12 KiB
Getting Started
asdf
installation involves:
- Installing dependencies
- Downloading
asdf
core - Installing
asdf
- Installing a plugin for each tool/runtime you wish to manage
- Installing a version of the tool/runtime
- Setting global and project versions via
.tool-versions
config files
1. Install Dependencies
Linux:
::: tip Note
sudo
may be required depending on your system configuration.
:::
Package Manager | Command |
---|---|
Aptitude | apt install curl git |
DNF | dnf install curl git |
Pacman | pacman -S curl git |
Zypper | zypper install curl git |
macOS:
Package Manager | Command |
---|---|
Homebrew | Dependencies will be automatically installed by Homebrew. |
Spack | spack install coreutils curl git |
2. Download asdf
We recommend using Git, though there are other platform specific methods:
Method | Command |
---|---|
Git | git clone https://github.com/asdf-vm/asdf.git ~/.asdf --branch v0.10.2 |
Homebrew | brew install asdf |
Pacman | git clone https://aur.archlinux.org/asdf-vm.git && cd asdf-vm && makepkg -si or use your preferred AUR helper |
3. Install asdf
There are many different combinations of Shells, OSs & Installation methods all of which affect the configuration here. Expand the selection below that best matches your system:
::: details Bash & Git
Add the following to ~/.bashrc
:
. $HOME/.asdf/asdf.sh
Completions must be configured by adding the following to your .bashrc
:
. $HOME/.asdf/completions/asdf.bash
:::
::: details Bash & Git (macOS)
If using macOS Catalina or newer, the default shell has changed to ZSH. Unless changing back to Bash, follow the ZSH instructions.
Add the following to ~/.bash_profile
:
. $HOME/.asdf/asdf.sh
Completions must be configured manually with the following entry in your .bash_profile
:
. $HOME/.asdf/completions/asdf.bash
:::
::: details Bash & Homebrew (macOS)
If using macOS Catalina or newer, the default shell has changed to ZSH. Unless changing back to Bash, follow the ZSH instructions.
Add asdf.sh
to your ~/.bash_profile
with:
echo -e "\n. $(brew --prefix asdf)/libexec/asdf.sh" >> ~/.bash_profile
Completions will need to be configured as per Homebrew's instructions or with the following:
echo -e "\n. $(brew --prefix asdf)/etc/bash_completion.d/asdf.bash" >> ~/.bash_profile
:::
::: details Bash & Pacman
Add the following to ~/.bashrc
:
. /opt/asdf-vm/asdf.sh
bash-completion
needs to be installed for the completions to work.
:::
::: details Fish & Git
Add the following to ~/.config/fish/config.fish
:
source ~/.asdf/asdf.fish
Completions must be configured manually with the following command:
mkdir -p ~/.config/fish/completions; and ln -s ~/.asdf/completions/asdf.fish ~/.config/fish/completions
:::
::: details Fish & Homebrew
Add asdf.fish
to your ~/.config/fish/config.fish
with:
echo -e "\nsource "(brew --prefix asdf)"/libexec/asdf.fish" >> ~/.config/fish/config.fish
Completions are handled by Homebrew for the Fish shell. Friendly! :::
::: details Fish & Pacman
Add the following to ~/.config/fish/config.fish
:
source /opt/asdf-vm/asdf.fish
Completions are automatically configured on installation by the AUR package. :::
::: details Elvish & Git
Add asdf.elv
to your ~/.config/elvish/rc.elv
with:
mkdir -p ~/.config/elvish/lib; ln -s ~/.asdf/asdf.elv ~/.config/elvish/lib/asdf.elv
echo "\n"'use asdf _asdf; var asdf~ = $_asdf:asdf~' >> ~/.config/elvish/rc.elv
echo "\n"'set edit:completion:arg-completer[asdf] = $_asdf:arg-completer~' >> ~/.config/elvish/rc.elv
Completions are automatically configured.
:::
::: details Elvish & Homebrew
Add asdf.elv
to your ~/.config/elvish/rc.elv
with:
mkdir -p ~/.config/elvish/lib; ln -s (brew --prefix asdf)/libexec/asdf.elv ~/.config/elvish/lib/asdf.elv
echo "\n"'use asdf _asdf; var asdf~ = $_asdf:asdf~' >> ~/.config/elvish/rc.elv
echo "\n"'set edit:completion:arg-completer[asdf] = $_asdf:arg-completer~' >> ~/.config/elvish/rc.elv
Completions are automatically configured. :::
::: details Elvish & Pacman
Add asdf.elv
to your ~/.config/elvish/rc.elv
with:
mkdir -p ~/.config/elvish/lib; ln -s /opt/asdf-vm/asdf.elv ~/.config/elvish/lib/asdf.elv
echo "\n"'use asdf _asdf; var asdf~ = $_asdf:asdf~' >> ~/.config/elvish/rc.elv
echo "\n"'set edit:completion:arg-completer[asdf] = $_asdf:arg-completer~' >> ~/.config/elvish/rc.elv
Completions are automatically configured. :::
::: details ZSH & Git
Add the following to ~/.zshrc
:
. $HOME/.asdf/asdf.sh
OR use a ZSH Framework plugin like asdf for oh-my-zsh which will source this script and setup completions.
