You Gotta Have Spice Mac OS

broken image


  1. You Gotta Have Spice Mac Os 11
  2. What Is Needed
  3. More Images For You Gotta Have Spice Mac OS »
  • In Characterville 2020, Almost 73 years after the murder of Marvin Acme in 1947, Maroon Cartoon Studio (now Maroon Entertainment Studio) has a new boss except in fact it is the cousin of the son of Judge Doom unite with Dick Dastardly, Muttley, The Grand Guignol, Belsnickel and the army of Toon Patrol (Phil Phillips is the new leader except Smartass), Rotten Robots, Nerdlucks.
  • MacSpice runs on Intel architecture Apple Macintosh computers. It is compatible with, Berkeley Spice 3f5 but incorporates many improvements to Spice 3f5 – from simple bug-fixes to entirely new commands, algorithms and solution strategies.
Learning has never been so easy!

So are you trying scan Mac's from Spiceworks and having some trouble, this post will help you.

To scan Mac's their are some things you need to change on both Spiceworks and the Mac's them self's.

12 Steps total

You Gotta Have Spice Mac Os 11

Step 1: Part 1

We start off with a piece of software which is of interest to a tightly-focussed group of folk - a port of the Spice electronic circuit simulation program to the Macintosh (MacOS Classic and MacOS. Launch device manager (start orb, search field, 'device manager'). Locate the lonely unknown device 'Apple USB Ethernet' and right-click it to select 'Update Driver Software'. Select 'Browse my computer for driver software' and in the file browser dialog select the folder of your recently modified.INI file and continue the wizard. On newer MacBooks (I have a 2017 for reference), this is a huge PITA to get set up. Windows isn't bad at all if you use Boot Camp, but the hardware support in Linux is awful (I use Ubuntu, maybe it's different for other dists). For installation, you need a USB mouse and keyboard because neither the built-in trackpad nor the keyboard works.

This part you will configure the Mac to be able to be scanned by Spiceworks

Step 2: Open Internet and network sharing

# Click the Apple icon in the top right (or left depending on your setup)
# Go to System preferences
# Internet and network sharing

Step 3: Remote login

You should see something for 'Remote login'
open that.

Make sure that your computer name is alpha-numeric and does not have any special characters or spaces.

Step 4: Check the names match up

Go back to System preferences then network:

Board out of control mac os. Be sure that both your AirPort (if applicable) and Ethernet have the WINS (under Advanced) NetBios name show the same as the computer name. I want to show all my haters love.

Step 5: Apply the settings

Step 6: Setup a Spiceworks Login

Most Mac's in my experience arn't on a domain, so setup a new user for Spiceworks and check you can login.

Remember these details you will need them soon.

Step 7: Part 2

Time to setup Spiceworks Medieval shuffle mac os.

Step 8: Goto Network Accounts for Scanning

# Open Spiceworks
# Go to Settings
# Network Scan

You should see a section called 'Network Accounts for Scanning'.

Step 9: Add a new SSH account

Add a SSH account, if you have a account the same on every Mac then its easier if not you will need to add each Mac's login details.

Step 10: Add a new scan range

At the top of that page you should see the option to add a scan range.

Enter the range and on the SSH dropdown pick the username for the Mac devices.

Step 11: Enable Scanning for Linux Software

On the network scan page, goto Additional Settings (at the bottom) then set Skip Linux Software to false.

Step 12: Scan

You should now be able to scan your network fully :-)

Published: Apr 24, 2010 · Last Updated: Aug 18, 2017

References

  • Cisco Ospina
  • Unofficial Spiceworks

32 Comments

What Is Needed

  • Jalapeno
    bhole Apr 25, 2010 at 06:37pm

    Thanks Andy - handy if we ever get any Apple Mac's on our network. To be honest I read this thinking I'd missed a trick at layer 2. ;)

  • Chipotle
    Dirk8099 Apr 27, 2010 at 09:08am

    Andy, what would we do without you :)

    Thanks

  • Tabasco
    Dogleg-ACSP May 6, 2010 at 02:19am

    Top man excellent info (as always)
    I'm a Mac man now as the new CEO only wanted a Mac and not any of the Windows machines we usually use here!
    Still - It's a learning curve. :)

  • Cayenne
    sundrift Aug 10, 2010 at 06:21pm

    Nice information.

  • Thai Pepper
    Emerson Leal Aug 17, 2010 at 04:21pm

    Ok! we have just two macs at the office, but i will test it tomorrow, of course.

  • Jalapeno
    DS13X Oct 13, 2010 at 12:12pm

    Cool. What if you've added the mac to you active directory domain. Can you use a windows domain account to scan or do you have to user SSH?

  • Anaheim
    Dr. Karl Jun 12, 2011 at 04:35pm

    This worked -- outstanding step-by-step, thank you. One question on wording in Step 11. Was this:

    On the network scan page, goto Additional Settings (at the bottom) then set Skip Linux Software to false.

    Supposed to be:

    Turtlehack mac os. .then set Scan Linux Software to true.' ?

  • Jalapeno
    DL@bntly Aug 18, 2011 at 04:50pm

    Very helpful, thank you.

  • Anaheim
    Steven.summone Nov 21, 2011 at 09:00am

    Sorry does not work on my iMac Snow leopard 10.6.8 The SSH server refuses to speak to my Mac machine I know the SSH is work because I tried to talk to it via the cmd line. I read in another Spicework article and it was saying spiceworks supports sshv2 and not sshv1. See below:

    'Spiceworks uses the SSH2 client, so it cannot connect to SSH servers that only understand the SSH1 protocol. This problem tends to show up when the correct login/password is used, but the test login still fails.'

