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Archive for the ‘Mac Support’ Category

Filenames and Paths in Mac OS X

May 23rd, 2007

Since I am our sole Mac Administrator where I work, and our company produces and supports Mac software in addition to using a small number internally for graphic work, I’m often asked questions about Macintosh filenames and path names in OS X. What follows is what I’ve learned and gleaned during my administrative efforts and support activities, and I suspect is in no way a comprehensive discussion of file and path names on Mac OS X. However, it should answer most of the more common questions I’ve received over the years.

If the file is located on the disk OS X boots from, you should start the path name with a simple slash “/”. For example, the path to the Terminal application would be specified as:

/Applications/Utilities/Terminal.app

If the file is on a different disk, however, the syntax is a bit different. All the disks attached to your Mac are represented with virtual directories under the “/Volumes” directory. So if you had a file named “information.txt” which resides in a folder called “Data” on a disk drive called “Workdisk” you would specify the path as:

/Volumes/Workdisk/Data/information.txt

If you want to specify a file that’s on a mounted network volume, it’s a little trickier because you need to know the name the Mac used to mount the disk in the “Volumes” directory. To do this, I would first execute the command:

ls /Volumes

This will generate a result something like the following:

Macintosh HD     Storage      Workdisk

Let’s assume that the “Storage” volume is a shared directory on a Windows server that we’ve already connected to. Let’s also assume that the file we’re going to access from the command line is named “confidential.rtf” and that it’s inside the directory “SecureDocs” which is itself inside a directory called “MacFiles1″ on the Windows server. Our path in this case would look like this:

/Volumes/Storage/MacFiles1/SecureDocs/confidential.rtf

There are a couple of “gotchas” here that I haven’t mentioned, intentionally, to keep the examples straightforward up to this point. Let’s now have a look at some of those little gotchas, because the odds are that you’re going to see them pretty soon in your use of the OS X command line.

One of the first gotchas I ran into is the fact that you can use spaces in file and folder names on OS X, but that OS X’s UNIX command line doesn’t handle spaces in the same way that Windows XP and Windows Vista do. Windows XP, for example, is perfectly happy with being given a path like this on the command line:

C:\Program Files\Apple\QuickTime Pro\sample.mov

XP will, at least in most cases, figure out what you mean. OS X, however, will treat the spaces in the command line as if they are part of the syntax of the command. For example, if you were to enter the path:

/Applications/QuickTime Tools/Some file.txt

OS X is going to think your path name is actually several parts:

/Applications/QuickTime
Tools/Some
file.txt

And it’s going to at the very least generate an error, and in a worst case perform actions on the wrong files and folders. If you need to specify a path with spaces in it on the OS X command line, you need to “help” OS X understand that the spaces are a part of the path. There are two ways to do this, and there are circumstances where one may work better than the other (which you’ll have to figure out through experimentation).

The first and simplest option is to simply put quotes around the path. Referring back to the previous example path, that would look something like this:

“/Applications/QuickTime Tools/Some file.txt”

The double-quotes help OS X understand that the entire string between the two quotation marks is a single entity. As I mentioned, there are circumstances where this is your best option. There are others, such as in scripting, where you may find that for some reason it simply doesn’t work as expected. In that case, you’ll want to use the alternative method.

The alternative is to place a backslash “\” in front of each space. Referring back to our previous example, that would look like this:

/Applications/QuickTime\ Tools/Some\ file.txt

In this case, the backslashes tell OS X to treat the following space as a part of the current string it’s working with. This same technique can be useful if your filename contains other characters that could potentially confuse the command line, such as the apostrophe or single quote (’), the quotation mark or double-quote (”), or others. If you enter a path name that OS X doesn’t like, you’ll very likely get an error message or unexpected result. That will often be your clue to check the characters in the path name.

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admin Mac Support

Find Out What an Installer Put on Your Mac

November 5th, 2005

Ever wonder what actually got installed on your Macintosh when you
applied an Apple Software Update, installed an application, or applied a
patch?   Ever need to “completely remove” a Mac OS X
application but weren’t sure how to find everything it installed (not
everything goes in the “Applications” folder!)?  This
article will help you solve that little problem.

