sudo chown -R $USER /usr/local
You'll have to give yourself ownership of /usr/local/
using that line right there. I had to do this myself after using the ruby one-liner at the top of the official docs to install Homebrew. Worked like a charm for me. It ought to be the only time you'll ever need to sudo
with Homebrew.
I'm not sure if the ruby one-liner does this. If it did, then something else on my system took control of /usr/local
since.
Edit: I completely missed this, but @samvermette didn't (see replies to my answer): if you run this command above and have something installed via homebrew that requires special user permissions, like mysql
, make sure to give those permissions back (as the above command gives recursive ownership to everything inside /usr/local
to you ($USER
). In the case of mysql, it's…
sudo chown -RL mysql:mysql /usr/local/mysql/data
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