System Requirements

NetLogo 6.4.0 User Manual

NetLogo runs on almost any current computer.

If you have any trouble with NetLogo not working, see Contacting Us.

Application Requirements

Windows

NetLogo runs on Windows 11, 10, 8, 7, and Vista. NetLogo 5.2.1 was the last version to support Windows XP and Windows 2000.

The NetLogo installer for Windows includes Java 17 for NetLogo’s private use only. Other programs on your computer are not affected. NetLogo can run using a different Java installed on your system of version 11 or higher.

Mac OS X

Mac OS X 10.8.3 or newer is required. (NetLogo 5.1 was the last version to support 10.5 and 10.4; NetLogo 5.2.1 was the last version to support 10.6 and 10.7)

The NetLogo application contains a distribution of the Java 17 runtime for NetLogo’s private use only. Other programs on your computer will not be affected. NetLogo can run using a different Java installed on your system of version 11 or higher.

Linux

NetLogo should work on standard Debian-based and Red Hat-based Linux distributions. The NetLogo tarball includes a copy of the Java 17 runtime. NetLogo can run using a different Java installed on your system of version 11 or higher.

Start NetLogo by running the provided NetLogo executable.

3D Requirements

Occasionally an older, less powerful system is not able to use the 3D view or NetLogo 3D. Try it and see.

Some systems can use 3D but can’t switch to full-screen mode. It depends on the graphics card or controller. (For example, the ATI Radeon IGP 345 and Intel 82845 probably will not work.)

32-bit or 64-bit?

For most users on Linux or Windows, the 64-bit version of NetLogo is the simplest way to a working NetLogo installation. Most desktop and laptop computers made since 2005 are 64-bit.

If you have a computer that was made before 2006 you may need to use the 32-bit version of NetLogo instead. To determine whether your version of Windows is 64-bit, see Is my PC running the 32-bit or 64-bit version of Windows if you’re using Windows Vista, or Windows 7, or Which Windows operating system am I running? if you are running any other version of Windows.

For Linux users, the easiest way to determine whether your operating system is 64-bit is checking the output of

uname -m

If the output shows “x86_64” or “amd64”, you should be able to run the 64-bit version.