Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
89 lines (68 loc) · 4.31 KB

Acceptable-Formulae.md

File metadata and controls

89 lines (68 loc) · 4.31 KB

Acceptable Formulae

Some formulae should not go in homebrew/core. But there are additional Interesting Taps and Forks and anyone can start their own!

Dupes in homebrew/core

We now accept stuff that comes with macOS as long as it uses keg_only :provided_by_macos to be keg-only by default.

Versioned formulae in homebrew/core

We now accept versioned formulae as long as they meet the requirements.

We don’t like tools that upgrade themselves

Software that can upgrade itself does not integrate well with Homebrew's own upgrade functionality.

We don’t like install-scripts that download things

Because that circumvents our hash-checks, makes finding/fixing bugs harder, often breaks patches and disables the caching. Almost always you can add a resource to the formula file to handle the separate download and then the installer script will not attempt to load that stuff on demand. Or there is a command-line switch where you can point it to the downloaded archive in order to avoid loading.

We don’t like binary formulae

Our policy is that formulae in the core tap (homebrew/core) must be open-source and either built from source or produce cross-platform binaries (e.g. Java). Binary-only formulae should go to Homebrew Cask.

Stable versions

Formulae in the core repository must have a stable version tagged by the upstream project. Tarballs are preferred to Git checkouts, and tarballs should include the version in the filename whenever possible.

We don’t accept software without a tagged version because they regularly break due to upstream changes and we can’t provide bottles for them.

Bindings

First check that there is not already a binding available via gem or pip etc.

If not, then put bindings in the formula they bind to. This is more useful to people. Just install the stuff! Having to faff around with foo-ruby, foo-perl etc. is a bad user experience.

Niche (or self-submitted) stuff

The software in question must:

  • be maintained (e.g. upstream is still making new releases)
  • be known
  • be stable (e.g. not declared "unstable" or "beta" by upstream)
  • be used
  • have a homepage

We will reject formulae that seem too obscure, partly because they won’t get maintained and partly because we have to draw the line somewhere.

We frown on authors submitting their own work unless it is very popular.

Don’t forget Homebrew is all Git underneath! Maintain your own tap if you have to!

There may be exceptions to these rules in the main repository; we may include things that don't meet these criteria or reject things that do. Please trust that we need to use our discretion based on our experience running a package manager.

Stuff that builds an .app

Don’t make your formula build an .app (native macOS Application); we don’t want those things in Homebrew. Encourage upstream projects to build and support a .app that can be distributed by Homebrew Cask (and used without it, too).

Stuff that builds a GUI by default (but doesn't have to)

Make it build a command-line tool or a library by default and, if the GUI is useful and would be widely used, add an option to build the GUI. Don't offer an option for multiple GUI backends e.g. X11 is a bad user experience for GUIs on macOS.

Stuff that doesn't build with the latest, stable Xcode's Clang

Clang is the default C/C++ compiler on macOS (and has been for a long time). Software that doesn't build with it hasn't been adequately ported to macOS.

Stuff that requires heavy manual pre/post-install intervention

We're a package manager so we want to do things like resolve dependencies and setup applications for our users. If things require too much manual intervention then they aren't useful in a package manager.

Sometimes there are exceptions

Even if all criteria are met we may not accept the formula. Documentation tends to lag behind current decision-making. Although some rejections may seem arbitrary or strange they are based on years of experience making Homebrew work acceptably for our users.