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Tiger to Leopard Upgrade on PPC
Anyone upgraded OSX from Tiger (v 10.4.11) to Leopard (v. 10.5.8) on PowerPC G5 hardware?
I need to upgrade my iMac to Leopard so I can install the current version of Eclipse and the Android development plug-in for Eclipse. I can't find a way to get this working on Tiger, so I need up upgrade to Leopard.
The Android SDK is not supported on PPC, but the Android Eclipse plug-in should work, I hope!
Are Mac OS X 10.4.11 Tiger passwords only stored in /var/db/shadow/hash? Or is it also used in NetInfo?
The reason I am asking is because I wonder if I edit the file in /var/db/shadow/hash and replace the hash inside with my own, will it change the password?
Thanks. (0 Replies)
Hi!
A bug on X11 leopard prevent me from using a program through ssh channel. My unix guru suggest me to install X11 tiger, in which the bug is absent.
So I tried to follow the step given by Ben Byer.
My problem is simple, the first step :
sudo launchctl unload -w... (4 Replies)
Hi everybody.
Im a starter on Unix systems.. i need check some security issues on UNIX server something like: ports, last patches, users acount, etc.
I need do that, before the server wil be on production enviorement.
i Found a tool that i guess does that... TARA.
Somebody works with... (0 Replies)
I've downloaded Xcode and i've done :
which "gcc"
which "ggc-4.0"
and which "c99"
all were found in /usr/bin/
however with the script
#include <stdio.h>
main()
{
printf("hello, world\n");
}
and when I, in command line use the command while in my home dir:
gcc cprog.c -o cprog (4 Replies)
here is the very simple bob.c:
main()
{
printf("hello");
}
i use tiger and i use the command:
gcc bob.c
and the end result:
bob.c: In function ‘main':
bob.c:3: warning: incompatible implicit declaration of built-in function /‘printf'
any help appreciated, i'm just starting... (4 Replies)
I was installing gdm on the terminal application and my ISP disconnected. When I reconnected and tried to continue the installation, I got the following message:
Waiting for lock on... (0 Replies)
Question:
Can I run a UNIX executable on Mac OS X Tiger?
If so, how is it done?
Background:
I FTP'd my schools UNIX server some C++ code and header files. Then I used Telnet to get g++ to compile them.
I then FTP'd the UNIX executable back to my PowerBook G4.
I've already... (4 Replies)
KEXTLOAD(8) BSD System Manager's Manual KEXTLOAD(8)NAME
kextload -- load kernel extensions (kexts) into the kernel
SYNOPSIS
kextload [options] [--] [kext ...]
DESCRIPTION
The kextload program is used to explicitly load kernel extensions (kexts). For most kexts, kextload must run as the superuser (root). Kexts
installed under /System/ with an OSBundleAllowUserLoad property set to true may be loaded via kextload by non-root users.
Notice: On Mac OS X 10.6 (Snow Leopard), the developer functionality of kextload has moved to the new program kextutil(8); all developer-
related options have been removed from kextload and are no longer recognized. On Mac OS X 10.6 (Snow Leopard), kextload simply forwards a
load request to kextd(8), which performs all communication with the kernel.
kextload is a formal interface for kext loading in all versions of Darwin OS and Mac OS X. Software and installers can rely on its presence
and invoke it in order to load kexts. Note that long options are present as of Mac OS X 10.6 (Snow Leopard).
Mac OS X 10.6 (Snow Leopard) introduces C functions for loading kexts: KextManagerLoadKextWithIdentifier() and KextManagerLoadKextWithURL(),
which are described in Apple's developer documentation.
ARGUMENTS AND OPTIONS
kext The pathname of a kext bundle to load. The kext's plugins are available for dependency resolution. Kexts can also be specified by
CFBundleIdentifier with the -bundle-id option.
-b identifier, -bundle-id identifier
Look up the kext whose CFBundleIdentifier is identifier within the set of known kexts and load it. The kext of the highest
CFBundleVersion with the given identifier is used; in the case of version ties, the last such kext specified on the command line is
used. See the -dependency and -repository options for more information.
-d kext, -dependency kext
Add kext and its plugins to the set of known kexts for resolving dependencies. This is useful for adding a single kext from a
directory while excluding the others. See the -repository option for more information.
-h, -help
Print a help message describing each option flag and exit with a success result, regardless of any other options on the command
line.
-q, -quiet
Quiet mode; print no informational or error messages.
-r directory, -repository directory
Use directory as a repository of kexts. This adds to the set of known kexts for resolving dependencies or looking up by CFBundleI-
dentifier when using the -bundle-id option. This is not recursive; only kexts directly within the directory, and their plugins, are
scanned. See also the -dependency option.
-v [0-6 | 0x####], -verbose [0-6 | 0x####]
Verbose mode; print information about program operation. Higher levels of verbosity include all lower levels. You can specify a
level from 0-6, or a bitmask of flags as a hexadecimal number prefixed with 0x (as described in kext_logging(8)). Because kextload
messages kextd(8), to perform the actual work of loading, the decimal levels 1-6 generally have little effect. You may wish to use
kextutil(8) if you want verbose output about the kext loading operation.
-- End of all options. Only kext names follow.
EXAMPLES
To load a kext, run kextload and supply a kext bundle name; no options are required:
kextload TabletDriver.kext
Alternatively, you can use the -bundle-id (-b) option to specify a kext by its CFBundleIdentifier:
kextload -bundle-id com.mycompany.driver.TabletDriver
With no additional options kextload looks in the extensions directories (/System/Library/Extensions/ and /Library/Extensions/) for a kext
with the given CFBundleIdentifier. Adding repository directories with the -repository option or individual kexts with the -dependency option
expands the set of kexts that kextload looks among for dependency resolution and for loading by bundle identifier:
kextload -repository /Applications/MyApp.app/Contents/Resources
TabletDriver.kext
FILES
/System/Library/Extensions/ The standard system repository of kernel extensions
/Library/Extensions/ The standard repository of non Apple kernel extensions
DIAGNOSTICS
kextload exits with a zero status if all kexts specified load successfully (or are already loaded). If any kext fails to load, kextload
prints an error message for that kext, continues trying to load any remaining kexts, then exits with a nonzero status.
For a kext to be loadable, it must be valid, authenticated, and all dependencies of the kext must be available and loadable. A valid kext
has a well formed bundle, info dictionary, and an executable built for the running kernel's architecture. An authentic kext's component
files, not including plugins, are owned by root:wheel, with permissions nonwritable by group and other. If your kext fails to load, try
using kextutil(8) to examine the kext for problems.
SEE ALSO kextcache(8), kextd(8), kextstat(8), kextunload(8), kextutil(8), kext_logging(8)Darwin November 14, 2012 Darwin