342

How can I install gitk on a Mac?

From their official website, it seems gitk comes with Git, but the version of my Git (git version 1.7.12.4 (Apple Git-37)) does not come with gitk.

brew install gitk does not work for gitk.

Version information (copied from comments):

11
  • 1
    what version of osx are you using? On 10.8.4 I have git version 1.8.2.1 (Apple Git-45) which includes gitk
    – foundry
    Jul 10, 2013 at 23:35
  • 1
    There's roughly a bajillion Git tools that work on OS X, why do you need gitk specifically? Also, gitk is included with Homebrew git.
    – millimoose
    Jul 10, 2013 at 23:47
  • 1
    @Mingyu: sourcetreeapp.com, for one.
    – fjarri
    Jul 11, 2013 at 0:19
  • 2
    GitX is a pretty nice Git client. I miss it on Linux
    – rcomblen
    Jul 11, 2013 at 6:44
  • 1
    If you installed SourceTree ... it comes with it's own packed-in copy of git - and it's a build that has gitk in it, so you can create an alias for it and just use it.
    – Adrian
    Oct 16, 2018 at 10:49

15 Answers 15

479

Correct, the 1.7.12.4 (Apple Git-37) does not come with gitk. You can install a more recent version of Git + git-ui as a separate formula by using Homebrew (executable brew). More thorough instructions are located on The fastest and easiest way to install Ruby on a Mac in 2022 (see this commit extracting git-gui/gitk into its own formula: git-gui: split from git formula.)

Run the following commands at the terminal:

brew update
brew install git
brew install git-gui

If you get an error indicating it could not link Git, then you may need to change permissions/owners of the files it mentions.

Once completed, run:

type -a git

And make sure it shows:

/usr/local/bin/git

If it does not, run:

brew doctor

And make the path change to put /usr/local/bin earlier in the path. Now, gitk should be on your path (along with an updated version of Git).

12
  • 1
    I installed git 1.8.3.4 to use brew. But gitk has Bug. If you check out branch and type gitk --all, unstaged local branch is visible. After you type git status, unstaged local branch is unvisible. Does anyone experience it?
    – pebble8888
    Aug 7, 2013 at 0:42
  • 9
    I did all the update described above, but the version of git didn't change - I must have already had the most recent version. BUT now I suddenly have gitk! hurray
    – Kuba
    Jul 4, 2014 at 9:03
  • 1
    Yep same with @Kuba I mysteriously now have gitk!
    – relipse
    Dec 9, 2016 at 18:57
  • 2
    It might be necessary to restart the terminal session.
    – veksen
    Feb 23, 2017 at 13:02
  • @giovannipds what was the problem?
    – volvox
    Jul 19, 2018 at 9:14
49

The Git Mac version comes without gitk, but if you do brew install git you get instant access to gitk.

I'm using macOS v10.12.5 (Sierra).

But this stopped working. You must install brew install git-gui

1
  • What versions of Git? Working and not working. Apr 19, 2022 at 3:22
29

As of macOS v10.15.6 (Catalina), I run:

brew install git
brew install git-gui

And it worked for me.

4
  • FTU of MAC. thanks for the brew. its worth installation I guess.
    – Santosh
    Dec 22, 2021 at 12:02
  • 2
    "FTU" may be a (double) typo of FYI. Apr 19, 2022 at 3:27
  • brew is like pip to Linux for Mac.
    – Hong
    Sep 26, 2022 at 14:26
  • Its called git-gui and not gitk part of the official git docs: git-scm.com/download/mac
    – GuySoft
    Aug 27, 2023 at 9:07
28

I just had the same problem and solved it as follows:

  1. Download the official Git package for Mac from http://git-scm.com/download/mac
  2. Install the package. This places all the binaries in folder /usr/local/git/bin.
  3. Optionally, run the included script to make gitk accessible outside of terminals
  4. Either add /usr/local/git/bin to your PATH or use an alias (alias gitk='/usr/local/git/bin/gitk')
1
  • 2
    in ~/.bash_profile file. Add : export PATH=/usr/local/bin:$PATH or /usr/local/git/bin path.
    – Jinbom Heo
    Mar 27, 2015 at 3:55
24

If you already have Git installed via Homebrew, you can just do upgrade:

type -a git
brew upgrade git
type -a git

Output

/usr/bin/git
/usr/local/bin/git

The one at local/bin will have gitk.

2
  • 3
    This should be the accepted answer. Also, if you have been using the system git that comes with Mac OS X, the sequence to do a new install of git via homebrew would instead be: brew install git && which git which (no pun intended!) should give you the output /usr/local/bin/git ... Note: I would also highly recommend updating and doctoring first, as in: brew update ; brew doctor && brew install git && which git -or- brew update ; brew doctor && brew upgrade git && which git instead... to get the expected /usr/local/bin/git output (from the which command).
    – likethesky
    Sep 10, 2014 at 20:54
  • 1
    @giovannipds - do brew install git .you probably have older version of Git.
    – yantaq
    Aug 20, 2018 at 19:56
17

I had the same issue. I installed GitX instead.

You can install GitX from here:

https://gitx.github.io/

Download the package and install it. After that, open gitk from spotlight search, go to the top left corner. Click on GitX and enable the terminal usage.

Go to your repository and simply type:

gitx --all

It will open the GUI.

