressing Control+X. Type the following command and press Enter: source ~/.bash_profile or source ~/.zshrc, depending on which shell you are using. Type the following command and press Enter: echo $PATH. This will display the new path for the terminal. Verify that the path is correct by running a command that is installed by default on macOS, such as ls or pwd. These steps should reset the binaries for the terminal and restore the default macOS path.
Apr ’23
Reply to Lots of Killed: 9 compilation errors with an M1/Monterey
I tried resetting the binaries and it did fix the issue for me. To reset the binaries for the macOS M1 terminal, you can follow these steps: Open the Terminal application on your Mac. Type the following command and press Enter: echo $PATH. This will display the current path for the terminal. Copy the output of the command and save it in a text editor for reference. Type the following command and press Enter: echo $SHELL. This will display the current shell being used by the terminal. If the output of the command is /bin/bash, type the following command and press Enter: nano ~/.bash_profile. If the output is /bin/zsh, type the following command and press Enter: nano ~/.zshrc. This will open the shell configuration file in the nano text editor. Scroll down to the bottom of the file and add the following line: export PATH=/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/opt/X11/bin. This will reset the path to the default macOS path. Save the file by pressing Control+O, then press Enter to confirm, and then exit the editor by pressing Control+X. Type the following command and press Enter: source ~/.bash_profile or source ~/.zshrc, depending on which shell you are using. Type the following command and press Enter: echo $PATH. This will display the new path for the terminal. Verify that the path is correct by running a command that is installed by default on macOS, such as ls or pwd. These steps should reset the binaries for the terminal and restore the default macOS path.
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Apr ’23