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Screenflow 3 on os x vm
Screenflow 3 on os x vm











screenflow 3 on os x vm
  1. #Screenflow 3 on os x vm how to#
  2. #Screenflow 3 on os x vm install#

(Note, if you are not familiar with the apt-get command on Ubuntu, it is a package installer, that works a lot like Fink or Mac Ports on the Mac)

screenflow 3 on os x vm

#Screenflow 3 on os x vm install#

Step 1: Install NFS on the Ubuntu virtual machine: sudo apt-get install nfs-kernel To demonstrate how useful this is, we are going to go back to our virtual machine to create an NFS exported file system, and then automount it on our Mac. One of the new, and welcome, changes is a working automounting system just like your favorite Unix or Linux system. With 10.4 Tiger, a few changes brought OS X very close to acting like traditional Unix machines, and finally with Leopard becoming POSIX and SUSv3 compliant. Many Systems Administrators have wrestled with trying to get OS X to behave more like Unix and Linux for all of this time. OS X has been around for almost a decade, with first version OS X server coming out in 1999. Getting Used to Automounting with Leopard In the first two articles, we downloaded a pre-configured Ubuntu virtual machine here: Īll of the following steps will be based on the assumption that you have been continuing to work from either this Samba/OpenLDAP server, or a similar one you configured. It is almost a little too science fiction to talk about without seeing some examples, so I have included quite a few.

#Screenflow 3 on os x vm how to#

In this article we tackle how to fully configure and tweak OS X to work with OpenLDAP, and Samba, including automounting a network home directory via Samba or NFS served out from the virtual machine. In part two we reached a stopping point after we got basic authentication working with OpenLDAP.

screenflow 3 on os x vm

And because our Ubuntu virtual machine is just a file, it is simple to keep copies of this configuration laying around in case something goes wrong. For many people those two articles would be enough to setup a simple home file sharing and authentication system. In the last two articles, we got familiar with using virtualization to build a Samba /LDAP environment that our Macs could talk to. Integrating OS X With OpenLDAP/Samba, Part 3Ĭolumn Tag: Networking Integrating OS X With OpenLDAP/Samba, Part 3Ĭonfiguring Your Mac To Work With Linux Samba and LDAP Servers

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  • Screenflow 3 on os x vm