Making a new Cask is easy. Follow the directions in Getting Set Up To Contribute to begin.
Here’s a Cask for shuttle
as an example:
cask 'shuttle' do
version '1.2.5'
sha256 '7df182f506b80011222c0cdd470be76e0376f38e331f3fafbb6af9add3578023'
url "https://github.com/fitztrev/shuttle/releases/download/v#{version}/Shuttle.zip"
appcast 'https://github.com/fitztrev/shuttle/releases.atom',
checkpoint: '9f66dbb98f73f69f4a1759d4bdb8d2552060d599548427740e239ca45185fe5c'
name 'Shuttle'
homepage 'https://fitztrev.github.io/shuttle/'
license :mit
app 'Shuttle.app'
zap delete: '~/.shuttle.json'
end
And here is one for gateblu
. Note that it has an unversioned download (the download url
does not contain the version number, unlike the example above). It also suppresses the checksum with sha256 :no_check
(necessary since the checksum will change when a new distribution is made available). This combination of version :latest
and sha256 :no_check
is currently the preferred mechanism when a versioned download URL is not available. Also note the comment above url
, which is needed when the url and homepage hostnames differ:
cask 'gateblu' do
version :latest
sha256 :no_check
# amazonaws.com is the official download host per the vendor homepage
url 'https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/gateblu/gateblu-ui/latest/Gateblu.dmg'
name 'Gateblu'
homepage 'https://gateblu.octoblu.com'
license :mit
pkg 'Gateblu Installer.pkg'
uninstall pkgutil: 'com.octoblu.*',
delete: '/Applications/Gateblu.app'
end
The Cask token is the mnemonic string people will use to interact with the Cask via brew cask install
, brew cask search
, etc. The name of the Cask file is simply the token with the extension .rb
appended.
The easiest way to generate a token for a Cask is to run this command:
$ "$(brew --repository)/Library/Taps/caskroom/homebrew-cask/developer/bin/generate_cask_token" '/full/path/to/new/software.app'
If the software you wish to Cask is not installed, or does not have an associated App bundle, just give the full proper name of the software instead of a pathname:
$ "$(brew --repository)/Library/Taps/caskroom/homebrew-cask/developer/bin/generate_cask_token" 'Google Chrome'
If the generate_cask_token
script does not work for you, see Cask Token Details.
Once you know the token, create your Cask with the handy-dandy brew cask create
command:
$ brew cask create my-new-cask
This will open $EDITOR
with a template for your new Cask, to be stored in the file my-new-cask.rb
. Running the create
command above will get you a template that looks like this:
cask 'my-new-cask' do
version ''
sha256 ''
url ''
name ''
homepage ''
license :unknown # TODO: change license and remove this comment; ':unknown' is a machine-generated placeholder
app ''
end
Fill in the following stanzas for your Cask:
name | value |
---|---|
version |
application version; give the value :latest if only an unversioned download is available |
sha256 |
SHA-256 checksum of the file downloaded from url , calculated by the command shasum -a 256 <file> . Can be suppressed by using the special value :no_check . (see sha256) |
url |
URL to the .dmg /.zip /.tgz file that contains the application. A comment should be added if the hostnames in the url and homepage stanzas differ (see URL Stanza Details) |
name |
the full and proper name defined by the vendor, and any useful alternate names (see Name Stanza Details) |
homepage |
application homepage; used for the brew cask home command |
license |
a symbol identifying the license for the application. Valid category licenses include :oss , :closed , and :unknown . It is OK to leave as :unknown . (see License Stanza Details) |
app |
relative path to an .app bundle that should be moved into the /Applications folder on installation (see App Stanza Details) |
Other commonly-used stanzas are:
name | value |
---|---|
appcast |
a URL providing an appcast feed to find updates for this Cask. (see Appcast Stanza Details) |
pkg |
relative path to a .pkg file containing the distribution (see Pkg Stanza Details) |
caveats |
a string or Ruby block providing the user with Cask-specific information at install time (see Caveats Stanza Details) |
uninstall |
procedures to uninstall a Cask. Optional unless the pkg stanza is used. (see Uninstall Stanza Details) |
Additional artifact
stanzas you might need for special use-cases can be found here. Even more special-use stanzas are listed at Optional Stanzas.
If a token conflicts with an already-existing Cask, authors should manually make the new token unique by prepending the vendor name. Example: unison.rb and panic-unison.rb.
If possible, avoid creating tokens which differ only by the placement of hyphens.
To generate a token manually, or to learn about exceptions for unusual cases, see token_reference.md.
When a downloaded archive expands to a subfolder, the subfolder name must be included in the app
value.
Example:
- Texmaker is downloaded to the file
TexmakerMacosxLion.zip
. TexmakerMacosxLion.zip
unzips to a folder calledTexmakerMacosxLion
.- The folder
TexmakerMacosxLion
contains the applicationtexmaker.app
. - So, the
app
stanza should include the subfolder as a relative path:
app 'TexmakerMacosxLion/texmaker.app'
Give it a shot with brew cask install my-new-cask
.
Did it install? If something went wrong, brew cask uninstall my-new-cask
and edit your Cask with brew cask edit my-new-cask
to fix it.
