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These instructions will guide you through the DevZero CLI installation process based on your local operating system. The CLI enables building, launching, and connecting to workspaces.
Make sure to run the following commands after installation to continue with the setup process:
Download Links:
Using Chocolatey:
To install chocolatey, follow these instructions.
To install in WSL 2 (does not work on WSL 1):
If you run into any issues, please reach out to us at support@devzero.io.
To remove the CLI and uninstall the daemon, run:
A single CLI (called dz
) is used to interact with DevZero control plane. Check out the CLI main page for DevZero CLI options or use.
To check the currently installed version of your CLI, run:
To update your CLI, run (might require sudo
!):
To see the manpage for the CLI (with all the commands), run
At DevZero, every CLI update undergoes testing for the following conditions:
installer functionality
ability to authenticate against DevZero's control plane
ability to connect to DevZero network
ability to connect to a workspace
alpine:3.14
alpine:edge
alpine:latest
amazonlinux:latest
archlinux:latest
debian:oldstable-slim
debian:sid-slim
debian:stable-slim
debian:testing-slim
elementary/docker:stable
elementary/docker:unstable
fedora:latest
opensuse/leap:latest
opensuse/tumbleweed:latest
oraclelinux:8
oraclelinux:9
rockylinux:8.7
rockylinux:9
ubuntu:20.04
ubuntu:22.04
ubuntu:23.04
If you happen to be running an unsupported configuration (i.e. where you don't have sudo access), we got your back! We offer support on a best-effort basis for most Linux distributions & macOS versions, via statically-compiled binaries.
As you're deviating from the "happy path", you'll need to run some extra commands in order to get the DevZero CLI working on your machine. If you'd like assistance with this, please contact us at support@devzero.io and we'd be happy to guide you through these steps.
We generally support most arm64 / amd64 Linux systems, as well as Apple Silicon & Intel macOS systems. If you're running - say, a SPARC / RISC-V machine, we don't support that at this time.
For the stable
release track (this is most likely what you want), click the respective link for your CPU architecture.
If you're feeling adventurous, these links are for the latest
release track, which has potentially unstable updates that are pushed more frequently.
For the stable
release track (this is most likely what you want), click the respective link for your CPU architecture.
If you're feeling adventurous, these links are for the latest
release track, which has potentially unstable updates that are pushed more frequently.
This should produce one file, called dzcmd
.
You're connected! You can now connect to your workspaces via ./dz workspace connect
. Have fun!
Therefore, we're confident that the works on the following operating systems:
If you see something that's not supported yet that you'd like to see support for, please tell us at !
- more common
- less common (Raspberry Pi, etc)
- more common
- less common (Raspberry Pi, etc)
- older
- newer
- older
- newer