![]() ![]() You may be able to just install it directly into the same folder as Git:īut I haven't tried this alternative approach and I wouldn't recommend it because it is likely to cause issues when updating and may confuse uninstallers, leaving remnants. You'll, of course, need to adjust the above path to match the version of your of your particular install: $ export PATH="c:/Program Files/mingw-w64//mingw64/bin:$PATH" Select the latest "version" (for GCC), change "architecture" from i686 (32-bit) to x86_64 (64-bit), and change "threads" to win32.Īdd the bin folder to the beginning of your Git BASH (MINGW64) path: $ export PATH="c:/Program Files/mingw-w64/x86_64-8.1.0-win32-seh-rt_v6-rev0/mingw64/bin:$PATH" Install mingw-w64 ( Follow the "Sourceforge" link) and install it to the default Program Files based path. Note: There are several questions about this around the net and SE, but most are quite old and so no longer relevant AFAICT due to changes in MSYS2, MinGW and Git for Windows. Thus my question is this: can I use win-builds or some other binary to achieve my aim and if so, how? except if I try to run the install again it complains that there are already files there. It seems to run OK but it doesn't seem to add anything AFAICT, no executables, no folders, nada. If you prefer to build from source, you can find tarballs on. The latest version is 2.33.0, which was released almost 2 years ago, on. Tim Harper provides an installer for Git. I have tried installing win-builds in the bash install usr/ directory (seemed like the place all the other binaries were). Apple ships a binary package of Git with Xcode. However I'm not exactly clear on what is the best way to go about enabling this. Best way to go is install Cygwin from, and use the package manager there to install tree or whatever package its in (if it exists). It seems like there should be someway of adding to the MinGW-64 binaries within the git bash instead of adding a whole other MSYS2/MinGW-64 install. 1 git-bash is really just a cut down version of Cygwin. This comes with a bash environment that uses MinGW-64 but only includes some binaries. I have Git for Windows installed on a Windows 7 machine (no, sadly I can't switch to W10 on this particular machine). ![]()
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