'Maven Install on Mac OS X

I'm trying to install maven through the terminal by following these instructions.

So far I got this:

export M2_HOME=/user/apple/apache-maven-3.0.3
export M2=$M2_HOME/bin
export PATH=$M2:$PATH
export JAVA_HOME=/usr/java/jdk1.6.0_22

Where do you go to find this?



Solution 1:[1]

OS X prior to Mavericks (10.9) actually comes with Maven 3 built in.

If you're on OS X Lion, you won't have java installed by default. Run java by itself and it'll prompt you to install it.

Assuming qualifications are met, run mvn -version and see some output like this:

Apache Maven 3.0.3 (r1075438; 2011-02-28 12:31:09-0500)
Maven home: /usr/share/maven
Java version: 1.6.0_29, vendor: Apple Inc.
Java home: /System/Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/1.6.0.jdk/Contents/Home
Default locale: en_US, platform encoding: MacRoman
OS name: "mac os x", version: "10.7.2", arch: "x86_64", family: "mac"

Solution 2:[2]

Alternatively, I recommend installing Homebrew for these kinds of utilities.

Then you just install Maven using:

brew install maven

PS: If you got a 404 error, try doing a brew update just before

Solution 3:[3]

Disclaimer: Here is a complete answer taking the last version of OS X (10.9 AKA Mavericks) into account. I am aware that everything I compiled in this answer is already present in the page, but having it clearly in one answer makes it a lot clearer.

First of all, with previous versions of OS X, Maven is installed by default. If Java is missing running you@host:~ $ java in a terminal will prompt you for the Java installation.

With Mac OS X 10.9 (Mavericks), Maven is not installed by default anymore. Different options are then possible:

  • Using Homebrew:
    • you@host:~$ brew install maven will install latest Maven (3.5.2 on 02/01/2018)
    • you@host:~$ brew install maven30 will install Maven 3.0 if needed
  • Using Macports: (I did not test this)
    • you@host:~$ sudo port install maven will install latest Maven (?)
    • or:
    • you@host:~$ sudo port install maven3 will Install Maven 3.0
    • you@host:~$ sudo port select --set maven maven3 selects that version of Maven
  • Installing by hand:
    • Download Maven from its homepage
    • Follow the installation instructions:
      1. Extract the distribution archive, i.e.apache-maven-3.3.9-bin.tar.gz to the directory you wish to install Maven 3.3.9. The subdirectory apache-maven-3.3.9 will be created from the archive.
      2. Optional: Add the MAVEN_OPTS environment variable to specify JVM properties, e.g. export MAVEN_OPTS="-Xms256m -Xmx512m". This environment variable can be used to supply extra options to Maven.
      3. Make sure that JAVA_HOME is set to the location of your JDK, e.g. export JAVA_HOME=$(/usr/libexec/java_home -v 1.8) and that $JAVA_HOME/bin is in your PATH environment variable (although that might not be necessary with the latest Mac OS X versions and the Oracle JDK).
      4. Add extracted apache-maven-3.3.9/bin to your $PATH
      5. Run mvn --version to verify that it is correctly installed.

Solution 4:[4]

When I upgraded recently to OS X Mavericks and my maven builds start failing. So I needed to install maven again as it doesn't come built in. Then I tried with the command:

brew install maven 

it works, but it installs the version 3.1.1 of maven which causes some problems for a few users like (https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/MAVEN/AetherClassNotFound). So if you're running into the same issue you will probably want to install the earlier Maven version, the 3.0.5. To do that with Homebrew, you have to execute the following command:

brew install https://raw.github.com/Homebrew/homebrew-versions/master/maven30.rb

That's it, it will then use a different Homebrew's formulae which will give you the maven 3.0.5 instead.

Solution 5:[5]

macOS Sierra onwards

brew install maven

Solution 6:[6]

To install Maven on OS X, go to the Apache Maven website and download the binary zip file.

You can then shift the apache-maven-3.0.5 folder in your Downloads folder to wherever you want to keep Maven; however as the rest of the process involves the command line, I recommend you do everything from there.

At the command line, you would run something like:

mv ~/Downloads/apache-maven-3.0.5 ~/Development/

This is just my personal preference - to have a "Development" directory in my home directory. You can choose something else if you wish.

Next, edit ~/.profile in the editor of your choice, and add the following:

export M2_HOME="/Users/johndoe/Development/apache-maven-3.0.5"
export PATH=${PATH}:${M2_HOME}/bin

The first line is important to Maven (and must be a full explcit path); the second line is important to the shell, in order to run the "mvn" binary. If you have a variation of that second line already in .profile, then simply add ${M2_HOME}/bin to the end of it.

Now open a second terminal window and run

mvn -version

which should give output like...

