Friday, February 5, 2021

Package manager Homebrew now fully supports Apple silicon

What you need to know

  • Homebrew users can now take full advantage of their speedy M1 chips.

The Homebrew team worked with Apple to make it happen.

The popular macOS package manager Homebrew has now been updated to fully and natively support Apple silicon and the M1 Macs.

The updated Homebrew, version 3.0.0, is now available and includes more changes beyond the M1 support, although that's undoubtedly the headline feature. Homebrew previously ran via Apple's Rosetta emulation, but that is no longer needed as of today's update.

Apple Silicon is now officially supported for installations in /opt/homebrew. formulae.brew.sh formula pages indicate for which platforms bottles (binary packages) are provided and therefore whether they are supported by Homebrew. Homebrew doesn't (yet) provide bottles for all packages on Apple Silicon that we do on Intel x86_64 but we welcome your help in doing so. Rosetta 2 on Apple Silicon still provides support for Intel x86_64 in /usr/local.

The Homebrew team says that they worked with co-location company MacStadium as well as Apple itself in order to get the M1 optimization complete and rolled out.

Thanks to all our hard-working maintainers, contributors, sponsors and supporters for getting us this far. Particular thanks on Homebrew 3.0.0 go to MacStadium and Apple for providing us with a lot of Apple Silicon hardware and Cassidy from Apple for helping us in many ways with this migration. Enjoy using Homebrew!

It's in Apple's best interest to ensure Homebrew is fully M1-compliant – it's a package manager that is used extensively by the developers that make the apps we all run on Apple hardware.


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