Read more…

admin Mac Support

Reducing CPU Use by OS X’s World Clock Dashboard Widget

September 22nd, 2005

As discussed in another article
on this web site
, the OS X World Clock Dashboard widget can become a
severe drain on system resources if it’s left active on the screen for
long periods of time since the last reboot.  Even when it has just
been started up on a freshly rebooted system, it uses quite a bit of
CPU.

For example, here’s what Activity Monitor showed me when
I launched the World Clock Widget on a 933 MHz G4 running MacOS X
10.4.2:

As
you can see, CPU usage is in the 7-10% range.  If left on screen
long enough, it will grow to as much as 80-85% of the CPU while it’s
active (0% when not shown on screen).  It will also consume quite a
bit of RAM, potentially all the RAM on the system.

If you
make the changes I’m going to suggest below, you can reduce that CPU
usage considerably (though the Widget will still gradually increase its
CPU and RAM usage over time for reasons I haven’t figured out). 
The Activity Monitor image below is what resource consumption looks like
on the modified World Clock:

The first “World Clock DashboardClient” process
above is mine (the one that’s using 1.30% of the CPU).  The second
“World Clock DashboardClient” process is an unchanged OS X
10.4 World Clock widget that has been left running on-screen for the
better part of 4 days.  As you can see, it’s grabbed about 80% of
the CPU, 200MB of RAM, and 350MB of virtual memory.  My modified
client (which hasn’t been running very long) is using a lot less CPU and
RAM (though it shares whatever is wrong in the unmodified widget that
increases CPU and RAM usage over time – but it seems not to consume them
as quickly).

My changes reduce CPU consumption from 7-8% down
to about 1.2%.  You still have a second-hand, but you are
eliminating the “sweep” (or “wiggle”) the
second-hand does as it revolves around the clock.  Apparently that
sweeping action increases the widget’s CPU usage by around 600%. 
(Making it a good example of why I hate little utilities that do cutesy
graphical changes to the system or OS features that waste lots of CPU
just to animate things.)

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admin Mac Support , , , , , ,

OS X World Clock Widget Resource Problem

September 20th, 2005

(There are updates for 9/21 and 9/22/05 that appear after
the graphs and charts on this page. Don’t miss them, because they help
wrap this little project up…)

Last Thursday I was
running a compile of an open source package on a 933 MHz Macintosh G4
running Mac OS X 10.4.2 with all of Apple’s latest patches and
updates.  The compilation seemed to be going more slowly than I
expected, so I wondered if it was really using all of the available
CPU.  I brought up the Activity Monitor and saw THIS:

World Clock was consuming over 46% of my CPU?! That seemed very wrong
to me, since World Clock does nothing more than display the current time
somewhere on Earth.  Why would it need 46% of my CPU to do
that?  I figured maybe the process had been corrupted by a power
outage or some other problem.  I used Activity Monitor to stop the
process, which restarted itself automatically.

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admin Mac Support , , , , ,

OS X Font Headaches

August 25th, 2005

Given that Mac OS X has virtually nothing in common with its
predecessor, Mac OS 9, the fact that Apple managed to build it to
support all the same font types OS 9 did is quite an impressive
undertaking.  On the other hand, they had to support legacy fonts
or graphic designers would have stayed away in droves.  Most
designers and shops have invested so much money in Mac fonts over the
years that re-purchasing the fonts in some new format would have made an
OS X upgrade cost-prohibitive.

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admin Mac Support , , , ,

Selective Automatic OS X Software Updates

July 27th, 2005

Back when I began doing OS X
administration, I asked myself how I could automatically keep the OS X
systems updated without having to login to them remotely each day to run
Software Update and without giving end users administrator access to the
machines (which is a no-no in our corporate security policy). I found
out that Apple makes it pretty easy to do this with the command line,
which means it can be setup to run in a cron job.

