While MacOSX is very similar to Linux, there are some differences.
#Xampp or mamp for mac install#
My personal recommendation is that your dev environment should be as close to your live environment as sensibly possible.įor most people this means Linux, so run a VM (or external test server), preferably using the same distribution as your live server and use the same package repos to install things from. The things you need to pay attention to most are the versions they distribute (and which MySQL distribution they use - Oracle, Percona or MariaDB - there's not much difference between Oracle MySQL and Percona MySQL, but MariaDB has some significant differences) XAMPP is pretty much just another WAMP installer with an easier to google name.Īt the end of the day, it doesn't matter too much which you run. There are a number of installers that refer to themselves as "WAMP" or "WAMP" or "WAMP".
Ich habe mich am Ende fr XAMPP entschieden, weil ich die dba-Erweiterung brauchte.
Im Gegensatz zu XAMPP, MAMP funktioniert ohne Administratorrechte. Aber fr ein Entwicklungssystem zhlt das nicht viel. Andererseits sieht MAMP etwas Mac-hnlicher aus und hat ein Dashboard-Widget. There are a number of different installers that attempt to make installing and running an *AMP stack easier. Auch XAMPP hat mehr Erweiterungen eingebaut. WAMP is Windows, MAMP is MacOS, LAMP is Linux (which you tend not to see bundled installers for in the same way because the AMP stack is usually easy to install from your distribution directly). Take USB thumb drive and connect it to the Mac running MAMP. Move file created in Step 6 (ie 'WebProject.zip) to USB thumb drive. Insert a new USB thumb drive in your Windows PC. Right click on folder from Step 1, Send To -> Compressed Folder. In general *AMP refers to a -Apache-MySQL-PHP(/Perl/Python) stack. Repeat the above 4 steps for each project you would like to migrate.