This is a snippet of what I see on a macOS machine: 1 ~ $ docker version 2 Client: Docker Engine - Community 3 Version: 19.03.8 4 API version: 1.40 5 Go version: go1.12.17 6 Git commit: afacb8b 7 Built: Wed Mar 11 01:21:11 2020 8 OS/Arch: darwin/amd64 9 Experimental: false 10 11 Server: Docker Engine - Community 12 Engine: 13 Version: 19.03.8 14 API version: 1.40 (minimum version 1.12) 15 Go version: go1.12.17 16 Git commit: afacb8b 17 Built: Wed Mar 11 01:29:16 2020 18 OS/Arch: linux/amd64 19 Experimental: false 20 21. After the installation, open a Terminal or, if you are on Windows, a PowerShell window and check if Docker was properly installed with: 1 docker version
File system check exit code is 8 os x 10.11.3 install#
I assume that you have Docker installed on your machine, if not go to the Docker website and install it.
![file system check exit code is 8 os x 10.11.3 file system check exit code is 8 os x 10.11.3](https://www.bitwarsoft.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/Fix-File-System-Check-Exit-Code-is-8-Error-on-Mac-1024x594.jpg)
I’ve tested the approach presented in this article on Windows 10, macOS Mojave and Ubuntu Linux. The last point is especially important if your host operating system is macOS, on which it is a really bad idea to directly install a binary Clang other than the one that comes with Xcode.
![file system check exit code is 8 os x 10.11.3 file system check exit code is 8 os x 10.11.3](https://www.bitwarsoft.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/File-Type.png)
Running Clang in a container has the advantage that it is light on resources and won’t mess with your underlying OS. If you want to try the latest stable version of Clang in a Docker container, you are in the right place. Solarian Programmer My programming ramblings Home Archives Contact Privacy Clang 10 in a Docker container for C++17 and C++20 development Posted on Decemby Paul