If everything looks good, you’ll also want to make sure your Cask passes audit with:
brew cask audit my-new-cask --download
You should also check stylistic details with brew cask style
:
$ cd "$(brew --repository)"/Library/Taps/caskroom/homebrew-cask
$ brew cask style Casks/my-new-cask.rb [--fix]
Keep in mind all of these checks will be made when you submit your PR, so by doing them in advance you’re saving everyone a lot of time and trouble.
If your application and Homebrew-Cask do not work well together, feel free to file an issue after checking out open issues.
We maintain separate Taps for different types of binaries. Our nomenclature is:
- Stable: The latest version provided by the developer defined by them as such.
- Beta, Development, Unstable: Subsequent versions to stable, yet incomplete and under development, aiming to eventually become the new stable.
- Nightly: Constantly up-to-date versions of the current development state.
- Legacy: Any stable version that is not the most recent.
- Alternative: Alternative edition of an existing app, by the same vendor (developer editions, community editions, pro editions, …).
- Regional, Localized: Any version that isn’t the US English one, when that exists.
- Trial: Date-limited version that stops working entirely after it expires, requiring payment to lift the limitation.
- Freemium: Gratis version that works indefinitely but with limitations that can be removed by paying.
- Fork: An alternate version of an existing project, with a based-on but modified source and binary.
- Unofficial: An allegedly unmodified compiled binary, by a third-party, of a binary that has no existing build by the owner of the source code.
- Vendorless: A binary distributed without an official website, like a forum posting.
- Walled: When the download URL is both behind a login/registration form and from a host that differs from the homepage.
Stable versions live in the main repository at caskroom/homebrew-cask. They should run on the latest release of OS X or the previous point release (in 2015, for example, that meant El Capitan and Yosemite).
When an App is only available as beta, development, or unstable versions, or in cases where such a version is the general standard, then said version can go into the main repo.
When an App has a principal stable version, alternative versions should be submitted to caskroom/homebrew-versions.
When an App exists in more than one language or has different regional editions, the US English one belongs in the main repo, and all the others in caskroom/homebrew-versions. When not already part of the name of the App, a regional identifier and a language code are to be appended to the Cask’s token (both when available, or just the appropriate one when not).
Before submitting a trial, make sure it can be made into a full working version without the need to be redownloaded. If an App provides a trial but the only way to buy the full version is via the Mac App Store, it does not belong in any of the official repos. Freemium versions are fine.
Forks should have the vendor’s name as a prefix on the Cask’s file name and token. For unrelated Apps that share a name, the most popular one (usually the one already present) stays unprefixed. Since this can be subjective, if you disagree with a decision open an issue and make your case to the maintainers.
We do not accept these casks since they offer a higher-than-normal security risk. alehouse/homebrew-unofficial is a sister repo where you may wish to submit your cask.
Font Casks live in the caskroom/homebrew-fonts repository. See the font repo CONTRIBUTING.md for details.
Hop into your Tap and check to make sure your new Cask is there:
$ cd "$(brew --repository)"/Library/Taps/caskroom/homebrew-cask
$ git status
# On branch master
# Untracked files:
# (use "git add <file>..." to include in what will be committed)
#
# Casks/my-new-cask.rb
So far, so good. Now make a feature branch that you’ll use in your pull request:
$ git checkout -b my-new-cask
Switched to a new branch 'my-new-cask'
Stage your Cask with git add Casks/my-new-cask.rb
. You can view the changes that are to be committed with git diff --cached
.
Commit your changes with git commit -v
.
For any git project, some good rules for commit messages are:
- The first line is commit summary, 50 characters or less,
- Followed by an empty line,
- Followed by an explanation of the commit, wrapped to 72 characters.
See a note about git commit messages for more.
The first line of a commit message becomes the title of a pull request on GitHub, like the subject line of an email. Including the key info in the first line will help us respond faster to your pull.
For Cask commits in the Homebrew-Cask project, we like to include the Application name, version number (or :latest
), and purpose of the commit in the first line.
Examples of good, clear commit summaries:
Add Transmission.app v1.0
Upgrade Transmission.app to v2.82
Fix checksum in Transmission.app Cask
Add CodeBox Latest
Examples of difficult, unclear commit summaries:
Upgrade to v2.82
Checksum was bad
Push your changes to your GitHub account:
$ github_user='<my-github-username>'
$ git push "$github_user" my-new-cask
If you are using GitHub two-factor authentication and set your remote repository as HTTPS you will need to set up a personal access token and use that instead of your password. Further information here.
If your pull request has multiple commits which revise the same lines of code, or if you make some changes after comments from one of the maintainers, it is better to squash those commits together into one logical unit.
But you don’t always have to squash — it is fine for a pull request to contain multiple commits when there is a logical reason for the separation.
Now go to the homebrew-cask
GitHub repository. GitHub will often show your my-new-cask
branch with a handy button to Compare & pull request
. Otherwise, click the New pull request
button and choose to compare across forks
. The base fork should be caskroom/homebrew-cask @ master
, and the head fork should be my-github-username/homebrew-cask @ my-new-cask
. You can also add any further comments to your pull request at this stage.
Congratulations! You are done now, and your Cask should be pulled in or otherwise noticed in a while. If a maintainer suggests some changes, just make them on the my-new-cask
branch locally, squash, and push.
After your Pull Request is submitted, you should get yourself back onto master
, so that brew update
will pull down new Casks properly:
cd "$(brew --repository)"/Library/Taps/caskroom/homebrew-cask
git checkout master