Hello,
I entered:
sudo launchctl unload /Library/LaunchAgents/org.freedesktop.dbus-
session.plist
which resulted in:
No such process
Following up with:
launchctl load /Library/LaunchAgents/org.freedesktop.dbus-
session.plist
results in:
org.freedesktop.dbus-session: Already loaded
Workaround Bonjour: Unknown error: 0
On Apr 21, 2009, at 8:34 AM, Mike Alexander wrote:
Trashing the plist won't help. You should be able to reverse
things by using
sudo launchctl unload /Library/LaunchAgents/org.freedesktop.dbus-
session.plist
followed by
launchctl load /Library/LaunchAgents/org.freedesktop.dbus-
session.plist
I.e., just unload it using sudo then load it without sudo.
Try a command like "ps auxwww | grep dbus" to see if it worked.
You should find a process running dbus-daemon under ID messagebus
with "--system" in the parameters. If you have run anything that
uses dbus since login (such as gnucash) then you'll also find a
process running dbus-daemon under your own ID with "--session" in
the parameters. This process is started automatically the first
time some program tries to use dbus.
Mike
--On April 21, 2009 2:03:40 AM -0700 "Frank J. R. Hanstick"
<[email protected]> wrote:
Hello,
How do I undo the sudo or do I just trash the plist and reload?
On Apr 20, 2009, at 8:44 PM, Mike Alexander wrote:
--On April 20, 2009 8:41:04 PM -0500 Lenore Horner
<[email protected]> wrote:
On Apr 20, 2009, at 20:30 , Frank J. R. Hanstick wrote:
Hello,
After uninstalling and then installing dbus, I entered:
launchctl load /Library/LaunchAgents/org.freedesktop.dbus-
session.plist
which resulted in:
nothing found to load
I do not think this is the proper response to the command. For
the record org.freedesktop.dbus-session.plist is in /Library/
LaunchAgents/ and org.freedesktop.dbus-system.plist is in /
Library/
LaunchDaemons.
Frank J. R. Hanstick
[email protected]
This is what I have done that worked.
sudo launchctl load -w
/Library/LaunchDaemons/org.freedesktop.dbus-system.plist
sudo launchctl load -w
/Library/LaunchAgents/org.freedesktop.dbus-session.plist
Did you use sudo? Did you load the Daemon first? I think order
matters.
I think you want "sudo" on the first of these (dbus-system), not
*not* on the second (dbus-session). If you use sudo you're
creating a session bus for the root user which isn't too useful.
--
Mike Alexander [email protected]
Ann Arbor, MI PGP key ID: BEA343A6
Frank J. R. Hanstick
[email protected]
Frank J. R. Hanstick
[email protected]
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