Urbansory
Would you mind posting your scripts for others that may want to use them?
If you do, post in the How To's forum.
Thanks
You can use a program called Mac Janitor, which can be found on version tracker, it is free. Or you can run them via the command line.
sudo /etc/daily
sudo /etc/weekly
sudo /etc/monthly
each as it corresponds to its name.
Urbansory
Would you mind posting your scripts for others that may want to use them?
If you do, post in the How To's forum.
Thanks
Got around to posting that how-to, well part of it. I will go into more detail and add a few images later.
L. Jones
www.urbansory.com
Mac Pro 2.66 ghz - 3 Gig RAM - 10.4.10
G4 400 mhz - 960MB RAM - 10.4.7 & 9.2.1 (Seperate partitions)
Work: Mac Pro 2.66 ghz - 4 Gig RAM - 10.4.-
I have a semi-dumb question. Do these middle-of-the-night cron things run if your computer is sleeping?
If not, who the heck leaves their Mac fully awake 24/7?
"You are" = you're • "It is" = it's • It's really that simple
No, they don't. I haven't used the Sleep feature in years, because of the problems it caused in earlier systems, and never turn my main machine off.
Oh, OK. So then do you let the display and hard disk go to sleep and not the computer? Or do you just let the thing run full blown all the time?
Just curious.
I have had sleep issues in the past, but not in a couple of years, so I let it just go to sleep. I enjoy its quiet slumber.
Actually, you know what. Ironically, I have to turn OFF the hard drive spin down option in Energy Saver because of problems. For example, one of my internal drives will never wake up if I let it spin down. The rest wake up.
There's always something. Ugh.
"You are" = you're • "It is" = it's • It's really that simple
I let the displays go to sleep, then off, but not the computer, that means the Hard drives stay awake and on.
norton has a VERY BAD history of killing harddrives. i would never again trust in a software maker who claims to do good things to harddrives and actually does bad things. i maybe simple about this, but i think in order to sell harddrive tools, one should do much, much, much more careful betatesting.
and for the argument that goes something like "yes, but that was when apple updated their systems and norton had not yet released patches for their software", i can't second that. 1st: it happened also on well-tested apple systems and 2nd: norton has ALWAYS enough time to test against betas of apple's next OS releases and should be able to release patches even BEFORE apple releases an update/upgrade.
my advice: use apple's tools. use disk utility to repair your harddrives from time to time and to repair permissions. run the cron jobs from time to time. make backups of all your important data (best: mirror the whole harddisk). no other tools are required than the ones that come with Mac OS X. and IF there's a problem and your data goes to nirwana, a reinstall and retrieve-from-backup is always your safest (and often fastest) bet, anyways.
Mac user since 1987. Running Mac OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion on a MacBook Air 11" & an iMac 27" and whatever's newest for my iPhone 4s, iPad 3 and AppleTV 2.
Apple Certified System Administrator 10.6, Apple Sales Professional 2008-2011, Apple Certified Mac Technician.
Bookmarks