Sourcetree Macos 10.13

  



Posts about 10.13 written by Liviu Ionescu (ilg). Apple continuously enhanced the security of recent macOS versions and with High Sierra 10.13 it introduced a new. I wrote about SuperMicro mainboards and IPMIView recently, but that ran only on Windows and Linux. Since I focus my desktop mainly on MacOS, and never on Linux, I did not want to use the Windows IPMView (though it did work most of the time). Not having a MacOS version sounded odd, as there was an iOS version.

  1. Sourcetree Macos 10.13.6
  2. Sourcetree Download Mac
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[UPDATED sep 26]
[UPDATED again on oct 27th, see tags UPDATE2]

Sourcetree for mac

macOS High Sierra is awesome, but unfortunately, it killed my “old style” development environment. It was not just High Sierra; brew upgrade also had a big part in the failing of the development setup, if not ALL of it. I brew upgraded my set-up on Sierra (not High yet) and it got F’ed up as well. My guess; 95% Brew’s fault, 5% High Sierra (and only because High Sierra sort of forced me to brew upgrade)

If you are still using the “old” way for development websites (a.k.a., using macOSs own apache2 and brew php), you might want to wait with upgrading to High Sierra; I don’t have a working solution yet.

Sourcetree
  1. SourceTree can do much more, of course, but I personally find that viewing history is where git GUI clients really shine compared to the command line. I have tried other git GUI clients, including Tower, GitKraken and GitUp. But I find SourceTree far more comfortable and efficient than the others - especially for viewing history and changes.
  2. I updated to High Sierra 10.13.5 today. Tried lunching SourceTree 2.7.3. It worked for a minute, then crashed (EXCBADINSTRUCTION (SIGILL)). Every time I launch it now, it crashes almost immediately. I've tried versions 2.6.3, 2.7.4, and 2.7.1. 1) Thought it could be related to.

[UPDATE2] I think I might have a solution :)

macOS: install Oracle VirtualBox on macOS 10.13

Sourcetree Macos 10.13.6

Apple continuously enhanced the security of recent macOS versions and with High Sierra 10.13 it introduced a new feature that requires user approval before loading newly-installed third-party kernel extensions (KEXTs)

Sourcetree Download Mac

There are lots of complaints from users not being able to install applications with KEXT, like Oracle VirtualBox. The mechanism is relatively complex, but basically each developer is required to get a developer ID from Apple, and users can approve that software signed by that developer is allowed to run.
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