OS X El Capitan Installer. Official OS X El Capitan Installer from the Mac App Store. Un-archive the zip archive and you will get the app Installer. A bootable ISO or bootable USB can be made from this installer. Instructions on how to do that are on the Internet/Youtube. This is the Install DMG of OS X El Capitan, downloaded from Apple's website just before this upload. This is for archiving purposes, just in case Apple decides to remove the download, so people can still download this in the future. 2021-02-24 22:39:21. Internet Archive HTML5 Uploader 1.6.4.
The reason why this insane message is happening is because as of February 2016, the security certificates that validate these Mac OS X installs seems to have expired. What this means is that when you try to install Mac OS X Mavericks, Yosemite or El Capitan from any USB or external source, the certificate checking process will render your copy of the installer null and void. You will then get the error “This copy of the Install OS X Mavericks application can’t be verified. It may have been corrupted or tampered with during downloading.”
Thankfully, as annoying as this is, there’s a pretty easy fix in the Terminal, located on every installer of Mac OS X. Here’s what to do:
The reason why this works is that you are actually turning your computer into a time machine–and you are telling it to go back to the date February 2nd, 2016. This tricks the certificate into believing that the date is now in the past and allows the installation to resume. You can also redownload any installers to get the new certificates, which are located in your purchase history on the Mac App Store. You would then have to make new installer disks with these new downloaded installers.
Installing Homebrew on Mac OS X prior to El Capitan (that is Yosemite, Mavericks and others) used to be a breeze. But with a new change in OS X El Capitan called SIP - installing Homebrew has become a bit complicated.
You need not worry, I have got you covered.
There are two parts to this tutorial. If you want to uninstall or delete Homebrew first and then re-install it on El Capitan then follow Part 2 of this tutorial below. However, if you are doing a fresh installation of El Capitan then follow the steps outlined in Part 1 of this tutorial.
Happy Brewing!
Step 1 - Install XCode by downloading it from here. This is needed for installing the XCode command line tools which in turn is needed by Homebrew. You might skip this step if you already have XCode installed.
Quick Note - If you already have XCode installed then go to STep 2. Also, You can skip this step and jump to Step 3 instead and see if the Homebrew installer complains about XCode command line tools. If it does, then come back to this step and continue.
Step 2 - Install Command Line tools by running the following command in terminal:
Step 3 - Now, you need to get a fresh copy of Homebrew and then run the install script. You can perform both these tasks using this one command in the terminal app:
If it complains about permission issues, then you have to fix it before you can continue. This is an additional thing that you need to do in Mac OS X El Capitan because Apple introduced this new feature called System Integrity Protector. Here is a guide to how you can fix this permission issue with Homebrew on OS X El Capitan.
After you have fixed the permission issue, re-run the command above in the terminal to begin the Homebrew installation process.
Step 4 - Run the Brew Doctor utility to check for issues or warnings in the terminal
brew doctor
If it shows errors, then you need to fix them before you can continue. You might, however, skip any warnings that the doctor tool shows.
All the apps and libraries that you install using Homebrew are located in this folder: /usr/local/Cellar
After Homebrew is installed, you can use some of the following commands to perform different tasks with it:
Step 1 - First you will have to delete the Cellar folder of Homebrew that is usually available in the /usr/local folder. To do this, you need to run the following command in the terminal:
rm -rf /usr/local/Cellar /usr/local/.git && brew cleanup
Please note - If the above command throws a permissions error then you need to read this article to fix the Homebrew permissions in OS X El Capitan.
Step 2 - Install Xcode & XCode command line tools. This is an optional step but for many users, installing the tools mentioned in this step is mandatory. So in order to check, if you have to really perform this step, what you can do is quickly skip to Step 3 and run the command mentioned on that step - if you see success then you can safely skip this step, else continue here:
First download and install Xcode from this link - https://itunes.apple.com/au/app/xcode/id497799835?mt=12
Next, install Xcode command line tools by running the following command in your terminal:
If it complains about permissions, then use sudo and run the same command again.
Step 3 - Now that you have a cleaned-up Brew data folder, you need to fetch a fresh copy of Homebrew and start the installation process by running this command in the terminal:
You might be prompted for your root password and when that happens, enter the password and continue. You can find some sample output towards the end of this post.
Step 4 - After the installation completes, you should run the doctor utility on brew to see if there were any issues with the Homebrew installation. This can be done by running the following command:
brew doctor
If it returns any error, try fixing them. If you see just warnings then you could ignore them.
At this point you have succesfully installed Homebrew on El Capitan and you can use the commands mentioned above to perform various operations.
Some sample Outputs: