8.1 KiB
Installing on Linux via Flathub
WezTerm is available in flatpak format and published on Flathub, which is aggregated into the GNOME Software application and other similar storefront/software catalog applications.
To install using the command line:
First, setup flatpak on your system, then:
flatpak install flathub org.wezfurlong.wezterm
and then run:
flatpak run org.wezfurlong.wezterm
You may wish to define an alias for convenience:
alias wezterm='flatpak run org.wezfurlong.wezterm'
Note: flatpaks run in a sandbox so some functionality may behave a little
differently when compared to installing the native package format for your
system. In particular, starting wezterm using wezterm cli
subcommands will
block on the first run since you logged in if you haven't already launched the
gui.
Only stable releases are allowed to be published to Flathub, so if you want/need to try a nightly download you will need to use one of the other options below.
Installing on Linux using AppImage
WezTerm is available in AppImage format; a self-contained single file that doesn't require installation or any special privileges to run, and that is compatible with a wide range of Linux distributions.
Download and make the file executable and you're ready to run!
AppImage Nightly AppImage
curl -LO {{ ubuntu18_AppImage_stable }}
chmod +x {{ ubuntu18_AppImage_stable_asset }}
You may then execute the appimage directly to launch wezterm, with no specific installation steps required:
./{{ ubuntu18_AppImage_stable_asset }}
That said, you may wish to make it a bit more convenient:
mkdir ~/bin
mv ./{{ ubuntu18_AppImage_stable_asset }} ~/bin/wezterm
~/bin/wezterm
- Configuration instructions can be found here
Installing on Ubuntu and Debian-based Systems
The CI system builds .deb
files for a variety of Ubuntu and Debian distributions.
These are often compatible with other Debian style systems; if you don't find one
that exactly matches your system you can try installing one from an older version
of your distribution, or use one of the Debian packages linked below. Failing that,
you can try the AppImage download which should work on most Linux systems.
Distro | Stable | Nightly |
---|---|---|
Ubuntu18 | [{{ ubuntu18_deb_stable_asset }}]({{ ubuntu18_deb_stable }}) | [{{ ubuntu18_deb_nightly_asset }}]({{ ubuntu18_deb_nightly }}) |
Ubuntu20 | [{{ ubuntu20_deb_stable_asset }}]({{ ubuntu20_deb_stable }}) | [{{ ubuntu20_deb_nightly_asset }}]({{ ubuntu20_deb_nightly }}) |
Ubuntu22 | [{{ ubuntu22_deb_stable_asset }}]({{ ubuntu22_deb_stable }}) | [{{ ubuntu22_deb_nightly_asset }}]({{ ubuntu22_deb_nightly }}) |
Debian10 | [{{ debian10_deb_stable_asset }}]({{ debian10_deb_stable }}) | [{{ debian10_deb_nightly_asset }}]({{ debian10_deb_nightly }}) |
Debian11 | [{{ debian11_deb_stable_asset }}]({{ debian11_deb_stable }}) | [{{ debian11_deb_nightly_asset }}]({{ debian11_deb_nightly }}) |
To download and install from the CLI, you can use something like this, which shows how to install the Ubuntu 20 package:
curl -LO {{ ubuntu20_deb_stable }}
sudo apt install -y ./{{ ubuntu20_deb_stable_asset }}
- The package installs
/usr/bin/wezterm
and/usr/share/applications/org.wezfurlong.wezterm.desktop
- Configuration instructions can be found here
Installing on Fedora and rpm-based Systems
The CI system builds .rpm
files on CentOS, Fedora and openSUSE systems.
These are likely compatible with other rpm-based distributions.
Alternatively, you can try the AppImage download with should work
on most Linux systems.