Apache Maven 3.0.5 (r01de14724cdef164cd33c7c8c2fe155faf9602da; 2013-02-19 13:51:28+0000)
Maven home: /Users/johndoe/Development/apache-maven-3.0.5
Java version: 1.7.0_40, vendor: Oracle Corporation
Java home: /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/jdk1.7.0_40.jdk/Contents/Home/jre
Default locale: en_US, platform encoding: UTF-8
OS name: "mac os x", version: "10.9", arch: "x86_64", family: "mac"

Couple of things to note:

  1. If you've installed the Oracle JDK 1.7, then you may find Maven reports JDK 1.6 in the above output. To solve this, add the following to your ~/.profile:

    export JAVA_HOME=$(/usr/libexec/java_home)

  2. As some have pointed out, Maven has historically been supplied either with OS X itself, or with the optional Command Line Tools for XCode. This may cease to be the case for future versions of OS X, and in fact OS X Mavericks does not include Maven. Personal opinion: This could be because they are still in beta, or it could be that Apple have taken a look at the latest Thoughtworks Technology Radar, and spotted that Maven has been moved to "Hold".

Solution 7:[7]

If using MacPorts on OS X 10.9 Mavericks, you can simply do:

sudo port install maven3
sudo port select --set maven maven3

Solution 8:[8]

A simple approach to install Maven.

  1. Open Terminal

Finder -> Go -> Utilities -> Terminal

  1. Install Homebrew using the below command

ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)"

  1. After that install maven

brew install maven

Solution 9:[9]

Just a brief addition; if you want to install a specific version on MacOS using Homebrew 1.5.2, you can install it the following way:

  1. brew update
  2. brew search maven

This will give you maven versions available in homebrew

  1. brew install [email protected]

[If you want to install maven 3.3.]

Solution 10:[10]

Two Method

  • (use homebrew) Auto install:
    • Command:
      • brew install maven
    • Pros and cons
      • Pros: easy
      • Cons: (probably) not latest version
  • Manually install (for latest version):
    • Pros and cons
      • Pros: use your expected any (or latest) version
      • Cons: need self to do it
    • Steps
      • download latest binary (apache-maven-3.6.3-bin.zip) version from Maven offical download
      • uncompress it (apache-maven-3.6.3-bin.zip) and added maven path into environment variable PATH
        • normally is edit and add:
          • export PATH=/path_to_your_maven/apache-maven-3.6.3/bin:$PATH
        • into your startup script( ~/.bashrc or ~/.zshrc etc.)

Extra Note

how to take effect immediately and check installed correctly?

A:

source ~/.bashrc
echo $PATH
which mvn
mvn --version

here output:

?  bin pwd
/Users/crifan/dev/dev_tool/java/maven/apache-maven-3.6.3/bin
?  bin ll
total 64
-rw-r--r--@ 1 crifan  staff   228B 11  7 12:32 m2.conf
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 crifan  staff   5.6K 11  7 12:32 mvn
-rw-r--r--@ 1 crifan  staff   6.2K 11  7 12:32 mvn.cmd
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 crifan  staff   1.5K 11  7 12:32 mvnDebug
-rw-r--r--@ 1 crifan  staff   1.6K 11  7 12:32 mvnDebug.cmd
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 crifan  staff   1.5K 11  7 12:32 mvnyjp
?  bin vi ~/.bashrc
?  bin source ~/.bashrc
?  ~ echo $PATH
/Users/crifan/dev/dev_tool/java/maven/apache-maven-3.6.3/bin:xxx
?  bin which mvn
/Users/crifan/dev/dev_tool/java/maven/apache-maven-3.6.3/bin/mvn
?  bin mvn --version
Apache Maven 3.6.3 (cecedd343002696d0abb50b32b541b8a6ba2883f)
Maven home: /Users/crifan/dev/dev_tool/java/maven/apache-maven-3.6.3
Java version: 1.8.0_112, vendor: Oracle Corporation, runtime: /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/jdk1.8.0_112.jdk/Contents/Home/jre
Default locale: zh_CN, platform encoding: UTF-8
OS name: "mac os x", version: "10.14.6", arch: "x86_64", family: "mac"

for full detail please refer my (Chinese) post: ?????Mac???Gradle

Solution 11:[11]

This command brew install maven30 didn't work for me. Was complaining about a missing FORMULA. But the following command did work. I've got maven-3.0.5 installed.

brew install homebrew/versions/maven30

This is for Mac OS X 10.9 aka Mavericks.

Solution 12:[12]

If you don't want to install Homebrew only for install Maven you could simply do this:

  1. Download the binary Maven and extract the zip

  2. Launch the Terminal and type this command:

    sudo ln -s /path_to_maven_folder/bin/mvn /usr/bin/mvn

You can find more details on this post.

Solution 13:[13]

  1. Open terminal
  2. Just use brew command to install maven
brew install maven
  1. After the download and install finished. Check for the maven version
mvn -version

Here you go !!! Now you have successfully installed maven on your mac os.

