vastgroup.blogg.se

Sierra menumeters
Sierra menumeters










  1. SIERRA MENUMETERS INSTALL
  2. SIERRA MENUMETERS PRO
  3. SIERRA MENUMETERS SOFTWARE
  4. SIERRA MENUMETERS CODE
  5. SIERRA MENUMETERS MAC

SIERRA MENUMETERS MAC

Certainly they are more expandable, repairable and upgradeable than any other Mac built since, with SATA SSD and PCI cards and graphic card upgrades readily available and easily installed.

SIERRA MENUMETERS PRO

For video editors, the Mac Pro Silver Tower is one of the best computers ever built. In terms of cost for performance, no current Mac whether iMac or iMac Pro can touch the 4,1 and 5,1 Silver Towers.

SIERRA MENUMETERS SOFTWARE

What’s especially wonderful is that both of them will still run the latest Apple OS and software perfectly, with just a bit of preparation. Start by Testing Your Hardware: Apple Hardware Test I’ll take you through the steps of a successful deployment of a 4,1 Silver Tower with High Sierra. The first thing you should do is test your hardware. This is easier said than done on older hardware. #MAC MENUMETERS SIERRA SOFTWARE#Īpple has some lovely software called Apple Hardware Test a.k.a. Normally you find AHT at this path /System/Library/CoreServices/.diagnostics There’s no joy in suffering through crashes which are hardware related, trying to debug your OS (software). Unfortunately, recent versions of the OS have not included AHT or at least not for older computers. Happily some enterprising Apple fans have collected all the versions of AHT out there for all kinds of Apple computers including Powermac, Powerbook, iBook, iMac, MacMini, MacPro, MacBook and MacBooks Pro.Īs we have mainly MacPros here from 4,1 generation, mostly upgraded to 5,1 firmware, we generally prefer the bundle which includes both 4,1 and 5,1 MacPros. Installing AHT should be as easy as just as just copying the.

SIERRA MENUMETERS INSTALL

Through OS X 10.10 that was all a user had to do to install a working AHT and then press D when restarting his or her Mac.īut since OS X 10.11 El Capitan, it’s not that easy. To be able to install any files at all to the System folder, first you must disable System Integrity Protection. Apple and third party sites will try to scare you off of turning off SIP. Apple OS X users got by for fifteen years without SIP so it’s not as big a deal as it sounds. Any malware clever enough to deploy on OS X will find a way to do so even with SIP turned on. SIP is just putting another lock on the door. Locks rarely stopped an expert burglar (he’ll just go through a window). If you have a solid OS X 10.11, 10.12 or 10.13 installation you will have a recovery partition which can be accessed as simply as pressing command-R while rebooting before the grey boot screen comes up.ĭisabling SIPįortunately turning off SIP is easier than it looks. This will take you to the recovery desktop which gives you access to a fully rooted Terminal app. Inside Terminal, you can check SIP status by typing csrutil status. If you see System Integrity Protection status: enabled. Then all I had to do was to, basically speaking, replace the occurrences of " NSMenuExtra" by " NSStatusItem", since the two APIs are almost the same.Isn’t it great when command line commands say what they do and do what they say? Graphic Card Limitations: Install a native Mac card for AHT and firmware updates Terminal will print a message which says Reboot to disable System Integrity Protection. So, how did I port MenuMeters to El Capitan, then? Well, I just gave up having ⌘-dragging. In El Capitan, Apple added a more stringent check of the allowed NSMenuExtra's, and MenuCracker no longer works. MenuCracker was an NSMenuExtra that pretended to be one of those allowed ones, which, once loaded inside SystemUIServer, removed these checks, so that more NSMenuExtras can be loaded without any problem. MenuMeters used this to inject their own NSMenuExtra's to SystemUIServer in fact MenuMeters' author is one of the main authors of MenuCracker.Įssentially, until Yosemite, SystemUIServer had a fixed list of allowed NSMenuExtras.

SIERRA MENUMETERS CODE

But until Yosemite, there was a known way to work around it, available as an open-source code as MenuCracker. But since 10.2, Apple had a code that blocked SystemUIServer to load non-system-provided NSMenuExtra's. In fact until and including OS X 10.1, Apple allowed it. But this happened later than the need to port MenuMeters to El Capitan 10.11.)Īnyway, due to this better behavior of NSMenuExtra's, people often wanted to write their own. (On macOS Sierra 10.12, Apple finally implemented and enabled ⌘-dragging for all NSStatusItem's, including this port of MenuMeters.

sierra menumeters

I have no idea why ⌘-dragging was not provided for the latter by the system.

sierra menumeters

One good thing about the former is that you can rearrange them by ⌘-dragging the menu items. The latter can be displayed by any app written by any developer. The former are loaded and displayed by SystemUIServer, a process provided by the system. There are in fact two types of such menu bar items, one known as NSMenuExtra's and another known as NSStatusItem's. As you very well know and is shown in the screenshot above, there can be various utilities put on the right hand side of the menu bar.












Sierra menumeters