Updated for MacOS 11.2
This guide describes how to build bitcoind, command-line utilities, and GUI on macOS
The commands in this guide should be executed in a Terminal application. macOS comes with a built-in Terminal located in:
/Applications/Utilities/Terminal.app
The Xcode Command Line Tools are a collection of build tools for macOS. These tools must be installed in order to build Bitcoin Core from source.
To install, run the following command from your terminal:
xcode-select --install
Upon running the command, you should see a popup appear.
Click on Install
to continue the installation process.
Homebrew is a package manager for macOS that allows one to install packages from the command line easily. While several package managers are available for macOS, this guide will focus on Homebrew as it is the most popular. Since the examples in this guide which walk through the installation of a package will use Homebrew, it is recommended that you install it to follow along. Otherwise, you can adapt the commands to your package manager of choice.
To install the Homebrew package manager, see: https://brew.sh
Note: If you run into issues while installing Homebrew or pulling packages, refer to Homebrew's troubleshooting page.
The first step is to download the required dependencies. These dependencies represent the packages required to get a barebones installation up and running.
See dependencies.md for a complete overview.
To install, run the following from your terminal:
brew install automake libtool boost pkg-config libevent
git
should already be installed by default on your system.
Now that all the required dependencies are installed, let's clone the Bitcoin Core repository to a directory.
All build scripts and commands will run from this directory.
git clone https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin.git
It is not necessary to build wallet functionality to run bitcoind
or bitcoin-qt
.
sqlite
is required to support for descriptor wallets.
macOS ships with a useable sqlite
package, meaning you don't need to
install anything.
berkeley-db@4
is only required to support for legacy wallets.
Skip if you don't intend to use legacy wallets.
brew install berkeley-db@4
Bitcoin Core includes a GUI built with the cross-platform Qt Framework.
To compile the GUI, we need to install qt@5
.
Skip if you don't intend to use the GUI.
brew install qt@5
Note: Building with Qt binaries downloaded from the Qt website is not officially supported. See the notes in #7714.
The GUI can encode addresses in a QR Code. To build in QR support for the GUI, install qrencode
.
Skip if not using the GUI or don't want QR code functionality.
brew install qrencode
miniupnpc may be used for UPnP port mapping. Skip if you do not need this functionality.
brew install miniupnpc
libnatpmp may be used for NAT-PMP port mapping. Skip if you do not need this functionality.
brew install libnatpmp
Note: UPnP and NAT-PMP support will be compiled in and disabled by default. Check out the further configuration section for more information.
Support for ZMQ notifications requires the following dependency. Skip if you do not need ZMQ functionality.
brew install zeromq
ZMQ is automatically compiled in and enabled if the dependency is detected. Check out the further configuration section for more information.
For more information on ZMQ, see: zmq.md
There is an included test suite that is useful for testing code changes when developing. To run the test suite (recommended), you will need to have Python 3 installed:
brew install python
You can deploy a .zip
containing the Bitcoin Core application using make deploy
.
It is required that you have python
installed.
There are many ways to configure Bitcoin Core, here are a few common examples:
If berkeley-db@4
is installed, then legacy wallet support will be built.
If sqlite
is installed, then descriptor wallet support will also be built.
Additionally, this explicitly disables the GUI.
./autogen.sh
./configure --with-gui=no
This explicitly enables the GUI and disables legacy wallet support.
If qt
is not installed, this will throw an error.
If sqlite
is installed then descriptor wallet functionality will be built.
If sqlite
is not installed, then wallet functionality will be disabled.
./autogen.sh
./configure --without-bdb --with-gui=yes
./autogen.sh
./configure --without-wallet --with-gui=no
You may want to dig deeper into the configuration options to achieve your desired behavior. Examine the output of the following command for a full list of configuration options:
./configure -help
After configuration, you are ready to compile. Run the following in your terminal to compile Bitcoin Core:
make # use "-j N" here for N parallel jobs
make check # Run tests if Python 3 is available
You can also create a .zip
containing the .app
bundle by running the following command:
make deploy
Bitcoin Core should now be available at ./src/bitcoind
.
If you compiled support for the GUI, it should be available at ./src/qt/bitcoin-qt
.
The first time you run bitcoind
or bitcoin-qt
, it will start downloading the blockchain.
This process could take many hours, or even days on slower than average systems.
By default, blockchain and wallet data files will be stored in:
/Users/${USER}/Library/Application Support/Bitcoin/
Before running, you may create an empty configuration file:
mkdir -p "/Users/${USER}/Library/Application Support/Bitcoin"
touch "/Users/${USER}/Library/Application Support/Bitcoin/bitcoin.conf"
chmod 600 "/Users/${USER}/Library/Application Support/Bitcoin/bitcoin.conf"
You can monitor the download process by looking at the debug.log file:
tail -f $HOME/Library/Application\ Support/Bitcoin/debug.log
./src/bitcoind -daemon # Starts the bitcoin daemon.
./src/bitcoin-cli --help # Outputs a list of command-line options.
./src/bitcoin-cli help # Outputs a list of RPC commands when the daemon is running.
./src/qt/bitcoin-qt -server # Starts the bitcoin-qt server mode, allows bitcoin-cli control