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Homebrew is an open-source package manager written in Ruby (on
GitHub) that allows the installation of packages missing from Apple's operating system (or Linux).
Homebrew installation is described on the
official site home page, and run it by launching the Terminal app and typing the following command:
/bin/bash -c "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/HEAD/install.sh)"
As indicated on the
page about installing Homebrew, you may need to install
Xcode, or Command Line Tools (CLT) for Xcode via the command from the Terminal
xcode-select --install
The installation path changes depending on the processor that is on the Apple machine specifically:
/usr/local
/opt/homebrew
On Silicon Macs, an additional step is required because the
folder is not part of the default
Therefore, the following message should be present at the end of the installation.
- Add Homebrew to your PATH in ~/.zprofile: echo 'eval "$(/opt/homebrew/bin/brew shellenv)"' >> ~/.zprofile eval "$(/opt/homebrew/bin/brew shellenv)"
Therefore, it will be sufficient to open the Terminal app and type the following command:
echo 'eval "$(/opt/homebrew/bin/brew shellenv)"' >> ~/.zprofile eval "$(/opt/homebrew/bin/brew shellenv)"
That will add the string
eval "$(/opt/homebrew/bin/brew shellenv)"
to the file
~/.zprofile
To verify that this was successful, from the Terminal app, you can open the file
.zprofile
with an editor as in the following command:
nano ~/.zprofile
If everything was successful, you would see the string
eval "$(/opt/homebrew/bin/brew shellenv)"
If you want to verify the correct installation of Homebrew, you can type the following command from the Terminal app:
brew doctor
If everything was successful, you would see the following message
Your system is ready to brew.
As
stated on the official website
Homebrew gathers anonymous aggregate user behaviour analytics using Google Analytics.
Therefore, after installation, we suggest disabling "Analytics" using the following command:
brew analytics off
You can verify by the following command:
brew analytics state
And you will see the following message:
Analytics are disabled.
Below is the video that plays the installation of Homebrew and the execution of some commands described so far.
https://asciinema.org/a/gg5ex55kRNQRb6lHTCxk7A1Du.js
Once Homebrew has been installed, when it wants to install a package, simply launch the Terminal app and type
brew install <nomepacchetto>
To find out which packages have been installed, run the following command
brew list
Sometimes installed packages have so-called "dependencies" (basically other packages needed for proper functioning the application you install). With the following command, you can see all the installed packages and their dependencies:
brew deps --tree --installed
If you want to see the dependencies of a specific installation, you will have to type the following command
brew deps --tree --installed <nomepacchetto>
There are some commands that need to be used most frequently, and it takes work to remember them along with any parameters. Therefore, our selection aims to indicate those commands we usually use most frequently.
brew update
brew upgrade
brew update && brew upgrade
brew remove <nomepacchetto>
brew outdated
brew autoremove
brew cleanup -s
To make sure that all packages have been removed, you can run the following command (the `--dry-run` option does not perform the deletion but only shows what will be deleted)
brew cleanup --prune=all --dry-run
With the following command, you will have the actual elimination
brew cleanup --prune=all
brew install <nomeapp> --cask
brew remove <nomeapp> --cask
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