Mac Os X Tiger Manual
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A comprehensive manual is included with the zip archive. For Mac Users still on Mac OS X 10.5 and lower (Leopard, Tiger, etc.), you can download a Carbon version of Stereonet. Note that this version will not be kept up to date with the above Cocoa version.
Automator is an application developed by Apple Inc. for macOS used to create workflows for automating repetitive tasks into batches for quicker alteration via point-and-click (or drag and drop). This saves time and effort over human intervention to manually change each file separately. Automator enables the repetition of tasks across a wide variety of programs, including Finder, Safari, Calendar, Contacts and others. It can also work with third-party applications such as Microsoft Office, Adobe Photoshop or Pixelmator. The icon features a robot holding a pipe, a reference to pipelines, a computer science term for connected data workflows. Automator was first released with Mac OS X Tiger (10.4).[1][2]
After invoking Privoxy with --install, you will need to bring up the Windows service console to assign the user you want Privoxy to run under, and whether or not you want it to run whenever the system starts. You can start the Windows services console with the following command: services.msc. If you do not take the manual step of modifying Privoxy's service settings, it will not start. Note too that you will need to give Privoxy a user account that actually exists, or it will not be permitted to write to its log and configuration files.
To manually start or stop the privoxy service, use the Privoxy Utility for Mac OS X (also part of the macsetup module). This application can start and stop the privoxy service and display its log and configuration files.
If install finds previous versions of local configuration files, most of these will not be overwritten, and the new ones will be installed with a "new" extension. default.action and default.filter will be overwritten. You will then need to manually update the other installed configuration files as needed. The default template files will be overwritten. If you have customized, local templates, these should be stored safely in a separate directory and defined in config by the "templdir" directive. It is of course wise to always back-up any important configuration files "just in case". If a previous version of Privoxy is already running, you will have to restart it manually.
Please download the user's manual and the Mac installer from the Drivers and Manuals page. You will find more information in our user's manual for Mac users.Please send an email to support@pandawireless.com if you have any question(s).Note: The WPA Enterprise mode is not supported by the Mac software driver forOS X 10,9 or higher.
Apple has released Java 1.5 as a manual download with no plans to release J2SE 5.0 for earlier releases of Mac OS X. Which I guess means that its not going to show up in Software Update for quite some time. Additionally applications requiring J2SE 5.0 / JDK 1.5 must explicitly request version 1.5.
This is kind of a bummer - while I am glad to see that I will be able to code, and run Java 1.5 apps on my Mac - Java 1.5 was released about 9 months ago, and its finally just available as a manual download. This leaves me very curious as to why Apple doesn't want to make Java 1.5 the default JVM on Tiger. Does anyone have any thoughts on that?
Those are loose Mac OS 9.2.2 folders to ease manually setting up Classic Environment inside Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger or earlier. Normally, with your OSX native Mac, it would come with a Mac OS 9 CD to install Classic Environment, but if you've lost it or if your CD drive is defective or whatever, you could simply use one of the following generic Mac OS 9 System Folder to enable Classic Envionment on your PPC OSX computer (10.4 or earlier, not supported in 10.5 and above).
You can download either Miller Puckette's version of Pure Data, or Pd-extended. Miller's version of Pure Data is called "Pd-vanilla" because it has just the basic minimum set of functionality. It does not contain any external libraries or any of the features developed by the Pure Data community which are included in Pd-extended. We will use Pd-extended for this manual, so chose your installer from the "Pd-extended" section of this webpage.
As indicated, the Pd-extended.app is setup by default to load most of the included external libraries. If you want to change the libraries which are loaded at startup time, or any of the other startup settings, please notice the instructions here in the "ReadMe", and be sure to read the chapter "Configuring Pure Data" in this manual.
All debug information is also kept in main.log for the port you installed. Its path will be printed automatically if the installation fails. You can manually get the path using port logfile portname. Note that logfiles will automatically be deleted on successful installation.