Distro | Stable | Nightly |
---|---|---|
CentOS7 | [{{ centos7_rpm_stable_asset }}]({{ centos7_rpm_stable }}) | [{{ centos7_rpm_nightly_asset }}]({{ centos7_rpm_nightly }}) |
CentOS8 | [{{ centos8_rpm_stable_asset }}]({{ centos8_rpm_stable }}) | [{{ centos8_rpm_nightly_asset }}]({{ centos8_rpm_nightly }}) |
CentOS9 | [{{ centos9_rpm_stable_asset }}]({{ centos9_rpm_stable }}) | [{{ centos9_rpm_nightly_asset }}]({{ centos9_rpm_nightly }}) |
Fedora33 | [{{ fedora33_rpm_stable_asset }}]({{ fedora33_rpm_stable }}) | [{{ fedora33_rpm_nightly_asset }}]({{ fedora33_rpm_nightly }}) |
Fedora34 | [{{ fedora34_rpm_stable_asset }}]({{ fedora34_rpm_stable }}) | [{{ fedora34_rpm_nightly_asset }}]({{ fedora34_rpm_nightly }}) |
Fedora35 | [{{ fedora35_rpm_stable_asset }}]({{ fedora35_rpm_stable }}) | [{{ fedora35_rpm_nightly_asset }}]({{ fedora35_rpm_nightly }}) |
Fedora36 | [{{ fedora36_rpm_stable_asset }}]({{ fedora36_rpm_stable }}) | [{{ fedora36_rpm_nightly_asset }}]({{ fedora36_rpm_nightly }}) |
openSUSE Leap | [{{ opensuse_leap_rpm_stable_asset }}]({{ opensuse_leap_rpm_stable }}) | [{{ opensuse_leap_rpm_nightly_asset }}]({{ opensuse_leap_rpm_nightly }}) |
openSUSE Tumbleweed | [{{ opensuse_tumbleweed_rpm_stable_asset }}]({{ opensuse_tumbleweed_rpm_stable }}) | [{{ opensuse_tumbleweed_rpm_nightly_asset }}]({{ opensuse_tumbleweed_rpm_nightly }}) |
To download and install from the CLI you can use something like this, which shows how to install the Fedora 35 package:
sudo dnf install -y {{ fedora35_rpm_stable }}
WezTerm is also available in the official Factory repo in openSUSE Tumbleweed. To install from Factory instead from the rpm provided by WezTerm's Github repository, you can use Yast. If you prefer the CLI, you can install it as root user with
zypper addrepo https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/openSUSE:Factory/standard/openSUSE:Factory.repo
zypper refresh
zypper install wezterm
- The package installs
/usr/bin/wezterm
and/usr/share/applications/org.wezfurlong.wezterm.desktop
- Configuration instructions can be found here
Arch Linux
WezTerm is available in the Community repository.
The version available in the community repository may lag behind the latest wezterm release, so you may wish to use one of these AUR options:
What | Where |
---|---|
Nightly Binaries | https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/wezterm-nightly-bin/ |
Build from source | https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/wezterm-git/ |
Alpine Linux
APKs are built out from the main
branch.
Version | Stable | Nightly |
---|---|---|
3.12 | [{{ alpine3_12_apk_stable_asset }}]({{ alpine3_12_apk_stable }}) | [{{ alpine3_12_apk_nightly_asset }}]({{ alpine3_12_apk_nightly }}) |
3.13 | [{{ alpine3_13_apk_stable_asset }}]({{ alpine3_13_apk_stable }}) | [{{ alpine3_13_apk_nightly_asset }}]({{ alpine3_13_apk_nightly }}) |
3.14 | [{{ alpine3_14_apk_stable_asset }}]({{ alpine3_14_apk_stable }}) | [{{ alpine3_14_apk_nightly_asset }}]({{ alpine3_14_apk_nightly }}) |
3.15 | [{{ alpine3_15_apk_stable_asset }}]({{ alpine3_15_apk_stable }}) | [{{ alpine3_15_apk_nightly_asset }}]({{ alpine3_15_apk_nightly }}) |
Linuxbrew Tap
If you are a Linuxbrew user, you can install wezterm from our tap:
$ brew tap wez/wezterm-linuxbrew
$ brew install wezterm
If you'd like to use a nightly build you can perform a head install:
$ brew install --HEAD wezterm
to upgrade to a newer nightly, it is simplest to remove then install:
$ brew rm wezterm
$ brew install --HEAD wezterm
Raw Linux Binary
Another option for linux is a raw binary archive. These are the same binaries that are built for Ubuntu but provided in a tarball.
Download raw Linux binaries Nightly raw Linux binaries