CLion 2023.2 Help

Install CLion

CLion is a cross-platform IDE that provides consistent experience on Windows, macOS, and Linux (for setup on FreeBSD, refer to this instruction).

System requirements

Requirement

Minimum

Recommended

RAM

2 GB of free RAM

8 GB of total system RAM

CPU

Any modern CPU

Multi-core CPU. CLion supports multithreading for different operations and processes making it faster the more CPU cores it can use.

Disk space

3.5 GB

SSD drive with at least 5 GB of free space

Monitor resolution

1024×768

1920×1080

Operating system

Officially released 64-bit versions of the following:

  • Microsoft Windows 10 1809 or later

    Windows Server 2019 or later

  • macOS 10.15 or later

  • Any Linux distribution that supports Gnome, KDE , or Unity DE*.

Pre-release versions are not supported.

Latest 64-bit version of Windows, macOS, or Linux (for example, Debian, Ubuntu, or RHEL)

* CLion is not available for some Linux distributions, such as RHEL6/CentOS6, which do not include glibc version 2.27 required by JBR 17.

You do not need to install Java to run CLion because JetBrains Runtime is bundled with the IDE (based on JRE 17).

Toolchain requirements

  • When using bundled MinGW, no additional tools are required

  • In case of Cygwin, install the version 2.8 or later with the gcc-g++ and gdb packages

  • In case of using the MSVC compiler: Visual Studio 2013, 2015, 2017, 2019, or 2022

  • In case of using WSL: Windows 10 Fall Creators Update (least version 1709, build 16299.15) and the tools required in WSL (see the Linux tab)

  • Xcode command line developer tools (to install, run the xcode-select --install command)

  • GCC/G++ or Clang

  • the make utility (run sudo apt-get -y install make to install it)

Install using the Toolbox App

The JetBrains Toolbox App is the recommended tool to install JetBrains products. Use it to install and manage different products or several versions of the same product, including Early Access Program (EAP) and Nightly releases, update and roll back when necessary, and easily remove any tool. The Toolbox App maintains a list of all your projects to quickly open any project in the right IDE and version.

Install the Toolbox App

  1. Download the installer .exe from the Toolbox App web page.

  2. Run the installer and follow the wizard steps.

  3. After you run the Toolbox App, click its icon Toolbox App icon in the notification area and select which product you want to install.

    To install a specific version, click App actions more and select Available versions.

CLion in the Toolbox App

Log in to your JetBrains Account from the Toolbox App, and it will automatically activate the available licenses for any IDE that you install.

Install the Toolbox App

  1. Download the disk image .dmg from the Toolbox App web page.

  2. Mount the image and drag the JetBrains Toolbox app to the Applications folder.

  3. After you run the Toolbox App, click its icon in the main menu and select which product you want to install.

    To install a specific version, click App actions more and select Available versions.

CLion in the Toolbox App

Log in to your JetBrains Account from the Toolbox App, and it will automatically activate the available licenses for any IDE that you install.

Install the Toolbox App

  1. Download the tarball .tar.gz from the Toolbox App web page.

  2. Extract the tarball to a directory that supports file execution.

    For example, if the downloaded version is 1.17.7391, you can extract it to the recommended /opt directory using the following command:

    sudo tar -xzf jetbrains-toolbox-1.17.7391.tar.gz -C /opt
  3. Execute the jetbrains-toolbox binary from the extracted directory to run the Toolbox App.

    After you run the Toolbox App for the first time, it will automatically add the Toolbox App icon Toolbox App icon to the main menu.

  4. Select the product that you want to install.

    To install a specific version, click App actions more and select Available versions.

CLion in the Toolbox App

Log in to your JetBrains Account from the Toolbox App, and it will automatically activate the available licenses for any IDE that you install.

Standalone installation

You can install CLion manually and have the option to manage the location of every instance and all the configuration files. This is useful, for example, if you have a policy that requires specific install locations.

  1. Download the installer .exe.

  2. Run the installer and follow the wizard steps.

    On the Installation Options step, you can configure the following:

    • Create a desktop shortcut for launching CLion.

    • Add the directory with CLion command-line launchers to the PATH environment variable to be able to run them from any working directory in the Command Prompt.

    • Add the Open Folder as Project action to the system context menu (when you right-click a folder).

    • Associate specific file extensions with CLion to open them with a double click.

To run CLion, find it in the Windows Start menu or use the desktop shortcut. You can also run the launcher batch script or executable in the installation directory under bin.

  1. Download the ZIP archive

  2. Extract the archive to the desired folder.

To run CLion, use the launcher batch script or executable in the extracted directory under bin.

  1. Download the disk image.

  2. Mount the image and drag the CLion app to the Applications folder.

Run the CLion app from the Applications directory, Launchpad, or Spotlight.

  1. Download the tarball .tar.gz.

  2. Unpack the downloaded CLion-*.tar.gz archive. The recommended extract directory is /opt:

    sudo tar xvzf CLion-*.tar.gz -C /opt/
  3. Execute the CLion.sh from bin subdirectory to run CLion:

    sh /opt/clion-*/bin/clion.sh

To create a desktop entry, do one of the following:

  • On the Welcome screen, click Configure | Create Desktop Entry

  • From the main menu, click Tools | Create Desktop Entry

When you run CLion for the first time, you can take several steps to complete the installation, customize your instance, and start working with the IDE.

For more information, refer to Run CLion for the first time.

Silent installation on Windows

Silent installation is performed without any user interface. It can be used by network administrators to install CLion on a number of machines and avoid interrupting other users.

To perform silent install, run the installer with the following switches:

  • /S: Enable silent install

  • /CONFIG: Specify the path to the silent configuration file

  • /D: Specify the path to the installation directory

    This parameter must be the last in the command line, and it should not contain any quotes even if the path contains blank spaces.

For example:

clion.exe /S /CONFIG=d:\temp\silent.config /D=d:\IDE\CLion

To check for issues during the installation process, add the /LOG switch with the log file path and name between the /S and /D parameters. The installer will generate the specified log file. For example:

clion.exe /S /CONFIG=d:\temp\silent.config /LOG=d:\JetBrains\CLion\install.log /D=d:\IDE\CLion

Silent configuration file

You can download the default silent configuration file for CLion at https://download.jetbrains.com/cpp/silent.config

The silent configuration file defines the options for installing CLion. With the default options, silent installation is performed only for the current user: mode=user. If you want to install CLion for all users, change the value of the installation mode option to mode=admin and run the installer as an administrator.

The default silent configuration file is unique for each JetBrains product. You can modify it to enable or disable various installation options as necessary.

Install as a snap package on Linux

You can install CLion as a self-contained snap package. Since snaps update automatically, your CLion installation will always be up-to-date.

CLion is distributed via two channels:

  • The stable channel includes only stable versions. To install the latest stable release of CLion, run the following command:

    sudo snap install clion --classic

    The --classic option is required because the CLion snap requires full access to the system, like a traditionally packaged application.

  • The edge channel includes EAP builds. To install the latest EAP build of CLion, run the following command:

    sudo snap install clion --classic --edge

When the snap is installed, you can launch it by running the clion.sh command.

To list all installed snaps, you can run sudo snap list. For more information about other snap commands, refer to the Snapcraft documentation.

Last modified: 13 November 2023