MacPorts applies patch files automatically, but you may want to know how to apply patch files manually if you want to test patch files you have created or you wish to apply uncommitted Portfile patches.
Using a DESTDIR variable is a part of standard GNU coding practices, and this variable must be supported in an application's install routines for MacPorts' destroot phase to work without manual Portfile scripting or source patching. Urge developers to fully support DESTDIR in their applications.
The standard Tcl file command can be used for a number of operations on files, such as moving, renaming, deleting, or creating directories, among others. For a complete list, consult the Tcl reference manual for the file command, or the Tcl file manpage in the n section of manpages on your machine using man n file
If the project's developers do not tag their releases, they should be encouraged to do so. Until they do, or in the case in which an untagged development version has to be used, port maintainers have the possibility of specifying a git commit hash and manually set the version field. If the project does not assign version numbers the port maintainer has to define one. Such versions typically format the date of the chosen commit using the YYYYMMDD pattern. If, for example, the port maintainer decides to use a changeset with the hash 0ff25277c3842598d919cd3c73d60768, committed on April 1, 2014, then the following would be used:
We have already learned that launchd loads jobs automatically, daemons at boot time, agents when the user logs in. launchctl allows you to load jobs manually. The following example loads the agent com.example.error. It is an user agent, so we know its definition will be in ~/Library/LaunchAgents.
Finding out why a launchd job does not perform as expected can be a time consuming task if you have to do it manually. Using LaunchControl you can troubleshoot a job in a matter of seconds. Most of the time just selecting the job will highlight the problem and give advice on how to fix it.
The last command asks for your super user password. Now start the job manually in the second window and see what launchd has to say. The following example did not start because the script did not define an executing interpreter:
While the code is the same, the problem is a different one. launchd has executed the program specified in our job definition just fine, but the program exited with exit code 8. Unfortunately there is no way of knowing what this code means, as a programmer can choose arbitrary exit codes if he wants. Maybe the program uses standard exit codes, in which case you can use the Perl one-liner to get a description. If you are lucky the user manual of the program contains a list of all exit codes with an explanation. Otherwise ask the author about the meaning of the error code.
If you get a message Job failed to exec(3) for weird reason then you can get a description by moving your mouse cursor over the error code in the job list (See screenshot). If you get a message Exite with code then launchd started the job just fine. Its just that the program specified in the job definition exited with an error code. Unfortunately there is no way of knowing what this code means, as a programmer can choose arbitrary exit codes if he wants. Maybe the program uses standard exit codes, in which case you can trust the description LaunchControl provides. If you are lucky the user manual of the program contains a list of all exit codes with an explanation. Otherwise ask the author about the meaning of the error code.
If you're using Leopard (OS X 10.5) or Tiger (OS X 10.4), then it is possible to use the VPN-server-supplied DNS and WINS settings in addition to your manual settings by selecting "Set nameserver". However, your manual settings will always take precedence over any VPN server-supplied settings. If "Do not set nameserver" is selected, you will continue to use only your manually-configured settings and any VPN server-supplied settings will be ignored. "Take precedence" means that the manual DNS server will be used for all DNS queries unless it fails to answer, in which case the VPN server-supplied DNS server will be used.
If you set your DNS servers manually, then regardless of the state of "Set nameserver", your manual DNS servers, Search Domains, and WINS servers will always be the only ones used unless you set the configuration to "Allow changes to manually-set network settings".
Each of these settings is independent of the others: if "Set nameserver" is selected, those settings not configured manually will be replaced by the settings obtained from the VPN server. If "Do not set nameserver" is selected, then as with Leopard/Tiger, no DNS/WINS settings will be applied unless you set the configuration to "Allow changes to manually-set network setttings".
If your situation is not described above (e.g., if you use manual DNS settings and wish to use DNS servers at the far end of a tunnel when connected, or you wish to use the macOS ability to use different nameservers for different domains), you must create your own up/down scripts and select "Set nameserver". 2b1af7f3a8