How to install opam
This page describes how to install and configure opam. For further help on how
to use opam, either read opam --help
or move on to the
Usage guide.
Upgrading from a previous version
Generally, you should just reproduce the same installation steps as for the
original installation: upgrade from your system's package manager, or re-run the
binary installer. Opam will automatically update its internal repository at
~/.opam
on first run if needed (if using our installer script, a backup can be
made automatically).
To upgrade shell scripts, and enable sandboxing, don't forget to run opam init
--reinit -ni
.
Then see the Upgrade guide to check the changes.
Binary distribution
The quickest way to get the latest opam up and working is to run this script:
bash -c "sh <(curl -fsSL https://opam.ocaml.org/install.sh)"
or this script on Windows using PowerShell:
Invoke-Expression "& { $(Invoke-RestMethod https://opam.ocaml.org/install.ps1) }"
This will simply check your architecture, download and install the proper
pre-compiled binary, backup your opam data if from an older version, and run
opam init
.
(If you have trouble with curl
, just
download the script
and run sh install.sh
)
We provide pre-compiled binaries for:
- Linux (amd64, arm64, ppc64le, s390x, riscv64, armhf, i686)
- macOS (amd64, arm64)
- FreeBSD (amd64)
- OpenBSD (amd64)
- Windows (amd64) (other platforms are available using the other methods below)
If you don't like scripts, you can just pick your download
here, put it in your PATH as
opam
, and set it as executable, e.g.
sudo install <downloaded file> /usr/local/bin/opam
Note that this script is intended for end-users, not CI. For that purpose, you can use pre-built Docker images for various configurations.
Using your distribution's package system
This is generally the recommended way, when available and up-to-date (you can check here the latest available release per distribution). Here is a list of supported distributions:
Arch Linux
The opam package is available in the official distribution. To install it simply run:
pacman -S opam
If you'd like to use the development version there is an opam-git package available in the AUR. Assuming you have yay installed just run the following command:
yay -S opam-git
Debian
Binary packages of opam are available for the stable, testing and unstable distributions, from the official repositories. You should be set with:
apt-get install opam
Exherbo
The
dev-ocaml/opam
package can be installed with the command:
cave resolve -x dev-ocaml/opam
You might need to add the ::ocaml-unofficial
repository first:
cave resolve -x repository/ocaml-unofficial
Fedora, CentOS and RHEL
The opam package for Fedora can be installed with the command:
dnf install opam
There is not currently a package for CentOS/RHEL. You will need to use our pre-built binaries, or build from sources.
Mageia
The opam package for Mageia can be installed with the command:
urpmi opam
OpenBSD
The opam package for OpenBSD can be installed with the command (since OpenBSD 5.7):
pkg_add opam
FreeBSD
Opam is available in the ports and packages tree on FreeBSD 11 or higher.
pkg install ocaml-opam
or to install from source:
cd /usr/ports/devel/ocaml-opam
make install
macOS
Opam packages for homebrew and MacPorts are available.
# Homebrew
brew install opam
# MacPort
port install opam
See also howto setup Emacs.app for Opam usage.
Ubuntu
apt install opam
Guix & Guix System
The opam package for guix can be installed with the command:
# Guix
guix install opam
From Sources
Getting the Sources
Sources of the latest stable version of opam are available on Github:
You can also download the full archives, including opam dependencies (these don't require any extra downloads, just the OCaml compiler -- 4.02.3 or later for the latest version):
- 2.2.0
- MD5: ba94fd83c0e023b0d3c91857f28b8755
- SHA384: 365eb949bfe18d0f189b35e620fa854628ab3e962721ee43488865456bf80da0dbba037b8fdb3830abb83f64b7c79106
Follow the instructions in the included
README.md
to get opam built and
installed from there.