It’s been awfully quiet here on the blog recently. This is owed to some major changes in my life, including the successful end of my PhD program, a successful job hunt, a move from Japan to Germany, and an interesting yet challenging start in my new job at a major German research institute.
But the recent release of MacOS 10.10 “Yosemite” together with the even more recent release of the new QGIS 2.6 “Brighton” was a brilliant opportunity to not only bring back some life here, but also to continue my mini-series of articles about installing and running QGIS and other rather scientific software packages on the latest versions of MacOS (see here, here, and here for example).
So I sat down on my freshly delivered sofa between unpacked boxes to try my luck. To make a long story short, in my case the installation ran smoothly and was done in about half an hour – downloading the necessary disk images took most of time. But before I updated my QGIS 2.4 to the new version 2.6 I first tried if 2.4 still runs on my freshly upgraded MacOS Yosemite. And there was a small surprise waiting for me here, as MacOS asked me to update my Java SE 6 runtime!
Luckily this was no big deal, since the error message provided a link to the download page at Apple.
After running this update QGIS 2.4 worked fine like before.
For the download of QGIS itself I decided once again for the packages provided by William Kyngesburye a.k.a KyngChaos – not only did I never have any problems with these, but to my best knowledge they are the only available pre-compiled QGIS packages for MacOS… The installation process follows the steps known from earlier releases:
1. GDAL
First is the new GDAL 1.11
. The installation is as easy as downloading the DMG
and installing GDAL
from the respective PKG
therein. Please ignore the NumPy
package also contained in the GDAL
disk image, since it’s an outdated version. Oh ya, and then there’s this thing that’s still annoying me:
Gatekeeper refuses to open applications and packages from “unidentified developers” (that is, developers that can’t afford a certificate by Apple) by double-clicking. Hence you need to right-click it and select Open
.
2. matplotlib
and NumPy
Before we can install matplotlib
we need to install NumPy
. There you can find the most recent version 1.8.0-1. As is stated on the website NumPy
is “included on the GDAL
Framework disk image, though it may not be up to date”. And indeed the GDAL
image mentioned above includes NumPy 1.6.2-1
from mid-2012…
Now that that’s out of the way we can install matplotlib 1.3.1-2
.
3. QGIS
And finally QGIS 2.6.0-1 itself. As in the other cases we open the DMG
file and install from the PKG
file therein. That’s it!
Now that everything was installed it was time to fire it up for the first time. And lo and behold, it works! Just like that. You can’t ask for more. Now it’s time to discover all the great new features QGIS 2.6 brings!
Nice article mate, been looking for this kind of article… i am a new user of mac, i used to run surfer but now i am kinda this this one.
You’re most welcome!
Thanks for the notes, Konstantin. I’m not having as much luck. I tried to install QGIS for the first time on my MacBook Pro running Yosemite. I’ve installed GDAL Complete and NumPy and matplotlib, in that order, but it fails to install QGIS. “The Installer encountered an error that caused the installation to fail.” Any idea why this might be the case?
Vielen Dank.
MvW
Hm, that’s a fairly generic error message that doesn’t provide too many hints as to where to look first… Which version of QGIS are you trying to install? The latest version 2.8 has only very recently been released for MacOS (see here for instructions), so you might want to give this a try first.
[…] for MacOS as well! Following the (kind of) tradition of my articles showing how to install QGIS 2.6 2.4, and 2.0 on MacOS, I now sat down to write a brief walkthrough for the latest version as […]
To bypass the Gatekeeper vigilance if you use regularly app from other source than App Store, you can adjust it.
System preference / Security / General (not exactly that, I work in french, but you’ll find easily)
Unlock, enter you admin password and choose ”from everywhere” at bottom.
The next time OSX won’t ask permission.
I’ll try QGIS 2.8 with lot of shapefile from ArcGIS 9 and will post my comment soon.
Merci ! for your clear instructions :-)
Alex
Finished the installation, I opened QGIS, import shapefiles… Work like a dream :-)
Thank you for the good job Konstantin.
Thanks for the feedback – I’m glad it worked for you!