For instance, to automatically get all the latest required
updates from Apple installed on a machine without having to do it
manually, you can create a cron task to issue the following command as
root:

softwareupdate -q -i
-r

This works fine for most
users, most of the time. Unfortunately, what if you’re a QuickTime Pro
user and Apple puts out a QuickTime update marked as
“required”? That’s right, Software Update will dutifully
download the new version and install it over top of the version you’re
registered for. Unless you have the time and money to call them and buy
a new registration code for the new version of QuickTime, your
“Pro” features are all locked down again.

This is precisely the situation Apple placed me in as an
administrator a while ago. One of our artists’ machines was
automatically updated to Quicktime 7.0 from 6.5.2 Pro, rendering the
“Pro” functionality inactive. Because of the way things work
in our corporate environment, it’s not a quick or simple process for him
to just buy the new registration code. It means a lengthy purchase
process that can take weeks, sometimes even months. An artist can’t do
without QuickTime for that long. But as the Mac Administrator, I
couldn’t do without the systems getting their security updates for that
long. Apple had once again put me in a bind.

Read more…

admin Mac Support , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

OS X Script to Create a User from the Command Line

June 15th, 2005

If you ever need
to set up a local user account on a remote machine from the command
line, this script can help.  It will allow you to create a local
account on the machine you’re running it on, whether it’s local or
remote.  


To use the
script, login as root and run the script.  Follow the prompts and
when it’s finished, the account will be created on the screen.  If
you tell the script to create the account as an administrator account,
it will add the user to the admin group on the machine.

As to
what this script is doing behind the scenes, it’s essentially this…
First, it’s prompting the user for the information needed to create the
account, such as the short name for the account, the first and last
names of the user, a user ID number, and an initial password.  Then
it encrypts the password provided using openssl encryption.  After
that, it asks if the user needs administrator rights to the
machine. 

Based on the above information, the script
then calls the NetInfo utility (niutil) to create the user account in
the system.  If the user is to be an administrator, it adds them to
the appropriate group in NetInfo. 

If this is all the
script did, you’d only have a “partially working” account on
the system.  In order for the account to be “fully
working” the newly-created user needs a home directory in the
“/Users” directory on the boot drive.  Normally, when a
user is created in the GUI, OS X pulls a “clean” home
directory from the “/System/Library/User
Template/English.lproj” (for systems running with the English
language at least) directory and copies it into the “/Users”
directory in a directory matching the account’s “short
name”.  The last portion of the script replicates this
behavior and changes ownership of the newly-created user directory to
the newly-created user.  This should be all that is necessary for
the user to login to the Macintosh.


While this
script has been tested on OS X 10.3.9 and is believed to work properly,
no warranty is expressed or implied.  If this script works for you,
fantastic!   If not, I accept no responsibility for what
happens.  By downloading and using the script, you accept all
responsibility for any consequences from using it.

Read more…

admin Mac Support , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

OS X System Optimization Script

June 3rd, 2005

The script below combines the functions of several others on this
site into one “optimization” script.  It cleans up the
various caches, updates prebindings to improve system performance,
repairs permissions on the startup disk, and reboots the
computer.

It must be run with administrator privileges in order to
work properly.

As with all my scripts, this one is offered
“as is” without warranty or support.  If you choose to
use it, you accept all liability and responsibility for whatever might
happen to your system (good or bad).

Read more…

admin Mac Support , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

OS X Script to Re-Prebind the System

June 3rd, 2005

A good description of what “re-prebinding” is and why you
would want to do it appears here:

http://macusertalk.com/discuss/lofiversion/index.php/t119.html

The
basic gist of it is that your applications may launch faster and the
system may run better overall if you periodically re-prebind
things.

The script below, when executed with administrator
permission, will re-prebind all the software on your boot drive,
potentially improving performance.

The script was designed for and
tested on OS X 10.3.x and may or may not work with earlier or later OS X
releases.  As with all my scripts, by downloading and attempting to
use them you agree to accept all responsibility and liability for
whatever may happen.  That means if you run this script and your
system wipes its hard drive, catches fire, and burns down your entire
city (highly unlikely) or anything else goes wrong, you agree that I’m
not responsible.  I don’t support or warranty these scripts in any
way. I just share them here in the hope that they’ll help others.

