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Operating Systems OS X (Apple) Are you sure you want to quit Safari? Post 303032437 by Neo on Monday 18th of March 2019 07:28:46 AM
Old 03-18-2019
Quote:
Originally Posted by hicksd8
I appreciate that what I pointed to is really old stuff but I do know that a top design agency which uses lots of Macs and Linux workstations has UPS's installed that, when a power outage occurs, runs the whole studio on battery backup for an hour and then lands all the boxes gracefully. Failure to land gracefully is not an option. They use Safari all the time so how does that work? The APC service runs a script to shutdown.

That has little to do with the issue I am having with Safari, Dennis, and the preferences switches in a 2008 has nearly zero to do with a Mac in 2019.

ROTFL Eleven years... that was Mac OS X 10.5, Leopard. , now it is Mac OS 10.14, Mojave.... the OS is very different animal, the preferences are very different. Eleven years!

Honestly, I can Google as well as the next guy and saw that 2009 link you shared before I asked the question. That's why I asked the question; because I could not find the answer on the net. What I need is info some some modern day MacOS user who knows how to get Mojave set up so Safari quits without a popup warning.

Thanks anyway Smilie
 
APCSMART-OLD(8) 						    NUT Manual							   APCSMART-OLD(8)

NAME
apcsmart-old - Driver for American Power Conversion Smart Protocol UPS equipment SYNOPSIS
apcsmart-old -h apcsmart-old -a UPS_NAME [OPTIONS] Note This man page only documents the hardware-specific features of the apcsmart-old driver. For information about the core driver, see nutupsdrv(8). SUPPORTED HARDWARE
apcsmart-old should recognize all recent APC models that use a serial protocol at 2400 bps. This is primarily the Smart-UPS, Matrix-UPS and Back-UPS Pro lines. The driver attempts to support every bell and whistle of the APC reporting interface, whether or not this is strictly sensible. Some older hardware may only report a handful of variables. This is usually not a bug--they just don't support anything else. CABLING
This driver expects to see a 940-0024C cable or a clone by default. You can switch to the 940-0095B dual-mode cable support with the cable= definition described below. If your 940-0024C cable is broken or missing, use this diagram to build a clone: http://www.networkupstools.org/cables/940-0024C.jpg EXTRA ARGUMENTS
This driver supports the following optional settings in the ups.conf(5): cable=940-0095B Configure the serial port for the APC 940-0095B dual-mode cable. sdtype=num Use shutdown type num, according to this table: 0 soft shutdown or powerdown, depending on battery status 1 soft shutdown followed by powerdown 2 instant power off 3 power off with grace period 4 "force OB" hack method for CS 350 Modes 0 and 1 will power up the load when power returns. Modes 2 and 3 will keep the load turned off when the power returns. Mode 4 exploits an oddity in the CS 350 models since they only seem to support the S command, but then only when running on battery. As a result, the driver will force the UPS to go on battery if necessary before sending the shutdown command. This ensures that the load gets reset. BUGS
Some older APC UPS models return bogus data in the status register during a front panel test. This is usually detected and discarded, but some other unexpected values have occasionally slipped through. APC UPS models with both USB and serial ports require a power cycle when switching from USB communication to serial, and perhaps vice versa. AUTHOR
Nigel Metheringham <Nigel.Metheringham@Intechnology.co.uk> (drawing heavily on the original apcsmart driver by Russell Kroll). This driver was called newapc for a time and was renamed in the 1.5 series. In 2.6.2 the driver was renamed to apcsmart-old, being superseded by updated version with new features. SEE ALSO
The core driver: nutupsdrv(8) Internet resources: The NUT (Network UPS Tools) home page: http://www.networkupstools.org/ Network UPS Tools 05/21/2012 APCSMART-OLD(8)
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