234
votes

I just bought a new Mac with OS X Lion and I checked in the Terminal what version of git is installed by default. I got the answer

git --version
> git version 1.7.5.4

I would like to upgrade git to the latest version 1.7.8.3, so I downloaded the dmg installer "git-1.7.8.3-intel-universal-snow-leopard.dmg" and I launched it.

After the install, the Terminal still says that the version is 1.7.5.4. What am I doing wrong?

16
Type which git to see where the binary is. Is that the same place you installed the new one? - Greg Hewgill
It says /usr/bin/git for the 1.7.5.4, but how can I know where the DMG installed the new version? Why it doesn't upgrade/overwrite the previous version automatically? If I want to use the new one how can I link the git command to the new version? (thanks for your really quick answer by the way!) - Nicolas Renon
on my mac (os 10.6.8) the old git 1.7.5.4 lives in /usr/bin/git while the new git installer 1.7.11.3 puts git into /usr/local/ - miker
I wonder if superuser.com/a/580611/74576 is a good approach. I wish I could figure out the commands for it. - Ryan
I made entry in .bash_profile instead of .bashrc & it worked. I think if your terminal is running as "Default Login Shell" then it happens. - Swapnil Chincholkar

16 Answers

159
votes

It's simple if you already have Homebrew: Assuming you have homebrew installed, type the following:

brew install git

This should automatically install git and set it in your path, replacing the Apple one.

Now quit and restart your terminal.

Then check git version to confirm.

git --version

If the output of the above command shows the latest version and does not mention Apple with the version details, then you are all set.

If however you still see apple version, then type the following two lines, which will manually set our path to the local git distro instead of the Apple one.

export PATH=/usr/local/bin:$PATH
git --version

IF YOU DON'T HAVE HOMEBREW, FOLLOW THESE STEPS

Check version

$ git --version

Backup (or remove) Apple git (Optional)

$ sudo mv /usr/bin/git /usr/bin/git-apple

Install Homebrew if you didn’t have

$ /usr/bin/ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)"

Or update if you already have

$ brew update && brew upgrade

Install Git with Homebrew

$ brew install git

Symbolic link

$ brew link --force git

Quit terminal and open a new terminal, then check version.

$ git --version

You should see…

git version <latest version>

Nice! We’re safe now! And next time you can just…

$ brew update && brew upgrade

60
votes

It would probably be better if you added:

export PATH=/usr/local/git/bin:/usr/local/sbin:$PATH

to a file named .bashrc in your home folder. This way any other software that you might install in /usr/local/git/bin will also be found first.

For an easy way to do this just type:

echo "export PATH=/usr/local/git/bin:/usr/local/sbin:$PATH" >> ~/.bashrc

into the Terminal and it will do it for you.

43
votes

if using homebrew you can update sim links using

brew link --overwrite git
29
votes

For me, with Homebrew 1.6.7, the following worked:

brew upgrade git
16
votes

After searching for "trouble upgrading git on mac" on Google, I read several posts and attempted the following before resolving the problem by completing step 4:

  1. I updated my terminal path by using the above mention export command. Every time I quit the terminal and restarted it, when I typed git --version the terminal, it still return the older version 1.8.

  2. I followed the README.txt instructions for upgrading to the current version 2.0.1 that comes with the .dmg installer and when I restarted the terminal, still no go.

  3. I looked for /etc/path/ folder as instructed above and the directory called "path" does not exist on my Mac. I am running OS X Mavericks version 10.9.4.

  4. Then I recalled I have Homebrew installed on my Mac and ran the following:

    brew --version
    brew update
    brew search git
    brew install git
    

This finally resolved my problem. If anyone has some insight as to why this worked, further insight would be greatly appreciated. I probably have some left over path settings on my system from working with Ruby last year.

15
votes

I recently upgraded the Git on my OS X machine to the latest also. I didn't use the same .dmg you used, but when I installed it the binaries were placed in /usr/local/bin. Now, the way my PATH was arranged, the directory /usr/bin appears before /usr/local/bin. So what I did was:

cd /usr/bin
mkdir git.ORIG
mv git* git.ORIG/

This moves the several original programs named git* to a new subdirectory that keeps them out of the way. After that, which git shows that the one in /usr/local/bin is found.

Modify the above procedure as necessary to fit wherever you installed the new binaries.

