Oct 13, 2017 If you have FileVault enabled in OS X 10.9 or earlier, or if a firmware password is set, or if the startup volume is a software RAID, you can’t start in safe mode. Disable Third Parties. Third party plug-ins and Safari extensions may be the cause of Safari crashing problem. Go to Safari Preferences Extensions and turn all extensions off. Apr 12, 2016 Whenever a program crashes in OS X, you are presented with a small window that indicates the program quit unexpectedly (Apple’s vernacular for “it crashed”). Whenever this happens, first choose the default option in this window to ignore the issue, and then try relaunching your program. What operating system are you using? Windows XP Windows Vista Windows 7 Windows 8 Windows 8.1 Windows 10 Other Windows Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard Mac OS X 10.7 Lion Mac OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion Mac OS X 10.9 Mavericks Mac OS X 10.10 Yosemite Mac OS X 10.11 El Capitan Mac OS X 10.12 Sierra Mac OS X 10.13 High Sierra Mac OS X. Date/Time: 2018-03-15 00:58:10.552 -0400 OS Version: Mac OS X 10.12.6 (16G1036) Report Version: 12 Anonymous UUID: 6C985CFD-6975-3F30-50EB-07 Time Awake Since Boot: 630000 seconds System Integrity Protection: enabled.
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10.6: Disable the Problem Reporter in Snow Leopard
I would guess that a 'Repair Permissions' from Disk Utility would 'fix' the permission change (thus undoing the hint) as well.
--Mak
--Mak
10.6: Disable the Problem Reporter in Snow Leopard
I'm not sure why you say there's no way not to send the report to apple in 10.6. I see an 'ignore' button when the problem reporter first comes up and a 'don't send' button if you click the 'report' button in the first pane.
Plus, if you're running your app under development from xcode the way you probably should be, it ought to catch all your crashes in the debugger rather than letting them get as far as Problem Reporter launching. And for apps that you aren't developing, Problem Reporter is an infrequent visitor, and provides some useful functionality when it does appear.
Plus, if you're running your app under development from xcode the way you probably should be, it ought to catch all your crashes in the debugger rather than letting them get as far as Problem Reporter launching. And for apps that you aren't developing, Problem Reporter is an infrequent visitor, and provides some useful functionality when it does appear.
10.6: Disable the Problem Reporter in Snow Leopard
I think this doesn't just affect Objective-C XCode development. I have had the Problem Reporter pop up from segmentation faults in simple command line C programs that I have written. It can be useful to have the traceback pop up like that (you have to enable gdb when compiling), but you don't want to send that junk to Apple.
If you have XCode installed, you should have Crash Reporter Prefs in
/Developer/Applications/Utilities/
. Open this up and set the option to 'Server' mode, which says it will never display the Unexpectedly Quit dialog. 10.6: Disable the Problem Reporter in Snow Leopard
Um:
defaults write com.apple.CrashReporter DialogType none
defaults write com.apple.CrashReporter DialogType none
Problem Report For Os X Factor
10.6: Disable the Problem Reporter in Snow Leopard
I can't imagine OSX liking/working best if you disable the executable bit on the app itself to be a good idea. I didn't try this nor feel inclined to really test the overall effect because if your desire is to get no report at all, Apple has an option for the 'server' mode, where you only get a log of the crash itself (rather handy) but no dialog: Apple has a specific app in the Developer Tools for this at CrashReporterPrefs. As mentioned right above and known for quite some time, this does nothing more than modify the global value for com.apple.CrashReporter's dialogtype. This can be modified through the obvious GUI tools or via the terminal.
Problem Report For Mac Os X Kernel
10.6: Disable the Problem Reporter in Snow Leopard
How to disable from OS X help. Also from my experience it is not enabled by default, but upon the first crash it defaults to allowing itself automatically in the future.
Turning off automatic problem reporting
If you've set up automatic problem reporting, you can turn it off at any time.
- Open Console, located in the Utilities folder.
- Open Console
- Choose Console > Preferences.
- In Console preferences, click Reset.
10.6: Disable the Problem Reporter in Snow Leopard
In Lion, all you need to do is go to:
System Preferences>Security & Privacy> Privacy. And un-check the box that says 'Send Diagnostic and Usage Data to Apple'
But I assume it may be different for Snow Leopard.
System Preferences>Security & Privacy> Privacy. And un-check the box that says 'Send Diagnostic and Usage Data to Apple'
But I assume it may be different for Snow Leopard.