+1 for mamp
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Trying to use Mac for proper work
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Yes, locate.updatedb can be used, but starting with Leopard (or was it Tiger?), running it via sudo this spits out something like:Originally posted by NickFitz View PostI think the locate database can be updated using the bash script at /usr/libexec/locate.updatedb (which appears to be part of the FreeBSD distribution judging by the copyright and comments). Of course it's always possible that some other way of doing it has also been added. There's a man page for it, available by typing man locate.updatedb in Terminal, or using your favourite GUI-based man page reader (I use ManOpen).
"This WILL reveal all filenames on your machine to all login users, which is a security risk."
and will probably leave the created file with no read access for non-admin users. If you really are the sole user of your system this may be what you want, but I don't currently do this myself.
Instead of using periodic weekly, use
sudo /etc/periodic/weekly/310.locate
This will set the database ownership and protection correctly, but won't do the other weekly stuff like rotating logs.
Here's a method for using Spotlight from the command line:
- put this into your .bash_profile
function loc { mdfind "kMDItemDisplayName == '$@'wc"; }
(should all be on one line) - execute it via source .bash_profile
- see the results via loc my.cnf
And as a GUI alternative to Spotlight, I use NotLight (scroll down or search that page to find it).Last edited by Sysman; 28 March 2010, 00:06.Behold the warranty -- the bold print giveth and the fine print taketh away.Comment
- put this into your .bash_profile
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I believe I fixed the issue with my.conf
Durbs,
You were able to get the my.conf files. You had about three of them, plus the one found on google.
I used the default_my.conf file within the include directory, copied it to my desktop and renamed it to my.conf. I placed it in the proper folder /etc/
and the I received the next error you received about the section on [mysqld] not being in the my.conf file.
There is a section in the my.conf file called [mysqld.1], i renamed that section (renamed it when it was on my desktop) to [mysqld] and the setup of mysql workbench was complete.Comment
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Nowadays there's also XAMPP. Free. Linux, OS X, Windows, Solaris versions available, which makes sense if you are running multiple platforms.Originally posted by stek View PostBest to download MAMP - there a free and paid for, both sort out MySQL without woes.
MAMP: Mac, Apache, MySQL, PHP
I've only tried the Windows version myself, and it worked fine.Behold the warranty -- the bold print giveth and the fine print taketh away.Comment
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+1 for XAMPP, works fine on my macs.
Also you can try the VM approach, but not the best approach on RAM starved laptop and 20 million row dataset.Comment
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