Re: More - Safari Download Security Alerts
Re: More - Safari Download Security Alerts
- Subject: Re: More - Safari Download Security Alerts
- From: Jeremy Pereira <email@hidden>
- Date: Wed, 17 Dec 2008 17:00:01 +0000
On 17 Dec 2008, at 15:27, Dave wrote:
On 17 Dec 2008, at 12:03, Jeremy Pereira wrote:
On 17 Dec 2008, at 11:28, Dave wrote:
Hi Mark,
Thanks a lot, it certainly is a lot easier to use and a lot less
flakey, but it still doesn't work. It does not create a folder in
"/Applications" it just installs the raw files there instead. I'm
giving up on PackageMaker, it just doesn't work and there doesn't
seem to be any support for it.
Seems crazy that you can't do this one simple thing with it, in
every other installer I've ever used this would have been a 5 min
job, 2 days later using PackageMaker and still nothing. Oh well,
such is life.
It would be crazy if it were true, but it's not.
I've just created a simple package maker project that installs to a
sub directory of /Applications and it works absolutely fine.
Here's how I did it.
I created a directory in my home folder that mirrored the way I
want the final installation to look i.e.
/Users/jeremyp/
-> /Applications
-> /ASubDir
I put the distribution application in ASubDir, so I have this
directory structure:
/Users/jeremyp/
-> Applications/
-> ASubDir/
-> MyApp.app
In package maker, I added /Users/jeremyp/Applications as content.
On the right hand pane
Install was /Users/jeremyp/Applications
Destination was /Applications (I had to change this from "/")
After running the installer with the built package, I had a
subdirectory within /Applications called ASubDir containing my
application exactly as expected.
Please see my last post. Did you set the Destination on the
Contained and the Folder within it?
I'm not quite sure what you mean. It seems to me that what actually
happens is that PM takes everything *in* the folder you specify in the
Install field and copies it *into* the location in the destination
field.
I think the reason it's like this and the destination field defaults
to / is that a common use-case of PM is you want to install lots of
components in different places e.g. an application in /Applications
and a driver in /System/Library/Extensions.
It doesn't seem to work unless you do this. To me this seems odd, if
left empty surely better behavior would be to use the Containing
Item's Destination rather than "/" ? If you wanted it to go into
"/", you could just override by entering "/" in the folder
Destination.
Also did you try it with files other than just the .app file? e.g.
the .app file and (say) a .txt file.
Yes. In fact, I just tried it with an empty directory in my package
and the empty directory was created successfully. I had this structure:
$HOME/testpm/Applications/
subdir/
hosts (copied frome /etc/hosts)
emptydir/
I added $HOME/Applications as the content. The install field was
$HOME/Applications, the destination was /Applications
The subdir structure was created faithfully in /Applications including
the emptydir.
Incidentally, this method preserved the folder icon I set for the
subdir directory.
All the Best
Dave
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