Read more…

admin Mac Support , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Customizing Default User Preferences in OS X

June 3rd, 2005

(The following article is intended for experienced and
knowledgeable system administrators only. If you find parts of the
discussion below contain verbs you don’t understand, techniques that you
aren’t comfortable with, etc., I recommend NOT attempting to follow
these instructions or use the provided script. This technique requires
some pretty-advanced skills and experience.)

What is this article about?

As an OS X system administrator, you may want to
change the default appearance of OS X the first time a new user logs
into it. For example, you might be writing lab instructions for students
and want a particular file to be “guaranteed” to be in their
home directory or on their desktop when they first login. You might want
to be sure that certain applications are in everyone’s Dock, or avoid
having to require users to enter a serial number the first time they
launch a particular program. Whatever your reasoning, the bottom line is
that you want to change (from Apple’s or some third party’s defaults)
the way a user’s OS X interface or applications behave from the first
time they login. There are two ways you can do that.  The first is
to create an account for the user, login as that user, and make the
changes.  That’s the safest and best way to do it, but if a user
logs in who doesn’t have a local account on that machine (e.g., they
authenticated through Active Directory or UNIX NIS), they won’t have
your customizations.  But there’s another way that “doesn’t
care” if there is a local account on the system already, that will
get the right set of customizations in place for every user who ever
logs in (local or via the network).

In this article, I’ll tell you
how I did that at my company, and how you can do it, too.  But,
please, before you make the decision to go down this path, read this
entire article.  If you follow my instructions here carefully and
test the changes you make thoroughly, you shouldn’t have too many
problems.  If you miss a step or don’t test something, I can
practically guarantee that you’re going to have problems – and some of
them you might not see for a week, a month, or more. 

Before
you can understand the procedure for doing this, you need to know a
little about how OS X stores a specific user’s preferences, and how it
decides what those preferences should be to begin with. Once you know
that, you’ll know much of what you need to know to be able to customize
those defaults (but I promise you, you won’t know everything you need to
know).

How do initial user preferences get
set by OS X?

When a local user account is created on an
OS X system, OS X automatically creates a directory for that user in the
“/Users” directory.  If you don’t authenticate locally,
you may have a script in place that creates that initial user directory
for the user.  That initial user directory is where Apple sets the
“default” user preferences for everyone on that particular
machine.

For example, when a local user with the short name of
“Fred” is setup on the system, a “/Users/Fred”
directory is created on that computer. Inside this directory are files
OS X creates to keep track of Fred’s favorite settings (e.g., icon or
list view in the Finder), files that OS X applications use to keep track
of what Fred likes (e.g., his word processor’s default font setting or
his dictionary words), settings saved by his third-party software (like
Microsoft Office), and files he’s placed in his home directory. But if
there wasn’t a “Fred” directory before Fred’s account was
created, how did it get there?

There are two ways files can
“automatically” end up in Fred’s home directory. One way is
that the files are created when Fred first tries to execute a particular
application (for example, after the first time he launches Adobe
PhotoShop). The other is that they were put there by OS X before Fred
logged in, to provide a “base” environment for him to work in.
That “base” environment comes from the files stored in the
following directory:

   /System/Library/User
Template/English.lproj

(This assumes that you’re using
the English settings in OS X. If you’re using another language, your
defaults may be coming from one of the other subdirectories in the
“User Template” directory.)

When a new account is
created, OS X copies the files in the above directory into a new
subdirectory under “/Users”. This creates the new user’s
initial “sandbox” environment.

So, the theory on which
this article is based is that by modifying the contents of the above
directory (”English.lproj”) we can customize what new users
will see when they first login to OS X.  Sounds very
straightforward, right?  It’s not.

So what’s the
catch?

Earlier, I mentioned that being thorough and
careful in your testing is critical. While it is true that many kinds of
customizations are indeed as simple as adding or replacing files in the
“User Template” directory, some are not. Some customizations
may not even be possible at all, without some major “hacking”
at the files in that directory. You have been warned!

