2020. 3. 22. 20:23ㆍ카테고리 없음
It has a Homebrew formula so if you have not yet tried that, it might be the easiest path to getting it to install correctly. My completely non-expert opinion based on what you've posted so far is that it simply installed to a location not included in your path. Homebrew will fix that at least.
Here's the formula: » And a link to Homebrew itself: » I don't use Smartmontools myself but I do use Homebrew daily and can attest to its safety. Once you install Homebrew, you use it from Terminal like you would apt-get on Debian/Ubuntu: brew install smartmontools It'll do the rest for you. Good luck, -j. Did 'brew install smartmontools' complete successfully? You can see which formulas are installed using 'brew list'. I just installed it on my MacBook Pro and it seems to work fine: MBP: Td$ brew install smartmontools Warning: You are using OS X 10.11.
We do not provide support for this pre-release version. You may encounter build failures or other breakage. Downloading Downloading from ######################################################################## 100.0%./configure -prefix=/usr/local/Cellar/smartmontools/6.4 -sbindir=/usr/loca make install%uD83C%uDF7A /usr/local/Cellar/smartmontools/6.4: 31 files, 1.6M, built in 15 seconds MBP: Td$ smartctl smartctl 6.4 2015-06-04 r4109 x8664-apple-darwin15.3.0 (local build). MBP: Td$ sudo smartctl Password: smartctl 6.4 2015-06-04 r4109.
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Smartctl was installed at /usr/local/bin/smartctl for me, so you could also try 'sudo /usr/local/bin/smartctl'. Yes, it keeps adding an X when copy/paste? HOMEBREWVERSION: 0.9.5 ORIGIN: HEAD: 3f86deb5af8b0fd54fbf57b320f49a Last commit: 5 hours ago HOMEBREWPREFIX: /usr/local HOMEBREWREPOSITORY: /usr/local HOMEBREWCELLAR: /usr/local/Cellar HOMEBREWBOTTLEDOMAIN: CPU: 8-core 64-bit nehalem OS X: 10.11.2-x8664 Xcode: 7.2 CLT: 7.2.0.0.1.
Clang: 7.0 build 700 X11: N/A System Ruby: 2.0.0-p645 Perl: /usr/bin/perl Python: /usr/bin/python Ruby: /usr/bin/ruby = /System/Library/Frameworks/Ruby.framework/Versions/2.0/usr/bin/ruby Java: N/A Jeffs-Mac-Pro: jeffstorms$ ls /usr/local/bin/smart. ls: /usr/local/bin/smart.: No such file or directory. Jeffs-Mac-Pro: jeffstorms$ brew uninstall smartmontools Uninstalling /usr/local/Cellar/smartmontools/6.4. (31 files, 1.6M) Jeffs-Mac-Pro: jeffstorms$ brew install smartmontools Downloading Already downloaded: /Library/Caches/Homebrew/smartmontools-6.4.elcapitan.bottle.tar.gz Pouring smartmontools-6.4.elcapitan.bottle.tar.gz Error: The `brew link` step did not complete successfully The formula built, but is not symlinked into /usr/local Could not symlink share/doc/smartmontools/AUTHORS Target /usr/local/share/doc/smartmontools/AUTHORS already exists.
It sees a partial installation of smartmontools already exists (maybe from when you tried to install via MacPorts?). Either uninstall the package you installed via MacPorts or use the direct path I posted above: /usr/local/Cellar/smartmontools/6.4/bin/smartctl If that command works, you can use the overwrite function to force it to point to the brew installed version rather than the MacPorts version: $ brew link -overwrite smartmontools Then 'smartctl' without the path should work.
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Open Source installers DO NOT mess with individual user shell initialization scripts. Open Source project may be installed on single user systems, or multi-user systems so to update every possible user's shell initialization files becomes a nightmare. For example which accounts should be updated, and which are daemon accounts that should be left along. Which shell does the user of each account prefer to use? And for some shells, there are multiple different shell initialzation files, so which one does the shell initialzation file select.
And if the user already has a PATH environment variable in a shell initializaton file that gets executed AFTER the file the installer choose (.bashprofile vs.bashrc), then all the installers work would be for nothing, and worse confuse the user. And the user already has the directory in PATH, but they are not logged in, does the installer parse all the other user's shell initialzation files to figure out if that user does not need an update PATH, or does it blindly add yet another export PATH to one of the shell initialization files? Open Source installers worry about the getting the app built and installed. It leaves the user's personal files alone, for very good reasons:-). Open Source installers DO NOT mess with individual user shell initialization scripts.
Open Source project may be installed on single user systems, or multi-user systems so to update every possible user's shell initialization files becomes a nightmare. For example which accounts should be updated, and which are daemon accounts that should be left along. Which shell does the user of each account prefer to use? And for some shells, there are multiple different shell initialzation files, so which one does the shell initialzation file select. And if the user already has a PATH environment variable in a shell initializaton file that gets executed AFTER the file the installer choose (.bashprofile vs.bashrc), then all the installers work would be for nothing, and worse confuse the user.
And the user already has the directory in PATH, but they are not logged in, does the installer parse all the other user's shell initialzation files to figure out if that user does not need an update PATH, or does it blindly add yet another export PATH to one of the shell initialization files? Open Source installers worry about the getting the app built and installed. It leaves the user's personal files alone, for very good reasons:-). Apple Footer. This site contains user submitted content, comments and opinions and is for informational purposes only. Apple may provide or recommend responses as a possible solution based on the information provided; every potential issue may involve several factors not detailed in the conversations captured in an electronic forum and Apple can therefore provide no guarantee as to the efficacy of any proposed solutions on the community forums.
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