This section details the installs required to get a fully functional local server running. Generally, this takes the form of brew install. Once that’s installed, you can use brew to install other things. Instructions are at brew.sh, but it’s a simple curl statement that you paste into a terminal: /bin/bash -c "$(curl -fsSL )" After installing iTerm2 and the other general purpose apps, it’s usually the next thing installed. Homebrew is “The Missing Package Manager for macOS.” It’s a tool that allows you to install Linux command line tools and other packages easily. This blog will not dive into that can of worms any further instead, I’ll focus on getting a development environment up and running using Homebrew. In short, it has stalled due to some upstream requirements from packages that Docker installs (though Docker Desktop for Mac itself is ready), as noted in the Docker docs. The Great Armification details efforts by the Lando team to get up to speed with the ARM-64 architecture. What’s Lando? Lando is a free, open-source, cross-platform local development environment and DevOps tool built on Docker containers. Most of our site builds use Lando to set up local development environments. Installing most or all of these is recommended by most of our developers at Four Kitchens. Docker Desktop for Mac: Install Docker Desktop on Mac (see “Mac with Apple silicon” tab). ![]()
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