# Building from Source Pre-built binaries are available for download for a variety of supported platforms through the [HashiCorp Releases website](https://releases.hashicorp.com/terraform/). However, if you'd like to build Terraform yourself, you can do so using the Go build toolchain and the options specified in this document. ## Prerequisites 1. Ensure you've installed the Go language version specified in [`.go-version`](https://github.com/hashicorp/terraform/blob/main/.go-version). 2. Clone this repository to a location of your choice. ## Terraform Build Options Terraform accepts certain options passed using `ldflags` at build time which control the behavior of the resulting binary. ### Dev Version Reporting Terraform will include a `-dev` flag when reporting its own version (ex: 1.5.0-dev) unless `version.dev` is set to `no`: ``` go build -ldflags "-w -s -X 'github.com/hashicorp/terraform/version.dev=no'" -o bin/ . ``` ### Experimental Features Experimental features of Terraform will be disabled unless `main.experimentsAllowed` is set to `yes`: ``` go build -ldflags "-w -s -X 'main.experimentsAllowed=yes'" -o bin/ . ``` In the official build process for Terraform, experiments are only allowed in alpha release builds. We recommend that third-party distributors follow that convention in order to reduce user confusion. ## Go Options For the most part, the Terraform release process relies on the Go toolchain defaults for the target operating system and processor architecture. ### `CGO_ENABLED` One exception is the `CGO_ENABLED` option, which is set explicitly when building Terraform binaries. For most platforms, we build with `CGO_ENABLED=0` in order to produce a statically linked binary. For MacOS/Darwin operating systems, we build with `CGO_ENABLED=1` to avoid a platform-specific issue with DNS resolution.