There are
several things that can go wrong here, and I’m probably not going to be
giving you a comprehensive list of the things I’ve seen go wrong because
I can’t honestly remember them all. Even if I remembered all the issues
I saw, you may have different software or configuration issues in your
environment that I haven’t seen, and I can’t warn you about something
that didn’t happen to me. Again, you have been warned.  Testing the
changes after you make them is absolutely critical.  Testing the
new user template thoroughly after any change is equally
critical.

At a high level, all the problems boil down to one
thing: There are some preferences files that store information which
identifies the original user who made the customization. If those same
preferences files are given to another user, when the user tries to do
something involving the data stored in that preferences file, OS X will
try to modify the files belonging to that original user. Since OS X’s
security will generally prevent one user from screwing around with
another user’s files, this new user is going to get security warnings,
application errors, crashes, lock-ups, and other unpleasant results from
our customization attempt. The only way you can be sure that this
doesn’t happen is to test, test, and re-test. Even if you test very
thoroughly, odds are that your users are going to find something you
didn’t expect that isn’t working. Mine did, and still do
occasionally.

What’s the procedure?

The
process is pretty straightforward, really. First, begin with a Macintosh
that you can afford to “trash” if need be.  That is,
don’t do this with a Mac whose configuration you can’t easily and
quickly put back to normal.  It is possible to render a machine
partially (maybe completely) unusable by performing this little
“trick”.  Again, you’ve been warned…

You will
begin by logging in as root or administrator and locating the following
directory on the boot disk:

  /System/Library/User
Template/English.lproj

Having found that directory,
you should back it up somewhere on another drive, another partition,
etc. This way, if you really screw things up badly later, you can
restore this directory from the backup and start over again. My first
time trying this, I had to start over more than once. Consider that
another warning!

Next, while logged in with administrator
privileges, create two new accounts on the Mac. One should be called
“default” (because my script below depends on that particular
name… if you change the name, change the script accordingly or it
won’t work). The other can be any name you like, but I suggest using the
name “test” to keep things consistent with these
instructions.  Neither of these accounts should have administrator
privileges.

You will notice that there is now a
“default” directory inside the “/Users” directory on
the boot disk. This directory contains the base settings that OS X has
provided for a new user, customized slightly for the new user called
“default”.  This “default” user directory is
where we’ll make the customizations that we’d like all our users to
have.  Once we’ve made the customizations we want to make, we’ll
copy this “default” user directory over top of (and replacing
the matching files within) the “/System/Library/User
Template/English.lproj” directory.  When a new user is
created, that user will (as normal) get a copy of the
“English.lproj” directory which contains our customized
settings.  In this example, we’ll use the “test” user to
simulate someone logging in for the first time and getting our new
settings.  Later, ANY first-time user will get the new settings.
With your environment setup as recommended here, it’s time to begin.
Login as “default”. Make all the changes you want to make for
your users. For example, change the desktop pattern to the company logo,
adjust the default Finder views to “list”, turn on the screen
saver, etc. When you have configured the “default” user’s
environment to your standards or needs, log out.

Log in as
“root” (rather than admin, because it will work more easily
for this process). Run the script provided below to overwrite the
system’s base “User Template” with the files from
“/Users/default”. Now, locate the “/Users/test”
directory if it exists. Delete the “test” directory, leaving
the rest intact. Log out as root. Login as “test”. You should
see that things look a lot like they did when you were logged in as
“default”. (If not, I’ve given you bad instructions here and
what you should do is log back in as root, delete the “test”
account, then re-add the “test” account. It’s been a while,
and I’m working from memory here.)

At this point, you should try
everything you possibly can. Browse files in the Finder, click on all
the shortcut buttons in the Finder window, change system preferences for
things, etc. When you’ve done all the “OS X” stuff that you
can, start testing the applications. For example, launch Safari, add a
bookmark, remove a bookmark, change the default home page, download some
files, etc. Continue for every other application and function on the
system that you think your end users might possibly ever use. You’re
going to find that some things don’t work. I can almost guarantee that.
What do you do if something doesn’t work?  Cry. No, just kidding.
Don’t do that. You might get the keyboard wet, and that could cause
other problems.