15
votes

I used the following to upgrade git on mac.

hansi$ brew install git 

hansi$ git --version 
git version 2.19.0


hansi$ brew install git
Warning: git 2.25.1 is already installed, it's just not linked
You can use `brew link git` to link this version.

hansi$ brew link git 
Linking /usr/local/Cellar/git/2.25.1... 
Error: Could not symlink bin/git
Target /usr/local/bin/git
already exists. You may want to remove it:
  rm '/usr/local/bin/git'

To force the link and overwrite all conflicting files:
  brew link --overwrite git

To list all files that would be deleted:
  brew link --overwrite --dry-run git

hansi$ brew link --overwrite git 
Linking /usr/local/Cellar/git/2.25.1... 205 symlinks created


hansi$ git --version
git version 2.25.1
7
votes

The installer from the git homepage installs into /usr/local/git by default. However, if you install XCode4, it will install a git version in /usr/bin. To ensure you can easily upgrade from the website and use the latest git version, edit either your profile information to place /usr/local/git/bin before /usr/bin in the $PATH or edit /etc/paths and insert /usr/local/git/bin as the first entry.

It may help to someone at-least changing the order in /etc/paths worked for me.

5
votes

the simplest way I found so far is from git official website. It just computed dependencies and downloaded all of the required libraries/tools

http://git-scm.com/book/en/Getting-Started-Installing-Git

The other major way is to install Git via MacPorts (http://www.macports.org). If you have MacPorts installed, install Git via

$ sudo port install git-core +svn +doc +bash_completion +gitweb

3
votes

@rafaecheve's response worked perfectly in my case as a Mac user. I had a couple versions of git installed on my machine but using the package manager, Homebrew, and the following code:

brew link --overwrite git

I received this confirmation

Linking /usr/local/Cellar/git/2.32.0... 212 symlinks created.

Voila!

2
votes

In order to keep both versions, I just changed the value of PATH environment variable by putting the new version's git path "/usr/local/git/bin/" at the beginning, it forces to use the newest version:

$ echo $PATH

/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/opt/X11/bin:/usr/local/git/bin/

$ git --version

git version 2.4.9 (Apple Git-60)

original value: /usr/bin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/opt/X11/bin:/usr/local/git/bin/

new value: /usr/local/git/bin/:/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/opt/X11/bin

$ export PATH=/usr/local/git/bin/:/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/opt/X11/bin

$ git --version

git version 2.13.0

1
votes

Without Homebrew

  1. Use the installer from git's website.
  2. Update your ~/.bash_profile file. Notice this command differs from kmikael's answer by what it puts in the file:
    • Other command: export PATH=/usr/local/git/bin:/usr/local/sbin/:[and so on]
    • Below command: export PATH="/usr/local/git/bin:/usr/local/sbin:$PATH"
    • Use whichever one you prefer.

echo 'export PATH="/usr/local/git/bin:/usr/local/sbin:$PATH"' >> ~/.bash_profile

  1. If you're using Xcode, you'll need to add some symbolic links.
    • Example: ln -s /opt/local/bin/git /usr/bin/git
  2. Restart terminal.
    • which git should say the directory in the README.txt file from the dmg.
    • git --version should say the updated version.
    • echo $PATH should start with /usr/local/git/bin:/usr/local/sbin:
1
votes

The latest version was not available as a binary for mac on git-scm.com, so I installed from source. I was missing a required package for localization, and added NO_GETTEXT=true to install without localization.

git clone https://github.com/git/git.git
cd git
make NO_GETTEXT=true
make NO_GETTEXT=true install

This installed git under ~/bin which I then had to add to the beginning of my PATH variable.

0
votes

I prefer not to alter the path hierarchy, but instead deal with git specifically...knowing that I'm never going to use old git to do what new git will now manage. This is a brute force solution.

NOTE: I installed XCode on Yosemite (10.10.2) clean first.

I then installed from the binary available on git-scm.com.

$ which git
/usr/bin/git
$ cd /usr/bin
$ sudo ln -sf /usr/local/git/bin/git
$ sudo ln -sf /usr/local/git/bin/git-credential-osxkeychain
$ sudo ln -sf /usr/local/git/bin/git-cvsserver
$ sudo ln -sf /usr/local/git/bin/git-receive-pack
$ sudo ln -sf /usr/local/git/bin/git-shell
$ sudo ln -sf /usr/local/git/bin/git-upload-archive
$ sudo ln -sf /usr/local/git/bin/git-upload-pack
$ ls -la
(you should see your new symlinks)
0
votes

I did it in this way:

  1. Open GitHub application installed on Mac
  2. Click on Advanced tab → Install command line tools
  3. Once you get a message that all commands have been installed close your terminal and reopen it.
  4. Now check git --version, it should give you the latest version.
0
votes

You need to adjust shell path , the path will be set in either .bashrc or .bash_profile in your home directory, more likely .bash_profile.

So add into the path similar to the below and keep what you already have in the path, each segment is separated by a colon:

export PATH="/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin/git:/usr/bin:/usr/local/sbin:$PATH"