1
zhjits 2015-07-11 11:30:22 +08:00 1
sudo nvram boot-args="rootless=0"
然而据说正式版本这东西也会失效,所以…… 话说替换系统版本为啥不直接用 homebrew 呢 |
2
wkdhf233 2015-07-11 12:12:57 +08:00
这是准备做成iOS的节奏么,这么搞估计以后OS X也可以越狱了。。
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3
ffffwh 2015-07-11 15:12:20 +08:00 1
其实吧,那个拼作capitan..
另外我原先以为是captain... |
4
sobigfish 2015-07-11 17:15:25 +08:00
brew, phpbrew 可以不?
os x 10.11 是说权限被限制的很厉害,都不打算升了 |
5
jedihy 2015-07-11 23:25:10 +08:00 via iPhone
硬盘拆下来改
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6
crystone 2015-07-11 23:35:16 +08:00
有限制也是好处
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7
geekdada 2015-07-12 16:42:29 +08:00 1
http://arstechnica.com/apple/2015/06/preview-os-x-el-capitans-first-beta-is-a-promising-heap-of-refinements/4/
以下为引用: System Integrity Protection, also called "rootless," is a new system security feature that prevents the user or any process from writing in system-protected folders. This list includes /System, /bin, /usr (but not /usr/local), and /sbin. Not even administrators can add to these folders or edit files that are in them, though they retain their access to the rest of the files on the drive. That's one way to protect important operating system files from external tampering! If you never dive into any of those folders, you won't notice the difference in day-to-day usage. If you do, reboot into your El Capitan Mac's recovery partition. There's a new item under the Utilities menu that will let you toggle System Integrity Protection on and off for El Capitan volumes. That's all it does. So we're not looking at an iOS-esque level of system lockdown just yet, though there are no promises that System Integrity Protection won't become mandatory in some future version of OS X. |
8
uuapp 2015-10-15 17:01:56 +08:00
执行
sudo chown -R $(whoami):admin /usr/local homebrew 等 使用正常 |
9
uuapp 2015-10-15 17:02:36 +08:00
sudo chown -R $(whoami):admin /usr/bin
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