Here’s where you become a sort of “Sherlock
Holmes of OS X”. The “crime” you’re investigating here is
that the application (or part of OS X) that is misbehaving is doing so
because in one of the many preferences files in “/Users/test”,
some piece of information is telling that application that it needs to
be modifying something (a file or directory) that belongs to
“default” rather than “test”. Since OS X’s security
won’t let that kind of activity take place, the application is behaving
oddly for “test” but quite normally when “default”
is logged in. Your job is to figure out which file(s) in
“/Users/test” are causing this problem.  (If you ignored
my instructions earlier and setup the “test” account as
administrator, some things will work normally that shouldn’t, because an
administrator COULD modify some of “default’s” files.)

I
recommend starting in the “/Users/test/Library” directory to
find your culprit (but it may not be there, so branch out if you have
to). Most likely it will be a file in the “Preferences”
subdirectory whose name ends in “.plist” but it could be
elsewhere. The files in this directory are all given names that should
clue you in to the fact that they relate to the application that’s
misbehaving. For example, in my own Preferences directory there is a
file named “com.microsoft.Word.plist”. If I was
troubleshooting a Microsoft Word problem, I’d suspect this file first,
especially if it shows a modification date that is around the time I
setup my Word preferences in the “default” account.

To
see if this is the file where the problem exists, I’d log in as
“root” and move that file from “/Users/test” to
somewhere else. Then I’d log back in as “test” and try doing
the thing in Word that didn’t work. If it works now, I’ve found the
right file. What you do next is going to be one of the
following:

  • Don’t include the file in the User
    Template.
    In this case, you’ll adjust the script below to
    delete that file from “/System/Library/User
    Template/English.lproj” after it has synchronized with the default
    directory. This will ensure that you don’t later on forget that this
    file is a problem and include it for other users.
  • Fix
    the problem within the file.
    This is a lot harder, and maybe
    not even possible depending on the setting that’s at fault. Open the
    file in TextEdit. It will often (though not always) be in
    somewhat-readable XML format. You may find as you scan through the
    contents of the file that there is a line in there that references
    “/Users/default” or something that points to a resource
    “owned” by default. In some cases you can delete these lines
    from the file and the preference gets filled in with the name of the
    user who just logged in when they try to launch that application. If so,
    you’ll need to make a note for yourself that you have to delete
    such-and-such line from such-and-such file to make the application work
    for other users.
  • Fix the problem by merging some
    preferences from the “default” directory plist file with those
    in the backup of the original “User Template”
    directory.
    In other words, you might find that by adding a line
    or two from the original Word preferences file in the backup of the
    original “User Template” directory you can create a new file
    for the new “User Template” that works for all users.
  • Use the file from the backup of the original “User
    Template” that you made before changing anything.
    (Some
    applications may require a “blank” preferences file to be
    there the first time they’re launched.)

If you haven’t
guessed, the second and third options above are a lot of work, and
fraught with error. Plus, to implement them properly you need to
document what you did, adjust the script below to automate that in the
future (if you can), etc. I found it to be more trouble than it was
worth to me in nearly all cases, and I went for the first option (or the
last, if that didn’t work).

Each time you think you’ve fixed a
problem, I recommend that you delete the “test” directory in
“/Users” and try the same test again. Then test everything
else you can think of in that same application. You may find that in
fixing this issue, you’ve created another. I don’t have any good
scientific way to figure out what works and what’s broken other than to
test and re-test.

So there you have it. That’s how you setup a
profile to be customized, but the same for all first-time
users.

I found something you missed!

If you
discover some changes that should be made to my script, perhaps you’ll
drop me a line and suggest how I can improve it. If you have specific
tips on how to correct problems with a given application, I’m interested
in those, too. I’ll add the information here for others to use if you
share it with me. (Since this web site isn’t my full-time job, don’t
expect me to perform instant updates, but I will get around to it as
soon as I can.)

Disclaimer:  As with all my
scripts and articles, this has worked for me on the systems I
administer. Carefully implemented and tested, it ought to work for you
in many cases as well. But I provide this information and the script
below on an “as is” basis. If it works for you, great! If it
doesn’t, you agree that by using the information or script that you’ve
assumed all liability and responsibility for what happens to you, your
network, and your computers (and anything else I’ve forgotten that might
be affected).

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