Today, I’d like to announce Homebrew 4.5.0. The most significant changes since 4.4.0 are major improvements to brew bundle/services, preliminary Linux support for casks, official Support Tiers, Tier 2 ARM64 Linux support, Ruby 3.4 and several deprecations.| Homebrew
Over the next few days, Homebrew’s repositories will begin to transition from PGP-based signing to SSH-based signing for @BrewTestBot commits.| Homebrew
Homebrew is pleased to congratulate Workbrew on their 1.0 launch today. Workbrew is a company founded by several Homebrew members and the Project Leader, @MikeMcQuaid, to use Homebrew as the foundation of a secure software delivery platform. Workbrew’s product is out of beta and ready to solve your workplace’s problems with securing Homebrew at scale, so go check it out!| Homebrew
Today, I’d like to announce Homebrew 4.4.0. The most significant changes since 4.3.0 are official macOS Sequoia (15) support, INSTALL_RECEIPT.json files for casks, macOS Monterey (12) deprecation and various other deprecations.| Homebrew
Homebrew had a security audit performed in 2023. This audit was funded by the Open Technology Fund and conducted by Trail of Bits. Trail of Bits’ report contained 25 items, of which 16 were fixed, 3 are in progress, and 6 are acknowledged by Homebrew’s maintainers. Below is the scope of testing, findings by severity, and mitigation and acknowledgements.| Homebrew
Today I’d like to announce Homebrew 3.6.0. The most significant changes since 3.5.0 are preliminary macOS Ventura support, the need for --eval-all/HOMEBREW_EVAL_ALL and a migration to Ubuntu 22.04 as our CI platform.| Homebrew