Solution 14:[14]

for the ones that just migrated to mavericks - I used the *-ux solution;

  1. download maven from apache maven site
  2. put in /opt
  3. modified .bash_profile and added:

    alias mvn='/opt/apache-maven-3.1.1/bin/mvn'
    export JAVA_HOME=/Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/jdk1.7.0_21.jdk/Contents/Home
    

Solution 15:[15]

brew install maven31 (if you have homebrew)

Solution 16:[16]

If you have tried brew install maven and were greeted with missing gcc compiler and some other dependencies, an easier approach is to install sdkman and then run

sdk install maven

(or refer to the latest documentation for the right command)

sdkman is probably over-qualified for the job, but if you deal with multiple versions of SDKs, it's a pretty nice tool to have in general.

Credits to Ammar for the excellent tip

Solution 17:[17]

Open a TERMINAL window and check if you have it already installed.

Type:

$ mvn –version

And you should see:

Apache Maven 3.0.2 (r1056850; 2011-01-09 01:58:10+0100)
Java version: 1.6.0_24, vendor: Apple Inc.
Java home: /System/Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/1.6.0.jdk/Contents/Home
Default locale: en_US, platform encoding: MacRoman
OS name: “mac os x”, version: “10.6.7?, arch: “x86_64?, family: “mac”

If you don't have Maven installed already, then here is how to download and install maven, and configure environment variables on Mac OS X:

http://bitbybitblog.com/install-maven-mac/

Solution 18:[18]

On Maverick, run in the terminal xcode-select --install to install the Command Line Tools.

Solution 19:[19]

You can use Maven Version Manager through which you can use multiple version of Maven per directory base.

Installation

Using Homebrew brew install mvnvm

Without Homebrew mkdir -p ~/bin && curl -s https://bitbucket.org/mjensen/mvnvm/raw/master/mvn > ~/bin/mvn && chmod 0755 ~/bin/mvn and add ~/bin to path.

Usage

Default Version

To set default maven version set the environment variable DEFAULT_MVN_VERSION to the maven version to be used by default.

Maven version for the folder

Create a file named mvnvm.properties in the folder and configure the maven version as follows

mvn_version=<maven version>

Solution 20:[20]

Two ways to install Maven

Before installing maven check mvn -version to make sure maven is not install in system

Method 1:

brew install maven

Method 2:

  1. go to https://maven.apache.org/download.cgi
  2. Select any of Binary link
  3. Unzip the link
  4. Move to application folder
  5. Update .bash profile with exports
  6. run mvn -version

Solution 21:[21]

This worked for me:

$ vim .bash_profile

export JAVA_HOME=$(/usr/libexec/java_home)

$ source .bash_profile

credit: http://www.mkyong.com/java/maven-java_home-is-not-defined-correctly-on-mac-osx/

Solution 22:[22]

% sudo port selfupdate; 
% sudo port upgrade outdated;
% sudo port install maven3;
% sudo port select --set maven maven3;

— add following to .zshenv -- start using zsh if you dont —
set -a
[[ -d /opt/local/share/java/maven3 ]] &&
    M3_HOME=/opt/local/share/java/maven3 &&
    M2_HOME=/opt/local/share/java/maven3 &&
    MAVEN_OPTS="-Xmx1024m" &&
    M2=${M2_HOME}/bin
set +a

Solution 23:[23]

You can install maven using homebrew. The command is $ brew install maven

Solution 24:[24]

After installing maven using brew or manually, using macOS Catalina and using the terminal or iTerm to operate maven you will need to grant access to the apps to access user files.

System Preferences -> Privacy (button) -> Full Disk Access

And then add terminal or iTerm to that list.

You will also need to restart your application e.g. terminal or iTerm after giving them full disk access.

Solution 25:[25]

For those who wanna use maven2 in Mavericks, type:

brew tap homebrew/versions

brew install maven2

If you have already installed maven3, backup 3 links (mvn, m2.conf, mvnDebug) in /usr/local/bin first:

mkdir bak

mv m* bak/

then reinstall:

brew uninstall maven2(only when conflicted)

brew install maven2

Solution 26:[26]

This worked for me. Its simpler and cleaner. Open Mac terminal and type:

export MAVEN_HOME=~/apache-maven-3.8.1
export PATH=$PATH:$MAVEN_HOME/bin

Now when you type

mvn -version

You get an output:

Apache Maven 3.8.1 (05c21c65bdfed0f71a2f2ada8b84da59348c4c5d)
Maven home: /Users/nisha/apache-maven-3.8.1
Java version: 16.0.1, vendor: Oracle Corporation, runtime: /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/jdk-16.0.1.jdk/Contents/Home
Default locale: en_US, platform encoding: UTF-8
OS name: "mac os x", version: "11.4", arch: "x86_64", family: "Mac"

** Edited to add:

When you close the terminal and open again, you will get mvn: command not found and you will have to run the command again.

Refer this post for a permanent installation