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I use the command line a lot to download and install applications. I've always downloaded into the /tmp directory then installed to another directory.

But where is the place to install such applications? For example, I was just downloading MongoDB (a database application similar to MySQL).
And I had no idea where to put it.

Where should such applications be installed on Mac?
Whats the conventional way?

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  • Also, you could use a package manager like homebrew - brew.sh and it has one command install of mongodb and handles where to store things for you systematically.
    – bmike
    Commented Jan 30, 2014 at 13:17

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As OS X is a UNIX OS at its core you can usually use the installers that come with the open source tools you've mentioned.

Quite often there's some way to install them, usually there's 3 steps to configure, compile, and install the tools.

For stuff like databases and other UNIX tools they might need stuff in a number of places.

In contrast to that a typical Mac application will be just one self-contained application bundle that's supposed to go in to your /Applications folder.

Though it can as well run from your Desktop, Downloads folder, etc. ...

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  • The installation instructions for MongoDB are here (docs.mongodb.org/manual/tutorial/install-mongodb-on-os-x). It says to optionally move the extracted archive to another folder (which I will need to do anyway because it's currently in the /tmp folder). But where would be the conventional place to put it? There is no package installer for MongoDB so I'm having to do it via the terminal. Commented Jan 29, 2014 at 15:01

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