Completions are configured by either a ZSH Framework asdf
plugin or by adding the following to your .zshrc
:
# append completions to fpath
fpath=(${ASDF_DIR}/completions $fpath)
# initialise completions with ZSH's compinit
autoload -Uz compinit && compinit
- if you are using a custom
compinit
setup, ensurecompinit
is below your sourcing ofasdf.sh
- if you are using a custom
compinit
setup with a ZSH Framework, ensurecompinit
is below your sourcing of the framework
Warning
If you are using a ZSH Framework the associated asdf
plugin may need to be updated to use the new ZSH completions properly via fpath
. The Oh-My-ZSH asdf plugin is yet to be updated, see ohmyzsh/ohmyzsh#8837.
:::
::: details ZSH & Homebrew
Add asdf.sh
to your ~/.zshrc
with:
echo -e "\n. $(brew --prefix asdf)/libexec/asdf.sh" >> ${ZDOTDIR:-~}/.zshrc
OR use a ZSH Framework plugin like asdf for oh-my-zsh which will source this script and setup completions.
Completions are configured by either a ZSH Framework asdf
or will need to be configured as per Homebrew's instructions. If you are using a ZSH Framework the associated plugin for asdf may need to be updated to use the new ZSH completions properly via fpath
. The Oh-My-ZSH asdf plugin is yet to be updated, see ohmyzsh/ohmyzsh#8837.
:::
::: details ZSH & Pacman
Add the following to ~/.zshrc
:
. /opt/asdf-vm/asdf.sh
Completions are placed in a ZSH friendly location, but ZSH must be configured to use the autocompletions. :::
asdf
scripts need to be sourced after you have set your $PATH
and after you have sourced your framework (oh-my-zsh etc).
Restart your shell so that PATH
changes take effect. Opening a new terminal tab will usually do it.
Core Installation Complete!
This completes the installation of the asdf
core 🎉
asdf
is only useful once you install a plugin, install a tool and manage its versions. Continue the guide below to learn how to do this.
4. Install a Plugin
For demonstration purposes we will install & set Node.js via the asdf-nodejs
plugin.
Plugin Dependencies
Each plugin has dependencies so we need to check the plugin repo where they should be listed. For asdf-nodejs
they are:
OS | Dependency Installation |
---|---|
Linux (Debian) | apt-get install dirmngr gpg curl gawk |
macOS | brew install gpg gawk |
We should install dependencies first as some Plugins have post-install hooks.
Install the Plugin
asdf plugin add nodejs https://github.com/asdf-vm/asdf-nodejs.git
5. Install a Version
Now we have a plugin for Node.js we can install a version of the tool.
We can see which versions are available with asdf list all nodejs
or a subset of versions with asdf list all nodejs 14
.
We will just install the latest
available version:
asdf install nodejs latest
::: tip Note
asdf
enforces exact versions. latest
is a helper throughout asdf
that will resolve to the actual version number at the time of execution.
:::
6. Set a Version
asdf
performs a version lookup of a tool in all .tool-versions
files from the current working directory up to the $HOME
directory. The lookup occurs just-in-time when you execute a tool that asdf
manages.
::: warning
Without a version listed for a tool execution of the tool will error. asdf current
will show you the tool & version resolution, or absence of, from your current directory so you can observe which tools will fail to execute.
:::
Global
Global defaults are managed in $HOME/.tool-versions
. Set a global version with:
asdf global nodejs latest
$HOME/.tool-versions
will then look like:
nodejs 16.5.0
Some OSs already have tools installed that are managed by the system and not asdf
, python
is a common example. You need to tell asdf
to pass the management back to the system. The Versions reference section will guide you.
Local
Local versions are defined in the $PWD/.tool-versions
file (your current working directory). Usually, this will be the Git repository for a project. When in your desired directory execute:
asdf local nodejs latest
$PWD/.tool-versions
will then look like:
nodejs 16.5.0
Using Existing Tool Version Files
asdf
supports the migration from existing version files from other version managers. Eg: .ruby-version
for the case of rbenv
. This is supported on a per-plugin basis.
asdf-nodejs
supports this via both .nvmrc
and .node-version
files. To enable this, add the following to your asdf
configuration file $HOME/.asdfrc
:
legacy_version_file = yes
See the configuration reference page for more config options.
Guide Complete!
That completes the Getting Started guide for asdf
🎉 You can now manage nodejs
versions for your project. Follow similar steps for each type of tool in your project!
asdf
has many more commands to become familiar with, you can see them all by running asdf --help
or asdf
. The core of the commands are broken into three categories: