--- type: docs title: "Initialize Dapr in your local environment" linkTitle: "Init Dapr locally" weight: 20 description: "Fetch the Dapr sidecar binaries and install them locally using `dapr init`" aliases: - /getting-started/set-up-dapr/install-dapr/ --- Now that you've [installed the Dapr CLI]({{}}), use the CLI to initialize Dapr on your local machine. Dapr runs as a sidecar alongside your application. In self-hosted mode, this means it is a process on your local machine. By initializing Dapr, you: - Fetch and install the Dapr sidecar binaries locally. - Create a development environment that streamlines application development with Dapr. Dapr initialization includes: 1. Running a **Redis container instance** to be used as a local state store and message broker. 1. Running a **Zipkin container instance** for observability. 1. Creating a **default components folder** with component definitions for the above. 1. Running a **Dapr placement service container instance** for local actor support. {{% alert title="Docker" color="primary" %}} The recommended development environment requires [Docker](https://docs.docker.com/install/). While you can [initialize Dapr without a dependency on Docker]({{}})), the next steps in this guide assume the recommended Docker development environment. You can also install [Podman](https://podman.io/) in place of Docker. Read more about [initializing Dapr using Podman]({{}}). {{% /alert %}} ### Step 1: Open an elevated terminal {{< tabs "Linux/MacOS" "Windows">}} {{% codetab %}} You will need to use `sudo` for this quickstart if: - You run your Docker commands with `sudo`, or - The install path is `/usr/local/bin` (default install path). {{% /codetab %}} {{% codetab %}} Run Windows Terminal or command prompt as administrator. 1. Right click on the Windows Terminal or command prompt icon. 1. Select **Run as administrator**. {{% /codetab %}} {{< /tabs >}} ### Step 2: Run the init CLI command Install the latest Dapr runtime binaries: ```bash dapr init ``` ### Step 3: Verify Dapr version ```bash dapr --version ``` **Output:** `CLI version: {{% dapr-latest-version cli="true" %}}`
`Runtime version: {{% dapr-latest-version long="true" %}}` ### Step 4: Verify containers are running As mentioned earlier, the `dapr init` command launches several containers that will help you get started with Dapr. Verify you have container instances with `daprio/dapr`, `openzipkin/zipkin`, and `redis` images running: ```bash docker ps ``` **Output:** ### Step 5: Verify components directory has been initialized On `dapr init`, the CLI also creates a default components folder that contains several YAML files with definitions for a state store, Pub/sub, and Zipkin. The Dapr sidecar will read these components and use: - The Redis container for state management and messaging. - The Zipkin container for collecting traces. Verify by opening your components directory: - On Windows, under `%UserProfile%\.dapr` - On Linux/MacOS, under `~/.dapr` {{< tabs "Linux/MacOS" "Windows">}} {{% codetab %}} ```bash ls $HOME/.dapr ``` **Output:** `bin components config.yaml`
{{% /codetab %}} {{% codetab %}} ```powershell explorer "%USERPROFILE%\.dapr\" ``` **Result:** {{% /codetab %}} {{< /tabs >}}
{{< button text="Next step: Use the Dapr API >>" page="getting-started/get-started-api.md" >}}