3
  • 2
    "GitX, a long-defunct GUI for the Git version-control system". Is that right? Apr 18, 2022 at 16:37
  • Can also be installed via brew: brew install --cask gitx.
    – 0xZ3RR0
    Jun 26, 2023 at 23:23
  • Only GUI tool which worked for me for a large repo (tens of thousands of commits).
    – 0xZ3RR0
    Jun 26, 2023 at 23:25
9

There are two ways to fix this:

  1. The Unix way (simple and recommended)
  2. The Homebrew way

1. Unix Way: In four simple steps

  1. Execute which git in the terminal to know the location of your git executable. Open that directory & locate gitk inside the bin folder. Copy the path --- typically /usr/local/git/bin
  2. Edit your ~/.bash_profile file to add the location of local git & gitk in the paths or, simply copy-paste from the sample written below.

Sample bash_profile:

# Enabling gitk
export PATH=/usr/local/git/bin:$PATH

If you don't have a bash_profile file and want to learn how to create one, then click here.

  1. This step is relevant if you're using OS X v10.11 (El Capitan) or higher, and you run into an unknown color name “lime” error. Locate gitk executable (typically at /usr/local/bin/gitk), take a backup & open it in a text editor. Find all occurrences of lime in the file & replace them with "#99FF00".
  2. Reload Bash: source ~/.bash_profile

Now, run gitk


2. Homebrew way

Updates - If you do not have homebrew on your Mac, get it installed first. It may require sudo privileges.

  • brew update
  • brew doctor
  • brew link git
  • added /usr/local/Cellar/git/2.4.0/bin to path, reload Bash, and run gitk
  • No luck yet? Proceed further.
  • Run which git and observe if Git is still linked to /usr/bin/git
  • If yes, then open the directory and locate the was a binary executable.
  • Take its backup. It may be save with a name git.bak and delete the original file
  • Reload the terminal - source ~/.bash_profile
2
  • 3
    brew should NOT need sudo privileges. The brew installation procedure itself needs sudo, but it then opens permissions on /usr/local so that after that you wont need sudo. If you need sudo, either you're choosing that you want brew to only work with sudo (totally understandable decision), or you've missed a step in the installation procedure. May 21, 2020 at 12:56
  • Yes, I'm aware of that. TBH gitk not working is a really annoying problem & failing to launch it because they forgot to sudo at some random step is the last thing I'd wished anyone reading this ever faced. I wrote it to play it safe (tho, sudo isn't).
    – DDM
    Jul 13, 2020 at 21:11
4

You can also get gitk with the git from MacPorts.

sudo port install git
1
  • A now-deleted "answer" warns against using sudo. Why is it necessary? Apr 19, 2022 at 3:31
4

For macOS v10.14 (Mojave) users, I found this page very useful, particularly this suggestion:

/usr/bin/wish $(which gitk)

...without that, the window did not display correctly!

2

I ended up doing brew info git.

Which gave me info that Git was cloned into: /usr/local/Cellar/git/1.9.0

So I just added: /usr/local/Cellar/git/1.9.0/bin to the beginning of my PATH environment variable.

Note: I don't know how to use Homebrew... I just want to get going quickly as I have other things to do... this basically gets gitk running for me, so I'm sticking to it for now (it is probably not the way to work with Homebrew though).

1
  • brew info git and then adding the path it is in to PATH in ~/.profile worked for me (y)
    – Yo Ludke
    Mar 20, 2018 at 9:48
2

If you happen to already have Fink installed, this worked for me on OS X v10.10.5 (Yosemite):

fink install git

Note that as a side effect, other Git commands are also using the newer Git version (2.5.1) installed by Fink, rather than the version from Apple (2.3.2), which is still there, but preempted by my $PATH.

0

First you need to check which version of Git you are running. The one installed with Homebrew should be running on /usr/local/bin/git. You can verify this from a terminal using:

which git

In case Git shows up on a different directory, you need to run this from a terminal to add it to your path:

echo export PATH='/usr/local/bin:$PATH' >> ~/.bash_profile

After that, you can close and open again your terminal or just run:

source ~/.bash_profile

And voilà! In case you are running on OS X v10.9 (Mavericks) you might need to install XQuartz.

0

If, like me, you have Sourcetree installed, but want to use gitk as well, you can use the version that comes with Sourcetree's embedded version of Git.

Sourcetree's version of Git (and thus gitk) is here:

For Windows:

C:\Users\User\AppData\Local\Atlassian\SourceTree\git_local\bin\git.exe

or

%USERPROFILE%\AppData\Local\Atlassian\SourceTree\git_local\bin

For Mac:

/Applications/SourceTree.app/Contents/Resources/git_local/bin

In that directory, you'll find a gitk executable.

Thanks to @Adrian for the comment which alerted me to this.

0

I had the same problem on Mac 10.7.5 with Git version 1.7.12.4.

When I ran gitk, I got an error:

"Error in startup script: expected version number but got "Git-37)" while executing
"package vcompare $git_version "1.6.6.2""
invoked from within
"if {[package vcompare $git_version "1.6.6.2"] >= 0} {
set show_notes "--show-notes"
}"
(file "/usr/bin/gitk" line 11587)

When I looked at the code in gitk I saw the line that sets the version.

set git_version [join [lrange [split [lindex [exec git version] end] .] 0 2] .]

This somehow parsed the git version results to Git-37 instead of 1.7.12.4

I just replaced the git_version line with:

set git_version "1.7.12.4"
0

Run the following commands at the terminal:

  1. brew update
  2. brew install git
  3. brew install git-gui
1
  • This duplicates the accepted answer. Please don't post an answer unless you actually have something new to contribute. You can show your support for an original answer by upvoting.
    – Ben A.
    Sep 9, 2023 at 3:14

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