Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: MacPorts on Snow Leopard
Operating Systems OS X (Apple) MacPorts on Snow Leopard Post 302348992 by HoldenCaulfield on Sunday 30th of August 2009 05:52:47 PM
Old 08-30-2009
MacPorts on Snow Leopard

Hello everyone. I was previously using MacPorts 1.8 on Mac OS 10.5.8 without any problems and everything was working well.

I recently upgraded to Xcode 3.2 and Mac OS 10.6, since then my MacPorts installation has not been working at all. I deleted it and then reinstalled the .dmg from the MacPorts website which was for Snow Leopard. This one has not worked either. I currently deleted it, and now have no MacPorts.

Does anyone know how to fix this problem?
 

3 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. OS X (Apple)

Alpine 2 on Snow Leopard

I've just installed Alpine on Snow Leopard but can't seem to get a default spell checker configured for it. What happened to spell? I can't find it at all on 10.6, must have been some changes. Does anyone know about the default unix spell checker on SL? Thanks! (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: platz
0 Replies

2. OS X (Apple)

Installing Oracle 10g on Snow Leopard using this tutorial

This tutorial. Which is a lovely tutorial, really, and was working up until this instruction: Now download db.zip installation archive and place it somewhere and unzip it: mkdir Install cd Install # download db.zip to this directory unzip db.zip cd db/Disk1 I didn't know how to... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: khayraB
1 Replies

3. OS X (Apple)

Problem with mail attachment in Snow Leopard

Hi, We have few scripts that are run through jobs . It sends us daily reports (using mailx). This was working fine in Leopard. But in Snow Leopard there is problem with the attachments.Neither the attachment name is being displayed correctly(all it displays is "Mail Attachment") nor the format... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: adash
1 Replies
MDNSD(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 						  MDNSD(8)

NAME
mdnsd -- Multicast and Unicast DNS daemon SYNOPSIS
mdnsd DESCRIPTION
mdnsd (also known as mDNSResponder on some systems) is a daemon invoked at boot time to implement Multicast DNS and DNS Service Discovery. On Mac OS X 10.6 (Snow Leopard), mdnsd is also the system-wide Unicast DNS Resolver. mdnsd listens on UDP port 5353 for Multicast DNS Query packets. When it receives a query for which it knows an answer, mdnsd issues the appropriate Multicast DNS Reply packet. mdnsd also performs Unicast and Multicast DNS Queries on behalf of client processes, and maintains a cache of the replies. mdnsd has no user-specifiable command-line argument, and users should not run mdnsd manually. LOGGING There are several methods with which to examine mdnsd's internal state for debugging and diagnostic purposes. The syslogd(8) logging levels map as follows: Error - Error messages Warning - Client-initiated operations Notice - Sleep proxy operations Info - Informational messages By default, only log level Error is logged. A SIGUSR1 signal toggles additional logging, with Warning and Notice enabled by default: # pkill -USR1 mdnsd A SIGUSR2 signal toggles packet logging: # pkill -USR2 mdnsd A SIGINFO signal will dump a snapshot summary of the internal state to /var/log/system.log: # pkill -INFO mdnsd FILES
/usr/sbin/mdnsd SEE ALSO
dns-sd(1), pkill(1), syslogd(8) For information on Multicast DNS, see http://www.multicastdns.org/ For information on DNS Service Discovery, see http://www.dns-sd.org/ For information on how to use the Multicast DNS and the DNS Service Discovery APIs on Mac OS X and other platforms, see http://developer.apple.com/bonjour/ For the source code to mdnsd, see http://developer.apple.com/darwin/projects/bonjour/ HISTORY
The mdnsd daemon first appeared in Mac OS X 10.2 (Jaguar). Also available from the Darwin open source repository (though not officially supported by Apple) are mdnsd daemons for other platforms, including Mac OS 9, Microsoft Windows, Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD, Solaris, and other POSIX systems. BUGS
mdnsd bugs are tracked in Apple Radar component "mDNSResponder". BSD
February 27, 2011 BSD
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:27 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy