macOS
brew install trezor-bridgelocal Homebrew formula metadata
brew
Trezor Communication Daemon. Version 2.0.33 via Homebrew; verified 2026-06-25.
install
brew install trezor-bridgelocal Homebrew formula metadata
winget install --id SatoshiLabs.TrezorBridge -eWindows Package Manager source index · SatoshiLabs.TrezorBridge · source: cdn.winget.microsoft.com
overview
Trezor Communication Daemon
history
Trezor Bridge, implemented by the `trezord-go` communication daemon, is the small local service that historically let browser-based Trezor software talk to a USB hardware wallet. Its history is tied to the migration from Chrome apps and browser extensions toward WebUSB and later toward Trezor Suite's built-in bridge behavior.
The `trezord-go` README describes Trezor Bridge as a tiny HTTP server that allows webpages such as Trezor Suite in web mode to communicate directly with a Trezor device. It explains that newer devices support WebUSB, but the Bridge remains relevant for Firefox, older firmware that only supports HID, and synchronization of USB access between domains.
In February 2018, Trezor announced a new Bridge that was rewritten from scratch in more modern code and positioned it as the first part of the transition away from Chrome apps. The announcement told existing Bridge users to update, new users to install it through the wallet, and Trezor Connect users of applications such as MyEtherWallet, MyCrypto, and NEM NanoWallet to update so those applications could keep communicating with Trezor devices.
Later in 2018, Trezor described WebUSB as the answer for Chrome users who did not want a separate communication tool. Trezor Model T supported WebUSB from its initial release, and Trezor One firmware 1.7.1 added WebUSB support for Trezor Wallet and Trezor Password Manager so Chrome users could connect without Trezor Bridge.
Bridge adoption came from a practical browser gap: hardware-wallet users needed a local transport that browser wallet applications could call, especially as Chrome apps were being phased out and Firefox did not expose WebUSB. That made the daemon part of the normal setup story for browser-based Trezor workflows.
For package managers, Trezor Bridge is unusual because it packages a vendor communication daemon rather than a general-purpose CLI. Homebrew users install it to make local wallet/browser interactions work; developers and advanced users may also build `trezord-go` from source, install Linux udev rules, or run it in debug mode for local development.
At runtime, Bridge listens locally and mediates communication between supported webpages and the USB device. The official README frames it as needed for Firefox, for devices with 2018-and-older firmware that support HID but not WebUSB, and for coordinating USB access across domains.
From a package-nerd perspective, `trezor-bridge` is mostly a background dependency: install it, ensure the daemon is running, and then use Trezor Suite web mode or compatible Trezor Connect applications. Source users build `trezord-go`, run `./trezord-go -h`, and on Linux install the official Trezor udev rules when not using pre-built packages.
Trezor Bridge matters because it is a concrete example of the browser/device boundary leaking into package managers. A small local HTTP daemon became the compatibility layer between USB HID/WebUSB realities, browser security decisions, and cryptocurrency wallet UX.
It also explains why some packages are important despite having little interactive surface: the executable `trezord-go` is infrastructure for other tools. In Homebrew, its value is that it makes a hardware wallet visible to web and desktop wallet workflows without requiring users to understand the transport details.
security posture
formula declares a Homebrew service.
orange risk · medium confidence · infrastructure
Before unattended agent use, check whether the tool reads plaintext credentials, writes remote state, publishes artifacts, or shells out to plugins.
executables
| Command | Kind | Exposure | Note |
|---|---|---|---|
trezord-go | cli | global executable |
freshness
These signals separate page generation age, package-manager activity, and upstream release comparison. Version lag is warned only when an evidence URL and comparable versions are present.
https://github.com/trezor/trezord-go
install metadata
| Package key | brew:trezor-bridge |
|---|---|
| Version | 2.0.33 |
| Package manager | Homebrew |
| Package manager page | https://formulae.brew.sh/formula/trezor-bridge |
| Homepage | https://github.com/trezor/trezord-go |
| Repository | https://github.com/trezor/trezord-go |
| Upstream docs | https://github.com/trezor/trezord-go#readme |
| License | LGPL-3.0-only |
| Source archive | https://github.com/trezor/trezord-go/archive/refs/tags/v2.0.33.tar.gz |
| Last updated | 2026-06-25T15:07:37Z |
| Pulse | updated |
| Build dependencies | go |
| Bottle | available (on arm64_linux, arm64_sequoia, arm64_sonoma, arm64_tahoe, sonoma, x86_64_linux) |
| Homebrew post-install | not defined |
| Service | declared |
registry facts
| Source Database | Homebrew formula API |
|---|---|
| Tap | homebrew/core |
| Full Name | trezor-bridge |
| Version Scheme | 0 |
| Revision | 1 |
| Bottle Stable Root URL | https://ghcr.io/v2/homebrew/core |
| Deprecated | no |
| Disabled | no |
| Keg Only | no |
| URL Keys |
|
source database matches
Matches are pulled from external package-manager indexes and kept separate from local Automic Vault package links.
SatoshiLabs.TrezorBridge
winget install --id SatoshiLabs.TrezorBridge -esource trail
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View the package source record on GitHub.