The Servlet 4.0 specification is out and Tomcat 9.0.x does support it. Time to dive into Tomcat 9.
Minds is an open-source, privacy-oriented, community-moderated alternative to Facebook and has managed to attract at least 1.25 million users (as of 2018; up-to-date user numbers aren’t available). It also uses an Ethereum-based token to reward content creators and run a digital economy within the network and employs a decentralized.
Prerequisite: Java
Since OS X 10.7 Java is not (pre-)installed anymore, let’s fix that by installing a Prebuilt OpenJDK Binary. Easy to follow details about how to install OpenJDK are available here. Anyway, after opening the Terminal app,
hopefully shows something like this:
Whatever you do, when opening Terminal and running ‘java –version’, you should see something like this, with a version of at least 1.8.x I.e. Tomcat 9.x requires Java 8 or later.
sudo is a program for Unix-like operating systems, allowing you to run programs with the security privileges of another user (normally the superuser, or root). Since we are creating directories, outside of your home folder, administrator right are required. I.e., when executing sudo you will be asked to enter your password; and your Mac User account needs to be an ‘Admin’ account.
JAVA_HOME is an important environment variable, not just for Tomcat, and it’s important to get it right. Here is a trick that allows me to keep the environment variable current, even after a Java Update was installed. In ~/.zshrc, I set the variable like so:
Installing Tomcat
Here are the easy to follow steps to get it up and running on your Mac
Tomcat 9.x![]()
Starting and stoping Tomcat works with executing the provided scripts, like so:
/Library/Tomcat/bin/startup.sh
Finally, after your started Tomcat, open your Mac’s Web browser and take a look at the default page: http://localhost:8080
(UPDATE 04/11/2011 – Corrected error with sparseimage. Should be sparsebundle. Directions corrected.)
One in the chamber, one in the socket mac os. Note: These directions will not work with Mac OS X Lion as Apple has removed the necessary components to allow this functionality to work.
In today’s how-to, we’re going to setup Time Machine for a Mac client with the backups being stored on Windows Home Server 2011. These same steps should work with Small Business Server 2011 Essentials and Storage Server 2008 R2 Essentials as well. (P.S. If after reading this, and you agree with me that setup could be easier, go here and vote.)
Step 1: Create shared folder on server
Tomk Mac Os Downloads
Step 2: Enable Network Volume Support and create SparseBundle file
Step 3: Copy Sparsebundle to server and enable Time Machine
Tom Macom
Tom Macon
New Mac Os 11
Congratulations! You’ve just configured Time Machine with Windows Home Server 2011.
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