Homebrew — The Missing Package Manager for macOS (or Linux) Homebrew complements macOS (or your Linux system) Install your RubyGems with gem and their dependencies with brew “To install, drag this icon…” no more Homebrew Cask installs macOS apps, fonts and plugins and other non-open source software
Installation — Homebrew Documentation The script installs Homebrew to its default, supported, best prefix ( opt homebrew for Apple Silicon, usr local for macOS Intel and home linuxbrew linuxbrew for Linux) so that you don’t need sudo after Homebrew’s initial installation when you brew install
Documentation — Homebrew Documentation Users brew manual page (command documentation) Homebrew Blog (news on major updates) Installation Support Tiers Troubleshooting FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions) Common Issues brew Shell Completion Command Not Found Homebrew on Linux Homebrew Bundle, brew bundle and Brewfile Homebrew MCP Server Bottles (binary packages) Taps (third-party
4. 5. 0 — Homebrew Today, I’d like to announce Homebrew 4 5 0 The most significant changes since 4 4 0 are major improvements to brew bundle services, preliminary Linux support for casks, official Support Tiers, Tier 2 ARM64 Linux support, Ruby 3 4 and several deprecations
FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions) — Homebrew Documentation Run brew edit <formula> to open the formula in EDITOR You don’t have to submit modifications back to homebrew core, just edit the formula to what you personally need and brew install <formula>
Homebrew on Linux — Homebrew Documentation Use brew doctor to troubleshoot common issues [!NOTE] Please note that unlike macOS, Homebrew does not use a sandbox when building on Linux, so formulae may install outside the Homebrew prefix
Homebrew — Homebrew The most significant changes since 4 4 0 are major improvements to brew bundle services, preliminary Linux support for casks, official Support Tiers, Tier 2 ARM64 Linux support, Ruby 3 4 and several deprecations
brew(1) – The Missing Package Manager for macOS (or Linux) These are executable scripts that reside somewhere in the $PATH, named brew-cmdname or brew- cmdname rb, which can be invoked like brew cmdname This allows you to create your own commands without modifying Homebrew’s internals