# Development environment installation ## Requirements The Zulip development environment can be installed on **macOS, Windows, and Linux** (Debian or Ubuntu recommended). You'll need at least **2GB of available RAM**. Installing the Zulip development environment requires downloading several hundred megabytes of dependencies, so you will need an **active, reasonably fast, internet connection throughout the entire installation processes.** You can [configure a proxy][configure-proxy] if you need one. ## Recommended setup (Vagrant) **For first-time contributors, we recommend using the [Vagrant development environment][install-vagrant]**. This method creates a virtual machine (for Windows and macOS) or a Linux container (otherwise) inside which the Zulip server and all related services will run. Vagrant adds a bit of overhead to using the Zulip development server, but provides an isolated environment that is easy to install, update, and uninstall. It has been well-tested and performs well. ## Advanced setup (non-Vagrant) Zulip also supports a wide range of ways to install the Zulip development environment: * On **Ubuntu** 18.04 Bionic, 16.04 Xenial and 14.04 Trusty and **Debian** 9 Stretch, you can easily **[install without using Vagrant][install-direct]**. * On **other Linux** distributions, you'll need to follow slightly different instructions to **[install manually][install-generic]**. * On **macOS and Linux** (Ubuntu recommended), you can install **[using Docker][install-docker]**, though support for this remains experimental. Unfortunately, the only supported method to install on Windows is the [Vagrant method][install-vagrant]. ## Slow internet connections If you have a very slow network connection, however, you may want to avoid using Vagrant (which involves downloading an Ubuntu virtual machine or Linux Container) and either [install directly][install-direct] (recommended), or use [the manual install process][install-generic] instead. These options only support Linux. An alternative option if you have poor network connectivity is to rent a cloud server and install the Zulip development environment for remote use. See the [next section][self-install-remote] for details. ## Installing remotely The Zulip development environment works well on remote virtual machines. This can be a good alternative for those with poor network connectivity or who have limited storage/memory on their local machines. We recommend giving the Zulip development environment its **own virtual machine**, running one of [the supported platforms for direct installation][install-direct], with at least **2GB of memory**. If the Zulip development environment will be the only thing running on the remote virtual machine, we recommend installing [directly][install-direct]. Otherwise, we recommend the [Vagrant][install-vagrant] method so you can easily uninstall if you need to. ## Next steps Once you've installed the Zulip development environment, you'll want to read these documents to learn how to use it: * [Using the Development Environment][using-dev-env] * [Testing][testing] (and [Configuring CI][ci]) And if you've setup the Zulip development environment on a remote machine, take a look at our tips for [developing remotely][dev-remote]. [dev-remote]: remote.html [install-direct]: ../development/setup-advanced.html#installing-directly-on-ubuntu-debian-centos-or-fedora [install-docker]: ../development/setup-advanced.html#using-docker-experimental [install-generic]: ../development/setup-advanced.html#installing-manually-on-linux [install-vagrant]: ../development/setup-vagrant.html [self-install-remote]: #installing-remotely [self-slow-internet]: #slow-internet-connections [configure-proxy]: ../development/setup-vagrant.html#specifying-a-proxy [using-dev-env]: using.html [testing]: ../testing/testing.html [ci]: ../git/cloning.html#step-3-configure-continuous-integration-for-your-fork