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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
 
INSTALL-XPI(1)						     mozilla-devscripts suite						    INSTALL-XPI(1)

NAME
install-xpi - installs a xpi file into a Debian package SYNOPSIS
install-xpi [options] xpi-file DESCRIPTION
install-xpi is a helper tool for packaging XUL extensions. It installs the given xpi file into the correct directory and creates the required links based on the data in the install.rdf file. It corrects the file permissions unless --preserve-permissions is specified. install-xpi will create a configuration file in /etc if the XUL extension provides one or more preferences files in defaults/preferences. The configuration file contains only a description where to find the overridable preferences. debian/package.js is used as configuration file instead if it exists. The placeholder @INSTALLDIR@ is replaces by the actual installation directory. You can disable the creation of a system configuration file with --disable-system-prefs. OPTIONS
--disable-system-prefs Do not create a system preference file in /etc. -x file, --exclude=file The specified file from the xpi file will not be installed. You can use this parameter several times. -h, --help Display a brief help message. -i directory, --install-dir=directory The xpi file will be installed in the specified directory. directory must be an absolute path. Use this parameter with care. -l directory, --link=directory An additional link from the directory to the installation directory of the extension will be created. You can use this parameter several times. -p package, --package=package The xpi file will be installed in the specified binary package. If this parameter is not provided, the first binary package listed in debian/control will be used. --preserve-permissions The permissions of the files in the xpi file will not be modified. If this parameter is not provided, install-xpi will try to cor- rect the permissions of the files to 644 (files that starts with a shebang will be corrected to 755). -r, --remove-license-files Files with names like copying, licence, or license will not be installed. -v, --verbose Print more information. AUTHOR
Benjamin Drung <bdrung@debian.org> install-xpi January 2010 INSTALL-XPI(1)
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