    Source http://community.spiceworks.com/topic/130662-unknown-device-on-the-network

  • Serrano
    re-Barr Dec 13, 2011 at 04:32pm

    Okay so that seems to work sometimes for me. but since mine are on the domain how can i get it to work using the domain creds??? come to mention it all of mine that i have problems with are 10.6.8 lion works and leopard works. coincedence?

  • Pimiento
    LA.IT Jan 17, 2012 at 12:17pm

    Doesn't work for mine. Has there been any follow up to this? Would be helpful since I'm trying to integrate SW to handle the load of network monitoring. Unfortunately this doesn't seem to be going to well.

  • Mace
    hsc5775 Feb 14, 2012 at 07:08am

    thx for share

  • Cayenne
    macfixer Feb 24, 2012 at 11:27am

    Whoa, this is useful. Thanks!

  • Serrano
    Mikey@MJCO Aug 1, 2012 at 01:25pm

    I recommend using Centrify to AD connect your Macs - makes scanning with SpiceWorks at lot simpler.

  • Ghost Chili
    Nick42 Dec 18, 2012 at 01:24am

    Glad I found this!

  • prev
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • next
Mach-O
Filename extension
Uniform Type Identifier (UTI)com.apple.mach-o-binary
Developed byCarnegie Mellon University, Apple Inc.
Type of formatBinary, executable, object, shared libraries, core dump
Container forARM, SPARC, PA-RISC, PowerPC and x86executable code, memory image dumps

Mach-O, short for Machobject file format, is a file format for executables, object code, shared libraries, dynamically-loaded code, and core dumps. A replacement for the a.out format, Mach-O offers more extensibility and faster access to information in the symbol table.[citation needed]

Mach-O is used by most systems based on the Mach kernel. NeXTSTEP, macOS, and iOS are examples of systems that use this format for native executables, libraries and object code.

Mach-O file layout[edit]

Each Mach-O file is made up of one Mach-O header, followed by a series of load commands, followed by one or more segments, each of which contains between 0 and 255 sections. Mach-O uses the REL relocation format to handle references to symbols. When looking up symbols Mach-O uses a two-level namespace that encodes each symbol into an 'object/symbol name' pair that is then linearly searched for, first by the object and then the symbol name.[1]

The basic structure—a list of variable-length 'load commands' that reference pages of data elsewhere in the file[2]—was also used in the executable file format for Accent.[citation needed] The Accent file format was in turn, based on an idea from Spice Lisp.[citation needed]

More Images For You Gotta Have Spice Mac OS »

Multi-architecture binaries[edit]

Under NeXTSTEP, OPENSTEP, macOS, and iOS, multiple Mach-O files can be combined in a multi-architecture binary. This allows a single binary file to contain code to support multiple instruction set architectures. For example, a multi-architecture binary for iOS can have 7 instruction set architectures, namely ARMv6 (for iPhone, 3G and 1st / 2nd generation iPod touch), ARMv7 (for iPhone 3GS, 4, 4S, iPad, 2, 3rd generation and 3rd–5th generation iPod touch), ARMv7s (for iPhone 5 and iPad (4th generation)), ARMv8-A A64 also known as arm64 (for iPhone 5S to iPhone X), ARMv8.3-A A64 also known as arm64e (for iPhone XS and MacBook Air (M1)), x86 (for iPhone simulator on 32-bit machines), and x86_64 (64-bit simulator).[citation needed]

Minimum OS version[edit]

With the introduction of Mac OS X 10.6 platform the Mach-O file underwent a significant modification that causes binaries compiled on a computer running 10.6 or later to be (by default) executable only on computers running Mac OS X 10.6 or later. The difference stems from load commands that the dynamic linker, in previous Mac OS X versions, does not understand. Another significant change to the Mach-O format is the change in how the Link Edit tables (found in the __LINKEDIT section) function. In 10.6 these new Link Edit tables are compressed by removing unused and unneeded bits of information, however Mac OS X 10.5 and earlier cannot read this new Link Edit table format. To make backwards-compatible executables, the linker flag '-mmacosx-version-min=' can be used.

Other implementations[edit]

Betonline com ag. Ubercube mac os. Some versions of NetBSD have had Mach-O support added as part of an implementation of binary compatibility, which allowed some Mac OS 10.3 binaries to be executed.[3][4]

For Linux, a Mach-O loader was written by Shinichiro Hamaji[5] that can load 10.6 binaries. As a more extensive solution based on this loader, the Darling Project aims at providing a complete environment allowing OS X applications to run on Linux.

For the Ruby programming language, the ruby-macho[6] library provides an implementation of a Mach-O binary parser and editor.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

Have
  1. ^'OS X ABI Mach-O File Format Reference'. Apple Inc. February 4, 2009. Archived from the original on August 19, 2009. Retrieved April 27, 2016.
  2. ^Avadis Tevanian, Jr.; Richard F. Rashid; Michael W. Young; David B. Golub; Mary R. Thompson; William Bolosky; Richard Sanzi. 'A Unix Interface for Shared Memory and Memory Mapped Files Under Mach': 8.Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  3. ^Emmanuel Dreyfus (June 20, 2006). 'Mach and Darwin binary compatiblity [sic] for NetBSD/powerpc and NetBSD/i386'. Retrieved October 18, 2013.
  4. ^Emmanuel Dreyfus (September 2004), Mac OS X binary compatibility on NetBSD: challenges and implementation(PDF)
  5. ^Shinichiro Hamaji, Mach-O loader for Linux - I wrote.
  6. ^William Woodruff, A pure-Ruby library for parsing Mach-O files.

External links[edit]

  • OS X ABI Mach-O File Format Reference (Apple Inc.)
  • Mach-O(5) – Darwin and macOS File Formats Manual
  • Mach Object Files (NEXTSTEP documentation)
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mach-O&oldid=1019669213'




broken image