On Dec 19, 2011, at 2:53 PM, Puneet Kishor wrote:
>
> On Dec 19, 2011, at 3:02 PM, Brandon Allbery wrote:
>
>> On Mon, Dec 19, 2011 at 15:03, Puneet Kishor wrote:
>>
>>> I thought the -w switch was supposed to disable the "Disabled" key, but,
>>> as I said, the programs didn't start up automa
I don't know why you're having problems. The plists should work fine out of the
box. You don't need to edit the files at all.
On Dec 19, 2011, at 16:53, Puneet Kishor wrote:
> First, I manually edited each plist so the "Disabled" key was now set to
> "false".
There should be no need to change
On Dec 19, 2011, at 3:02 PM, Brandon Allbery wrote:
> On Mon, Dec 19, 2011 at 15:03, Puneet Kishor wrote:
>
>> I thought the -w switch was supposed to disable the "Disabled" key, but,
>> as I said, the programs didn't start up automatically on reboot. I will try
>> again.
>>
>
> It does, but
On Mon, Dec 19, 2011 at 15:03, Puneet Kishor wrote:
> I thought the -w switch was supposed to disable the "Disabled" key, but,
> as I said, the programs didn't start up automatically on reboot. I will try
> again.
>
It does, but on Snow Leopard and Lion this will only change state hidden
inside
> so, in other words, I shouldn't worry about RunAtLoad, but change the
> Disabled key as follows
>
> Disabled
>
>
> Does that seem reasonable? Interestingly, on reading
> http://guide.macports.org/chunked/reference.startupitems.html, I tried the
> following
>
> $sudo launchctl l
On Dec 19, 2011, at 1:54 PM, Jeremy Lavergne wrote:
>> Nothing there about running them on reboot. However, another plist
>> (vmware.plist) has the following switch
>>
>> RunAtLoad
>
> From `man launchd.plist`:
> RunAtLoad
> This optional key is used to control whether your job i
> Nothing there about running them on reboot. However, another plist
> (vmware.plist) has the following switch
>
> RunAtLoad
From `man launchd.plist`:
RunAtLoad
This optional key is used to control whether your job is launched once at
the time the job is loaded. The default
Hi all,
Perhaps a basic question. When I type the following
$sudo port load apache2
org.macports.apache2: Already loaded
The above is just an example... I get the same for mysql5-server or any other
servers. Yet, the program doesn't start up when I reboot the machine. Is there
Hello everyone,
the OCaml user meeting in April 2011 agreed on using "OCaml" as a brand for all
OCaml-related activities.
To follow that direction, I will go and rename many of our OCaml ports many of
which are currently prefixed by "caml", "ocaml" or not prefixed at all.
I'll try to use the sam