Post by mametamislei on May 22, 2019 15:29:35 GMT
Main category, Utilities
Sub category, Optimizers
Developer, Jim Mitchell
Filesize, 4096
Title, Yasu
╳ tinyuid.com/qPPPAJ
5.0.2 Yasu
The daily script removes old log files, "scratch" and "junk" files, backs-up the NetInfo database (Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger® and earlier), reports a variety of system and network statistics, and rotates the file. Under Tiger, the daily script also cleans up scratch fax files and prunes , the log file for the then-new Apple System Logging facility. Under Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard®, the daily script also prunes the file that replaced the file for Apple System Logging.
If you are running OS X 10.9 (Mavericks) or later, Apple provides a utility that does much the same thing. Open Activity Monitor (in your Applications/Utilities folder) and click the “Memory” button on the top. A window at the bottom will tell you how much swap or virtual memory is being used. If it is zero or close to zero and stays that way as you work on your Macintosh through the day, then you don't need more memory. Also while in Activity Monitor, there is a graph on the bottom of the window. It is called “Memory Pressure.” This shows a history of how much memory (RAM) is being used and if you are overloading your memory it will go up and change color from the normal green.
If you don’t know which one you have, go with the first option, startup drive.
Data Recovery
1) Not shut down your computer and hard drive until you have done the following...
Use DiskWarrior.
Site:
MacOS macpkg.icu/?id=13416&kw=vers.5.0.1.Yasu.IkyC.zip (4464 KB)
Updated on OS X macpkg.icu/?id=13416&kw=Yasu-ver-5.1.2-h4q.tar.gz (3399 KB)
This is a vast oversimplification, and the daily, weekly and monthly nature of these scripts has changed a little with recently releases of OS X – they’re somewhat inconsistent now. The main thing to take away is that you don’t need to be afraid of these scripts, because running them is something your Mac already does routinely.
Check your Python versions
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Press the power button again to turn the Mac on
Originally created with System Administrators who service large groups of workstations in mind, Yasu (Yet Another System Utility) was made to do a specific group of maintenance tasks quickly within a few clicks, rather than needing to endlessly type shell script commands in the Terminal application.
We are now ready to install Homebrew, a package manager for macOS. You can think of Homebrew as the macOS equivalent of the Ubuntu/Debian-based apt-get.
The left control key
Step #2: Install Homebrew
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