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This page contains instructions to help you install Bamboo Standalone on Mac OS X.
On this page:
Before you begin
Please ensure that you have read the Requirements section of the Bamboo Installation Guide.
You can choose to install Bamboo via a Mac OS X Installer (.dmg) or a TGZ Archive (.tgz):
atlassian-bamboo-x.x-standalone.dmg). This will mount the Atlassian Bamboo installation volume.Bamboo Continuous Integration Server Installer.app to begin the installation wizard. The installer requires you to specify two directories:
/Applications/Bamboo
/Users/<current-user>/Bamboo-home
You must use forward-slashes in your directory path. Backslashes are not recognised by Bamboo. Please ensure that the Bamboo home directory is not located inside the Bamboo installation directory.
bamboo-init.properties in the <Bamboo installation directory>/webapp/WEB-INF/classes directory. In this file, insert the property "bamboo.home", with an absolute path to your Bamboo home directory. Your file should look something like this:
bamboo.home=/test/bamboo-home
bamboo-init.properties file in the <Bamboo installation directory>/webapp/WEB-INF/classes directory:
bamboo.jms.broker.uri=tcp://localhost:54663
There are two ways you can launch Bamboo on Mac OS X:
bamboo.sh startup scriptYou can start Bamboo with the default bamboo.sh file in your installation root directory. The bamboo.sh command accepts the following options (e.g. ./bamboo.sh start):
console — this starts Bamboo in a console. The logs will scroll to standard out.start — this starts Bamboo.stop — this stops Bamboo.status — this provides the current status of Bamboo.Alternatively, you can start Bamboo via a Java Service Wrapper, which provides services such as automatic restarting. To do this, you will need to use the run-bamboo command available in the /wrapper folder of the Bamboo installation. You will need to fire the command with one of the following options (e.g. ./run-bamboo start):
console — this starts Bamboo in a console. The logs will scroll to standard out.start — this starts Bamboo.stop — this stops Bamboo.status — this provides the current status of Bamboo.
http://localhost:8085/.